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Definition of Gujarati
1. Noun. A member of the people of Gujarat.
2. Noun. The Indic language spoken by the people of India who live in Gujarat in western India.
Definition of Gujarati
1. Proper noun. Language spoken in the state of Gujarat, India ¹
2. Proper noun. A person from Gujarat ¹
3. Adjective. Of, from, or pertaining to Gujarat, or the Gujarati people. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Gujarati
Literary usage of Gujarati
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An Indoeuropean Classification: A Lexicostatistical Experiment by Isidore Dyen, Joseph B. Kruskal, Paul Black (1992)
"However, the percentage 55.2 connecting Gujarati with the ... the Voegelin and
Voegelin group above associated with Gujarati) would fit more easily with the ..."
2. The Encyclopædia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and by Hugh Chisholm (1910)
"while the Prakrit of the Midland invaders was called " Sau risen I," and we may
therefore describe Gujarati as being an intermediate language derived (as ..."
3. Catalogue of Sanskrit and Pali Books in the British Museum by Ernst Anton Max Haas, Cecil Bendall, Lionel David Barnett, British Museum Department of Oriental Printed Books and Manuscripts (1908)
"With rubrics, commentaries, etc., in the Marwari dialect of Gujarati. ...
explanations, rubrics, etc., and a series of Gujarati hymns. Second edition. ..."
4. Encyclopaedia Britannica, a Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and edited by Hugh Chisholm (1910)
"It will be observed that, at the present day, Gujarati breaks the continuity of
the outer band of Indo-Aryan languages. To its north it has Sindhi and to ..."
5. India, Forty Years of Progress and Reform: Being a Sketch of the Life and by Rustomji Pestonji Karkaria (1896)
"Hindu Gujarati and Pars! Gujarati. FROM reading and admiring poetry to writing
it was but one step, and that was soon taken. Indeed, many of his poems were ..."
6. Catalogue of the Library of the India Office by Reinhold Rost, James Fuller Blumhardt (1908)
"Collection of Gujarati Proverbs with their English equivalents. ... Comparative
English and Gujarati Proverbs, Sayings and Familiar Quotations. ..."
7. The Encyclopedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and by Hugh Chisholm (1910)
"In the following paragraphs we shall therefore tontine ourselves to Gujarati,
Marwari and Jaipuri. We know more about the ancient history of Gujarati than ..."