بدعت

See also: بدعة

Ottoman Turkish

Etymology

Borrowed from Persian بدعت, from Arabic بدعة.

Noun

بدعت • (bidʿat)

  1. A thing newly created or introduced; a creation; an invention; an innovation; especially an innovation in religious practice; or, any science or custom introduced subsequently to the time of the Prophet Muhammad.

Descendants

  • Turkish: bidat

References

Persian

Etymology

    Borrowed from Arabic بِدْعَة (bidʕa).

    Pronunciation

     

    Readings
    Classical reading? bid'at
    Dari reading? bid'at
    Iranian reading? bed'at
    Tajik reading? bid'at

    Noun

    بدعت • (bid'at / bed'at) (plural بدعت‌ها (bid'at-hā / bed'at-hâ), or بدعات, Tajik spelling бидъат)

    1. change, revision, alteration
    2. (Islam) bid'ah: deviation, transgression

    Antonyms

    Urdu

    Etymology

      Borrowed from Classical Persian بِدْعَت (bid'at), borrowed from Arabic بِدْعَة (bidʕa), from بَدَعَ (badaʕa).

      Pronunciation

      Noun

      بِدْعَت • (bid'atm (Hindi spelling बिदत)

      1. (Islam) bid'a (heresy, innovation, ie. not conforming to a religion's ideals)

      Declension

      Declension of بدعت
      singular plural
      direct بِدْعَت (bid'at) بِدْعَت (bid'at)
      oblique بِدْعَت (bid'at) بِدْعَتوں (bid'atõ)
      vocative بِدْعَت (bid'at) بِدْعَتو (bid'ato)

      Ushojo

      Etymology

      From Urdu بدعت (bidʿat), from Arabic بِدْعَة (bidʕa).

      Noun

      بِدعَت (bidʿat)

      1. something new
      2. groundless
      3. modern