সামী

See also: শামী

Bengali

Pronunciation

  • (Rarh) IPA(key): /sami/, [ˈsamiˑ]

Etymology 1

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

  • সামি (śami)

Proper noun

সামী • (śami)

  1. a male given name, Sami, from Arabic
    Coordinate term: সামিয়া (śamiẏa)

References

Etymology 2

Borrowed from Arabic سَامِيّ (sāmiyy).

Adjective

সামী • (śami) (comparative আরও সামী, superlative সবচেয়ে সামী)

  1. Of or pertaining to a subdivision of Afroasiatic Semitic languages: Amharic, Arabic, Aramaic, Syriac, Akkadian, Hebrew, Maltese, Tigrigna, Phoenician etc.
  2. Of or pertaining to the Semites; of or pertaining to one or more Semitic peoples.

Noun

সামী • (śami) (objective সামী (śami) or সামীকে (śamike), genitive সামীর (śamir), locative সামীতে (śamite))

  1. Semite, the Semitic people

Pali

Alternative forms

Noun

সামী

  1. Bengali script form of sāmī, which is inflection of সামিন্:
    1. nominative singular
    2. nominative/vocative/accusative plural (sāmin, master)
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