See also: مملكت

Persian

edit

Etymology

edit

Borrowed from Arabic مَمْلَكَة (mamlaka, kingdom).

Pronunciation

edit
 

Readings
Classical reading? mamlakat
Dari reading? mamlakat
Iranian reading? mamlekat
Tajik reading? mamlakat

Noun

edit
Dari مملکت
Iranian Persian
Tajik мамлакат

مملکت (mamlekat)

  1. country

Urdu

edit

Etymology

edit

First attested in c. 1635 Middle Hindi مملکت (mamlakat /⁠mmlkt⁠/), borrowed from Classical Persian مَمْلَکَت (mamlakat), from Arabic مَمْلَكَة (mamlaka).

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

مَمْلُکَت or مَمْلَکَت (mamlukat or mamlakatf (Hindi spelling ममलकत)

  1. kingdom; empire (dominion)
  2. (figuratively) grandeur, magnificence[1]
edit

See also

edit

Further reading

edit
  • مملکت”, in اُردُو لُغَت (urdū luġat) (in Urdu), Ministry of Education: Government of Pakistan, 2017.
  • مملکت”, in ریخْتَہ لُغَت (rexta luġat) - Rekhta Dictionary [Urdu dictionary with meanings in Hindi & English], Noida, India: Rekhta Foundation, 2024.
  • Qureshi, Bashir Ahmad (1971) “مملکت”, in Kitabistan's 20th Century Standard Dictionary‎, Lahore: Kitabistan Pub. Co.
  • Platts, John T. (1884) “مملکت”, in A dictionary of Urdu, classical Hindi, and English, London: W. H. Allen & Co.
  1. ^ Platts
  • John Shakespear (1834) “مملکت”, in A dictionary, Hindustani and English: with a copious index, fitting the work to serve, also, as a dictionary of English and Hindustani, 3rd edition, London: J.L. Cox and Son, →OCLC