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Doesn't inad mean to "spite"? As in "kezi inad eneloo hamar gne"?
I've heard it like that too. Inad ellaloo hamar gene. I think inad is used in that situation. Like to describe someone who is being stubborn and bull-headed on purpose.
Anyway I thought you were trying to learn Armenian words Gabig. Inad is not Armenian, it's Turkish (yech). The Armenian word would be hamar.
The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposing ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function. -- F. Scott Fitzgerald
Hamar? I thought that meant "for"...like..."kez hamar" means "for you". I've also heard "inadetyun" used for spiting someone, as in "inchu ghosk mdeek chner? - Vorovedev inadetyun gooze ene". I suppose either stubborn or spite would work in this context. Just depends on how you interpret the word in english.
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