সামী
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See also: শামী
Bengali[edit]
Pronunciation[edit]
Etymology 1[edit]
Borrowed from Classical Persian سامی (sâmî), from Arabic سَامِي (sāmī, “high, elevated”). Doublet of আসমা (aśoma), ইসমে আজম (iśome ajom), and সামিয়া (śamiẏa).
Alternative forms[edit]
- সামি (śami)
Proper noun[edit]
সামী • (śami)
- a male given name, Sami, from Arabic
- Coordinate term: সামিয়া (śamiẏa)
References[edit]
- Accessible Dictionary, “সামী” Bengali-Bengali, Government of Bangladesh
Etymology 2[edit]
Borrowed from Arabic سَامِيّ (sāmiyy).
Adjective[edit]
সামী • (śami) (comparative আরও সামী, superlative সবচেয়ে সামী)
- Of or pertaining to a subdivision of Afroasiatic Semitic languages: Amharic, Arabic, Aramaic, Syriac, Akkadian, Hebrew, Maltese, Tigrigna, Phoenician etc.
- Of or pertaining to the Semites; of or pertaining to one or more Semitic peoples.
Noun[edit]
সামী • (śami) (objective সামী (śami) or সামীকে (śamike), genitive সামীর (śamir), locative সামীতে (śamite))
Pali[edit]
Alternative forms[edit]
Alternative forms
Noun[edit]
সামী
- Bengali script form of sāmī, which is inflection of সামিন্:
- nominative singular
- nominative/vocative/accusative plural (sāmin, “master”)
Categories:
- Bengali terms with IPA pronunciation
- Bengali terms borrowed from Classical Persian
- Bengali terms derived from Classical Persian
- Bengali terms derived from Arabic
- Bengali doublets
- Bengali terms derived from the Arabic root س م و
- Bengali lemmas
- Bengali proper nouns
- Bengali given names
- Bengali male given names
- Bengali male given names from Arabic
- Bengali terms borrowed from Arabic
- Bengali adjectives
- Bengali nouns
- bn:Ethnonyms
- bn:Asia
- Pali non-lemma forms
- Pali noun forms
- Pali noun forms in Bengali script