آدم

See also: أدم

Arabic

Etymology

Inherited from Proto-Semitic *ʾadm-; cognate with Hebrew אָדָם (âdâm), Akkadian 𒁁𒈪 (adamu), Ugaritic 𐎀𐎄𐎎 (adm).[1]

Noun

آدَم (ʾādam) m (plural آدَم (ʾādam))

  1. human
  2. person
  3. man
  4. (plural, collective) mankind, humankind, collectively man

Declension

Proper noun

آدَم (ʾādam) m

  1. (religion) Adam
  2. A male given name, Adam

Declension

Descendants

See also


Ottoman Turkish

Etymology

From Old Anatolian Turkish [script needed] (ādem), from Arabic آدَم (ʾādam); a cognate of Hebrew אָדָם (âdam).

Noun

آدم (âdem, adam)

  1. human
  2. person
  3. man

Proper noun

آدم (Âdem)

  1. (religion) Adam
  2. A male given name: Adem, Adam

Descendants


Persian

Etymology

Borrowed from Arabic آدَم (ʾādam); a cognate of Hebrew אָדָם (âdam).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɒːˈdæm/
  • (file)

Noun

Dari Persian آدم
Iranian Persian آدم
Tajiki Persian одам (odam)

آدم (âdam) (plural آدم‌ها (âdam-hâ))

  1. human
  2. person
  3. man
  4. bloke

Descendants

Proper noun

آدم (âdam)

  1. (religion) Adam
  2. A male given name, Adam.
  • آدام (âdâm)

Urdu

Etymology

Borrowed from Arabic آدَم (ʾādam); a cognate of Hebrew אָדָם (âdam).

Noun

آدم (ādam) m (Hindi spelling आदम)

  1. man

Proper noun

آدم (Ādam) m (Hindi spelling आदम)

  1. (religion) Adam
  2. A male given name, Adam
  1. “Proto-Semitic Root *ʔadam-; Number 2641” in Georgiy Starostin, Tower of Babel, Copyright 1998-2003 by S. Starostin.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.