Indonesian

edit
 
Indonesian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia id

Etymology

edit

From Malay niaga, from Classical Malay niaga, back-formation from beniaga (trading), which borrowed from Sanskrit वाणिज्यक (vāṇijyaka, trader).

Pronunciation

edit
  • IPA(key): [niˈaɡa]
  • Hyphenation: ni‧a‧ga

Noun

edit

niaga (first-person possessive niagaku, second-person possessive niagamu, third-person possessive niaganya)

  1. trading.
    Synonym: dagang

Affixed terms

edit

Further reading

edit

Malay

edit

Etymology

edit

Back-formation from beniaga or berniaga (“trading”), borrowed from Sanskrit वाणिज्यक (vāṇijyaka, trader) from Sanskrit वणिज् (vaṇij, trade, commerce; merchant).

Pronunciation

edit
  • Rhymes: -a

Noun

edit

niaga (plural niaga-niaga, informal 1st possessive niagaku, 2nd possessive niagamu, 3rd possessive niaganya)

  1. trading.
    Synonyms: dagang, jual beli

Verb

edit

niaga (Jawi spelling نياݢ)

  1. to trade

Derived terms

edit

Descendants

edit
  • Indonesian: niaga

References

edit
  • Wilkinson, Richard James (1901) “نياݢ niaga”, in A Malay-English dictionary, Hong Kong: Kelly & Walsh limited, page 676
  • Wilkinson, Richard James (1932) “niaga”, in A Malay-English dictionary (romanised), volume II, Mytilene, Greece: Salavopoulos & Kinderlis, page 172

Further reading

edit