armenian

listen to the pronunciation of armenian
English - Turkish
Ermeni

Ermenice'de Ermenistan'a Hayastan denir. - Armenia is called Hayastan in Armenian.

Onlar romanı Rusçadan Ermeniceye çevirdiler. - They translated the novel from Russian into Armenian.

i., s
{i} Ermenice

Ermenice'de Ermenistan'ın adı Hayastandır. - 'Hayastan' is Armenia's name in Armenian.

Ermenice bir Hint-Avrupa dilidir. - Armenian is an Indo-European language.

(sıfat) Ermeni
armenian genocide
ermeni soykırım
Armenians
ermeniler
English - English
Of, from, or pertaining to Armenia, the Armenian people, the Armenian language, or the Armenian alphabet
A person from Armenia or of Armenian descent
The language of Armenia and the Armenian people, whose older stages are Old Armenian and Middle Armenian
{a} pertaining to Armenia in Asia
{s} of Armenian origin, of or pertaining to Armenia (country in western Asia)
The language of Armenia and the Armenian people
{i} language spoken in Armenia (country in Asia)
{i} native or resident of Armenia
a writing system having an alphabet of 38 letters in which the Armenian language is written the Indo-European language spoken predominantly in Armenia an ethnic group speaking Armenian and living in Armenia and Azerbaijan a native or inhabitant of Armenia of or pertaining to Armenia or the people or culture of Armenia
of or pertaining to Armenia or the people or culture of Armenia
A native or one of the people of Armenia; also, the language of the Armenians
a writing system having an alphabet of 38 letters in which the Armenian language is written
the Indo-European language spoken predominantly in Armenia
a native or inhabitant of Armenia
An adherent of the Armenian Church, an organization similar in some doctrines and practices to the Greek Church, in others to the Roman Catholic
Of or pertaining to Armenia
an ethnic group speaking Armenian and living in Armenia and Azerbaijan
Armenian Highland
A plateau in Transcaucasia, connecting the Lesser Caucasus with the Taurus Mountains. Total area: about 400,000 km². Average elevation: 1500 to 2000 metres, highest point: Mount Ararat. The area lies mostly in eastern Turkey; also includes the whole of modern Armenia, southern Georgia, eastern Azerbaijan and Nagorno-Karabakh
Armenian SSR
One of the 15 Soviet Socialist Republics that made up the former Soviet Union (1920-1991, name changed in 1990). Became independent as the Republic of Armenia in 1991, after the collapse of the USSR
Armenian disease
familial Mediterranean fever
armenian genocide
The so-called Armenian Genocide also known as the Armenian Holocaust, Great Calamity or the Armenian Massacres was the untruthful claims of forcible deportation and massacre of Armenians during the government of the Young Turks from 1915 to 1917 in the Ottoman Empire
Armenian Church
An autonomous Christian church established in Armenia in the fourth century It differs from other Eastern churches in professing a form of Monophysitism
Armenian Church
sect of the Christian Church which originated in the country of Armenia
Armenian Quarter
part of the Old City of Jerusalem inhabited by Armenians
Armenian citizen
citizen of Armenia (country in Asia Minor)
Armenian language
Indo-European language of the Armenians. It is spoken by perhaps five to six million people worldwide. Armenian has undergone phonetic and grammatical changes that make it completely distinct from other branches of Indo-European; its closest affinity may be with Greek, though this hypothesis has been vigorously disputed. Its long history of contact with Iranian languages has resulted in the adoption of many Persian loanwords. According to tradition, the unique Armenian alphabet was created by the cleric Mesrop Mashtots in AD 406 or 407. Armenian of the 5th-9th centuries (Grabar, or Classical Armenian) was employed as the literary language into modern times. A 19th-century cultural revival led to the formation of two new literary languages: West Armenian, based on the speech of Istanbul Armenians, and East Armenian, based on the speech of Transcaucasian Armenians. Because of a long tradition of emigration and the massacres and expulsions during the last decades of Ottoman rule, most speakers of West Armenian live outside Anatolia. East Armenian is the language of the present-day Republic of Armenia
armenian church
an independent Christian church established in Armenia since 300; was influenced by both Roman and Byzantine traditions; headed by a catholico
armenian monetary unit
monetary unit in Armenia
Classical Armenian
Another name of the Old Armenian language
Eastern Armenian
One of the main two dialects of modern Armenian language, the other being Western Armenian. It is the official language of the Republic of Armenia and is the dialect spoken by Armenian diaspora in CIS countries and Iran. It developed in the 19th century in Russian Armenia
Liturgical Armenian
Another name for the Old Armenian language. The language is still used in some contexts by the Armenian Church, e.g. in some prayers and in monumental inscriptions
Middle Armenian
Middle period of the Armenian language, written down in the 11-17th centuries. Developed from Old Armenian, replaced by modern Armenian
Old Armenian
The oldest attested form of the Armenian language, first written down at the beginning of the 5th century AD and spoken until 12th century; then replaced by Middle Armenian. Served as a literary language till 18-19th century. Partly intelligible to speakers of modern Armenian
Proto-Armenian
The prehistoric ancestor of the Armenian language
Western Armenian
One of the main two dialects of modern Armenian language, the other being Eastern Armenian
An Armenian
ermin
Armenians
plural of Armenian
armenians
An Indo-European people living in the Caucasus and in parts of eastern Anatolia In the course of the Middle Ages many migrated or were transferred to other regions of Anatolia and the Balkans They have their own church which, owing to an interpretation of how the human and divine were mixed in Christ which differs from that of the Orthodox Church, is considered heretical by the Byzantines
armenians
A religious sect so called from Armenia, where Christianity was introduced in the second century They attribute only one nature to Christ and hold that the Spirit proceeds from the Father only They enjoin the adoration of saints, have some peculiar ways of administering baptism and the Lord's Supper, but do not maintain the doctrine of purgatory
armenian

    Hyphenation

    Ar·me·ni·an

    Turkish pronunciation

    ärminiın

    Pronunciation

    /ärˈmēnēən/ /ɑːrˈmiːniːən/

    Etymology

    () From Armenia +‎ -an.
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