maulvi
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English[edit]
Etymology[edit]
From Urdu مولوی (maulvi), and its source, Classical Persian مولوی (mawlawī), noun use of Arabic مَوْلَوِيّ (mawlawiyy, “of a lord or master”), ultimately from مَوْلًى (mawlan, “master”). Compare mullah, maulana.
Noun[edit]
maulvi (plural maulvis)
- An imam; a Muslim doctor of law.
- (loosely, chiefly South Asia) Any man of learning; a scholar, a teacher of Classical languages.
- 2004, Khushwant Singh, Burial at Sea, Penguin, published 2014, page 10:
- He had a maulvi and a pandit to teach him Urdu and Hindi.