shaitan
See also: Shaitan
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Borrowed from Arabic شَيْطَان (šayṭān, “satan, devil”). Doublet of Satan.
Pronunciation
- (MLE) IPA(key): /ˈʃeɪtan/
Noun
shaitan (plural shaitans)
- (Islam) a demon/devil; or evil jinn.
- 2014, Zuckermann, Ghil‘ad, Burning issues in Afro-Asiatic linguistics, page 141:
- '... hence, we are always malā'ika (angels), forgetting that ashayṭān was once a malāk (angel).
- 2014, Zuckermann, Ghil‘ad, Burning issues in Afro-Asiatic linguistics, page 140:
- '... 'A man and a jinni became friends. One day, the man asked the jinni, 'How come you look like a real human being?' [The jinni answered,]'We... shayāṭīn 'devils/demons' appear to people in whatever form we want, and we disappear whenever we want.'.
- (India, archaic) A dust storm.
- 1888, Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society:
- Dust columns are called shaitans or devils by the Beloochees, who have a superstitious feeling with regard to them.
- 1925, Henry Michael Collins, From pigeon post to wireless, page 158:
- The dust borne in these shaitans of wind is often carried for vast distances […]
See also
Anagrams
Portuguese
Etymology
Borrowed from English shaitan, from Arabic شَيْطَان (šayṭān).
Pronunciation
- (Brazil) IPA(key): /ʃajˈtɐ̃/ [ʃaɪ̯ˈtɐ̃]
- (Portugal) IPA(key): /ʃajˈtan/
- Hyphenation: shai‧tan
Noun
shaitan m (plural shaitans)
- (Arab mythology) shaitan (an evil djinn or devil)