دها dahā fr. dah
P دها dahā (fr. dah), s.m. The first ten days of the Moharram (syn. ʻashara; ʻāshūrā);—the models of the tombs of Hasan and Husain, or the model of a building containing the tombs, which are carried about in procession during those ten days. (On the tenth day the tombs are buried, or in some places, thrown into water: the building, if made of cheap materials, shares the same fate; if costly, it is carried back and deposited in the dargāh or Karbalā.)
دهائي दुहाई duhāʼī
H دهائي दुहाई duhāʼī, s.f.= دوهائي dohāʼī, q.v.
ڐهائي ढाई ḍhāʼī
H ڐهائي ढाई ḍhāʼī [Prk. अड्ढाइआ=अड्ढअइआ=अड्ढअइज्जा=S. अर्द्ध+तृतीया], adj. Two and a half (=aṛhāʼī):—ḍhāʼī ghaṛī-kī ānā or ā-jānā, 'To meet with death in two and a half hours,' to die very soon (a phrase used by women).
داها dāhā
H داها dāhā, s.m. corr. of dahā, q.v.
دوها दोहा dohā
H دوها दोहा dohā [Prk. दोहा; S. द्विधा], s.m. An old and popular Prākrit and Hindī metre; a couplet, distich (the two verses of which rhyme: each verse consists of 24 mātrās, which are distributed into feet of 6+4+3 mātrās respectively, with a caesura at the end of each first hemistich).