سردار
Pashto edit
Noun edit
سردار • (sardā́r) m
References edit
- Pashtoon, Zeeya A. (2009) “سردار”, in Pashto–English Dictionary, Hyattsville: Dunwoody Press
Persian edit
Etymology edit
Probably borrowed from Parthian [Term?]. Doublet of سالار (sâlâr), which is from Middle Persian [script needed] (srdʾl /sālār/), a genuine Persian development.
Pronunciation edit
- (Classical Persian) IPA(key): [saɾ.dɑːɾ]
- (Iran, formal) IPA(key): [sæɹ.d̪ɒːɹ]
- (Tajik, formal) IPA(key): [säɾ.d̪ɔɾ]
Readings | |
---|---|
Classical reading? | sardār |
Dari reading? | sardār |
Iranian reading? | sardâr |
Tajik reading? | sardor |
- Rhymes: -âr
Noun edit
سردار • (sardâr) (plural سردارها (sardâr-hâ) or سرداران (sardârân))
Derived terms edit
- سرداری (sardâri)
Descendants edit
- Armenian: սարդար (sardar)
- Azerbaijani: sərdar
- Bengali: সর্দার (śordar)
- English: Sardar
- Georgian: სარდალი (sardali)
- Gulf Arabic: سردال (sirdāl)
- Hindustani:
- Kazakh: сардар (sardar)
- Northern Kurdish: Serdar
- Ottoman Turkish: سردار (serdâr)
- Uzbek: sardor
Proper noun edit
سردار • (sardâr)
- a male given name, Sardar
Descendants edit
- Turkish: Serdar
Punjabi edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from Classical Persian سردار (sardār).
Noun edit
سردار • (sardār) m (Gurmukhi spelling ਸਰਦਾਰ)
Related terms edit
- سرداری (sardārī)
Proper noun edit
سردار • (sardār) m (Gurmukhi spelling ਸਰਦਾਰ)
- (Sikhism) Sikh (a title)
- 2013, “Sardaar Ji”, Satinder Sartaj (lyrics):
- اک دن مینوں بندہ ملیا کہندا سردار جی، سنیا اس قوم 'چ کافی ہوئے دلدار جی
- ek din maenū̃ bandā miliā kahindā sardār jī, suṇiā es kaum 'ch kāfī hoe dildār jī
- One day I met a person who said, "honorable Sikh, they say there are many breve-hearts in this community"