daya

See also: ɖaya, ɗaya, and dǎyā

Alangan

Etymology

From Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *daʀaq, from Proto-Austronesian *daʀaq.

Noun

daya

  1. (anatomy) blood

Bikol Central

Etymology

Borrowed from Tagalog daya.

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: da‧ya
  • IPA(key): /ˈdajaʔ/

Noun

dayà

  1. dishonesty
  2. cheat; deceit; fraud; trickery
    Synonyms: loko, lansi

Derived terms


Hiligaynon

Etymology 1

Borrowed from Tagalog daya, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *daya.

Noun

dáyà

  1. cheat; trick

Verb

dáyà

  1. to cheat; to defraud; to swindle; to trick

Pronoun

dáya

  1. that

Ilocano

Etymology 1

From Proto-Philippine *daya, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *daya, from Proto-Austronesian *daya.

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: da‧ya
  • IPA(key): /ˈdaja/, [ˈdɐ.ja]

Noun

daya

  1. east

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: da‧yá
  • IPA(key): /daˈja/, [dɐˈja]

Noun

dayá

  1. wedding
  2. feast
  3. any occasion involving a feast or reunion
Derived terms
  • agdaya
  • dayaan
  • sidadaya

Indonesian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /daja/
  • Rhymes: -aja, -ja, -a
  • Hyphenation: da‧ya

Etymology 1

From Malay daya,

  1. from Proto-Malayic *daya (to trick, to fool).
  2. from Sanskrit उदय (udaya, rise, result).
  3. from Old Javanese daya (inner feelings; heart), from Pali hadaya (feeling, literally heart), from Sanskrit हृदय (hṛdaya, soul, mind, spirit, literally heart).
  4. from Old Javanese daya, dāya, deya ((future) act; plan), de (action; condition; by) + aya, haya, ayah (effort).

The sense of a measure of the rate of work or transferring energy in physics is a semantic loan from Dutch vermogen (power (physics), literally ability).

Noun

daya (plural daya-daya, first-person possessive dayaku, second-person possessive dayamu, third-person possessive dayanya)

  1. power:
    1. physical force or strength.
      Synonyms: kekuatan, tenaga
    2. (electricity) electricity or a supply of electricity.
      Synonym: tenaga
    3. (classical mechanics) a measure of the rate of doing work or transferring energy, a measure of the effectiveness that a force producing a physical effect has over time.
      Synonym: tenaga
      Synonym: kuasa (Standard Malay)
    4. the strength by which a lens or mirror magnifies an optical image.
      Synonym: kekuatan
  2. (usually in compound) trick
    Synonym: muslihat
  3. ability
    Synonym: kemampuan
  4. effort
    Synonyms: akal, ikhtiar, upaya
Derived terms
  • berdaya
  • diberdayakan
  • diperdaya
  • memperdaya
  • memperdayakan
  • mendayai
  • pendayaan
  • perdayaan
  • sedaya
  • sedaya upaya
  • teperdaya
  • daya abar
  • daya adaptasi
  • daya aerobik
  • daya anaerob
  • daya anaerobik
  • daya angin
  • daya angkat
  • daya angkut
  • daya antisipasi
  • daya apung
  • daya baca
  • daya batin
  • daya beli
  • daya bertelur
  • daya cengkeram
  • daya cerap
  • daya cerna
  • daya cipta
  • daya dukung
  • daya eksternal
  • daya gabung
  • daya gaib
  • daya genggam
  • daya gerak
  • daya gesek
  • daya hantar
  • daya hidup
  • daya ilokusi
  • daya ingat
  • daya internal
  • daya juang
  • daya kecambah
  • daya kerja
  • daya kompresi diska
  • daya kreasi
  • daya kuda
  • daya kupas
  • daya muat
  • daya olah
  • daya pancar
  • daya pendinginan
  • daya penguapan
  • daya penurunan
  • daya penyinaran
  • daya perbawa
  • daya percepatan
  • daya perlambatan
  • daya pikir
  • daya rasa
  • daya rem
  • daya saing
  • daya serap
  • daya suai
  • daya tahan
  • daya tahan mutlak
  • daya tahan otot
  • daya tahan statis
  • daya tampung
  • daya tanggap
  • daya tangkap
  • daya tarik
  • daya tetas
  • daya tolak magnet
  • daya usaha

Etymology 2

From Malay daya, from Proto-Malayic *daya, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *daya, from Proto-Austronesian *daya (towards the inland; south).

Noun

daya (first-person possessive dayaku, second-person possessive dayamu, third-person possessive dayanya)

  1. used only in the noun phrase barat daya (southwest)
Derived terms

Further reading


Kankanaey

Noun

daya

  1. sky

Kapampangan

Etymology

From Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *daʀaq, from Proto-Austronesian *daʀaq.

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: da‧ya
  • IPA(key): /ˈdajəʔ/, [ˈdäː.jəʔ]

Noun

daya

  1. blood

Malay

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /daja/
  • Rhymes: -aja, -ja, -a
  • (Johor-Riau) IPA(key): [däjə]

Etymology 1

From Proto-Malayic *daya, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *daya, from Proto-Austronesian *daya.

Adjective

daya (Jawi spelling داي)

  1. Used only in the noun phrase barat daya (southwest)
Derived terms
Descendants
  • Indonesian: daya

Etymology 2

From Proto-Malayic *daya.

Noun

daya (Jawi spelling داي, plural daya-daya, informal 1st possessive dayaku, 2nd possessive dayamu, 3rd possessive dayanya)

  1. trick (something designed to trick)
  2. ability (quality or state of being able)
  3. (physics) force
Synonyms
Derived terms
  • mendaya
Descendants

Further reading


Sambali

Etymology

From Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *daʀaq, from Proto-Austronesian *daʀaq.

Noun

dayà

  1. blood

Sundanese

Etymology

From Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *daya.

Verb

daya

  1. to deceive, to persuade to anything under false pretenses. artifice. trick.

References

  • “Daya” in Jonathan Rigg, A Dictionary of the Sunda language (1862), page 103.

Tagalog

Etymology

From Malay daya (trick), from either Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *daya (to cheat) or Sanskrit द्वय (dvaya, duplicity).[1]

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: da‧ya
  • IPA(key): /ˈdajaʔ/, [ˈda.jɐʔ]

Noun

dayà

  1. deceit; fraud; cheating; trickery
    Synonyms: pagdaraya, linlang, panlilinlang, lansi, panlalansi, gantso, panggagantso
  2. dodge (trick to deceit)

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Agutaynen: daya
  • Bikol Central: daya
  • Hiligaynon: daya
  • Hanunoo: daya

References

  1. Potet, Jean-Paul G. (2016) Tagalog Borrowings and Cognates, Lulu Press, →ISBN, pages 73-74
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.