hodja

Etymology
(modern 🇨🇬), from. .

Noun

 * 1) A Muslim schoolmaster.
 * 2) * 1916, unnamed narrator, quoted in 2008, Viscount Bryce (editor), The Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire: Documents Presented to Viscount Grey of Fallodon, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, by Viscount Bryce, page 315,
 * The next night I heard two hodjas talking, under my window, of a terrible massacre of the Armenians that had just taken place in the mountains; they seemed to be very sorry about it and spoke of it with horror; they did not know, of course, that I was listening.

Translations

 * Albanian:
 * Arabic: خَوَاجَة
 * Azerbaijani: xoca
 * Bashkir: хужа
 * Belarusian: хаджа́
 * Bengali:
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Chuvash: хуҫа, хоҫа
 * Czech: hodža
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * German: Hodscha
 * Greek:
 * Hindi: ख़ोजा,
 * Hungarian:
 * Japanese: ホジャ
 * Kazakh: қожа
 * Korean: 호자
 * Kyrgyz: кожо
 * Macedonian: хоџа
 * Ottoman Turkish: خواجه
 * Persian:
 * Polish: hodża, chodża
 * Portuguese: hodja
 * Russian:
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: хо̏џа
 * Roman:
 * Slovak: hodža
 * Tajik: хӯҷа, хоча, хоҷа
 * Tatar:
 * Turkish:
 * Turkmen: hoja
 * Ukrainian: ходжа́
 * Urdu: خوجہ
 * Uyghur: خوجا
 * Uzbek: ,

Noun

 * 1)   a Muslim schoolmaster