Yazata
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: ya + za + ta
Alternative forms
- yazad Middle Persian
Origin
From the Avestan verbal root ð¬«ð¬€ð¬° (yaz-, "to worship, to honor, to venerate"). The original nominative form is ð¬«ð¬€ð¬°ð¬€ð¬™ð¬‹, pl. ð¬«ð¬€ð¬°ð¬€ð¬™ð¬‚ð¬¢ð¬µð¬‹, reflecting Proto-Iranian *yazatah and pl. *yazatÄhah.
From the same root comes Avestan ð¬«ð¬€ð¬¯ð¬¥ð¬€ (yasna, "worship, sacrifice, prayer, veneration"). A yazata is accordingly "a being worthy of worship" or "a holy being." The word is etymologically related to Sanskrit यजति (yájati, "he worships, he sacrifices"), यजत (yajatá-, "worthy of worship, holy"), यजञ (yajñá, "sacrifice"), and is perhaps also related to Ancient Greek ἅγιος (hagios, "devoted to the gods, sacred, holy.").
Avestan ð¬«ð¬€ð¬°ð¬€ð¬™ð¬€ became ð¬«ð¬€ð¬°ð¬€ð¬› or ð¬«ð¬€ð¬°ð¬› (pl. ð¬«ð¬€ð¬°ð¬›ð¬ð¬¥) in Middle Iranian languages, continuing in New Persian as ایزد.