bania
[ ban-yuh ]
/ ˈbæn yə /
noun
Also
ban·iya
[ban-yuh, -ee-uh] /ˈbæn yə, -i ə/.
Origin of bania
First recorded in 1590–1600
Words nearby bania
bangtail muster,
bangui,
bangweulu,
banh mi,
bani,
bania,
banian,
banish,
banister,
banister back,
banisters
Definition for baniya (2 of 2)
banyan
or ban·ian
[ ban-yuh n ]
/ ˈbæn yən /
noun
Also called banyan tree.
an East Indian fig tree, Ficus benghalensis, of the mulberry family, having branches that send out adventitious roots to the ground and sometimes cause the tree to spread over a wide area.
Also bania, baniya. (in India)
- a Hindu trader or merchant of a particular caste, the rules of which forbid eating flesh.
- a loose shirt, jacket, or gown.
Origin of banyan
1590–1600; < Portuguese (perhaps < Arabic) < Gujarati
vāṇiyo (singular) or
vāṇiyā (plural) member of the merchant caste (compare Prakrit
vāṇiaya, Sanskrit
vāṇija trader); the tree is said to have taken its name from a particular tree of the species near which merchants had built a booth; source of final nasal uncertain
Example sentences from the Web for baniya
British Dictionary definitions for baniya
banyan
banian
/ (ˈbænjən) /
noun
a moraceous tree, Ficus benghalensis, of tropical India and the East Indies, having aerial roots that grow down into the soil forming additional trunks
a member of the Hindu merchant caste of N and W India
a loose-fitting shirt, jacket, or robe, worn originally in India
Word Origin for banyan
C16: from Hindi
baniyā, from Sanskrit
vānija merchant