See also: دیز, دير, and د ي ر

Brahui

edit

Etymology

edit

Inherited from Proto-Dravidian *nīr. Cognate with Badaga நீரு (nīru), Kannada ನೀರು (nīru), Malayalam നീര് (nīrŭ), Tamil நீர் (nīr), Toda நீர் (nīr), Tulu ನೀರ್ (nīrŭ), Telugu నీరు (nīru).

Noun

edit

دِیر (dīr)

  1. water

References

edit
  • Denys Bray, The Brāhūī problem (1934)

Persian

edit
 
Persian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia fa

Etymology 1

edit

From Middle Persian 𐫅𐫃𐫡 (dgr /⁠daǧr⁠/), 𐫅𐫏𐫡 (dyr /⁠dēr⁠/), from Old Persian 𐎭𐎼𐎥 (d-r-g /⁠darga⁠/, long), from Proto-Iranian *dr̥Hgáh, from Proto-Indo-Iranian *dr̥Hgʰás, from Proto-Indo-European *dl̥h₁gʰós.[1]

Pronunciation

edit
 

Readings
Classical reading? dēr
Dari reading? dēr
Iranian reading? dir
Tajik reading? der

Adjective

edit
Dari دیر
Iranian Persian
Tajik дер

دیر (dir) (comparative دیرتَر (dir-tar), superlative دیرتَرین (dir-tarin))

  1. late; tardy
    Antonym: زود (zud)
  2. long (of time)

Adverb

edit

دیر (dir)

  1. late
    Antonym: زود (zud)
  2. long (of time)

Descendants

edit
  • Assamese: দেৰি (deri)
  • Bengali: দেরি (deri)
  • Hindi: देर (der)
  • Urdu: دیر (der)

Etymology 2

edit

Borrowed from Arabic دَيْر (dayr); see there for further information.

Pronunciation

edit
 
یک دیر (yek deyr, a monastery)
 

Readings
Classical reading? dayr
Dari reading? dayr
Iranian reading? deyr
Tajik reading? dayr

Noun

edit

دیر (deyr) (plural ادیار (adyâr) or دیرها (deyr-hâ))

  1. (literary, archaic) monastery, convent
    Synonym: خانقاه (xânqâh)

References

edit
  1. ^ Rastorgujeva, V. S., Edelʹman, D. I. (2003) Etimologičeskij slovarʹ iranskix jazykov [Etymological Dictionary of Iranian Languages] (in Russian), volume 2, Moscow: Vostochnaya Literatura, page 350

Ushojo

edit

Etymology

edit

From Persian دیر (der).

Adjective

edit

دیر (der)

  1. late