সামী

See also: শামী

Bengali

Etymology 1

Borrowed from Arabic سَامِيّ (sāmiyy).

Adjective

সামী (sami) (comparative আরও সামী, superlative সবচেয়ে সামী)

  1. Of or pertaining to a subdivision of Afroasiatic Semitic languages: Amharic, Arabic, Aramaic, Syriac, Akkadian, Hebrew, Maltese, Tigrigna, Phoenician etc.
  2. Of or pertaining to the Semites; of or pertaining to one or more Semitic peoples.

Noun

সামী (sami) (objective সামী (sami) or সামীকে (samike), genitive সামীর (samir), locative সামীতে (samite))

  1. Semite, the Semitic people

Etymology 2

Borrowed from Classical Persian سامی, from Arabic سَامٍ (sāmin, high, elevated). Doublet of আসমা (asma), ইসমে আজম (isme azôm), and সামিয়া (samiẏa).

Alternative forms

  • সামি (sami)
  • সামিন (samin)

Proper noun

সামী (sami)

  1. a male given name, Sami, from Arabic
    Coordinate term: সামিয়া (samiẏa)

References

Pali

Alternative forms

Noun

সামী

  1. Bengali script form of sāmī, which is inflection of সামিন্:
    1. nominative singular
    2. nominative/vocative/accusative plural (sāmin, master)
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