See also: سنة and سنہ

Arabic

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

سَنْت (santm

  1. cent
Declension
edit

Etymology 2

edit

Verb

edit

سنت (form I)

  1. سَنَّتْ (sannat) /san.nat/: third-person feminine singular past active of سَنَّ (sanna)
  2. سُنَّتْ (sunnat) /sun.nat/: third-person feminine singular past passive of سَنَّ (sanna)

Malay

edit

Noun

edit

سنت (plural سنت-سنت or سنت۲, informal 1st possessive سنتکو, 2nd possessive سنتمو, 3rd possessive سنتڽ)

  1. Jawi spelling of senat


Ottoman Turkish

edit

Etymology

edit

Borrowed from Arabic سُنَّة (sunna).

 
سنت

Noun

edit

سنت (sünnet)

  1. (Islam) Sunna
  2. (Islam) circumcision (excising foreskin from penis)

Derived terms

edit

Descendants

edit
  • > Turkish: sünnet (inherited)
  • Albanian: synet
  • Macedonian: сунет (sunet)
  • Serbo-Croatian: sunet, сунет

Persian

edit
 
Persian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia fa

Etymology

edit

Borrowed from Arabic سُنَّة (sunna).

Pronunciation

edit
 

Readings
Classical reading? sunnat
Dari reading? sunnat
Iranian reading? sonnat
Tajik reading? sunnat

Noun

edit
Dari سنت
Iranian Persian
Tajik суннат

سُنَّت (sonnat) (plural سنت‌ها (sonnat-hâ))

  1. tradition
  2. habit
  3. custom
  4. (Islam) Sunna
  5. (Islam) circumcision (excising the foreskin from the penis)

Derived terms

edit
edit

Urdu

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Borrowed from Arabic سُنَّة (sunna).

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

سُنَّت (sunnatf (Hindi spelling सुन्नत)

  1. tradition
  2. habit
  3. custom
  4. (Islam) Sunna
  5. (Islam) circumcision (excising the foreskin from the penis)

Etymology 2

edit

From Sanskrit सत् (sat).

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

سَنْت (santm (Hindi spelling संत)

  1. (Sikhism, Hinduism) a saint
  2. a revered or venerated person