نیلوفر

Persian

Etymology

From Middle Persian nylw(k)pl (nīlōpal, lotus, water-lily), ultimately from Sanskrit नीलोत्पल (nīlotpala, blue lotus).

Pronunciation

 

Readings
Classical reading? nīlūfar
Dari reading? nīlūfar
Iranian reading? nilufar
Tajik reading? nilufar

Noun

نیلوفر • (nīlūfar / nilufar) (plural نیلوفرها (nīlūfar-hā / nilufar-hâ), Tajik spelling нилуфар)

  1. water lily
  2. Ipomoea
    • 982, Hudud al-'Alam:
      از وی ترنج و نارنج و نیشکر و نیلوفر خیزد.
      az vey toranj o nârenj o neyšekar o nilufar xizad.
      Bergamot orange, bitter orange, sugarcanes, and Ipomoea grow over there [Balkh].

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Tajik: нелӯфар (nelüfar), нилуфар (nilufar)
  • Azerbaijani: nilufər
  • Bengali: নীলুফার (niluphar)
  • Gujarati: નીલોફર (nīlophar)
  • Hindustani:
    Hindi: नीलोफ़र (nīlofar)
    Urdu: نِیلوفَر (nīlofar)
  • Odia: ନିଲୋଫର (nilophara)
  • Punjabi:
    Gurmukhi script: ਨੀਲੋਫ਼ਰ (nīlofar)
    Shahmukhi script: نِیلوفَر (nīlofar)
  • Kurdish:
    Northern Kurdish: nîlûfer, nîlufer
  • Ottoman Turkish: لولوفر (lülüfer), نیلوفر (nilüfer), لوفر (lufar), نیلوپر (niluper), نیلوبرگ (niluberg)
  • Uzbek: nilufar

(some forms may be influenced by Arabic)

Proper noun

نیلوفر • (nīlūfar / nilufar) (Tajik spelling Нилуфар)

  1. a female given name, Nilufar or Niloofar, from Middle Persian

References