خواجه

Ottoman Turkish

Etymology

From Persian خواجه (xâje).

Noun

خواجه (hoca)

  1. teacher
  2. professor
  3. master
  4. hodja

Descendants

  • Turkish: hoca
    • Albanian: hoxhë
    • English: hodja
    • Greek: χότζα (chótza)
    • French: hodja
    • German: Hodscha
    • Serbo-Croatian: Hodža
    • Portuguese: hodja
  • Albanian: hoxhë
  • Greek: χότζας (chótzas), Χατζάκης (Chatzákis)
  • Hungarian: hodzsa
  • Middle Armenian: խօջայ (xōǰay), խոջայ (xoǰay), խօճայ (xōčay)
    • Armenian: խոջա (xoǰa), հօճա (hōča), խօճա (xōča)
  • Romanian: hoge
  • Serbo-Croatian:
    Cyrillic script: хоџа
    Latin script: hȍdža, Hodžić
  • Slovak: hodža

Persian

Dari خواجه
Iranian Persian
Tajik хоҷа (xoja)

Etymology

Ultimately derived from a Middle Indo-Aryan reflex of Sanskrit उपाध्याय (upādhyāya, teacher; preceptor; spiritual adviser), via Central Asian intermediaries.[1][2] Various Middle Indo-Aryan reflexes are attested from all stages, including Maharastri Prakrit 𑀉𑀯𑀚𑁆𑀛𑀸𑀅 (uvajjhāa), but the Central Asian loaning source most closely resembles an unattested *𑀯𑀸𑀚𑁆𑀛𑀸𑀅 (*vājjhāa) — matching Sindhi واجهو (vājho, Hindu schoolteacher), cf. also Tamil வாத்தியார் (vāttiyār, teacher; instructor; family priest). The initial aspiration in Classical Persian خواجه (xwāja) is also found in Khwarezmian خواجیک (xwʾjyk /xwājīk/, venerated man) and Chinese 和尚 (héshàng, Buddhist monk) (see more there).

Pronunciation

  • (Tajik) IPA(key): /xɔd͡ʒa/

Noun

خواجه (xâje) (plural خواجه‌ها (xâje-hâ) or خواجگان (xâjegân))

  1. lord, master, owner
  2. (archaic) dignitary, gentleman
    Synonyms: مهتر (mehtar), بزرگ (bozorg), سید (seyyed), آقا (âqâ)
  3. (archaic) wealthy man
    Synonyms: مالدار (mâldâr), ثروتمند (servatmand)
  4. (archaic) a polite form of address of a man, mister
  5. Khwajah, vizier
  6. (colloquial, historical) eunuch
    Synonym: اخته (axte)

Derived terms

  • حواجه‌زاده (xâje-zâde)
  • حواجه‌سرا (xâje-sarâ)
  • خواجگی (xâjegi)
  • سرخواجه (sar-xâje)

Descendants

  • Tajik: хоҷа (xoja) / خواجه
  • Bengali: খোজা (khōja)
  • Gujarati: ખોજા (khojā)
  • Kazakh: Қожа (Qoja)
  • Malay: khoja
  • Punjabi: ਖ਼ੋਜਾ (xojā) / خوجہ (xojā)
  • Sindhi: خوجه
  • Turkmen: Hoja
  • Uyghur: خوجا (xoja)
    • Mandarin: 獲嘉获嘉 (huòjiā)
  • Uzbek: xoja, xoʻja
  • Arabic: خَوَاجَة (ḵawāja)
  • Azerbaijani: xoca
  • Bashkir: хужа (xuja)
  • Bengali: খাজা (khaja)
  • Hindustani:
    Hindi: ख़्वाजा (xvājā)
    Urdu: خواجہ (xājā, xvājā)
  • Punjabi: ਖ਼ਵਾਜਾ (xavājā) / خواجہ (xvājā)
  • Sindhi: خواجه
  • Ottoman Turkish: خواجه (hâce, hoca)
    • Turkish: hoca
      • Albanian: hoxhë
      • English: hodja
      • Greek: χότζα (chótza)
      • French: hodja
      • German: Hodscha
      • Serbo-Croatian: Hodža
      • Portuguese: hodja
    • Albanian: hoxhë
    • Greek: χότζας (chótzas), Χατζάκης (Chatzákis)
    • Hungarian: hodzsa
    • Middle Armenian: խօջայ (xōǰay), խոջայ (xoǰay), խօճայ (xōčay)
      • Armenian: խոջա (xoǰa), հօճա (hōča), խօճա (xōča)
    • Romanian: hoge
    • Serbo-Croatian:
      Cyrillic script: хоџа
      Latin script: hȍdža, Hodžić
    • Slovak: hodža

References

  1. Asatrian, Garnik (2011), “Review: Iranian Loanwords in Syriac (Beiträge zur Iranistik 28) by Claudia A. Ciancaglini”, in Iran and the Caucasus, volume 15, issue 1/2, page 324
  2. Asatrian, Garnik (2012), “Marginal remarks on the history of some Persian words”, in Iran and the Caucasus, volume 16, issue 1, page 108

Further reading

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.