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  1. Dictionary
    purdah
    /ˈpəːdə/

    noun

    • 1. the practice in certain Muslim and Hindu societies of screening women from men or strangers, especially by means of a curtain: "he never required them to observe purdah"

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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PurdahPurdah - Wikipedia

    Purdah has been rigorously observed under the Taliban in Afghanistan, where women are forced to observe complete purdah at all times while in public. Only close male family members and other women are allowed to see them out of purdah.

  3. PURDAH definition: 1. the custom, found in some Muslim and Hindu cultures, of keeping women from being seen by men…. Learn more.

  4. The meaning of PURDAH is seclusion of women from public observation among Muslims and some Hindus especially in India. How to use purdah in a sentence.

  5. purdah, practice that was inaugurated by Muslims and later adopted by various Hindus, especially in India, and that involves the seclusion of women from public observation by means of concealing clothing (including the veil) and by the use of high-walled enclosures, screens, and curtains within the home. The practice of purdah is said to have ...

  6. Purdah definition: the seclusion of women from the sight of men or strangers, practiced by some Muslims and Hindus.. See examples of PURDAH used in a sentence.

  7. Purdah is a custom practised in some Muslim and Hindu societies, in which women either remain in a special part of the house or cover their faces and bodies to avoid being seen by men who are not related to them.

  8. purdah. noun. /ˈpɜːdə/. /ˈpɜːrdə/. [uncountable] the system in some Muslim societies by which women live in a separate part of a house or cover their faces so that men do not see them. in purdah to be in purdah. He kept his daughters in virtual purdah. Word Origin.

  9. Jun 2, 2024 · purdah ( countable and uncountable, plural purdahs) ( countable, chiefly South Asia, also figuratively) A curtain, especially one used in some Hindu or Muslim traditions to conceal women from the gaze of people, particularly men and strangers. [from early 17th c.]

  10. May 24, 2024 · The practice among women in certain Muslim and Hindu societies of living in a separate room or behind a curtain, or of dressing in all-enveloping clothes, in order to stay out of the sight of men or strangers. The word comes (in the early 19th century) from Urdu and Persian parda ‘veil, curtain’.

  11. PURDAH meaning: a custom among Muslims and some Hindus in which women stay separate from men or keep their faces and bodies covered when they are near men