कडे
Marathi
editEtymology 1
editBorrowed from Kannada ಕಡೆ (kaḍe). Compare कड (kaḍ, “side”), Old Marathi 𑘎𑘚 (kaḍa).
Postposition
editकडे • (kaḍe)
- towards, to, at
- चेंडू माझ्याकडे आला.
- ceṇḍū mājhyākaḍe ālā.
- The ball came towards me.
- with, in the possession of
- त्याच्याकडे एक कॅमेरा आहे.
- tyācyākaḍe ek kĕmerā āhe.
- He has a camera.
Related terms
editReferences
edit- Berntsen, Maxine (1982–1983) “कडे”, in A Basic Marathi-English Dictionary, New Delhi: American Institute of Indian Studies
- Molesworth, James Thomas (1857) “कडे”, in A dictionary, Marathi and English, Bombay: Printed for government at the Bombay Education Society's Press
- दाते, यशवंत रामकृष्ण [Date, Yashwant Ramkrishna] (1932-1950) “कडे”, in महाराष्ट्र शब्दकोश (mahārāṣṭra śabdakoś) (in Marathi), पुणे [Pune]: महाराष्ट्र कोशमंडळ (mahārāṣṭra kośmaṇḍaḷ).
Etymology 2
editनपुसकलिंग (napusakliṅga): कडे n (kaḍe) |
स्त्रीलिंग (strīliṅga): कडी f (kaḍī) |
Inherited from Old Marathi 𑘎𑘚𑘹𑘽 (kaḍeṃ). Cognate to Hindi कड़ा (kaṛā), Punjabi ਕੜਾ (kaṛā) / کَڑا (kaṛā).
Noun
editकडे • (kaḍe) n
Alternative forms
edit- कडं (kaḍa)
References
edit- Berntsen, Maxine (1982–1983) “कडे”, in A Basic Marathi-English Dictionary, New Delhi: American Institute of Indian Studies
- Molesworth, James Thomas (1857) “कडें”, in A dictionary, Marathi and English, Bombay: Printed for government at the Bombay Education Society's Press
- दाते, यशवंत रामकृष्ण [Date, Yashwant Ramkrishna] (1932-1950) “कडें”, in महाराष्ट्र शब्दकोश (mahārāṣṭra śabdakoś) (in Marathi), पुणे [Pune]: महाराष्ट्र कोशमंडळ (mahārāṣṭra kośmaṇḍaḷ).
- Turner, Ralph Lilley (1969–1985) “káṭa”, in A Comparative Dictionary of the Indo-Aryan Languages, London: Oxford University Press
Categories:
- Marathi terms borrowed from Kannada
- Marathi terms derived from Kannada
- Marathi lemmas
- Marathi postpositions
- Marathi terms with usage examples
- Marathi terms inherited from Old Marathi
- Marathi terms derived from Old Marathi
- Marathi nouns
- Marathi nouns in Devanagari script
- Marathi neuter nouns
- mr:Sikhism
- Marathi terms derived from Dravidian languages