Assamese edit

Etymology edit

From Early Assamese যেন (jeno), borrowed from Sanskrit: येन (yena), the instrumental singular of यद् (yad).

Pronunciation edit

Conjunction edit

যেন (zen)

  1. as, like
  2. as if

Bengali edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Sanskrit येन (yena), the instrumental singular of यद् (yad).

Pronunciation edit

  • (Rarh) IPA(key): /dʒæno/, [ˈdʒænoˑ]
    (file)
  • (Dhaka) IPA(key): /dʑɛno/, [ˈdʑɛnoˑ]

Conjunction edit

যেন (jeno)

  1. as, like
  2. how, as if
  3. so that
  4. be sure that
    আর দেখ, বাড়ির ভিতর নিয়ে যাস না যেন
    ar dekh, baṛir bhitor niẏe jaś na jen
    And look, be sure that you don't take it into the house.
  5. certainly
  6. suppose that, given that

References edit

  • Biswas, Sailendra (2000) “যেন”, in Samsad Bengali-English dictionary, 3rd edition, Calcutta: Sahitya Samsad, →OCLC.

Pali edit

Alternative forms edit

Pronoun edit

যেন (m)

  1. Bengali script form of yena, which is instrumental singular of (ya, who (relative))

Pronoun edit

যেন (n)

  1. Bengali script form of yena, which is instrumental singular of (ya, who (relative))

Noun edit

যেন

  1. Bengali script form of yena, which is instrumental singular of (ya, the Pali letter 'y')