پری

See also: پري, تري, ترى, بری, and تري-

Azerbaijani

Noun

پری

  1. Arabic spelling of pəri

Ottoman Turkish

Etymology

Borrowed from Persian پری (pari).

Noun

پری • (peri)

  1. fairy
  2. (figurative) beautiful person

Descendants

  • Turkish: peri
  • Albanian: perri
  • Armenian: փերի (pʻeri)
  • Crimean Tatar: peri
  • English: peri
  • French: péri
  • Georgian: ფერია (peria)
  • Russian: пе́ри (péri)

Further reading

Persian

Etymology 1

From Middle Persian [script needed] (plyk' /⁠parīg⁠/, witch), ultimately from Old Persian *parikā. Compare Manichaean Middle Persian pryg (pryg), Avestan 𐬞𐬀𐬌𐬭𐬌𐬐𐬁 (pairikā, sorceress, witch), Sogdian [script needed] (pṛʿyk-, female demoness) and Old Armenian պարիկ (parik), an Iranian borrowing. Connections that have been proposed include Middle Irish airech (concubine, wanton woman), and from Indo-European root *pelē- ‘to fill,’ Latin plēnus ‘full.’ Middle Persian parīg, Khotanese 𑀧𑀮𑀻𑀓𑀸 (palīkā), Latin parcae (fates), Ancient Greek Παλλάς (Pallás, youth, maiden), Sanskrit पारक्य (pārakya, strange, alien). Pokorny derives this from Proto-Indo-European *parīkā (concubine).

Pronunciation

 

Readings
Classical reading? parī
Dari reading? parī
Iranian reading? pari
Tajik reading? pari

Noun

پری • (parī / pari) (plural پری‌ها (parī-hā / pari-hâ), or پریان (parīyān / pariyân), Tajik spelling парӣ)

  1. (Iranian mythology) sprite or supernatural being in Iranian/Persian mythology opposed to دیوسان (daemon) and دیو (daeva); peri.
  2. (Roman mythology) fury
  3. (mythology) fairy
  4. (mythology) witch (parika in Avestan mythology)
  5. (figuratively) a beautiful woman
    Synonym: هولو (hulu)
Derived terms
  • نازپری (nâzpari)
  • پریا (pariyâ)
  • پریخوان (parixân)
  • پریزاد (parizâd)
  • پریسا (parisâ)
  • پریستان (pariyestân, a fairyland)
  • پریناز (parinâz)
  • پریوش (parivaš)
  • پریچه (pariče)
  • پریچهر (paričehr)
Descendants

Proper noun

پری • (pari)

  1. Diminutive form of several female Persian given names starting with this word.
  2. a female given name, Pari or Paree, from Middle Persian

References

Etymology 2

From پر (por, full) +‎ ی (-i, -ness).

Noun

پری • (pori)

  1. fullness
    Synonym: پر بودن (por budan)

Etymology 3

From پریر (parir, parêr, day before yesterday), from Middle Persian 𐬞𐬭𐬌𐬭 (prir /⁠parīr⁠/), [Book Pahlavi needed] (plʾyyl), [Book Pahlavi needed] (plʾyyʾl /⁠parīr, parēr⁠/, the day before yesterday), from Proto-Iranian *parāyarah,[1][2] from *para- +‎ *ayarah (day) (compare Avestan 𐬀𐬫𐬀𐬭𐬇 (ayarə̄, day)), from Proto-Indo-European *h₂eyer- (day, morning). Cognate with Mazanderani پره (pare),[3] Bakhtiari [script needed] (parey), Bashkardi پریر (parir), Kermanic [script needed] (pare), Baluchi [script needed] (parērī), [script needed] (pairērī), Northern Kurdish pêr, Central Kurdish پێرێ (pêrê). Also compare Shirazi [Term?] (parigru(z)), Southern Luri [script needed] (parig).

Adverb

پری • (pari, parê)

  1. (archaic) the day before yesterday

Noun

پری • (parī / pari) (Tajik spelling парӣ)

  1. (archaic) the day before yesterday
Derived terms

References

  1. ^ Nyberg H. S. (posthumous), Utas, Bo, editors (1988), Frahang-i pahlavīk, Toll, Christopher, collaborator, Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, →ISBN, page 106
  2. ^ Horn, Paul (1893) Grundriss der neupersischen Etymologie (in German), Strasbourg: K.J. Trübner, page 69
  3. ^ Talebi, Ali (2012) مشتی از مرواریدهای فراموش‌شده‌ی مازندران (فرهنگ واژگانی) [A Handful of the Forgotten Pearls of Mazandaran (Dictionary)]‎[1], Amol, page 72

Sindhi

Etymology

Inherited from Sanskrit [Term?].

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [pəre]

Adverb

پَري • (pare) (Devanagari परे)

  1. far

References

  • Khānu, Balocu (19601988) “پَري”, in Jāmiʻ Sindhī lughāta (in Sindhi), Hyderabad, Sindh: Sindhī Adabī Borḍ

Urdu

Etymology

Borrowed from Classical Persian پری (parī), from Middle Persian plyk' (parīg).

Pronunciation

Noun

پَری • (parīf (Hindi spelling परी)

  1. fairy
  2. peri
  3. (figuratively) a beautiful woman

Declension

Declension of پری
singular plural
direct پری (parī) پرِیاں (pariyā̃)
oblique پری (parī) پرِیوں (pariyō̃)
vocative پری (parī) پرِیو (pariyō)

References