See also: مع

Persian edit

Etymology 1 edit

From Middle Persian 𐭬𐭢𐭥 (mgw /⁠mow⁠/), from Old Persian 𐎶𐎦𐎢𐏁 (m-gu-u-š /⁠maguš⁠/).

Pronunciation edit

 

Readings
Classical reading? muğ
Dari reading? muğ
Iranian reading? moğ
Tajik reading? muġ

Noun edit

مُغ (moğ) (plural مُغان (moğân) or مُغ‌ها (moğ-hâ))

  1. (Zoroastrianism) magus
    • c. 1585, عرفی شیرازی ('Orfi Shirazi), “Poem 56”, in قصیده‌ها:
      توشعار ملت اسلامیان بگذار اگر خواهی، که در دیر مغان آیی و اسرار نهان بینی.
      še'âr-e mellat-e eslâmiyân bogzâr agar xâhi, ke dar deyr-e moğân âyi o asrâr-e nehân bini.
      Put aside the customs of the Muslim people if you wish, that you may enter the temples of the magi and see [their] arcane secrets.

Etymology 2 edit

From Middle Persian (maγ, hole). Compare مغاک (mağâk, “hole, pit).

Pronunciation edit

 

Readings
Classical reading? mağ
Dari reading? mağ
Iranian reading? mağ
Tajik reading? maġ

Adjective edit

مغ (mağ)

  1. (dated) deep, abyssal