osh

See also: Osh

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Tajik ош ().

Noun

osh (uncountable)

  1. A Tajik dish of rice cooked with meat and oil; a kind of pilaf.

Anagrams


Kalasha

Noun

osh

  1. Alternative spelling of

Narragansett

Etymology

From Proto-Algonquian *noᐧhϴa (my father).[1] Compare Massachusett ꝏshoh, ꝏsh, ꝏshe, which according to Trumbull literally means "he comes from him" (compare okásu),[2]. Further cognates include Ojibwe -oos (father), noos (my father),[3] and Lenape nooch (my father), gooch (your father).[4]

Noun

osh anim

  1. father

Declension

  • cuttòso

References

  1. Hewson, John (2017), *noᐧhϴa”, in Proto-Algonquian Online Dictionary, Carleton University, School of Linguistics and Applied Language Studies
  2. James Hammond Trumbull (1903) Natick Dictionary, Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, OCLC 1038122077, pages 113, 256
  3. Nora Livesay and John D. Nichols, editors (2012-2021), noos”, in Ojibwe People's Dictionary, University of Minnesota
  4. Eben Norton Horsford, editor (1887) Zeisberger's Indian dictionary, Cambridge, MA: John Wilson and Son, OCLC 466293544, page 72

Further reading

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