๐‘––๐‘–ฝ๐‘–๐‘–‚

Apabhramsa

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

Inherited from Prakrit ๐‘€›๐‘€๐‘€”๐‘€‡ (jhaแนƒkhaรฏ), from Ashokan Prakrit *๐‘€›๐‘€“๐‘†๐‘€”๐‘† (*jhakkh, โ€œbabbleโ€, root).[1]

Noun

edit

๐‘––๐‘–ฝ๐‘–๐‘–‚ (jhaแนƒkhaรฏ) (intransitive) (Avahaแนญแนญha)

  1. to cry, lament
    • c. 1380, Vidyapati, ๐‘–Ž๐‘–ฑ๐‘–จ๐‘–ฟ๐‘–๐‘–ฐ๐‘–ฉ๐‘–๐‘–ฏ (kฤซrtilatฤ) [Kirtilata] 3.18.74
      ๐‘–ญ๐‘–๐‘–ฟ๐‘–๐‘–ฒ ๐‘–‘๐‘–จ๐‘–ผ ๐‘–„๐‘–ข๐‘–•๐‘–ฒ ๐‘–š๐‘–จ
      ๐‘–ก๐‘–ฐ๐‘–ก๐‘–ฟ๐‘–Ÿ ๐‘–ก๐‘–ฎ๐‘–ฐ๐‘–ฝ ๐‘––๐‘–ฝ๐‘–๐‘–œ๐‘–ธ ๐‘—‚
      sattu gharamฬ upaju แธara
      ninda nahiแนƒ jhaแนƒkhaแน‡e .
      Fear arose in the enemy's house,
      and instead of sleeping they had to cry.

Descendants

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Turner, Ralph Lilley (1969โ€“1985) โ€œ*jhakkhโ€, in A Comparative Dictionary of the Indo-Aryan Languages, London: Oxford University Press, page 293