different between kumara vs kumari

kumara

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Maori k?mara.

Pronunciation

IPA(key): /?ku?m???/

Noun

kumara (plural kumaras or kumara)

  1. (New Zealand) A sweet potato.

Derived terms

  • suck the kumara

Anagrams

  • karamu

Finnish

Adjective

kumara (comparative kumarampi, superlative kumarin)

  1. A hunch (bent, bowed posture)
    olla kumarassa = to hunch

Declension

Derived terms

  • kumaruus

kumara From the web:

  • what's kumara in english
  • kumarakom what to see
  • kumarakom what to do
  • kumara what language
  • what is kumara vegetable
  • what does kumara mean
  • what is kumarakom famous for
  • what is kumarahou used for


kumari

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Sanskrit ?????? (kum?r?, princess; young girl).

Noun

kumari (plural kumaris)

  1. (Hinduism, chiefly Nepal) A living goddess; a prepubescent girl worshipped as a manifestation of divine female energy.
    • 2011, Mark Magnier, Living goddess' fall back to earth (in Los Angeles Times, 14 February, page 1)
      Shakya [] reached puberty and 'retired' as a royal kumari, as the young Nepalese goddesses are known.

Translations

Anagrams

  • Kimura, kimura, rumaki

kumari From the web:

  • what's kumari in english
  • what kumari means
  • kumari what language
  • what is kumari kandam
  • what is kumari puja
  • what does kumari mean
  • what is kumari in pan card
  • what is kumari in nepal
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like