ننگ nang prob. akin to S. नग्न
P ننگ nang (prob. akin to S. नग्न), s.m. Honour, esteem, reputation;—shame, disgrace, infamy, ignominy:—nang-o-nām, or nang-o-nāmūs, s.m. Honour, esteem;—shame, disgrace (i.q. nang).
ننگ नंग naṅg
H ننگ नंग naṅg = H ننگا नंगा naṅgā [Prk. नग्गो and नग्गओ; S. नग्न and नग्न+कः], adj. (f. -ī), Naked, nude; bare;—leafless;—shameless;—s.m. A naked person; a shameless person;—a disgraced person:—naṅg-pairā, adj. Bare-footed:—naṅg-dhaṛaṅg, or naṅgā-dhaṛaṅgā, adj. 'Naked in body and limbs,' stark naked:—naṅg-dhaṛangī, s.f. Complete nakedness:—naṅg-khūl, adj. (rare) Completely naked:—naṅgā-jhūrī, s.f. 'Stripping and shaking (the clothes),' a searching, or examining (as of people leaving a workshop, to prevent them pilfering):—naṅgā-sir, adj. Bare-headed; with uncovered head:—naṅgā karnā, v.t. To make naked, to strip (of clothes, &c.); to bare, to uncover:—naṅgā-luććā adj. (f. naṅgī-luććī), Quite naked; without clothes or ornaments:—naṅgā-mādar-zād, adj. Naked as born of the mother, stark naked:—naṅgā-muṅgā, or naṅgā-munaṅgā, adj. (f. naṅgī-muṅgī, &c.), Stark naked:—naṅge-pāʼoṅ, or naṅge-pairoṅ, adj. & adv. Bare-footed:—naṅgī-talwār, or naṅgī-shamsher, s.f. A naked or drawn sword;—(met.) a fearless person; one who speaks his mind freely and without reserve.