خانم

Ottoman Turkish

Etymology

From خان (han, king, ruler) + -ım (first person singular possessive suffix).[1]

Noun

خانم • (hanım)

  1. lady, woman
  2. Miss, Mrs, Lady
  3. wife

Derived terms

  • خانمجق (hanımcık)
  • خانملق (hanımlık)

Descendants

  • Turkish: hanım
  • Egyptian Arabic: هَانِم (hānim)
  • North Levantine Arabic: خَانُم (xānom)
  • South Levantine Arabic: خَانُم (xānom)
  • Armenian: հանըմ (hanəm), խանում (xanum), խանըմ (xanəm)
  • Bulgarian: ханъ́ма (hanǎ́ma)
  • Georgian: ხანუმი (xanumi)
  • Ladino: hanum
  • Macedonian: анама (anama)
  • Romanian: hanâmă
  • Serbo-Croatian:
    Cyrillic script: хану̀ма
    Latin script: hanùma

References

  1. ^ Nişanyan, Sevan (2002–) “hanım”, in Nişanyan Sözlük

Persian

Alternative forms

  • خانوم (xânum)

Etymology

Borrowed from Turkic languages. Compare Old Anatolian Turkish خانم (ḫānum).

Pronunciation

 

Readings
Classical reading? xānum
Dari reading? xānum
Iranian reading? xânom
Tajik reading? xonum
  • Audio (Iran):(file)

Noun

Dari خانم
Iranian Persian
Tajik хонум

خانُم • (xânom) (plural خانم‌ها)

  1. Mrs, Ms
  2. lady
    Synonym: بانو (bânu)
  3. madam (used in Iran especially in the 19th century)

Descendants

Punjabi

Etymology

From Classical Persian خانم (xānum).

Noun

خانَم • (xānamf

  1. khanum

Urdu

Etymology

From Classical Persian خانم (xānum).

Noun

خانَم • (xānamf (Hindi spelling ख़ानम)

  1. a lady, a woman of rank, a princess; title of the wife of a ḵẖān

Further reading

  • Platts, John T. (1884) “خانم”, in A dictionary of Urdu, classical Hindi, and English, London: W. H. Allen & Co.