gentil
from Latin gentilis "of the same clan, name, or race" but Late Latin "pagan." Middle English gentil (also yentyll) "courteous" came from the same source, as do "gentle(man)," "gentile," and "genteel." The root originally meant "give birth" and so appears in Greek genos "race" with its English borrowings "gender," "general," "generation," "generous," "genre," and "genus."jân-deh (pbp.)
1
mehr-bân
ârâm
2
xoš-barxord/ru
gentillesse
f nəzakət, mehribanlıq