دَانَتْ• (dānat) (form I)/daː.nat/
- third-personfemininesingularpastactive ofدَانَ(dāna)
Inherited fromMiddle Hindiدانت(dā̃t/dānt/) /داند(dā̃d/dānd/) /دند(/dand/) /دنت(/dant/),[1] fromSauraseni Prakrit𑀤𑀁𑀢(daṃta), fromSanskritदन्त(dánta),[2] fromProto-Indo-Iranian*Hdántas, ultimately fromProto-Indo-European*h₃dónt-o-s, thematized from*h₃dónts(“tooth”).Doublet ofدَنْدَان(dandān).
دان٘ت• (dā̃t) m (Hindi spellingदाँत)
- (anatomy)tooth
- (anatomy)tusk
- ^“دانت”, inاُردُو لُغَت(urdū luġat) (in Urdu), Ministry of Education: Government of Pakistan,2017.
- ^Turner, Ralph Lilley (1969–1985) “dánta”, inA Comparative Dictionary of the Indo-Aryan Languages, London: Oxford University Press,page352
More information
- “دانت”, inریخْتَہ لُغَت(rexta luġat) - Rekhta Dictionary[Urdu dictionary with meanings in Hindi & English], Noida, India: Rekhta Foundation,2025.
- Qureshi, Bashir Ahmad (1971) “دانت”, inKitabistan's 20th Century Standard Dictionary, Lahore: Kitabistan Pub. Co.
- Platts, John T. (1884) “دانت”, inA dictionary of Urdu, classical Hindi, and English, London: W. H. Allen & Co.
- S. W. Fallon (1879) “دانت”, inA New Hindustani-English Dictionary, Banaras, London: Trubner and Co.
- John Shakespear (1834) “دانت”, inA dictionary, Hindustani and English: with a copious index, fitting the work to serve, also, as a dictionary of English and Hindustani, 3rd edition, London: J.L. Cox and Son,→OCLC