אתרוג
Appearance
Hebrew
[edit]Root |
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ת־ר־ג (t-r-g) |
1 term |
Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from Old Persian [script needed] (turung), from Sanskrit मातुलुङ्ग (mātuluṅga), ultimately from Dravidian. Compare Persian ترنج (toronj), Turkish turunç, Arabic تُرُنْج (turunj), أُتْرُجّ (ʔutrujj), Aramaic תְּרוֹגָא (tərōḡā), אֶתְרוֹגָא (ʾeṯrōḡā), Tamil மாதுளம் (mātuḷam), மாதுளங்காய் (mātuḷaṅkāy, “pomegranate, citron lemon”).
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio: (file)
Noun
[edit]אֶתְרוֹג • (etróg) m (plural indefinite אֶתְרוֹגִים, singular construct אֶתְרוֹג־, plural construct אֶתְרוֹגֵי־)
- citron (the fruit of a citron tree)
- a. 500 C.E., Babylonian Talmud, Kiddushin 70a:
- אָמַר שְׁמוּאֵל כׇּל הָאוֹמֵר אֶתְרוּנְגָּא תִּילְתָּא בְּרָמוּת רוּחָא אוֹ אֶתְרוֹג כִּדְקַרְיוּהּ רַבָּנַן אוֹ אֶתְרוֹגָא דְּאָמְרִי אִינָשֵׁי
- Amár Shmuél: kol ha-omér etrúnga tiltá b-ramút rúḥa. O etróg ki-d-qaryúh rabbanán, o etróga d-amrí inashéi.
- Said Shmuel: All who call a citron an etrunga have a third of a measure of haughtiness. Either call it an etrog, as the rabbis call it, or an etroga, as the people do.
References
[edit]- “אתרוג” in the Hebrew Terms Database of the Academy of Hebrew Language
Further reading
[edit]- אתרוג on the Hebrew Wikipedia.Wikipedia he
Yiddish
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]אתרוג • (esreg) m, plural אתרוגים (esroygim)
- citron (fruit)
Categories:
- Hebrew terms belonging to the root ת־ר־ג
- Hebrew terms borrowed from Old Persian
- Hebrew terms derived from Old Persian
- Hebrew terms derived from Sanskrit
- Hebrew terms derived from Dravidian languages
- Hebrew terms with audio pronunciation
- Hebrew lemmas
- Hebrew nouns
- Hebrew masculine nouns
- Hebrew terms with quotations
- he:Fruits
- Yiddish terms borrowed from Hebrew
- Yiddish terms derived from Hebrew
- Yiddish terms with IPA pronunciation
- Yiddish lemmas
- Yiddish nouns
- Yiddish masculine nouns
- yi:Fruits