ساكسفون
Appearance
Arabic
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Phonetic transliteration borrowed from English saxophone or French saxophone, a combination of the surname of its inventor Adolphe Sax (1814–1894) + -o- + -phone, from Ancient Greek φωνή (phōnḗ, “voice”).
Noun
[edit]سَاكْسُفُون • (saksufūn) m
Declension
[edit]Declension of noun سَاكْسُفُون (saksufūn)
Singular | basic singular triptote | ||
---|---|---|---|
Indefinite | Definite | Construct | |
Informal | سَاكْسُفُون saksufūn |
السَّاكْسُفُون as-saksufūn |
سَاكْسُفُون saksufūn |
Nominative | سَاكْسُفُونٌ saksufūnun |
السَّاكْسُفُونُ as-saksufūnu |
سَاكْسُفُونُ saksufūnu |
Accusative | سَاكْسُفُونًا saksufūnan |
السَّاكْسُفُونَ as-saksufūna |
سَاكْسُفُونَ saksufūna |
Genitive | سَاكْسُفُونٍ saksufūnin |
السَّاكْسُفُونِ as-saksufūni |
سَاكْسُفُونِ saksufūni |
Categories:
- Arabic terms borrowed from English
- Arabic terms derived from English
- Arabic terms borrowed from French
- Arabic terms derived from French
- Arabic terms derived from Ancient Greek
- Arabic lemmas
- Arabic nouns
- Arabic terms with irregular pronunciations
- Arabic masculine nouns
- Arabic nouns with basic triptote singular
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