|
|
This Proto-Indo-Iranian entry contains reconstructed terms and roots. As such, the term(s) in this entry are not directly attested, but are hypothesized to have existed based on comparative evidence.
|
Proto-Indo-Iranian
Etymology
From Proto-Indo-European *sem-bʰor-ó-s, from *sem- (“together, one”) + *bʰer- (“to bear, carry”) + *-ós (deverbal suffix).
Noun
*sambʰārás m
- a storage, warehouse, reservoir
- provisions, materials, necessaries for a particular task
Declension
| masculine a-stem
|
|
|
singular
|
dual
|
plural
|
| nominative
|
*sambʰārás
|
*sambʰārā́(w)
|
*sambʰārā́s(as)
|
| vocative
|
*sámbʰāra
|
*sámbʰārā(w)
|
*sámbʰārās(as)
|
| accusative
|
*sambʰārám
|
*sambʰārā́(w)
|
*sambʰārā́ns
|
| instrumental
|
*sambʰāráH
|
*sambʰāráybʰyā(m)
|
*sambʰārā́yš
|
| ablative
|
*sambʰārā́t
|
*sambʰāráybʰyā(m)
|
*sambʰāráybʰyas
|
| dative
|
*sambʰārā́y
|
*sambʰāráybʰyā(m)
|
*sambʰāráybʰyas
|
| genitive
|
*sambʰārásya
|
*sambʰāráyās
|
*sambʰārā́naHam
|
| locative
|
*sambʰāráy
|
*sambʰāráyaw
|
*sambʰāráyšu
|
Descendants
- Proto-Indo-Aryan: *sambʰārás
- Sanskrit: सम्भार (sambhārá, “materials required for a particular purpose, provision; collection of spices”)
- → Bengali: সম্ভার (śombhar)
- ⇒ Bengali: সাভার (śabhar)
- → Hindi: संभार (sambhār)
- Old Marathi: सांबार (sāṃbāra)
- Marathi: सांभार (sāmbhār), सांबार (sāmbār, “curry”)
- → Gujarati: સાંબાર (sā̃bār)
- → Hindi: सांबर (sāmbar)
- → Kannada: ಸಾಂಬಾರು (sāmbāru)
- → Tamil: சாம்பார் (cāmpār)
- → Kannada: ಸಂಭಾರ (sambhāra, “materials, input”)
- → Mongolian: самбар (sambar)
- Proto-Iranian: *hambāráh
- Avestan: 𐬵𐬅𐬨𐬠𐬀𐬭 (hą̇mbar)
- Parthian: *𐫀𐫖𐫁𐫀𐫡 (*ʾmbʾr /*ambār/)
- → Jewish Babylonian Aramaic: אמברא
- → Old Armenian: ամբար (ambar)
- → Hebrew: אַמְבָּר
- → Classical Syriac: ܐܡܒܪܐ
- ⇒ Parthian: 𐫀𐫖𐫁𐫀𐫡𐫃 (ʾmbʾrg /ambārag/)
- Old Persian: *hambārah
- Middle Persian: (/hambār/)
- Manichaean script: 𐫍𐫖𐫁𐫀𐫡 (hmbʾr)
- Book Pahlavi script: [Book Pahlavi needed] (hmbʾl)
- Classical Persian: انبار
- Iranian Persian: انبار (ambâr)
- Tajik: анбор (anbor)
- → Arabic: أَنْبَار (ʔanbār)
- → English: ambar
- → Georgian: ამბარი (ambari)
- → Ottoman Turkish: انبار
- → Old Armenian: համբար (hambar)