कश
Hindi
Etymology
Borrowed from Classical Persian کش (kaš), a form of کشیدن (kašīdan). Doublet of कसना (kasnā).
Pronunciation
- (Delhi Hindi) IPA(key): /kəʃ/, [kɐʃ]
Declension
Derived terms
- कश खींचना (kaś khī̃cnā)
- कश लगाना (kaś lagānā)
- कश लेना (kaś lenā)
References
- McGregor, Ronald Stuart (1993) “कश”, in The Oxford Hindi-English Dictionary, London: Oxford University Press
Sanskrit
Alternative scripts
Alternative scripts
- কশ (Assamese script)
- ᬓᬰ (Balinese script)
- কশ (Bengali script)
- 𑰎𑰫 (Bhaiksuki script)
- 𑀓𑀰 (Brahmi script)
- ကၐ (Burmese script)
- કશ (Gujarati script)
- ਕਸ਼ (Gurmukhi script)
- 𑌕𑌶 (Grantha script)
- ꦏꦯ (Javanese script)
- 𑂍𑂬 (Kaithi script)
- ಕಶ (Kannada script)
- កឝ (Khmer script)
- ກຨ (Lao script)
- കശ (Malayalam script)
- ᡬᠠᡧᠠ (Manchu script)
- 𑘎𑘫 (Modi script)
- ᢉᠠᠱᠠ᠋ (Mongolian script)
- 𑦮𑧋 (Nandinagari script)
- 𑐎𑐱 (Newa script)
- କଶ (Odia script)
- ꢒꢯ (Saurashtra script)
- 𑆑𑆯 (Sharada script)
- 𑖎𑖫 (Siddham script)
- කශ (Sinhalese script)
- 𑩜𑩿 (Soyombo script)
- 𑚊𑚧 (Takri script)
- கஶ (Tamil script)
- కశ (Telugu script)
- กศ (Thai script)
- ཀ་ཤ (Tibetan script)
- 𑒏𑒬 (Tirhuta script)
- 𑨋𑨮 (Zanabazar Square script)
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Declension
Masculine a-stem declension of कश (káśa) | |||
---|---|---|---|
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
Nominative | कशः káśaḥ |
कशौ / कशा¹ káśau / káśā¹ |
कशाः / कशासः¹ káśāḥ / káśāsaḥ¹ |
Vocative | कश káśa |
कशौ / कशा¹ káśau / káśā¹ |
कशाः / कशासः¹ káśāḥ / káśāsaḥ¹ |
Accusative | कशम् káśam |
कशौ / कशा¹ káśau / káśā¹ |
कशान् káśān |
Instrumental | कशेन káśena |
कशाभ्याम् káśābhyām |
कशैः / कशेभिः¹ káśaiḥ / káśebhiḥ¹ |
Dative | कशाय káśāya |
कशाभ्याम् káśābhyām |
कशेभ्यः káśebhyaḥ |
Ablative | कशात् káśāt |
कशाभ्याम् káśābhyām |
कशेभ्यः káśebhyaḥ |
Genitive | कशस्य káśasya |
कशयोः káśayoḥ |
कशानाम् káśānām |
Locative | कशे káśe |
कशयोः káśayoḥ |
कशेषु káśeṣu |
Notes |
|
References
- Monier Williams (1899) “कश”, in A Sanskrit–English Dictionary, […], new edition, Oxford: At the Clarendon Press, →OCLC, page 265.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.