English
Etymology
Borrowed from Arabic سُنَّة (sunna, “habit, custom”).
Noun
sunnah (countable and uncountable, plural sunnahs)
- (Islam) (An example of) Muhammad's way of life, as recorded in the hadiths, especially when viewed as a model for Muslims to emulate.
Translations
custom, system, way of life
- Albanian: synnet m
- Arabic: سُنَّة (ar) f (sunna)
- Azerbaijani: sünnət
- Bengali: সুন্নত (bn) (śunnot), সুন্নৎ (śunnot)
- Chechen: суннат (sunnat)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 聖行 / 圣行 (shèngxíng, shèngxìng)
- Dhivehi: ސުއްނަތް (sunnat̊)
- Finnish: sunna (fi)
- Georgian: სუნა (suna)
- Gujarati: સુન્નત f (sunnat)
- Hausa: sunnā̀ f
- Hindi: सुन्नत (hi) f (sunnat)
- Italian: sunna f
- Japanese: スンナ (sunna)
- Kazakh: сүннет (sünnet)
- Korean: 순나 (sunna)
- Kurdish:
- Northern Kurdish: sinet (ku)
- Kyrgyz: сүннөт (ky) (sünnöt)
- Malay: sunnah
- Pashto: سنت (ps) m (sonát)
- Persian: سنت (fa) (sonnat)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: суна f
- Roman: suna (sh) f
- Tajik: суннат (tg) (sunnat)
- Tatar: сөннәт (tt) (sönnät)
- Turkish: sünnet (tr)
- Urdu: سنت f (sunnat)
- Uyghur: سۈننەت (sünnet)
- Uzbek: sunnat (uz)
|
Further reading
- “sunnah”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.