See also: سكا

Persian edit

 
Persian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia fa
 
سردیس جنگجوی سکایی از باختر ۱۰۰ پ. م‌

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Old Persian 𐎿𐎣 (Saka).

Pronunciation edit

 

Readings
Classical reading? sakā
Dari reading? sakā
Iranian reading? sakâ
Tajik reading? sako

Noun edit

Dari سَکا
Iranian Persian
Tajik сако

سَکا (sakâ) (plural سَکاها (sakâ-hâ))

  1. Scyth, Scythian (person from Scythia)
  2. (archaic) Sistani (person from Sistan)

Derived terms edit

Saraiki edit

Etymology edit

Inherited from Sanskrit शुष्क (śuṣka), from Proto-Indo-Iranian *Hsúškas, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂sews-.

Cognate with Assamese শুকান (xukan), Bengali শুখা (śukha), English sear, Hindi सूखा (sūkhā) / Urdu سوکھا (sūkhā), Persian خشک (xušk), Romani śuko and Russian сушить (sušitʹ).

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

سُکّا (sukkā)

  1. dry

Declension edit

Declension of سکا
masculine feminine
singular plural singular plural
direct سُکّا (sukkā) سُکّے (sukke) سُکّی (sukkī) سُکِّیاں (sukkīyā̃)
oblique سُکّے (sukke) سُکّے, سُکّیاں (sukke, sukkeyā̃) سُکّی (sukkī) سُکِّیاں (sukkīyā̃)

Urdu edit

 
a Gandharan relief of سکا (sakā, "Scythian, Indo-Scythian") men playing instruments and dancing, Pakistan
 
a depiction of a battle crafted on the handle of a golden سکا hair comb

Etymology edit

Either from Classical Persian سکا (sakā) or a modern learned borrowing from an ancient Indo-Iranian language referring to the same nomadic peoples.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

سکا (sakā?

  1. Scythian; a warlike nomadic people from Scythia
  2. the Indo-Scythians of ancient Afghanistan and Pakistan

Ushojo edit

Noun edit

سکا (sakā)

  1. relative
    Synonym: رشتہ دار (rištah dār)

Adjective edit

سکا (sakā)

  1. own, self