Persian

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

Borrowed from Arabic عِيَال (ʕiyāl).

Pronunciation

edit
 

Readings
Classical reading? iyāl, ayāl
Dari reading? iyāl, ayāl
Iranian reading? iyâl, eyâl
Tajik reading? iyol, ayol

Noun

edit

عیال (iyāliyâl or ayāleyâl)

  1. plural of عیل (ayyileyyel, wife, offspring), wife (and offspring), household, family
    Synonyms: خاندان (xândân), فامیل (fâmil), عائله (â'ele)
    • 13th century, Farīd ud-Dīn ʿAṭṭār, پندنامه [Pandnāma]‎[1]:
      آدمی را چار چیز آرد شکست
      با تو گویم گوش دار ای حق‌پرست
      دشمن بسیار و وام بی‌شمار
      شغل بی‌حد و عیال بی‌قطار
      ādamē rā čār čīz ārad šikast
      bā tu gōyam gōš dār ay haq-parast
      dušman-i bisyār u wām-i bēšumār
      šuğl-i bēhadd u iyāl-i bēqitār
      Four things bring destruction upon men
      O' truthseeker, I will tell you, so listen
      Many enemies and countless loans
      Limitless work and dysfunctional families
    عیالش را طلاق داد.
    iyâlaš râ talâq dâd.
    He divorced his wife.
    او ده سر عیال دارد.
    u dah sar iyâl dârad.
    He has a family of ten members.

Derived terms

edit
  • عیالوار ('iyālwāriyâlvâr, having a (large) family)

Descendants

edit
  • Azerbaijani: əyal (wife; family)
  • Kazakh: әйел (äiel, woman; wife)
  • Turkmen: aýal ((married) woman; wife)
  • Uyghur: ئايال (ayal, woman; wife)
  • Uzbek: ayol (woman)

References

edit