ض م ر
Appearance
Arabic
[edit]Root
[edit]ض م ر • (ḍ-m-r)
- related to things collapsing into themselves, depression
Derived terms
[edit]- Form I: ضَمُرَ (ḍamura, “to be slender”), ضَمَرَ (ḍamara, “to be slender”)
- Form II: ضَمَّرَ (ḍammara, “to make slender”)
- Form IV: أَضْمَرَ (ʔaḍmara, “to make slender; to have in one’s heart”)
- Form V: تَضَمَّرَ (taḍammara, “to become slender, to become lean”)
- Verbal noun: تَضَمُّر (taḍammur)
- Active participle: مُتَضَمِّر (mutaḍammir)
- Form VII: اِنْضَمَرَ (inḍamara, “to become dry”)
- Verbal noun: اِنْضِمَار (inḍimār)
- Active participle: مُنْضَمِر (munḍamir)
- Form VIII: اِضْطَمَرَ (iḍṭamara, “to have the belly fallen in”)
- Verbal noun: اِضْطِمَار (iḍṭimār)
- Active participle: مُضْطَمِر (muḍṭamir)
- ضَمِير (ḍamīr, “innermost”)
- ضِمَار (ḍimār, “place or valley that is depressed; pretense that won’t be satisfied, claim on which default of performance is expected”)
- ضَمْرَان (ḍamrān, “Traganum”)
- مِضْمار (miḍmār, “arena, course, track”)
References
[edit]- Freytag, Georg (1835) “ض م ر”, in Lexicon arabico-latinum praesertim ex Djeuharii Firuzabadiique et aliorum Arabum operibus adhibitis Golii quoque et aliorum libris confectum[1] (in Latin), volume 3, Halle: C. A. Schwetschke, page 27
- Lane, Edward William (1863) “ض م ر”, in Arabic-English Lexicon[2], London: Williams & Norgate, pages 1803–4