س م د
Appearance
Arabic
[edit]Root
[edit]س م د • (s-m-d)
- related to things limbered up
Derived terms
[edit]- Form I: سَمَدَ (samada, “to raise one’s head by airy emotion”)
- Form II: سَمَّدَ (sammada, “to divert emotionally; to manure, to fertilize”)
- Form IX: اِسْمَدَّ (ismadda, “to swell, to intumesce”)
- Verbal noun: اِسْمِدَاد (ismidād)
- Active participle: مُسْمَدّ (musmadd)
- Form XI: اِسْمَادَّ (ismādda, “to swell, to intumesce”)
- Verbal noun: اِسْمِيدَاد (ismīdād)
- Active participle: مُسْمَادّ (musmādd)
- سَمَاد (samād, “manure”)
- مِسْمَد (mismad) and مِسْمَدَة (mismada, “basket for carrying manure”)
- سَمَيْدَع (samaydaʕ, “man of rank or quality; stout, bulky”)
References
[edit]- Freytag, Georg (1833) “س م د”, in Lexicon arabico-latinum praesertim ex Djeuharii Firuzabadiique et aliorum Arabum operibus adhibitis Golii quoque et aliorum libris confectum[1] (in Latin), volume 2, Halle: C. A. Schwetschke, page 351
- Kazimirski, Albin de Biberstein (1860) “س م د”, in Dictionnaire arabe-français contenant toutes les racines de la langue arabe, leurs dérivés, tant dans l’idiome vulgaire que dans l’idiome littéral, ainsi que les dialectes d’Alger et de Maroc[2] (in French), volume 1, Paris: Maisonneuve et Cie, page 1136
- Lane, Edward William (1863) “س م د”, in Arabic-English Lexicon[3], London: Williams & Norgate, pages 1423–1424
- Wehr, Hans (1979) “س م د”, in J. Milton Cowan, editor, A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic, 4th edition, Ithaca, NY: Spoken Language Services, →ISBN, page 500
- Wehr, Hans with Kropfitsch, Lorenz (1985) “س م د”, in Arabisches Wörterbuch für die Schriftsprache der Gegenwart[4] (in German), 5th edition, Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, published 2011, →ISBN, page 596