سکا

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See also: سكا

Persian[edit]

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سردیس جنگجوی سکایی از باختر ۱۰۰ پ. م‌

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Old Persian 𐎿𐎣 (Saka).

Pronunciation[edit]

 

Readings
Classical reading? sakā
Dari reading? sakā
Iranian reading? sakâ
Tajik reading? sako

Noun[edit]

Dari سَکا
Iranian Persian
Tajik сако

سَکا (sakâ) (plural سَکاها (sakâ-hâ))

  1. Scyth, Scythian (person from Scythia)
  2. (archaic) Sistani (person from Sistan)

Derived terms[edit]

Saraiki[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Inherited from Sanskrit शुष्क (śuṣka), from Proto-Indo-Iranian *Hsúškas, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂sews-.

Cognate with Assamese শুকান (xukan), Bengali শুখা (śukha), English sear, Hindi सूखा (sūkhā) / Urdu سوکھا (sūkhā), Persian خشک (xušk), Romani śuko and Russian сушить (sušitʹ).

Pronunciation[edit]

Adjective[edit]

سُکّا (sukkā)

  1. dry

Declension[edit]

Declension of سکا
masculine feminine
singular plural singular plural
direct سُکّا (sukkā) سُکّے (sukke) سُکّی (sukkī) سُکِّیاں (sukkīyā̃)
oblique سُکّے (sukke) سُکّے, سُکّیاں (sukke, sukkeyā̃) سُکّی (sukkī) سُکِّیاں (sukkīyā̃)

Urdu[edit]

a Gandharan relief of سکا (sakā, "Scythian, Indo-Scythian") men playing instruments and dancing, Pakistan
a depiction of a battle crafted on the handle of a golden سکا hair comb

Etymology[edit]

Either from Classical Persian سکا (sakā) or a modern learned borrowing from an ancient Indo-Iranian language referring to the same nomadic peoples.

Pronunciation[edit]

Noun[edit]

سکا (sakā?

  1. Scythian; a warlike nomadic people from Scythia
  2. the Indo-Scythians of ancient Afghanistan and Pakistan

Ushojo[edit]

Noun[edit]

سکا (sakā)

  1. relative
    Synonym: رشتہ دار (rištah dār)

Adjective[edit]

سکا (sakā)

  1. own, self