Webster's Online Dictionary
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Definition: Aryan

Part of Speech Definition
Adjective 1. Of or relating to the former Indo-European people.[Wordnet]
2. Of or pertaining to the people called Aryans; Indo-European; Indo-Germanic; as, the Aryan stock, the Aryan languages.[Websters]
3. Being arboreal. [Eve - graph theoretic]
4. Adjective base of the adverb aryanly.[Eve - graph theoretic]
Adverb Form
(aryanly)
1. Virtually never used adverbial inflection of the adjective aryan.[Eve - graph theoretic]
Noun 1. (according to Nazi doctrine) a Caucasian person of Nordic descent (and not a Jew).[Wordnet]
2. A member of the prehistoric people who spoke Proto-Indo European.[Wordnet]
3. One of a primitive people supposed to have lived in prehistoric times, in Central Asia, east of the Caspian Sea, and north of the Hindoo Koosh and Paropamisan Mountains, and to have been the stock from which sprang the Hindoo, Persian, Greek, Latin, Celtic, Teutonic, Slavonic, and other races; one of that ethnological division of mankind called also Indo-European or Indo-Germanic.[Websters]
4. The language of the original Aryans.[Websters].

Sources: compiled from various sources, (under license) copyright 2008. Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, WordNet 3.0 Copyright © 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

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"Aryan" is a common misspelling or typo for: aryans.

Date "Aryan" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1381. (references)

Common Expressions: Aryan

Expressions Definition
Aryan Games The Aryan Games were a proposed replacement for the Olympic Games by the National Socialist government, to be housed permanently in Nuremberg at the German Stadium that was designed, but never built, by Albert Speer. (references)
Aryan invasion theory The controversial Aryan invasion theory is a historical theory first put forth by the German Indologist Friedrich Max Müller and others in the mid nineteenth century in India. It was proposed in the context of European colonial expansion in the mid 19th century. (references)
Aryan Terrorism Aryan Terrorism is a National Socialist Black Metal band from Ukraine formed in 2002 by Knjaz Varggoth. (references)
Dragonland's Aryan Restoration Troops The site states that its Patron Avatar is the Baron Roman Fedorovich von Ungern-Sternberg, and that he was declared a Mahakala incarnation by the Dalai Lama XII. (references)
The Aryan March AMOGH-a vedic progressive metal band and is basically a solo project of a professional musician from Mumbai city, India. Instrumentally AMOGH`s music is a combination of Indian classical orchestra with some symphony/opera influence along with progressive rock, black metal and jazz music. (references)
Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate is a book by Koenraad Elst. The book discusses various aspects of the Indo-Aryan migration debate. (references)
White Aryan Resistance The White Aryan Resistance is a white supremacist organization headed by former Klan leader Tom Metzger. It is based in California, USA. (references)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Specialty Expressions: Aryan

Expressions Domain Definition
Aryan Languages Antiquities Aryan Languages. See Indo-European Languages. (references)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Extended Definition: Aryan


Aryan

Aryan and Arya can refer to:

  • Aryan, a term expressing various historical notions of linguistics, race and/or ethnicity
    • Indo-Iranian languages, a language group also known as Aryan languages.
    • Proto-Indo-Iranians
    • Ancient Iranian peoples
    • Indo-Aryans
    • Aryan race, a historical concept of scientific racism
    • Arya, a term in Hinduism with a variety of meanings, but generally along the lines of "kind", "favorable", or "devoted."
  • Ari (lion) or Aryeh, an Aramaic given name used in a blessing in the Bible.
  • Arya (band), 2007 and 2008 Toronto Independent Music Award-winning Canadian progressive metal band.

In film:

  • Aryan (film), a 2006 film.
  • Arya (2004 film), a Tollywood film starring Allu Arjun.
  • Arya (film), a 2007 Tamil film starring R. Madhavan and Bhavana.
  • Arya (actor), a south Indian actor.

In fiction:

  • Arya Stark, a character in George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire book series.
  • Arya Dröttningu, a character from the Inheritance cycle.

In geography:

In education:

  • Arya Central School, a school located in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, India

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia; from the article "Aryan (disambiguation)". Image Credit.



Extended Definition: Aryan


Aryan

Aryan is an English word derived from the Sanskrit "Ārya" meaning "noble" or "honorable".[1][2] The Avestan cognate is "Airya" and the Old Persian equivalent is "Ariya". It is widely held to have been used as an ethnic self-designation of the Proto-Indo-Iranians[citation needed]. Since, in the 19th century, the Indo-Iranians were the most ancient known speakers of Indo-European languages, the word Aryan was adopted to refer not only to the Indo-Iranian people, but also to Indo-European speakers as a whole[citation needed].

In Europe, the concept of an Aryan race became influential in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as linguists and ethnologists argued that speakers of these Indo-European languages constitute a distinctive race, descended from an ancient people, who were referred to as the "primitive Aryans", but are now known as Proto-Indo-Europeans.

In linguistics, Aryan is most often used in the context of the sub-branch of Indo-Iranian languages referred to as Indo-Aryan languages.

Etymology

Proto-Indo-European (PIE) *ar-yo-, a yo-adjective to a root *ar "to assemble skillfully", present in Greek harma "chariot", Greek aristos, (as in "aristocracy"), Latin ars "art", etc. Proto-Indo-Iranian *ar-ta- was a related concept of "properly joined" expressing a religious concept of cosmic order.

The adjective *aryo- was suggested as ascending to Proto-Indo-European times as the self-designation of the speakers of the Proto-Indo-European language itself. It was suggested that other words such as Éire, the Irish name of Ireland, and Ehre (German for "honour") were related to it, but these are now widely regarded as untenable,[3] and while *ar-yo- is certainly a well-formed PIE adjective, there is no evidence that it was used as an ethnic self-designation outside the Indo-Iranian branch. In the 1850s Max Müller theorized that the word originated as a denotation of farming populations, since he thought it likely that it was related to the root *arh3, meaning "to plow"; thus Aryans would be those who plow. Other 19th century writers, such as Charles Morris, repeated this idea, linking the expansion of PIE speakers to the spread of agriculturalists. Most linguists now consider *arh3 to be unrelated.

The Proto-Iranian form *Aryāna- appears as Æryānam Väejāh "expanse of the Aryans" in Avestan, in Middle Persian as Ērān, and in Modern Persian as Īrān. Similarly, Northern India was referred to by the tatpurusha Aryavarta "Arya-abode" in ancient times.

Semantics of Sanskrit arya

Main article: Arya

According to Paul Thieme (1938), the Vedic term arya- in its earliest attestations has a meaning of "stranger", but "stranger" in the sense of "potential guest" as opposed to "barbarian" (mleccha, dasa), taking this to indicate that arya was originally the ethnic self-designation of the Indo-Iranians. Arya directly contrasts with Dasa or Dasyu in the Rigveda (e.g. RV 1.51.8, ví jānīhy âryān yé ca dásyavaḥ "Discern thou well Aryas and Dasyus"). This situation is directly comparable to the term Hellene in Ancient Greece. The Middle Indic interjection arē!, rē! "you there!" is derived from the vocative arí! "stranger!".

The Sanskrit lexicon Amarakosha (c. AD 450) defines Arya as mahākula kulīnārya "being of a noble family", sabhya "having gentle or refined behavior and demeanor", sajjana "being well-born and respectable", and sādhava "being virtuous, honourable, or righteous". In Hinduism, the religiously initiated Brahmin, Kshatriya and Vaishyas were arya, a title of honor and respect given to certain people for noble behaviour. This word is used by Hindus, Buddhists, Jains and Zoroastrians to mean noble or spiritual.[4], for example, Four Noble Truths (Pali: Cattāri ariyasaccāni, Sanskrit: Catvāri āryasatyāni), and Noble Eightfold Path (Pāli: Ariyo aṭṭhaṅgiko maggo; Sanskrit: Ārya 'ṣṭāṅga mārgaḥ).

Indo-European

Map showing the distribution of Indo-European languages.
Map showing the distribution of Indo-European languages.

Max Müller and other 19th century linguists theorized that the term *arya was used as the self-description of the Proto-Indo-Europeans, who were often referred to at this time as the "primitive Aryans". By extension, the word came to be used in the West for the Indo-European speaking peoples as a whole. Besides Müller for example H. Chavée in 1867 uses the term in this sense (aryaque), but this never saw frequent use in linguistics, precisely for being reserved for "Indo-Iranian" already. G. I. Ascoli in 1854 used arioeuropeo, viz. a compound "Aryo-European" with the same rationale as "Indo-European", the term now current, which has been in frequent use since the 1830s. Nevertheless, the use of Aryan as a synonym for Indo-European became widespread in non-linguistic and popular usage by the end of the nineteenth century.

Use of "Aryan" for "Indo-European" in academia was obsolete by the 1910s: B. W. Leist in 1888 still titles Alt-Arisches Jus Gentium ("Old Aryan [meaning Indo-European, not Indo-Iranian] Ius Gentium"). P. v. Bradke in 1890 titles Methode und Ergebnisse der arischen (indogermanischen) Altterthumswissenschaft, still using "Aryan", but inserting an explanatory bracket. Otto Schrader in 1918 in his Reallexikon der indogermanischen Altertumskunde under the entry Arier matter-of-factly discusses the Indo-Iranians, without any reference to a possible wider meaning of the term.

According to Michael Witzel in his paper Autochthonous Aryans? The Evidence from Old Indian and Iranian Texts, "the use of the word Arya or Aryan to designate the speakers of all Indo-European (IE) languages or as the designation of a particular race is an aberration of many writers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries and should be avoided."[5]

Indo-Iranian

Main article: Indo-Iranians

The most probable date for Proto-Indo-Iranian unity is roughly around 2500 BC. In this sense of the word Aryan, the Aryans were an ancient culture preceding both the Vedic and Avestan cultures. Candidates for an archeological identification of this Indo-Iranian culture are the Andronovo and/or Srubnaya Archeological Complexes. India, Anatolia and Central Asia have also been suggested as possible homelands for this culture.

In linguistics, the term Aryan currently may be used to refer to the Indo-Iranian language family. To prevent confusion because of its several meanings, the linguistic term is often avoided today. It has been replaced by the unambiguous terms Proto-Indo-European, Proto-Indo-Iranian, Indo-Iranian, Iranian and Indo-Aryan.

The Proto-Indo-Iranian language evolved into the family of Indo-Iranian languages, of which the oldest-known members are Vedic Sanskrit, Avestan and another Indo-Iranian language, known only from loan-words found in the Mitanni language.

Indo-Aryan

Main articles: Indo-Aryans and Indo-Aryan languages
See also: Arya#Hinduism
See also: Indo-Aryan migration

There is evidence of an Indo-Aryan language in Mesopotamia around 1500 BC in the form of loanwords in the Mitanni dialect of Hurrian, the speakers of which, it is speculated, may have once had an Indo-Aryan ruling class[citation needed]. At around the same time, the Indo-Aryans associated with the Vedic civilization, which dates back to the same period. They are sometimes called Vedic Aryans because it is believed that they brought the Vedas to the Indian subcontinent[citation needed] after the Aryans migrated into that region (this theory is contrary to the Out of India Theory). In ancient India, the term Aryavarta, meaning "abode of the Aryans", was used to refer to the northern Indian subcontinent[citation needed].

Indo-Aryans are spread over most of the northern, eastern, western and central parts of the Indian subcontinent and in the islands of Sri Lanka and the Maldives. Indo-Aryan languages that exist outside the Indian subcontinent include Romani, the language of the Roma people, often known as "Gypsies", Parya, used in Tajikistan, Jataki, used in Ukraine, and Domari which is used in the Middle East.

Iranian

Main articles: Iranian peoples and Iranian languages

Since ancient times, Persians have used the term Aryan as a racial designation in an ethnic sense to describe their lineage and their language, and this tradition has continued into the present day amongst modern Iranians [6]. In fact, the name Iran is a cognate of Aryan and means "Land of the Aryans." [7] [8] [9] However, many of these usages are also intelligible if we understand the word Aryan in its sense of "noble" or "Spiritual".

This Iranian necklace was excavated from Gilan, Iran (1st millennium BCE,  National Museum of Iran). Because of evidence of its use in several Indo-European cultures the swastika came to be identified as "the oldest Aryan symbol" by several writers in the late 19th century.
This Iranian necklace was excavated from Gilan, Iran (1st millennium BCE, National Museum of Iran). Because of evidence of its use in several Indo-European cultures the swastika came to be identified as "the oldest Aryan symbol" by several writers in the late 19th century.[10]

The word has become a technical term in the theologies of Zoroastrianism, but has always been used by Iranians in the ethnic sense as well. In 1967, Iran's Pahlavi dynasty (overthrown in the 1979 Iranian revolution) added the title Āryāmehr "Light of the Aryans" to those of the monarch, known at the time as the Shahanshah (King of Kings).

The term "Airya-shayana" (abode of the Aryans) has also been used in the Avesta referring to all the lands where the Aryans dwell.

"Iranian Glory" (Airyana Khvarenah) occurs in the Avesta 23 times.

The term also remains a frequent element in modern Persian personal names, including Arya and Aryan (boy's and girl's name), Aryana (a common surname), Iran-Dokht (Aryan daughter, a girl's name),Aryanpour (or Aryanpur, a surname), Aryamane, Ary among many others. The terms "Aryan" and "Iranian" are sometimes used interchangeably, as in the Iranian bank chain, Aryan Bank.

Racial connotations

Main article: Aryan race

Because of ethnolinguistic arguments about connections between peoples and cultural values, "Aryan" peoples were often considered to be distinct from Semitic peoples. By the end of the nineteenth century "Aryan" was used as a synonym for Indo-European, and this popular usage persists even after some academic authors have condemned a such usage because of its negative connotations derived from the Nazi-era. In linguistics, it is still used in the context of the sub-branch of Indo-Iranians referred to as Indo-Aryans, all though that usage has also been condemned and proposed to be replaced by the term Indic languages.

The Aryan race was a term used in the early 20th century by European racial theorists who believed strongly in the division of humanity into biologically distinct races with differing characteristics. Such writers believed that the Proto-Indo-Europeans constituted a specific race that had expanded across parts of Europe, Iran and small parts of northern India. This usage tends to merge the Sanskrit meaning of "noble" or "elevated" with the idea of distinctive behavioral and ancestral ethnicity marked by language distribution.

From the late 19th century, a number of writers had argued that the Proto-Indo-Europeans had originated in Europe. Their opinion was received critically at first, but was widely accepted by the end of the nineteenth century. By 1905 Hermann Hirt in his Die Indogermanen (Hirt consistently used Indogermanen, not Arier, to refer to the Indo-Europeans) claimed that the scales had tilted in favour of the hypothesis, in particular claiming the plains of northern Germany as the Urheimat (p. 197) and connecting the "blond type" (p. 192) with the core population of the early, "pure" Indo-Europeans. This argument developed in tandem with Nordicism, the theory that the "Nordic race" of fair-haired north Europeans were innately superior to other peoples. The identification of the Proto-Indo-Europeans with the north German Corded Ware culture bolstered this position. This was first proposed by Gustaf Kossinna in 1902, and gained in currency over the following two decades, until V. Gordon Childe who in his 1926 The Aryans: a study of Indo-European origins concluded that "the Nordics' superiority in physique fitted them to be the vehicles of a superior language" (a belief which he later regretted having expressed).

The idea became a matter of national pride in learned circles of Germany, and was taken up by the Nazis. According to Alfred Rosenberg's ideology the "Aryan-Nordic" (arisch-nordisch) or "Nordic-Atlantean" (nordisch-atlantisch) race was thus a master race, at the top of a racial hierarchy, pitted against a "Jewish-Semitic" (jüdisch-semitisch) race, deemed to be a racial threat to Germany's homogeneous Aryan civilization, thus rationalizing Nazi anti-Semitism. Nazism portrayed their interpretation of an "Aryan race" as the only race capable of, or with an interest in, creating and maintaining culture and civilizations, while other races are merely capable of conversion, or destruction of culture. These arguments derived from late nineteenth century racial hierarchies. Some Nazis were also influenced by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky's The Secret Doctrine (1888) where she postulates "Aryans" as the fifth of her "Root Races", dating them to about a million years ago, tracing them to Atlantis, an idea also repeated by Rosenberg, and held as doctrine by the Thule Society. Such theories were used to justify the introduction of the so-called "Aryan laws" by the Nazis, depriving "non-Aryans" of citizenship and employment rights, and prohibiting marriage between Aryans and non-Aryans. Though Mussolini's fascism was not originally characterised by explicit anti-Semitism, he too eventually introduced laws pressed upon him by Hitler, prohibiting mixed-race marriages between "Aryans" and Jews.

Because of historical racist use of Aryan, and especially use of Aryan race in connection with the propaganda of Nazism, the word is sometimes avoided in the West as being tainted, in the same manner as the swastika symbol. Currently, India and Iran are the only countries to use the word Aryan in a demographic denomination. Aryan is also a common male name in India, Afghanistan, and Iran.

See also

  • Aryan race
  • Aryanization
  • Aryavarta
  • Airyanem Vaejah
  • Indigenous Aryans
  • Proto-Indo-Europeans
  • Indo-Iranian languages
  • Indo-Iranians
  • Indo-Aryans
  • Iranian peoples

Notes

  1. for the Sanskrit term, Monier-Williams has: "a respectable or honourable or faithful man, an inhabitant of Âryâvarta; one who is faithful to the religion of his country; name of the race which immigrated from Central Asia into Âryâvarta (opposed to an-arya, dasyu, daasa); in later times name of the first three castes (opposed to shudra); a man highly esteemed; a master; Âryan, favourable to the Âryan people; behaving like an Âryan, worthy of one, honourable, respectable, noble; of a good family; excellent; wise; suitable"
  2. Encyclopaedia Iranica - Aryans
  3. ThinkQuest : Site Unavailable
  4. Electronic Journal of Vedic Studies
  5. The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition, 2000
  6. http://www.nvtc.gov/lotw/months/february/indoIranianBranch.html
  7. Persian
  8. Thomas Wilson, curator of the Department of Prehistoric Anthropology, U.S. National Museum, wrote in 1894 that "it is believed by some to have been the oldest Aryan symbol", The Swastika: the earliest known symbol, and its migration, Report of the U. S. National Museum, p.770
  9. Hesiod Theogony 1000-2
  10. Herodotus Histories VII.62i

References

  • Paul Thieme, Der Fremdling im Rigveda. Eine Studie über die Bedeutung der Worte ari, arya, aryaman und aarya, Leipzig (1938).
  • Vyacheslav V. Ivanov and Thomas Gamkrelidze, The Early History of Indo-­European Languages, Scientific American, vol. 262, N3, 110­116, March, 1990
  • A. Kammenhuber, "Aryans in the Near East," Haidelberg, 1968

Further reading

  • Vyacheslav V. Ivanov and Thomas Gamkrelidze, The Early History of Indo-­European Languages, Scientific American, vol. 262, N3, 110­116, March, 1990
  • A. Kammenhuber, "Aryans in the Near East," Haidelberg, 1968
  • Arvidsson, Stefan (2006), Aryan Idols: Indo-European Mythology as Ideology and Science, translated by Sonia Wichmann, Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press.
  • Poliakov, Leon (1974). The Aryan Myth: A History of Racist and Nationalistic Ideas In Europe. Translation of Le mythe aryen, 1971.

External links


Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia; from the article "Aryan". Image Credit.



Topics by Level of Interest: Aryan

Topics sorted by level of Interest Level (1=low, 600=high)     Topics sorted Alphabetically Level (1=low, 600=high)
Aryan race 60     Armenian Aryan Union 4
Aryan Khan 54     Aryan 41
Aryan 41     Aryan (alternative meanings) 4
The Aryan Brotherhood in Oz 31     Aryan (film) 6
Aryan Nations 27     Aryan Brigade (comics) 6
Aryan Brotherhood 26     Aryan Brotherhood 26
White Aryan Resistance 21     Aryan Games 2
Aryan Guard 18     Aryan Guard 18
White Aryan Resistance (Sweden) 8     Aryan invasion theory 2
Aryan Vaid 7     Aryan Kaganof 7
Aryan Kaganof 7     Aryan Khan 54
Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate 7     Aryan language 2
Aryan (film) 6     Aryan languages 2
Aryan Brigade (comics) 6     Aryan League 3
The Aryan Crusade 4     Aryan Nations 27
Armenian Aryan Union 4     Aryan race 60
Aryan (alternative meanings) 4     Aryan religion 2
Aryan League 3     Aryan Vaid 7
Honorary Aryan 3     Honorary Aryan 3
The Problem of Aryan Origins 3     The Aryan Brotherhood in Oz 31
The Aryan Path 3     The Aryan Crusade 4
Aryan invasion theory 2     The Aryan Path 3
Aryan language 2     The Problem of Aryan Origins 3
Aryan religion 2     Update on the Aryan Invasion Debate 7
Aryan Games 2     White Aryan Resistance 21
Aryan languages 2     White Aryan Resistance (Sweden) 8

Source: the editor, created by/for EVE to gauge likely levels of human interest in linguistically triggered topics (compiled across various sources, such as Wikipedia and specialty expression glosses).

Translations: Aryan

Language Translations (or nearest inflections or synonyms, in parentheses)
Al Arabiya آري (Aryan, Arian), آرِيّ (Aryan), آري هندي (Aryan). Additional references: Al Arabiya, Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Al Fus-Ha آري (Aryan, Arian), آرِيّ (Aryan), آري هندي (Aryan). Additional references: Al Fus-Ha, Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Albanian indoevropiane (Aryan), arian (Aryan). Additional references: Albanian, Turkey (Europe), Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Annamese người A-ri-an (Aryan). Additional references: Annamese, Viet Nam, China, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Arabic آري (Aryan, Arian), آرِيّ (Aryan), آري هندي (Aryan). Additional references: Arabic, Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Arnaut indoevropiane (Aryan), arian (Aryan). Additional references: Arnaut, Turkey (Europe), Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Bahasa Indonesia aria (the Aryan race, aria, title of nobality). Additional references: Bahasa Indonesia, Indonesia, Java, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Balgarski ариец (Aryan, indo European), арийски (Aryan), индоевропейски (Japhetic, Aryan, indo European, Indo-Germanic), Арийска раса (Aryan race). Additional references: Balgarski, Bulgaria, Greece, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Balgarski (transliteration) ariets (Aryan, indo European), ariyski (Aryan), indoevropeyski (Japhetic, Aryan, indo European, Indo-Germanic), ariyska rasa (Aryan race). Additional references: Balgarski, Bulgaria, Greece, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Bohemian árijský (Aryan), indoevropský (Aryan, indo European), Arijec (Aryan), Árijec (Aryan). Additional references: Bohemian, Czech Republic, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Brazilian Portuguese Ariano (Aryan, Arian). Additional references: Brazilian Portuguese, Portugal, Angola, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Bulgarian ариец (Aryan, indo European), арийски (Aryan), индоевропейски (Japhetic, Aryan, indo European, Indo-Germanic), Арийска раса (Aryan race). Additional references: Bulgarian, Bulgaria, Greece, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Bulgarian (transliteration) ariets (Aryan, indo European), ariyski (Aryan), indoevropeyski (Japhetic, Aryan, indo European, Indo-Germanic), ariyska rasa (Aryan race). Additional references: Bulgarian, Bulgaria, Greece, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Catalan ari (Aryan). Additional references: Catalan, Spain, Andorra, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Central Danish arier (arias, Aryan). Additional references: Central Danish, Denmark, Germany, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Central Tai ชาวอารยัน (Aryan), เกี่ยวกับภาษาอารยัน (Aryan), ภาษาอารยัน (Aryan). Additional references: Central Tai, Thailand, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Cestina árijský (Aryan), indoevropský (Aryan, indo European), Arijec (Aryan), Árijec (Aryan). Additional references: Cestina, Czech Republic, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Chinese Simplified 印欧语系的 (Aryan, Indo-European), 亚利安人 (Aryan), 印欧语 (Indo-European, Aryan), 亚利安语系的 (Aryan), 印欧语系的人 (Aryan). Additional references: Chinese Simplified, China, Brunei, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Chinese Traditional 印歐語系的 (Aryan), 印歐語 (Indo-European, Aryan). Additional references: Chinese Traditional, China, Brunei, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Ching người A-ri-an (Aryan). Additional references: Ching, Viet Nam, China, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Czech árijský (Aryan), indoevropský (Aryan, indo European), Arijec (Aryan), Árijec (Aryan). Additional references: Czech, Czech Republic, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Daco-Rumanian arian (gentile, Arian, Aryan). Additional references: Daco-Rumanian, Romania, Hungary, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Danish arier (arias, Aryan). Additional references: Danish, Denmark, Germany, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Dansk arier (arias, Aryan). Additional references: Dansk, Denmark, Germany, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Dari زبان آريانَى (aryan), زبان اريايي (Aryan), اريايي (Aryan), از نژاد اريايي (Aryan), آريايی (Aryan), از نژاد اريايى (Aryan), زبان اريايى (Aryan), اريايى (Aryan). Additional references: Dari, Iran, Indo-European, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Deutsch arisch (Aryan), Arier (Aryan), die Indogermanin (Aryan), die Arierin (Aryan), der Indogermane (Aryan), der Arier (Aryan), Aryan (aryan). Additional references: Deutsch, Germany, Austria, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Dutch Arisch (Aryan, Indo-European), Ariër (Aryan, Indo-European). Additional references: Dutch, Netherlands, Aruba, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Føroyskt indoevropiskur (Aryan). Additional references: Føroyskt, Denmark, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Faroese indoevropiskur (Aryan). Additional references: Faroese, Denmark, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Finnish arjalainen (Aryan). Additional references: Finnish, Finland, Russia (Europe), Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Français aryen (Aryan), Aryenne (aryan), Aryens (Aryan). Additional references: Français, France, Algeria, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
French aryen (Aryan), Aryenne (aryan), Aryens (Aryan). Additional references: French, France, Algeria, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Gaelg Ayreeanagh (Aryan). Additional references: Gaelg, United Kingdom, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Gailck Ayreeanagh (Aryan). Additional references: Gailck, United Kingdom, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Galego indoeuropeo (Aryan), ario (Aryan). Additional references: Galego, Spain, Portugal, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Galician indoeuropeo (Aryan), ario (Aryan). Additional references: Galician, Spain, Portugal, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Gallego indoeuropeo (Aryan), ario (Aryan). Additional references: Gallego, Spain, Portugal, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
German arisch (Aryan), Arier (Aryan), die Indogermanin (Aryan), die Arierin (Aryan), der Indogermane (Aryan), der Arier (Aryan), Aryan (aryan). Additional references: German, Germany, Austria, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Gin người A-ri-an (Aryan). Additional references: Gin, Viet Nam, China, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Greek βορειοευρωπα οσ (aryan). Additional references: Greek, Greece, Albania, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Greek (transliteration) voreioeiropa os (aryan). Additional references: Greek, Greece, Albania, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Gujarati આર્ય (Aryan). Additional references: Gujarati, India, Kenya, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Gujerathi આર્ય (Aryan). Additional references: Gujerathi, India, Kenya, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Gujerati આર્ય (Aryan). Additional references: Gujerati, India, Kenya, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Gujrathi આર્ય (Aryan). Additional references: Gujrathi, India, Kenya, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Gurmukhi ਆਰੀਆ (Aryan). Additional references: Gurmukhi, India, Kenya, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Gurumukhi ਆਰੀਆ (Aryan). Additional references: Gurumukhi, India, Kenya, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Hanguk Mal 아리아족 (Aryan), 인도이란 말의 (Aryan), 아리아 말 (Aryan), 아리아어족 의 (aryan), 비 유대계 백인의 (aryan), 아리아 사람 의 (aryan), 인도이란 말 (Aryan), 아리아어족의 (Aryan), 아리아 인종의 (Aryan), 아리아 사람의 (Aryan). Additional references: Hanguk Mal, Korea, South, Korea, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Hanguohua 아리아족 (Aryan), 인도이란 말의 (Aryan), 아리아 말 (Aryan), 아리아어족 의 (aryan), 비 유대계 백인의 (aryan), 아리아 사람 의 (aryan), 인도이란 말 (Aryan), 아리아어족의 (Aryan), 아리아 인종의 (Aryan), 아리아 사람의 (Aryan). Additional references: Hanguohua, Korea, South, Korea, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Hebrew אָרִי (Aryan), הגזע הארי (Aryan race). Additional references: Hebrew, Israel, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
High Arabic آري (Aryan, Arian), آرِيّ (Aryan), آري هندي (Aryan). Additional references: High Arabic, Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
High German arisch (Aryan), Arier (Aryan), die Indogermanin (Aryan), die Arierin (Aryan), der Indogermane (Aryan), der Arier (Aryan), Aryan (aryan). Additional references: High German, Germany, Austria, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Hindi आर्य (Aryan, gentleman). Additional references: Hindi, India, Nepal, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Hochdeutsch arisch (Aryan), Arier (Aryan), die Indogermanin (Aryan), die Arierin (Aryan), der Indogermane (Aryan), der Arier (Aryan), Aryan (aryan). Additional references: Hochdeutsch, Germany, Austria, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Hungarian árja (Aryan, Nordic), indoeurópai (Aryan, indo European). Additional references: Hungarian, Hungary, Austria, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Indonesian aria (the Aryan race, aria, title of nobality). Additional references: Indonesian, Indonesia, Java, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Italian ariano (Aryan, Arian). Additional references: Italian, Italy, Croatia, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Ivrit אָרִי (Aryan), הגזע הארי (Aryan race). Additional references: Ivrit, Israel, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Japanese アーリアじん (Aryan), アーリア人の (Aryan), インド・ヨーロッパ語族の総称 (Aryan), アーリア語族の (Aryan), アーリア民族の (Aryan), アーリア人 (Aryan). Additional references: Japanese, Japan, Taiwan, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Jing người A-ri-an (Aryan). Additional references: Jing, Viet Nam, China, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Khadi Boli आर्य (Aryan, gentleman). Additional references: Khadi Boli, India, Nepal, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Khari Boli आर्य (Aryan, gentleman). Additional references: Khari Boli, India, Nepal, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Kinh người A-ri-an (Aryan). Additional references: Kinh, Viet Nam, China, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Korean 아리아족 (Aryan), 인도이란 말의 (Aryan), 아리아 말 (Aryan), 아리아어족 의 (aryan), 비 유대계 백인의 (aryan), 아리아 사람 의 (aryan), 인도이란 말 (Aryan), 아리아어족의 (Aryan), 아리아 인종의 (Aryan), 아리아 사람의 (Aryan). Additional references: Korean, Korea, South, Korea, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Kurdish اريان (Aryan). Additional references: Kurdish, Iraq, Turkey, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Latvian ārietis (Aryan), āriete (Aryan), āriešu (Aryan). Additional references: Latvian, Latvia, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Latviska ārietis (Aryan), āriete (Aryan), āriešu (Aryan). Additional references: Latviska, Latvia, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Lettisch ārietis (Aryan), āriete (Aryan), āriešu (Aryan). Additional references: Lettisch, Latvia, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Lettish ārietis (Aryan), āriete (Aryan), āriešu (Aryan). Additional references: Lettish, Latvia, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Magyar árja (Aryan, Nordic), indoeurópai (Aryan, indo European). Additional references: Magyar, Hungary, Austria, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Maharashtra आर्य (Aryan). Additional references: Maharashtra, India, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Maharathi आर्य (Aryan). Additional references: Maharathi, India, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Malhatee आर्य (Aryan). Additional references: Malhatee, India, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Maltese Arjan (Aryan). Additional references: Maltese, Malta, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Malti Arjan (Aryan). Additional references: Malti, Malta, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Manx Ayreeanagh (Aryan). Additional references: Manx, United Kingdom, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Manx Gaelic Ayreeanagh (Aryan). Additional references: Manx Gaelic, United Kingdom, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Marathi आर्य (Aryan). Additional references: Marathi, India, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Marthi आर्य (Aryan). Additional references: Marthi, India, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Moldavian arian (gentile, Arian, Aryan). Additional references: Moldavian, Romania, Hungary, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Muruthu आर्य (Aryan). Additional references: Muruthu, India, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Panjabi (Eastern Dialect) ਆਰੀਆ (Aryan). Additional references: Panjabi (Eastern Dialect), India, Kenya, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Parsi زبان آريانَى (aryan), زبان اريايي (Aryan), اريايي (Aryan), از نژاد اريايي (Aryan), آريايی (Aryan), از نژاد اريايى (Aryan), زبان اريايى (Aryan), اريايى (Aryan). Additional references: Parsi, Iran, Indo-European, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Persian زبان آريانَى (aryan), زبان اريايي (Aryan), اريايي (Aryan), از نژاد اريايي (Aryan), آريايی (Aryan), از نژاد اريايى (Aryan), زبان اريايى (Aryan), اريايى (Aryan). Additional references: Persian, Iran, Indo-European, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Persian (Farsi) زبان آريانَى (aryan), زبان اريايي (Aryan), اريايي (Aryan), از نژاد اريايي (Aryan), آريايی (Aryan), از نژاد اريايى (Aryan), زبان اريايى (Aryan), اريايى (Aryan). Additional references: Persian (Farsi), Iran, Indo-European, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Polish aryjski (Aryan), Aryjczyk (Aryan), dorosły (adult, grown, grown-up, adults, grownup), antena (antenna, aerial, antennae, antennas, car aerial), zakwaterowanie (accommodation, lodging, cantonment, affidavit, afflux), słuchacz (listener, auditor, hearer, listeners, student), powietrzny (aerial, air, airy, aerator, aerobatics), powierzchnia (area, surface, acreage, areas, face), poprzedni (previous, anterior, former, antecedent, prior), popołudnie (afternoon, afternoons, a, affidavit, afflux). Additional references: Polish, Poland, Czech Republic, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Polnisch aryjski (Aryan), Aryjczyk (Aryan), dorosły (adult, grown, grown-up, adults, grownup), antena (antenna, aerial, antennae, antennas, car aerial), zakwaterowanie (accommodation, lodging, cantonment, affidavit, afflux), słuchacz (listener, auditor, hearer, listeners, student), powietrzny (aerial, air, airy, aerator, aerobatics), powierzchnia (area, surface, acreage, areas, face), poprzedni (previous, anterior, former, antecedent, prior), popołudnie (afternoon, afternoons, a, affidavit, afflux). Additional references: Polnisch, Poland, Czech Republic, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Polski aryjski (Aryan), Aryjczyk (Aryan), dorosły (adult, grown, grown-up, adults, grownup), antena (antenna, aerial, antennae, antennas, car aerial), zakwaterowanie (accommodation, lodging, cantonment, affidavit, afflux), słuchacz (listener, auditor, hearer, listeners, student), powietrzny (aerial, air, airy, aerator, aerobatics), powierzchnia (area, surface, acreage, areas, face), poprzedni (previous, anterior, former, antecedent, prior), popołudnie (afternoon, afternoons, a, affidavit, afflux). Additional references: Polski, Poland, Czech Republic, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Portuguese Ariano (Aryan, Arian). Additional references: Portuguese, Portugal, Angola, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Punjabi ਆਰੀਆ (Aryan). Additional references: Punjabi, India, Kenya, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Romanian arian (gentile, Arian, Aryan). Additional references: Romanian, Romania, Hungary, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Rumanian arian (gentile, Arian, Aryan). Additional references: Rumanian, Romania, Hungary, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Ruotsi arier (Aryan, aryar), arisk (Aryan). Additional references: Ruotsi, Sweden, Finland, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Russian арийский (Aryan), арийка (Aryan), Арийцы (Aryan), ариец арийский (Aryan), ариец (Aryan). Additional references: Russian, Russia, China, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Russian (transliteration) ariyskiy (Aryan), ariyka (Aryan), ariytsy (Aryan), ariets ariyskiy (Aryan), ariets (Aryan). Additional references: Russian, Russia, China, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Russki арийский (Aryan), арийка (Aryan), Арийцы (Aryan), ариец арийский (Aryan), ариец (Aryan). Additional references: Russki, Russia, China, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Russki (transliteration) ariyskiy (Aryan), ariyka (Aryan), ariytsy (Aryan), ariets ariyskiy (Aryan), ariets (Aryan). Additional references: Russki, Russia, China, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Serbian (transliteration) arijac (Aryan), prvobitni arijski jezik (Aryan), indogermanski (Aryan), indoevropski (Aryan), ariski (Aryan), arijski (Aryan), arijka (Aryan). Additional references: Serbian (transliteration), Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Shkip indoevropiane (Aryan), arian (Aryan). Additional references: Shkip, Turkey (Europe), Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Shqip indoevropiane (Aryan), arian (Aryan). Additional references: Shqip, Turkey (Europe), Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Shqiperë indoevropiane (Aryan), arian (Aryan). Additional references: Shqiperë, Turkey (Europe), Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Siamese ชาวอารยัน (Aryan), เกี่ยวกับภาษาอารยัน (Aryan), ภาษาอารยัน (Aryan). Additional references: Siamese, Thailand, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Sjaelland arier (arias, Aryan). Additional references: Sjaelland, Denmark, Germany, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Skchip indoevropiane (Aryan), arian (Aryan). Additional references: Skchip, Turkey (Europe), Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Slovak árijec (Aryan). Additional references: Slovak, Slovakia, Hungary, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Slovakian árijec (Aryan). Additional references: Slovakian, Slovakia, Hungary, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Spanish ario (aryan, armenian). Additional references: Spanish, Spain, Mexico, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Standard Thai ชาวอารยัน (Aryan), เกี่ยวกับภาษาอารยัน (Aryan), ภาษาอารยัน (Aryan). Additional references: Standard Thai, Thailand, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Suomea arjalainen (Aryan). Additional references: Suomea, Finland, Russia (Europe), Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Suomi arjalainen (Aryan). Additional references: Suomi, Finland, Russia (Europe), Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Svenska arier (Aryan, aryar), arisk (Aryan). Additional references: Svenska, Sweden, Finland, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Swedish arier (Aryan, aryar), arisk (Aryan). Additional references: Swedish, Sweden, Finland, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Thai ชาวอารยัน (Aryan), เกี่ยวกับภาษาอารยัน (Aryan), ภาษาอารยัน (Aryan). Additional references: Thai, Thailand, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Thaiklang ชาวอารยัน (Aryan), เกี่ยวกับภาษาอารยัน (Aryan), ภาษาอารยัน (Aryan). Additional references: Thaiklang, Thailand, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Tosk indoevropiane (Aryan), arian (Aryan). Additional references: Tosk, Turkey (Europe), Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Turkish ari (Aryan, Aryanize, bee, clean, pure), hint-avrupalı (Aryan), hint-avrupa diliyle ilgili (Aryan), hint-avrupa dili (Aryan), arilerle ilgili (Aryan). Additional references: Turkish, Turkey, Bulgaria, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Ukrainian Арiйський (aryan), арієць (Aryan, Arian), арійський (Arian, Aryan), арійка (Arian, Aryan). Additional references: Ukrainian, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Ukrainian (transliteration) ariysʹkiy (aryan), arієtsʹ (Aryan, Arian), arіysʹkiy (Arian, Aryan), arіyka (Arian, Aryan). Additional references: Ukrainian, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Viet người A-ri-an (Aryan). Additional references: Viet, Viet Nam, China, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Vietnamese người A-ri-an (Aryan). Additional references: Vietnamese, Viet Nam, China, Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Zhgabe indoevropiane (Aryan), arian (Aryan). Additional references: Zhgabe, Turkey (Europe), Aryan. (volunteer & more translations)
Source: Eve, based on a combination of meta analysis and graph theory (for near and back translations). Top

Constructed Language Translations: Aryan

Language Translations for “Aryan” or closest synonym(s); back translations in parentheses.
Athag Athagaryathagathagan (Aryan). Additional references: Athag, Aryan. (volunteer)
Double Dutch Agaryagagan (Aryan). Additional references: Double Dutch, Aryan. (volunteer)
Esperanto arja (Aryan), arjo (Aryan). Additional references: Esperanto, Aryan. (volunteer)
Leet @|z%@{\} (Aryan). Additional references: Leet, Aryan. (volunteer)
Oppish Oparyopopan (Aryan). Additional references: Oppish, Aryan. (volunteer)
Pig Latin Aryanway (Aryan). Additional references: Pig Latin, Aryan. (volunteer)
Slovio arianju (Aryan), arian (Aryan). Additional references: Slovio, Aryan. (volunteer)
Terran A arianju (aryan), arian (aryan). Additional references: Terran A, Aryan. (volunteer)
Terran B Arionar (Aryan). Additional references: Terran B, Aryan. (volunteer)
Ubbi Dubbi Ubaryububan (Aryan). Additional references: Ubbi Dubbi, Aryan. (volunteer)
Source: compiled by the editor. Top

Ancestral and Extinct Language Translations: Aryan

Language Period Translations (or nearest inflections or synonyms, in parentheses)
Sanskrit 1500 BCE - present आर्यजातीय (Aryan). Additional references: Sanskrit, Aryan. (volunteer)
Avestan 200 - 600 Airyanem (Aryan, Iranian), airyanãm (Aryan, Iranian, of noble birth, respectable). Additional references: Avestan, Aryan. (volunteer)
Source: compiled by the editor. Top