See also: ألف, الق, and ألق

Ottoman Turkish

edit

Etymology

edit

From Arabic أَلِف (ʔalif).

Noun

edit

الف (elif)

  1. alif
  2. something shaped like an alif

References

edit

Persian

edit

Etymology

edit

Borrowed from Arabic أَلِف (ʔalif).

Pronunciation

edit
 

Readings
Classical reading? alif
Dari reading? alif
Iranian reading? alef
Tajik reading? alif

Noun

edit
Dari اَلِف
Iranian Persian
Tajik алиф

اَلِف (alef)

  1. alif (the letter ا, the first letter of the Persian and Arabic abjads)
    • c. 1260s, Jalāl ad-Dīn Mohammad Rūmī, translated by Reynold A. Nicholson, مثنوی معنوی, volume I, verse 1514:
      ما که‌‌ایم اندر جهان پیچ پیچ
      چون الف او خود چه دارد هیچ هیچ
      mâ ke-im andar jahân-e pič-pič
      čun alef u xod če dârad hič hič
      Who are we? In this tangled world
      What [thing other than He] indeed hath He [who is single] like alif? Nothing, nothing.
  2. (figurative) something erect and tall like the letter ا
    • c. 1390, Hafez, “Ghazal 317”, in دیوان حافظ[2]:
      نیست بر لوحِ دلم جز الفِ قامتِ دوست
      چه کنم حرفِ دگر یاد نداد استادم
      -nêst bar lawh-i dil-am juz alif-i qâmat-i dôst
      či kunam harf-i digar yâd na-dâd ustâd-am
      The tablet of my heart has nothing [written] on it but the alif of my love's figure
      What can I do? My master taught me no other letter.
      (romanization in Classical Persian)

Derived terms

edit
  • Hindustani:
    Hindi: अलिफ़ (alif)
    Urdu: اَلِف (alif)

Urdu

edit

Etymology

edit

Borrowed from Classical Persian الف (alif), from Arabic أَلِف (ʔalif).

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

الِف (alifm (Hindi spelling अलिफ़)

  1. name of the first letter of the Urdu alphabet; alif

Declension

edit
    Declension of الف
singular plural
direct الِف (alif) الِف (alif)
oblique الِف (alif) الِفوں (alifõ)
vocative الِف (alif) الِفو (alifo)

References

edit
  • Platts, John T. (1884) “الف”, in A dictionary of Urdu, classical Hindi, and English, London: W. H. Allen & Co.