ছা
Bengali
Alternative forms
- ছাঁ (chã)
Etymology
Inherited from Middle Bengali ছাও (chaō), from Prakrit 𑀙𑀸𑀯 (chāva), from Sanskrit *छाप (chāpa, “young one”). Doublet of ছানা (chana) and ছাওয়াল (chaōẇal). Cognate with Assamese ছাৱ (saw) and Romani ćhavo.
Pronunciation
Inflection
| Inflection of ছা | |||
| nominative | ছা cha | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| objective | ছাকে chake | ||
| genitive | ছার char | ||
| Indefinite forms | |||
| nominative | ছা cha | ||
| objective | ছাকে chake | ||
| genitive | ছার char | ||
| Definite forms | |||
| singular | plural | ||
| nominative | ছাটা, ছাটি chaṭa (colloquial), chaṭi (formal) |
ছারা chara | |
| objective | ছাটাকে, ছাটিকে chaṭake (colloquial), chaṭike (formal) |
ছাদের(কে) chader(ke) | |
| genitive | ছাটার, ছাটির chaṭar (colloquial), chaṭir (formal) |
ছাদের chader | |
| Objective Note: In some dialects -রে (-re) marks this case instead of -কে (-ke). | |||
References
- Turner, Ralph Lilley (1969–1985) “chāpa”, in A Comparative Dictionary of the Indo-Aryan Languages, London: Oxford University Press, page 275
Rabha
| < ০ | ১ | ২ > |
|---|---|---|
| Cardinal : ছা (sa) | ||
Alternative forms
Etymology
Cognate with Garo ছা (sa), Tiwa কিশ্বা (ksha), Bodo (India) से (se).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /sa/
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