پتر
Kundal Shahi edit
Noun edit
پتر (puter)
References edit
Punjabi edit
Etymology edit
Inherited from Ashokan Prakrit [Term?], from Sanskrit पुत्र (putra), ultimately from Proto-Indo-Iranian *putrás (“son”) (itself from Proto-Indo-European *putlós).
Pronunciation edit
- (Standard Punjabi) IPA(key): /pʊt̪.t̪əɾᵊ/, [pot̪.t̪əɾə̆]
Audio (PK) (file) - Rhymes: -əɾ
Noun edit
پُتَّر • (puttar) m (feminine پُتَّری or دھِی, Gurmukhi spelling ਪੁੱਤਰ) (Majhi, standard)
- son, child
- 2007, نوید شہزاد [Navīd Shahzād], پنجابى لوک گیتاں دا موضوعاتى مطالعہ [Panjābī lok gītān̲ dā mauz̤ūʻātī mut̤ālaʻah, A Thematic Study of Punjabi Folk Songs][1], Lahore: مقصود پبلشرز [mqṣod pblśrz, Maqsood Publishers], →OCLC, page 384:
- نونہہ جدوں پتر دی ماں بن دی اے تے سوہرے گھر اوہدا قدر ودھیرا ہو جاندا اے۔
- nūṉh jadoṉ puttar dī māṉ baṇ dī ae te sohre ghar ohdā qadar vadherā ho jāndā ae.
- When a daughter-in-law becomes the mother of a child, her value at her in-laws' place increases
Usage notes edit
Can be used specifically to refer to a male child, or generally a child, regardless of gender.
Declension edit
The template Template:pnb-noun-m-c does not use the parameter(s):2=puttarPlease see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.
Declension of پتر | ||
---|---|---|
dir. sg. | پُتَّر (puttar) | |
dir. pl. | پُتَّر (puttar) | |
singular | plural | |
direct | پُتَّر (puttar) | پُتَّر (puttar) |
oblique | پُتَّر (puttar) | پُتَّراں (puttarāṉ) |
vocative | پُتَّرا (puttarā) | پُتَّرو (puttaro) |
ablative | پُتَّروں (puttaroṉ) | — |
locative | پُتَّرے (puttare) | پُتَّرِیں (puttarīṉ) |
instrumental | پُتَّرے (puttare) | پُتَّرِیں (puttarīṉ) |
Further reading edit
- Iqbal, Salah ud-Din (2002) “پُتّر”, in vaḍḍī panjābī lughat (in Punjabi), Lahore: ʻAzīz Pablisharz
- “ਪੁੱਤਰ”, in Punjabi-English Dictionary, Patiala: Punjabi University, 2024
- Turner, Ralph Lilley (1969–1985) “putrá”, in A Comparative Dictionary of the Indo-Aryan Languages, London: Oxford University Press, page 468
Saraiki edit
Etymology 1 edit
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
پَتْر (patr) m
Etymology 2 edit
Inherited from Sanskrit पुत्र (putra), from Proto-Indo-Iranian *putrás (“son”) ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *putlós.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
پُتْر (putr) m
Urdu edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from Sanskrit पितृ (pitṛ), from Proto-Indo-Iranian *pHtā́, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *ph₂tḗr.