deb ther: Difference between revisions
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historical book, annals [RY] | historical book, annals [RY] | ||
1) annals, historical annals, recorded annals, chronicles, historical chronicles, recorded chronicles, records, historical records; 2) record books, documents, historical documents, catalogs, historical catalogs, catalog of records, registers, historical registers, recorded registers, listings, historical listings, recorded listings; 3) books, scrolls. Borrowed from Persian دفتر (''daftar''), ultimately from Ancient Greek διφθέρᾱ (''diphthérā'', “parchment”). There is also an irregular spelling with གཏེར ([[deb gter]]) based on a 'folk etymology' connecting it to the meaning "treasure", due to the accidental similarity of the the Persian-Greek words ''tar/thérā'' with the Tibetan word. Thus it appears that this Greco-Persian etymology is also the origin of ''[[deb]]'', the main Tibetan word for "book", as the monosyllabic [[deb]] is derived from the longer word ''[[deb ther]]''. [Erick Tsiknopoulos] | |||
[[Category:Tibetan Dictionary]] [[Category:rydic2003]] [[Category:da]] | [[Category:Tibetan Dictionary]] [[Category:rydic2003]] [[Category:da]] |
Revision as of 04:47, 3 April 2021
annal, chronicle, records, documents, records, catalogues, registers, lists, books [RY]
annals, chronicle, records, documents, records, catalogues, registers, lists, books [IW]
register, documents, catalogues, anything recorded in writing or stitched together [JV]
historical book, annals [RY]
1) annals, historical annals, recorded annals, chronicles, historical chronicles, recorded chronicles, records, historical records; 2) record books, documents, historical documents, catalogs, historical catalogs, catalog of records, registers, historical registers, recorded registers, listings, historical listings, recorded listings; 3) books, scrolls. Borrowed from Persian دفتر (daftar), ultimately from Ancient Greek διφθέρᾱ (diphthérā, “parchment”). There is also an irregular spelling with གཏེར (deb gter) based on a 'folk etymology' connecting it to the meaning "treasure", due to the accidental similarity of the the Persian-Greek words tar/thérā with the Tibetan word. Thus it appears that this Greco-Persian etymology is also the origin of deb, the main Tibetan word for "book", as the monosyllabic deb is derived from the longer word deb ther. [Erick Tsiknopoulos]