دلی

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See also: دلى and دلي

Ottoman Turkish

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Inherited from Old Anatolian Turkish دلی, from Proto-Turkic *tēlbe (mad, crazy). Cognate with Azerbaijani dəli, Bashkir тиле (tile), Kazakh дәлду (däldu), Kyrgyz тели (teli), Turkmen däli, Uyghur تەلۋە (telwe) and Uzbek telba.

Adjective

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دلی (deli)

  1. mad, crazy, insane, lunatic, bonkers, not sane, exhibiting unsoundness or disorder of mind, mentally deranged
    Synonyms: احمق (ahmak), دیوانه (divane), مجنون (mecnun)
  2. whimsical, eccentric, quirky, bizarre, odd, given to quirks or idiosyncrasies, strange in a somewhat silly, manner
  3. inconsiderate, thoughtless, unthoughtful, not considerate, showing lack of due thought or care for the other people
  4. rash, foolhardy, reckless, impulsive, precipitate, acting too quickly without considering the consequences and risks

Noun

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دلی (deli) (definite accusative دلیی (deliyi), plural دلیلر (deliler))

  1. madman, madwoman, loony, nut, psycho, schizo, nutcase, a person who is insane or mentally disturbed
  2. (historical) deli, a member of a light cavalry unit within the Ottoman Empire created to act as a shock troop

Derived terms

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Descendants

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  • Gagauz: deli
  • Turkish: deli
  • Armenian: տէլի (tēli)
  • Greek: ντελής (ntelís)
  • Hungarian: deli
  • Serbo-Croatian: delija

Further reading

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Urdu

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Urdu Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia ur

Etymology

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Transliteration of Hindi दिल्ली (dillī).

Pronunciation

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Proper noun

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دِلّی (dillīf (Hindi spelling दिल्ली)

  1. (India, informal) Alternative form of دِہْلی (dihlī, Delhi)

Usage notes

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This term is mainly used informally. The standard term for Delhi in Urdu is دہلی (dehlī).

See also

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