yad

See also: y'ad and það

English

Etymology 1

Borrowed from Hebrew יד (yád, hand)

A yad with a Torah

Noun

yad (plural yads or yadim)

  1. (Judaism) A pointer used in the ritual of Torah-reading.

Etymology 2

From the Tifinagh alphabet.

Noun

yad

  1. The letter in the Tifinagh alphabet.

Anagrams


Azerbaijani

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [jɑd]

Etymology 1

From Proto-Turkic *yāt (alien, foreign, unfamiliar). Cognate with Bashkir ят (yat), Kazakh жат (jat), Uzbek yot (alien, foreign), Turkmen ýat etc.

Adjective

yad (comparative daha yad, superlative ən yad)

  1. alien, strange, foreign
  2. unfamiliar
    Synonym: özgə
Derived terms

Noun

yad (definite accusative yadı, plural yadlar)

  1. stranger
    Synonym: özgə
Declension
Derived terms

Etymology 2

From Persian یاد (yâd).

Noun

yad (definite accusative yadı, plural yadlar)

  1. memory
    Bu daha yadımda deyil.
    I don't remember this anymore.
    (literally, “It's not in my memory anymore.”)
    Yadındadırsa, biz səninlə artıq görüşmüşük.
    If you remember, we've already met.
    (literally, “If it's in your memory, we've already met.”)
Declension
Derived terms
  • yaddaş (memory)
  • yadda qalmaq (to remember)
  • yadda saxlamaq (to remember)
  • yaddan çıxmaq (to forget)
  • yada düşmək (to come to mind)
  • yada salmaq (to remind)
  • yadigar (memento)

Pali

Alternative forms

Pronoun

yad

  • neuter nominative and accusative singular of ya (which (relative))

Volapük

Etymology

Borrowed from English yard, with the 'r' pronounced the British way, so that it practically disappears.

Noun

yad (plural yads)

  1. yard

Declension

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