出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/04/26 18:58 UTC 版)
From 中期英語 maunde, maundie, borrowed from Old French mande, borrowed from Middle Dutch mande, from Old Dutch *manda, from Proto-West Germanic *mandu.
maund (plural maunds)
From Hindi मन (man) / Urdu من (man), and their source, Persian من, from Middle Persian, from Akkadian 𒈠𒉡𒌑 (manû). The -d is probably from assimilation with Etymology 1 above, or from comparison with pound.
maund (plural maunds)
This spelling (maund) is usually used for the unit in British India, equal to 25 pounds avoirdupois at Madras, 28 pounds avoirdupois at Bombay and 10 troy pounds at Calcutta. For the equivalent unit in the Mughal Empire and in Persian- and Arabic-speaking countries, it is more usual to use the spelling mun or man (italicised to show that the word has not been assimilated into English).
Unclear, but possibly from French mendier or quémander (“to beg”). Compare Romani mang (“to beg”).
maund (third-person singular simple present maunds, present participle maunding, simple past and past participle maunded)
出典:Wikipedia
出典:『Wikipedia』 (2010/11/04 23:18 UTC 版)
The maund (pronounced /ˈmɔːnd/) is the anglicized name for a traditional unit of mass used in British India, and also in Afghanistan, Persia and Arabia: the same unit in the Moghul Empire was sometimes written as mun in English, while the equivalent unit in the Ottoman Empire and Central Asia was called the batman. At different times, and in different South Asian localities, the mass of the maund has varied, from as low as 25 pounds (11 kg) to as high as 160 pounds (72½ kg): even greater variation is seen in Persia and Arabia.