See also: دنیا

Arabic

edit

Etymology

edit

From the root د ن و (d-n-w) or د ن ي (d-n-y). Feminine elative of أَدْنَى (ʔadnā, lower). دُنيَا (world) is originally the "lower place" (as opposed to heaven, the "higher place"); compare English here below.

Pronunciation

edit

Adjective

edit

دُنْيَا (dunyāf

  1. feminine singular of أَدْنَى (ʔadnā, lower)

Noun

edit

دُنْيَا (dunyāf (dual دُنْيَيَان (dunyayān), plural دُنًا (dunan) or دُنًى (dunan) or دُنْيَيَات (dunyayāt))

  1. this mortal life; life in this world
    • 609–632 CE, Qur'an, 3:145:
      وَمَن يُرِدْ ثَوَابَ ٱلدُّنْيَا نُؤْتِهِ مِنْهَا وَمَن يُرِدْ ثَوَابَ ٱلْآخِرَةِ نُؤْتِهِ مِنْهَا ۚ وَسَنَجْزِي ٱلشَّاكِرِينَ
      waman yurid ṯawāba d-dunyā nuʔtihi minhā waman yurid ṯawāba l-ʔāḵirati nuʔtihi minhā wasanajzī š-šākirīna
      And whoever desires the reward of this world - We will give him thereof; and whoever desires the reward of the Hereafter - We will give him thereof. And We will reward the grateful.
  2. world (the Earth, or any this-worldly habitat, excluding the next world)

Declension

edit

Antonyms

edit

Derived terms

edit

Descendants

edit

From الدُّنْيَا (ad-dunyā):

References

edit
  • Wehr, Hans (1979) “دنو”, in J. Milton Cowan, editor, A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic, 4th edition, Ithaca, NY: Spoken Language Services, →ISBN

Bulgar

edit

Etymology

edit

From Arabic دُنْيَا (dunyā).

Noun

edit

دنيا (dönyā)

  1. (Volga Bulgar) world

Descendants

edit

References

edit
  • Hakimzjanov, Farid Sabirzjanovich (1986) “New Volga Bulgarian Inscriptions”, in Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae[1] (in Bulgar), volume 40, number 1, page 174

Gujarati

edit

Noun

edit

دنيا (dunyāf (Lisan ud-Dawat)

  1. Arabic spelling of દુનિયા (duniyā)

Maguindanao

edit

Noun

edit

دنيا (transliteration needed)

  1. Jawi spelling of dunia

Malay

edit

Noun

edit

دنيا (plural دنيا-دنيا or دنيا۲, informal 1st possessive دنياکو, 2nd possessive دنيامو, 3rd possessive دنياڽ)

  1. Jawi spelling of dunia

Moroccan Arabic

edit

Etymology

edit

From Arabic دُنْيَا (dunyā).

Pronunciation

edit
  • IPA(key): /dun.ja/, /din.ja/
  • Audio:(file)

Noun

edit

دُنيا or دِنيا (dunya or dinyaf (plural دُنيات (dunyāt) or دِنيات (dinyāt))

  1. world, earth
    Synonym: عالم (ʕālam)
    هاد الراجل هو أسرع واحد فهاد الدنيا
    hād er-rājel huwwa ʔasraʕ wāḥed f-hād ed-dunya
    This man is the fastest in the world.
  2. it; things; everything; used to refer to general states and circumstances
    الدنيا مغيمة غداed-dunya mḡayyma ḡaddaIt'll be cloudy tomorrow.
    الدنيا عامرة اليوم فهاد المحالed-dunya ʕāmra f-hād el-maḥālThis store is crowded today.

South Levantine Arabic

edit
Root
د ن و
2 terms

Etymology

edit

From Arabic دُنْيَا (dunyā). Equivalent to the feminine elative of أدنى (ʔadna, lower, lowest).

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

دنيا (dinyaf

  1. world
    Synonym: عالم (ʕālam)
  2. this world (opposed to the hereafter)
    Antonym: آخرة (ʔāḵre)
  3. it (dummy subject for the weather and seasons)

Usage notes

edit
  • When describing the weather, الدنيا (id-dinya) is followed by a noun rather than an adjective.
    الدنيا شوب.
    id-dinya šōb.
    It's hot (outside).
    (literally, “The world is heat.”)
  • When used with a verb الدنيا (id-dinya) is optional, but the verb remains in the 3rd person feminine singular.
    (الدنيا) عم بتشتي.
    (id-dinya) ʕam bitšatti.
    It's raining.