ای

See also: ـای, ایی, آیی, إي, آی, and أي

Brahui

Pronoun

ای (ī)

  1. I

Kashmiri

Pronunciation

  • (letter name): IPA(key): /kaʃi zeːr/
  • (phoneme): IPA(key): /iː/

Letter

ای • (ī)

  1. a vowel of Kashmiri.

Forms

The vowel ای in its initial form is اﻳٖ , middle form ـيٖـ and final form ی

See also

  • Previous vowel: اِ (i)
  • Next vowel : إ ()

Ottoman Turkish

Interjection

ای • (ey)

  1. oh
  2. eh
  3. well
  4. hey

Persian

Etymology 1

Mackenzie asserts that it is inherited from Middle Persian ʾy (ay).[1] However according to Dehkhoda it is from Arabic أَيْ (ʔay),[2] which itself is borrowed from Middle Persian ʾy (ay).

Adverb

ای • (ay)

  1. that is to say

Etymology 2

From اگر (agar).

Pronunciation

  • (dialectal: Shiraz, Abadan) IPA(key): /æj/
  • (dialectal: most Southern dialects of Persian) IPA(key): /ej/

Conjunction

ای • (ay, ey)

  1. (dialectal) if
    ای وه‌ش گفتی نه خسته می‌گو بشی تا کولتاوم.
    Éy vaš gófti na xáste migú béši tâ kúlet-awom. (Proverb, Dashtestan)
    If you tell him don't bother (more power to your elbow), he would say let me ride on your shoulder.
    روز مرگُم باشه ای یی رو بفَمَم که اَزُم سیر شده وُ دوسُم نداره.
    Ruze margom baše ay yey ru befāmam ke azom sir šode o dusom nadâre. (Shiraz)

Etymology 3

Onomatopoeia. Compare Ottoman Turkish ای (ey). Commonly followed by a noun bearing the vocative suffix -â.

Pronunciation

 

Readings
Classical reading? ay
Dari reading? ay
Iranian reading? ey
Tajik reading? ay

Interjection

Dari ای
Iranian Persian
Tajik ай

ای • (ey)

  1. O, hey
    Synonym: یا
Derived terms

Etymology 4

Inherited from Middle Persian ʾyd (ēd, this).

Determiner

ای • (i)

  1. (dialectal, Kabuli, Mashhad, Shiraz, Kazerun, Dashtestan, Bushehr) this

Etymology 5

Borrowed from English ay.

Noun

ای • (ey)

  1. Transliteration of the name of the Latin-script letter a in English and other European languages.
Derived terms
References
  1. ^ MacKenzie, D. N. (1971) A concise Pahlavi dictionary, London, New York, Toronto: Oxford University Press, page 93
  2. ^ Dehkhoda, Ali-Akbar (1931–) “ای”, in Dehkhoda Dictionary Institute, editors, Dehkhoda Dictionary (in Persian), Tehran: University of Tehran Press