پشم

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See also: بسم, تشم, and تسم

Persian

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Dari پشم
Iranian Persian
Tajik пашм
پشم

Etymology

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From Proto-Iranian *pášma, from Proto-Indo-Iranian *páćšma (hair, bristles), from Proto-Indo-European *poḱ-s-mn̥ (hair, whiskers), from *peḱ- (to shear, pluck). Cognate with Avestan 𐬞𐬀𐬱𐬨𐬀𐬥 (pašman), Sanskrit पक्ष्मन् (pakṣman).

Pronunciation

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Readings
Classical reading? pašm
Dari reading? pašm
Iranian reading? pašm
Tajik reading? pašm

Noun

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پشم (pašm)

  1. wool
    Synonym: صوف (suf)
    پشمِ گوسفندpašm-e gusfandfleece (lit. sheep wool)
    • c. 1080, ʿUmar Khayyām, نوروزنامه:
      و از پس او طهمورث بنشست، و سی سال پادشاهی کرد، و دیوان را در طاعت آورد، و بازارها و کوچها بنهاد، و ابریشم و پشم ببافت، و رهبان بزسپ در ایام او بیرون آمد، و دین صابیان آورد، و او دین بپذیرفت، و زنار بر بست، و آفتاب را پرستید، و مردمان را دبیری آموخت []
      u az pas-i ō tahmōras binišast, u sī sāl pādšāhī kard, u dēwān rā dar tā'at āward, u bāzār-hā u kōča-hā binihād, u abrēšum⁠ u pašm bibāft, u ruhbān-i buzasp dar ayām-i ō bērūn āmad, u dīn-i sābiyān āwarad, u ō dīn bipaḏīruft, u zunnār bar bast, u āftāb rā parastīd, u mardumān rā dabīrī āmōxt []
      And after him, Tahmōras sat [on the throne] and ruled for thirty years. He forced the demons into submission, built markets and alleyways, and wove with silk and wool. Buzasp the Monk appeared in his days, and he [Tahmōras] accepted the faith of the Sabians, bound the girdle on himself, and worshipped the sun. And he taught people the arts of writing []
      (Classical Persian transliteration)
  2. (slang) androgenic hair
    پشمِ سینهpašm-e sinechest hair
  3. (slang) pubic hair

Derived terms

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Further reading

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  • M. Tavoosî, A Glossary of Shâyast Nê Shâyast, Shirâz University publications, 1986, pages 123 and 125
  • Nourai, Ali (2011) An Etymological Dictionary of Persian, English and other Indo-European Languages, page 357
  • Pokorny, Julius (1959) “797”, in Indogermanisches etymologisches Wörterbuch [Indo-European Etymological Dictionary] (in German), volume 3, Bern, München: Francke Verlag, page 797</ref>