وال

Arabic

Etymology 1

Root
و ل ي (w-l-y)

Derived from the active participle of وَلِيَ (waliya, to administer, to govern).

Noun

وَالٍ • (wālin) m (construct state وَالِي (wālī), plural وُلَاة (wulāh))

  1. regent, governor, prefect of a province (وِلَايَة (wilāya))
Declension
References

Verb

وَالِ • (wāli) (form III)

  1. second-person masculine singular active imperative of وَالَى (wālā)

Persian

Alternative forms

  • اوال (avâl), افال (afâl) (obsolete)

Etymology

From Proto-Indo-Iranian *(s)káras, from Proto-Iranian *(s)káras, from Proto-Indo-European *(s)kʷálos. Compare Avestan 𐬐𐬀𐬭𐬀 (kara, kind of fish).

Noun

وال • (vâl) (plural وال‌ها (vâl-hâ))

  1. whale
  2. sperm whale

Descendants

  • Ottoman Turkish: وال (val)

Punjabi

Etymology

Inherited from Sanskrit वाल (vā́la).

Pronunciation

Noun

واࣇ • (vāḷ) m (Gurmukhi spelling ਵਾਲ਼ or ਵਾਲ)

  1. hair

Declension

Declension of وال
dir. sg. واࣇ (vāḷ)
dir. pl. واࣇ (vāḷ)
singular plural
direct واࣇ (vāḷ) واࣇ (vāḷ)
oblique واࣇ (vāḷ) واࣇاں (vāḷāṉ)
vocative واࣇا (vāḷā) واࣇو (vāḷo)
ablative واࣇوں (vāḷoṉ)
locative واࣇے (vāḷe) واࣇِیں (vāḷīṉ)
instrumental واࣇے (vāḷe) واࣇِیں (vāḷīṉ)

Further reading

  • Iqbal, Salah ud-Din (2002) “وال”, in vaḍḍī panjābī lughat‎ (in Punjabi), Lahore: ʻAzīz Pablisharz
  • وال”, in Punjabi-English Dictionary, Patiala: Punjabi University, 2024
  • Turner, Ralph Lilley (1969–1985) “vā́la”, in A Comparative Dictionary of the Indo-Aryan Languages, London: Oxford University Press, page 674

Saraiki

Etymology

Inherited from Sanskrit वाल (vāla)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /vaːl/

Noun

وال (vāl) m

  1. hair
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