different between manji vs manti

manji

English

Etymology 1

From Hindi ????? (m?ñjh?, boatman, sailor).

Alternative forms

  • mangee, manjee

Noun

manji (plural manjis)

  1. (obsolete, India, Bangladesh, Pakistan) A captain or skipper of a boat. [17th–19th c.]
    • 1808–10, William Hickey, Memoirs of a Georgian Rake, Folio Society 1995, p. 361:
      I prevailed upon the mangee of a pinnace I found laying in the creek, awaiting the arrival of a gentleman hourly expected from Vizagapatam, to convey us up the river as far as Budge Budge [] .

Etymology 2

From a form of Punjabi ???? (mañj?, raised bed). The Sikh sense is based on their use as seats of authority.

Noun

manji (plural manjis)

  1. A type of raised bed similar to a cot from South Asia.
    • 1990, W. H. McLeod, Textual Sources for the Study of Sikhism, page 152:
      Literally, 'He sat on a manji.' The manji is a small string bed. In the villages of the Punjab acknowledged leaders, spiritual and temporal, would commonly receive their followers seated on a manji.
    • 2005, W. Owen Cole, Piara Singh Sambhi, A Popular Dictionary of Sikhism: Sikh Religion and Philosophy:
      The significance of a manji lies in its use as the seat of a person in authority, other people sitting on the ground.
    • 2011, Rocky Singh, Mayur Sharma, Highway on my Plate: The indian guide to roadside eating, Random House India (?ISBN):
      There is even a tap to bathe under after you have spent a night sleeping on the manjis (beds), and all this comes at the price of a meal!
    • 2015, Shauna Singh Baldwin, What the Body Remembers:
      Roop doesn't want to sleep on a mat on the floor; she wants to sleep with Lajo Bhua on a manji, wants Lajo Bhua to tell her stories till she falls asleep.
  2. (Sikhism) A Sikh religious administrative unit.
    • 1993, Sunita Puri, Advent of Sikh Religion: A Socio-political Perspective, page 155:
      In the Janam Sakhis and utterances of Guru Nanak there is no reference, implicit or explicit, to the subject of manjis.

Derived terms

  • manji sahib/Manji Sahib

Etymology 3

From Japanese ? (manji).

Noun

manji (plural manjis)

  1. A left-facing Japanese swastika.

Embu

Etymology

From Proto-Bantu *màjíj??.

Noun

manji

  1. water

References

  • Ciarunji Chesaina, Oral Literature of the Embu and Mbeere (1997, ?ISBN

Japanese

Romanization

manji

  1. R?maji transcription of ???

Serbo-Croatian

Adjective

manji (Cyrillic spelling ????)

  1. comparative degree of malen

manji From the web:

  • manji meaning
  • what manjit name meaning
  • manjimup what to do
  • what does manji mean
  • what is manjistha powder
  • what does manji mean in japanese
  • what is manjistha in tamil
  • what is manjistha in malayalam


manti

English

Etymology

From Turkish mant?.

Noun

manti (plural manti or manties)

  1. A type of dumpling served in Turkish and Central Asian cuisine

Translations

Anagrams

  • Maint., Matin, matin, tamin

Guinea-Bissau Creole

Etymology

From Portuguese manter. Cognate with Kabuverdianu manti "maintain".

Verb

manti

  1. to hold
  2. to keep
  3. to maintain

Italian

Noun

manti m

  1. plural of manto
  2. meat-filled pockets of pasta in Turkey and Central Asia

Anagrams

  • minta

Swazi

Etymology

From emanti.

Relative

-mânti

  1. wet

Inflection


Turkish

Noun

manti (definite accusative mantiyi, plural mantiler)

  1. (Lubunyaca) Young top (dominant partner in a BDSM relationship) (generally between ages 15 and 20).

Declension

See also

  • laço
  • balamoz, malamoz

manti From the web:

  • what mantis shrimp see
  • what mantis eat
  • what mantis lives the longest
  • what mantis shrimp eat
  • what mantis eat ark
  • mantis meaning
  • what's mantine catch rate
  • what mantis in english
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like