author dâtâr Fr.: auteur 1) The writer of a book, article, or other text. One who practices
writing as a profession. M.E. auctour, from O.Fr. autor, from L. auctor, "creator, enlarger, founder, master, leader," literally "one who causes to grow," from auctus, p.p. of augere "to increase," from PIE root aug- "to increase". Dâtâr, from Mid.Pers. dâtâr/dâdâr "creator," from Av. and O.Pers. dâtâr "creator," from dâ- "to create, make, appoint," Skt. dhatr "author, creator, preserver, bearer." The Mod.Pers. form of this word in classical literary works is dâdâr, used mainly as noun or adjective for "God, the creator." |
authoritarian dâtârgânvarz Fr.: autoritaire Of, relating to, or characterized by strict obedience to authority. From authorit(y), → authority, + suffix -arian. |
authoritarianism dâtârgânvarzi Fr.: autoritarisme 1) The enforcement or advocacy of strict obedience to authority at the
expense of personal freedom. → authoritarian; → -ism. |
authoritative dâtârgânmand Fr.: qui fait autorité, digne de foi 1) Recognized or accepted as being true or reliable. From authorit(y), → authority, + suffix -ative. |
authority dâtârgân Fr.: autorité 1) The power to determine, adjudicate, or otherwise settle issues or
disputes; jurisdiction; the right to control, command, or determine (Dictionary.com). Dâtârgân, from dâtâr, → author, + -gân, on the model of xodâygân "a great lord." |
authorship Fr.: paternité 1) The act, fact, or occupation of writing. → author. |