Ottoman Turkish

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

From Persian زنباره (zan bâre), from زن (zan, woman) and باره (bâre).

Noun

edit

زنباره (senbare or sanpara)

  1. womanizer, rake
  2. adulterer, whoremonger

Descendants

edit
  • Turkish: zampara
  • Armenian: զամփարա (zampʻara)

References

edit

Persian

edit

Etymology

edit

From زن (zan, woman) +‎ باره (bâre, fond).

Pronunciation

edit
 

Readings
Classical reading? zanbāra
Dari reading? zanbāra
Iranian reading? zanbâre
Tajik reading? zanbora

Noun

edit

زنباره (zanbâre)

  1. womanizer, rake
    • c. 1030, Fakhr al-Dīn Asʿad Gurgānī, ويس و رامين [Vīs u Rāmīn]‎[2]:
      که آنجا پیر و برنا شاد خوارند
      همه کنغالگی را جان سپارند
      جوانان بیشتر زن باره باشند
      در آن زن بارگی پر چاره باشد
      ki ānjā pīr u burnā šād xwārand
      hama kunğalagī rā jān sipārand
      jawānān bēštar zan bāra bāšand
      dar ān zan bāragi pur čāra bāšand
      For the young and old drink alcohol there,
      And everyone gives themselves up to whoredom.
      The young are mostly womanizers,
      Full of tricks in their womanizing.
      (Classical Persian transliteration)

Derived terms

edit

Descendants

edit