ਰਾਮ
raama/rāma

Shahmukhi : رام

Parts Of Speech : noun, masculine

Meaning in English

God; Lord Rama
Source: Punjabi Dictionary

RÁM

Meaning in English2

s. m, God, Omniscient:—Ramánaṇd, s. m. The name of a devotee:—Rámánaṇdí, s. m. A follower of Ramanand; the name of a class of faqírs:—Rám Chaṇd, s. m. The name of a Hindu god, being the seventh incarnation of Vishnu:—rám dáná, s. m. A plant (Amaranthus mangostanus, Nat. Ord. Amarantaceæ). See Chuláí:—Rám Dáss, s. m. The fourth Gurú of the Sikhs, who laid the foundation stone of the Golden Temple of Amritsar:—rám deg, degá, s. f. An earthen háṇḍí or cooking pot:—rám duháí, s. f. Crying for justice in the name of God:—Rám Gaṛhyá, s. m. A title of respect applied to a Sikh carpenter (after a Rájá of the carpenter caste who built the fort of Rámgaṛh):—rám jaṇggá, s. m. A musket:—rám janí, s. f. A Hindu woman of ill-fame, a harlot:—rám kaháṉí, s. f. A wonderful story, a long narrative:—Rám kalí, s. f. The name of a rágṉí:—Rám lílá, s. f. A national heroic play of the Hindus. It represents the exile of Ram Chandra with his wife and brother Lakshman and the war with Ravana, king of Laṇká, in which Ravana was defeated and killed. It is performed in the first ten days of the light fortnight of the month Assú:—Rám naumí, s. f. The ninth day of the light fortnight in Chetar, the birth-day of Rám Chandrá:—Rám Rám, s. m. A form of salutation among the Hindus:—rám torí, turáí, s. f. A species of the vegetables (Abelmoschus esculentus, Nat. Ord. Malvaceæ) grown throughout the plains. The fruit is cooked and eaten as a vegetable; i. q. Bhinḍí torí—Rám rám do áne. gal laggiáṇ chawwanní; je ghar wichch láwe ḍehrá; táṇ ádhá kare nabeṛá. Two annas for a civil salutation, four annas for an embrace, if he stays in your house he will half ruin you.—Prov:—kitthe Rám Rám te kitthe ṭaiṇ ṭaiṇ! Lit. where Rám Rám and where ṭaiṇ ṭaiṇ; a meaningless noise i., e., the difference of earth and sky.
Source:THE PANJABI DICTIONARY-Bhai Maya Singh