སྨན
Dzongkha
Etymology
From Proto-Sino-Tibetan *s-man (“medicine”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /men˥/
- (literary) IPA(key): /mɛːn˥/
Sherpa
Etymology
From Proto-Sino-Tibetan *s-man (“medicine”). Cognates include Sulung ɕə³³min³³, Tshangla man⁵⁵, Thakali mɔn, Southern Pumi m̥ɛ̃⁵⁵, Queyu sme⁵⁵, Achang mjɑ³¹.
Tibetan
Etymology
From Proto-Sino-Tibetan *s-man (“medicine”). Compare Drung mvn (“medicine”), Chinese 萬 (“ritual dance”), Burmese မန်း (man:, “utter mystic words to heal or ward off evil”).
Pronunciation
- Old Tibetan: /*zman/
- Lhasa: /mɛ̃˥˥/
- Old Tibetan:
- IPA(key): /*zman/ (reconstructed)
- Ü-Tsang
- Tibetan pinyin: maenf
- (Lhasa) IPA(key): /mɛ̃˥˥/
Derived terms
- གློག་སྨན (glog sman, “battery”)
- གཉིད་སྨན (gnyid sman)
- དྲི་ངན་སངས་སྨན (dri ngan sangs sman, “deodorant”)
- ན་ཟུག་འཇགས་སྨན (na zug 'jags sman, “painkiller”)
- ན་ཟུག་འཇགས་ཡག་གི་སྨན (na zug 'jags yag gi sman, “painkiller”)
- འབུ་སྨན ('bu sman, “insecticide”)
- སྦི་ཅི་ལིའི་སྨན (sbi ci li'i sman, “battery”)
- སྨན་ཁང (sman khang)
- སྨན་ཁབ (sman khab, “hypodermic needle”)
- སྨན་ཁྲོག (sman khrog)
- སྨན་བཅོས (sman bcos)
- སྨན་ཐུན (sman thun)
- སྨན་ཐོ་ (sman tho)
- སྨན་སྣ (sman sna)
- སྨན་པ (sman pa)
- སྨན་ཚོང་ཁང (sman tshong khang)
- སྨན་རས (sman ras, “bandage”)
- སྨན་རྫས (sman rdzas)
- སྨན་ལེབ (sman leb)
- ཤུབས་སྨན (shubs sman)
- བཤལ་སྨན (bshal sman, “laxative”)
- སོ་སྨན (so sman)
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.