Definition
The plural form of adytum, referring to multiple inner sanctums or secret chambers in ancient Greek temples where only priests were allowed.
Etymology
From Ancient Greek adyton (ἄδυτον), meaning 'not to be entered,' from a- (not) + dytos (enterable). The word entered English through Classical scholarship describing temple architecture.
Kelly Says
The adyta in ancient temples were so forbidden that Greek and Roman writers used them as symbols of ultimate secrets—even philosophers compared deep philosophical truths to things hidden in an adytum that ordinary people could never access.
Translations
ARالعربية
أديتا
a-dee-tah
BNবাংলা
অদ্যতা
oh-dhy-tah
CACatalà
adyta
ah-dee-tah
CSČeština
adyta
ah-dee-tah
DEDeutsch
adyta
ah-dee-tah
ELΕλληνικά
Αδύτα
ah-dee-tah
ESEspañol
adyta
ah-dee-tah
FRFrançais
adyta
ah-dee-tah
HIहिन्दी
अद्यता
a-dhy-taa
HUMagyar
adyta
ah-dee-tah
IDBahasa Indonesia
adyta
ah-dee-tah
ITItaliano
adyta
ah-dee-tah
MSBahasa Melayu
adyta
ah-dee-tah
MYမြန်မာ
အဒီတာ
ah-dee-tah
NLNederlands
adyta
ah-dee-tah
PLPolski
adyta
ah-dee-tah
PTPortuguês
adyta
ah-dee-tah
RORomână
adyta
ah-dee-tah
RUРусский
адита
ah-dee-tah
SVSvenska
adyta
ah-dee-tah
SWKiswahili
adyta
ah-dee-tah
TRTürkçe
adyta
ah-dee-tah
UKУкраїнська
Адита
ah-dee-tah
VITiếng Việt
adyta
ah-dee-tah