যেন
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)
Bengali edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from Sanskrit येन (yena), the instrumental singular of यद् (yad).
Pronunciation edit
Conjunction edit
যেন • (jeno)
References edit
Pali edit
Alternative forms edit
Alternative forms
Pronoun edit
যেন (m)
- Bengali script form of yena, which is instrumental singular of য (ya, “who (relative)”)
Pronoun edit
যেন (n)
- Bengali script form of yena, which is instrumental singular of য (ya, “who (relative)”)
Noun edit
যেন
- Bengali script form of yena, which is instrumental singular of য (ya, “the Pali letter 'y'”)
Categories:
- Assamese terms inherited from Early Assamese
- Assamese terms derived from Early Assamese
- Assamese terms with IPA pronunciation
- Assamese lemmas
- Assamese conjunctions
- Bengali terms borrowed from Sanskrit
- Bengali terms derived from Sanskrit
- Bengali terms with IPA pronunciation
- Bengali terms with audio links
- Bengali lemmas
- Bengali conjunctions
- Bengali terms with usage examples
- Pali non-lemma forms
- Pali pronoun forms
- Pali noun forms