سند

Arabic

Etymology 1

From the root س ن د (s-n-d).

Verb

سَنَدَ (sanada) I, non-past يَسْنُدُ‎ (yasnudu)

  1. (construed with إِلَى (ʔilā)) to lean on
  2. to rely on, confide in
  3. to support
  4. to belong to
  5. to ascend
  6. to be near, close to
Conjugation

Verb

سَنَّدَ (sannada) II, non-past يُسَنِّدُ‎ (yusannidu)

  1. to support firmly
  2. to pile up
Conjugation

Noun

سَنْد (sand) m

  1. advocacy
  2. support
  3. improvement, reinforcement
Declension

Noun

سَنَد (sanad) m

  1. a surface that rises from a base, face of a mountain, a wall
  2. a support, a thing which one leans upon, to recline against
    1. a cushion or pillow
  3. a thing or person which one can rely on, a thing sturdy or not liable to move
  4. backing, a means of being held up or supported
    1. (religion, Islam) the support for a hadith's validity; the chain of narrators on which its veracity rests
Declension
Descendants
  • Bengali: সনদ (śonod)
  • Hindi: सनद (sanad)
  • Persian: سند
  • Urdu: سند

References

Persian

Etymology 1

From Arabic سَنَد (sanad).

Pronunciation

  • (Tajik) IPA(key): /sanad/

Noun

سَنَد (sanad)

  1. document
    Synonym: دَستاویز (dastâviz)

Etymology 2

From Sindhi سنڌ (Sind) or Hindustani Urdu سندھ (sindh) / Hindi सिंध (sindh), from Sanskrit सिन्धु (sindhu).

Pronunciation

Proper noun

Dari سند
Iranian Persian
Tajik Синд (Sind)

سِند (send)

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