دیو

See also: ديو

Ottoman Turkish

Etymology

  • Borrowed from Classical Persian دیوْ (dēw), from Middle Persian 𐫅𐫏𐫇 (dyw /⁠dēw⁠/), from Old Persian 𐎭𐎡𐎺 (d-i-v /⁠daivaʰ⁠⁠/), from Proto-Iranian *daywáh, from Proto-Indo-Iranian *daywás, from Proto-Indo-European *deywós, from *dyew- + *-ós.

    Noun

    دیو • (dev, div)

    1. demon
    2. giant

    Descendants

    • Turkish: dev, div
    • Serbo-Croatian: div / див

    Persian

    رستم دیو را می‌کشدRustam slays a demon

    Etymology

  • Inherited from Middle Persian 𐫅𐫏𐫇 (dyw /⁠dēw⁠/), from Old Persian 𐎭𐎡𐎺 (d-i-v /⁠daivaʰ⁠⁠/), from Proto-Iranian *daywáh, from Proto-Indo-Iranian *daywás, from Proto-Indo-European *deywós, from *dyew- + *-ós.

    Pronunciation

     

    Readings
    Classical reading? dēw
    Dari reading? dēw
    Iranian reading? div
    Tajik reading? dev

    Noun

    دیو • (dēw / div) (plural دیوان (dēwān / divân), or دیوها (dēw-hā / div-hâ), Tajik spelling дев)

    1. demon, devil, goblin; evil supernatural creature
      • c. 1011, Abu'l-Qāsim Firdawsī, “The tale of the Akwān Dēw”, in شاهنامه [Book of Kings]‎[1]:
        تو مر دیو را مردم بد شناس
        کسی کو ندارد ز یزدان سپاس
        هرانکو گذشت از ره مردمی
        ز دیوان شمر مشمر از آدمی
        tu mar dēw rā mardum-i bad šinās
        kasē k-ō na-dārad zi yazdān sipās
        har ān k-ō guḏašt az rah-i mardumī
        zi dēwān šumar mašumar az ādamī
        Consider the demon to be a bad person.
        Whoever does not have gratitude towards God
        And whoever leaves the proper path of humanity:
        Count him as among the demons, do not consider him a human.
        (Classical Persian romanization)
      1. (Islam) wicked jinn; sometimes contrasted with پری (parī / pari, fairy, good jinn).
      2. (Zoroastrianism) daeva, a spirit of evil

    Derived terms

    • دیوانه (dēwāna / divâne)
    • دیوسان (dēwsān / divsân)

    Descendants

    Urdu

    Etymology 1

  • Borrowed from Classical Persian دیوْ (dēw), from Middle Persian 𐫅𐫏𐫇 (dyw /⁠dēw⁠/), from Old Persian 𐎭𐎡𐎺 (d-i-v /⁠daivaʰ⁠⁠/), from Proto-Iranian *daywáh, from Proto-Indo-Iranian *daywás, from Proto-Indo-European *deywós, from *dyew- + *-ós.

    Noun

    دیو • (dēo, devm (Hindi spelling देव)

    1. demon
    2. devil

    Etymology 2

    From Sanskrit देव (deva).

    Noun

    دیو • (devm (Hindi spelling देव)

    1. deva
    2. deity
    3. god
    4. celestial being