It is suspected that English was influenced by Sanskrit
The English word "mother" can be written in Sanskrit as "मातृ" (mātṛ).
No, it is not. It is from the old French, guitere/goutiere, which come from Latin, 'gutta', meaning 'drop'.
The Sanskrit word "dost" translates to "friend" in English.
"Ayaan" is not a Sanskrit word. It is a name of Somali origin, meaning "fortunate" or "lucky."
The translation for the word "father" from English to Sanskrit is "पितृ" (pitṛ).
Palak is Spinach in English Origin Hindi pālak from Sanskrit pālakyā ‘green vegetables’.
India
Sanskrit
"Jay Deep" does not have a standard English meaning as it appears to be a name. The name Jay is of Sanskrit origin meaning "victory" or "success," while Deep is of Hindi origin meaning "lamp" or "light."
Vaman Shivaram Apte has written: 'The Practical Sanskrit-English dictionary [by] V.S. Apte' -- subject(s): Sanskrit language, Dictionaries, English 'The student's Sanskrit-English dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Sanskrit language, English, Sanskrit, English language 'The student's Sanskrit-English dictionary, containing appendices on Sanskrit prosody and important literary and geographical names in the ancient history of India' -- subject(s): Sanskrit language, Dictionaries, English 'Samskrta-racana' -- subject(s): Sanskrit language, Composition and exercises, Syntax 'Revised and enlarged edition of Prin. V. S. Apte's The practical Sanskrit-English dictionary' -- subject(s): Sanskrit language, Dictionaries, English
The English word "mother" can be written in Sanskrit as "मातृ" (mātṛ).
The word "jungle" is derived from the Sanskrit word "jangala," meaning uncultivated land or wasteland. It was later adopted into Portuguese and then into English to refer to dense, tropical forests or tangled, overgrown vegetation.
No, it is not. It is from the old French, guitere/goutiere, which come from Latin, 'gutta', meaning 'drop'.
The sanskrit word for the English word gram is channa.
The Sanskrit word "dost" translates to "friend" in English.
"Ayaan" is not a Sanskrit word. It is a name of Somali origin, meaning "fortunate" or "lucky."
The origin of the word bear as in to hold or show: Old English beran, of Germanic origin; from an Indo-European root shared by Sanskrit bharati, Greek pherein, and Latin ferre. The origin of the word bear as in a large heavy mammal: Old English bera, of West Germanic origin; related to Dutch beer and German Bar.