Pakistāna
Latvian
Etymology
Via other European languages, ultimately a borrowing from the local name of the country, with two converging origins: on the one hand, from Urdu پاکستان (“Land of the Pure”), from Urdu پاک (pak, “pure, holy, immaculate, chaste, undefiled”) and Persian ستان (stān, “land”); on the other hand, a coinage by Choudhry Rahmat Ali, who published it in the pamphlet Now or Never on January 28, 1933 as an acronym of the names of the "Muslim homelands" of western India: Punjab, Afghania, Kashmir, Sindh, and Balochistan. An i was later added to the English rendition of the name to ease pronunciation.
Proper noun
Pakistāna f (4th declension)
- Pakistan (country in Asia, with Islamabad as its capital)
- Pakistānas karogs ― the flag of Pakistan
- mūsdienās joprojām Pakistānai ar Indiju ir konflikts par musulmaņu apdzīvoto Kašmīru ― today Pakistan still has a conflict with India about the Muslim-populated (region of) Kashmir
- 1998. gadā Pakistānā dzīvoja 132 miljoni iedzīvotāji ― in 1998 there lived in Pakistan 132 million inhabitants
Declension
Declension of Pakistāna (4th declension)
singular (vienskaitlis) | plural (daudzskaitlis) | |
---|---|---|
nominative (nominatīvs) | Pakistāna | — |
accusative (akuzatīvs) | Pakistānu | — |
genitive (ģenitīvs) | Pakistānas | — |
dative (datīvs) | Pakistānai | — |
instrumental (instrumentālis) | Pakistānu | — |
locative (lokatīvs) | Pakistānā | — |
vocative (vokatīvs) | Pakistāna | — |
Synonyms
Related terms
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.