कटु
Sanskrit
Alternative scripts
Alternative scripts
- ᬓᬝᬸ (Balinese script)
- কটু (Assamese script)
- কটু (Bengali script)
- 𑰎𑰘𑰲 (Bhaiksuki script)
- 𑀓𑀝𑀼 (Brahmi script)
- 𑌕𑌟𑍁 (Grantha script)
- કટુ (Gujarati script)
- ਕਟੁ (Gurmukhi script)
- ꦏꦛꦸ (Javanese script)
- កដុ (Khmer script)
- ಕಟು (Kannada script)
- ກຏຸ (Lao script)
- കടു (Malayalam script)
- 𑘎𑘘𑘳 (Modi script)
- ᢉᠠᢌᠤ (Mongolian script)
- ᡬᠠᢞᡠ (Manchu script)
- ကဋု (Burmese script)
- 𑦮𑦸𑧔 (Nandinagari script)
- 𑐎𑐚𑐸 (Newa script)
- କଟୁ (Oriya script)
- ꢒꢜꢸ (Saurashtra script)
- 𑆑𑆛𑆶 (Sharada script)
- 𑖎𑖘𑖲 (Siddham script)
- කටු (Sinhalese script)
- కటు (Telugu script)
- กฏุ (Thai script)
- ཀ་ཊུ (Tibetan script)
- 𑒏𑒙𑒳 (Tirhuta script)
Etymology
From Proto-Dravidian *kaṭ-u (“be pungent; sting”).[1][2] Compare Old Tamil 𑀓𑀝𑀼 (kaṭu).
Sanskrit grammarians tied it to the root कृत् (kṛt, “to cut”) but this is not accepted in modern scholarship. Compare Kamkata-viri kařó, këřó.
Descendants
- Maharastri Prakrit: 𑀓𑀟𑀼 (kaḍu)
- ⇒ Sanskrit: कटुक (káṭuka) (+ Middle Indo-Aryan -𑀓- (-ka-))
Terms inherited from कटुक (káṭuka)
- Pali: kaṭuka
- Prakrit: 𑀓𑀟𑀼𑀅 (kaḍua)
- Central:
- Eastern:
- Magadhi Prakrit:
- Old Bengali: কডুআ (kaḍuā), কডু (kaḍu)
- Middle Bengali: কড়ুয়া (kôṛuẏa)
- Bengali: কড়া (koṛa), কড়ুয়া (koṛuẏa)
- Middle Bengali: কড়ুয়া (kôṛuẏa)
- Maithili: kaṛū
- Devanagari: कड़ू
- Tirhuta: 𑒏𑒛𑓃𑒴
- Old Bengali: কডুআ (kaḍuā), কডু (kaḍu)
- Magadhi Prakrit:
- Southern:
- Western:
References
- Southworth, Franklin (2005) Linguistic Archaeology of South Asia, Routledge, →ISBN, page 72
- Burrow, T.; Emeneau, M. B. (1984), “kaṭu”, in A Dravidian etymological dictionary, 2nd edition, Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 1135.
Further reading
- Turner, Ralph Lilley (1969–1985), “kaṭú -- , káṭuka”, in A Comparative Dictionary of the Indo-Aryan Languages, London: Oxford University Press, page 132
- Monier Williams (1899), “कटु”, in A Sanskrit–English Dictionary, […], new edition, Oxford: At the Clarendon Press, →OCLC, page 244.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.