Chhattisgarhi

edit

Etymology

edit

Semi-learned borrowing from Sanskrit भाषा (bhāṣā). First attested in c. 14th century as Old Awadhi भाखा (bhākhā). Doublet of भासा (bhāsā).

Pronunciation

edit
  • IPA(key): /bʱaː.kʰaː/, [bʱaː.kʰaː]
  • Hyphenation: भा‧खा

Noun

edit

भाखा (bhākhā) (Odia script ଭାଖା)

  1. language
    भाखा लहुटानाbhākhā lahuṭānāto copy

Further reading

edit
  • डॉ॰ गीतेश अमरोहित [Dr Gitesh Amrohit] (2015) “भाखा”, in मानक छत्तीसगढ़ी शब्दकोश [Standard Chhattisgarhi Dictionary] (in Hindi), अमीनपारा चौक, पुरानी बस्ती, रायपुर [Aminpara Chowk, Purani Basti, Raipur]: वैभव प्रकाशन [Vaibhav Prakashan], →ISBN, page 231.
  • चंद्राकर, चंद्रकुमार [Chandrakar, Chandrakumar] (2012) “भाखा”, in वृहत् छत्तीसगढ़ी शब्दकोश [vŕhat chattīsgaṛhī śabdakoś, Large Chhattisgarhi Dictionary] (in Hindi), Raipur, Chhattisgarh: छत्तीसगढ़ राज्य हिंदी ग्रंथ अकादमी [Chhattisgarh Hindi Granth Academy], →ISBN, page 688, column 2.

Hindi

edit

Etymology

edit

Semi-learned borrowing from Sanskrit भाषा (bhāṣā).[1] First attested in c. 1599 as Middle Hindi بھاکا (bhaka). From regional (especially Braj) pronunciation of Sanskrit भाषा (bhāṣā), common before the Sanskritisation of Hindi. Doublet of भाषा (bhāṣā).

Pronunciation

edit
  • (Delhi) IPA(key): /bʱɑː.kʰɑː/, [bʱäː.kʰäː]
  • Hyphenation: भा‧खा
  • Rhymes: -ɑː

Noun

edit

भाखा (bhākhāf (Urdu spelling بھاکھا)

  1. (dialectal) language, speech
    Synonyms: भाषा (bhāṣā), बोली (bolī), ज़बान (zabān), लिसान (lisān)
  2. (obsolete) the Hindi language

Declension

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ McGregor, Ronald Stuart (1993) “भाखा”, in The Oxford Hindi-English Dictionary, London: Oxford University Press, page 763

Further reading

edit