ইলিশ
Bengali
Alternative forms
- ইলশা (ilośa), ইলশে (ilośe)
Etymology
Semi-learned borrowing from Sanskrit इलीश (ilīśa), a compound of इल् (il, “to go, move”) + ईश (īśa, “lord, master, chief”), literally meaning "the chief of those which move (in water)", referring to the perceived taste of the fish.[1] The first element is from Proto-Indo-European *h₁elh₂- (“to drive, move, go”) (compare Ancient Greek ἐλαύνω (elaúnō, “to drive”), Latin alacer (“lively, active, brisk”), Irish élaim (“flee”), Proto-Germanic *alaną (“to spurn, drive”), *lanō (“lane”)).[2]
Pronunciation
References
- দাস, জ্ঞানেন্দ্রমোহন (1937) “ইলিশ”, in Dictionary of the Bengali Language (Self-pronouncing, Etymological & Explanatory) with Appendices (in Bengali), 2nd edition, কলিকাতা: দি ইণ্ডিয়ান্ পাব্লিশিং হাউস, page 282
- Mallory, J. P., Adams, D. Q., editors (1997), Encyclopedia of Indo-European culture, London, Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, page 228
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