ghat

See also: ȝhat

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Hindi घाट (ghāṭ, pier), from Sanskrit घट्ट (ghaṭṭa, a landing-place, steps on the side of a river leading to the waters). Perhaps related to Telugu కట్ట (kaṭṭa, dam, embankment).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /ɡɔːt/, /ɡɑːt/
  • Rhymes: -ɔːt

Noun

ghat (plural ghats)

  1. (India) A descending path or stairway to a river; a ford or landing-place.
    1855, Joseph Dalton Hooker, Flora Indica
    • The abrupt escarpment of the western Ghats condenses so much of the moisture of the south-west monsoon
    • 2008, Aravind Adiga, The White Tiger, Atlantic 2009, p. 16:
      Chunks of wood were being built into funeral pyres on the steps of the ghat that went down into the water; four bodies were burning on the ghat steps when we got there.
  2. (India) A mountain range.
    • 1885, Edward Balfour, Cyclopaedia of India
      And farther south, in the interior of the Peninsula, in the elevated tract from 1200 to 2400 feet above the sea, between the Eastern and Western Ghats
  3. (India) A mountain pass.
  4. (Caribbean) A steep ravine leading to the sea.
  5. (India) A burning-ghat.

Anagrams

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