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Pidar (Ugaritic: 𐎔𐎄𐎗, pdr) was a god
worshiped in
Ugarit in the late
Bronze Age. He was ****ociated with the
weather god Baal, and it is
often ****umed...
- (Shyadar-
Pidar), Gil puja (Gil-
Pidar), and
Meserani puja (Meserani-
Pidar), are
considered more
important than others. They
celebrate the Shyadar-
pidar festival...
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Other common names in
various languages include lasura, leswa,laveda,
pidar, panugeri, naruvilli, geduri, sepistan,
burgund dulu
wanan '"Iriki Chettu...
- Persian: pīd ī wuzurgīh, or the
Zoroastrian deity Zurwān; Parthian:
Pidar wuzurgift,
Pidar roshn; Chinese: 無上明尊; lit. 'Unsurp****ed
Divinity of Light' or 薩緩...
- piya, lala, po pet, pes pér pîyer, pîyar, per piyər bua tat pedar, bābā
pidar pid
pitar pitar fyd fear ters tirs tirs wēra (yara), bēra târs tars turs...
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symbol used for the
Hurrian god Teshub.
Hadad was also
called Rimon/Rimmon,
Pidar, Rapiu, Baal-Zephon, or
often simply Baʿal (Lord), but this
title was also...
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letters expressing parts of the
Persian word phonetically, e.g. ⟨ʼB-tr⟩ for
pidar "father". The
grammatical endings were
usually written phonetically. A logogram...
- Γέρων,
which when
compounded as
Paidiogeron led to Coptic: Ⲡⲓⲇⲁⲣ Ⲓⲟⲩⲅⲉⲣⲟⲛ,
Pidar Yougiron)
which meant the "old
young man", i.e. "the
young man with the...
- and
inalienable nouns are
often noun
phrases with
pronominal modifiers (
pidar 'father' is ABYtl,
originally Aramaic ʾby 'my father', pāy 'foot' is LGLE...
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Plarina is
related to the
Bactrian term plār,
which derives from Old
Iranian piðar (in
Bactrian and Pashto, Old
Iranian /ð/
usually yields /l/), and is related...