الواصلة
ban·yanالتركية النطق
bänyınالنطق
/ˈbanyən/ /ˈbænjən/
علم أصول الكلمات
[ 'ban-y&n ] (noun.) 1634. From Portuguese banian, from Arabic بنيان, from Gujarati વાણિયો (vāṇiyo, “merchant”), from Sanskrit वाणिज (vāṇijá), from earlier वणिज् (vaṇíj, “merchant, trader”). The name appears to have been first bestowed popularly on a famous tree of this species growing near Bandar Abbas, under which the Bannians or Hindu traders settled at that port, had built a little pagoda.1903, Yule, Henry, Sir. Hobson-Jobson, A glossary of colloquial Anglo-Indian words and phrases, and of kindred terms, etymological, historical, geographical and discursive., London: J. Murray: