Indonesian edit

Etymology edit

From Malay anggota, anggauta, from Classical Malay اڠڬوتا (anggota), اڠڬاوتا (anggauta), from Prakrit [Term?] (aṅga + *𑀳𑀼𑀢 (*huta)), from Sanskrit अङ्ग (aṅga, member, a limb) +‎ भूत (bhūta, person, literally living being).[1] Compare to Sanskrit अङ्गभूत (aṅgabhūta, built-in).

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): [aŋˈɡot̪a]
  • Hyphenation: ang‧go‧ta

Noun edit

anggota (first-person possessive anggotaku, second-person possessive anggotamu, third-person possessive anggotanya)

  1. body part (especially limb)
  2. member
    Synonym: warga
  3. part, component
  4. (colloquial) a member of legislative, army or police
  5. (set theory) element
    Synonyms: elemen, unsur

Derived terms edit

Terms derived from anggota

Compounds edit

References edit

  1. ^ Tom Hoogervorst (2017 December 31) Andrea Acri, Roger Blench, Alexandra Landmann, editor, 9. The Role of “Prakrit” in Maritime Southeast Asia through 101 Etymologies[1], ISEAS Publishing, →DOI, →ISBN, pages 375–440

Further reading edit