جبرائيل

Arabic

Etymology

From Hebrew גַּבְרִיאֵל (gavri'él, gaḇrīʾēl), from גַּבְרִי אֵל (gavrí 'él, gaḇrī ʾēl, my hero is God).

Proper noun

جِبْرَائِيل (jibrāʾīl) m

  1. The archangel Gabriel.

Declension

Alternative forms

Descendants

  • Albanian: Xhebraili
  • Azerbaijani: Cəbrayıl
  • Bengali: জিবরাঈল (jibraīl), জিবরীল (jibrīl)
  • Chechen: Джабраил (Ǯabrail)
  • English: Jibril
  • Hausa: Jibirilu
  • Kurdish: Cebraîl
  • Macedonian: Џибрил (Džibril)
  • Malay: Jibril
  • Ngazidja Comorian: Djibril
  • Persian: جبرئیل (Jebra'īl), جبرییل (Jebrayīl), جبریل‎‎ (Jebrīl)
  • Serbo-Croatian:
    Cyrillic: Џибрил
    Latin: Džibril
  • Somali: Jibriil
  • Sylheti: জিব্রাঈল (জিব্রাঈল), জিব্রীল (জিব্রীল)
  • Tatar: Җибрил (Cibril), Җәбраил (Cäbrail)
  • Tamil: கேப்ரியல் (kēpriyal)
  • Telugu: గాబ్రియేల్ (gābriyēl)
  • Turkish: Cebrail, Cebrâil
  • Uyghur: جەبرائىل (jebra'il)
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.