qene

See also: qenë

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Ge'ez ቅኔ (ḳəne).

Noun

qene (plural qenes)

  1. An Ethiopian literary genre that employs double entendres.
    • 2012, Mohammed Girma, Understanding Religion and Social Change in Ethiopia: Toward a Hermeneutic of Covenant[1], Springer, →ISBN:
      After undergoing extensive training on the methods of memorization and meditation, qene becomes a crucial aspect of the students' academic journey because qene gives them a chance to construe their own perception of reality using religious conviction as a foundation and individual poetic skill as a methodological device.
    • 2015, Mecca Jamilah Sullivan, Blue Talk and Love[2], Riverdale Avenue Books LLC, →ISBN:
      This was our qene, our back-and-forth talk. [] Abeselome's qene has always been good; he is sixteen, has been growing up and learning things two years longer than me. He goes to the school and gathers new words, a new story-full every week. Then he comes home and kicks the words to me. I stop them with my eyes, turn them around in my head, kick them back. My qene is good, he tells me, and I know. My qene is from my family; they put it in my name: Meraffe, chapter. My qene goes for days and days. Back when we were children, when Azmera was still here, she joined in the qene.
    • 2023, Christine Chaillot, The Traditional Teaching of the Ethiopian Orthodox Täwahedo Church: Faith and Spirituality[3], LIT Verlag Münster, →ISBN, page 80:
      These studies in qene demand great concentration as well as a contemplative spirit.

Further reading

Drehu

Noun

qene

  1. language

Zazaki

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [qɛˈnə]
  • Hyphenation: qe‧ne

Noun

qene

  1. alternative form of qıne