مجال

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search
See also: محال

Arabic

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]
Root
ج و ل (j w l)
8 terms

Noun of place from the verb جَالَ (jāla, to go round, to roam).

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • IPA(key): /ma.d͡ʒaːl/
  • Audio:(file)

Noun

[edit]

مَجَال (majālm (plural مَجَالَات (majālāt))

  1. field (area of specialty)
  2. extent
  3. domain, area
  4. space
    • 1982, Yusuf Idris, العسكري الأسود [The Black Military]:
      وَكَانَ، لِأَسْبَابٍ لَيْسَ هُنَا مَجَالُ تَقَصِّيهَا، قَدْ اِخْتَارَ فُتْرَةً بَعْدَ ٱلظُّهْرِ لِيَكُونَ ٱلنَّوْبَتْجِيَّ فِيهَا
      wakāna, liʔasbābin laysa hunā majālu taqaṣṣīhā, qad iḵtāra futratan baʕda ẓ-ẓuhri liyakūna n-nawbatjiyya fīhā
      And for reasons there's no space to investigate, he chose to have the shift in the afternoon.
  5. place of combat, battlefield
  6. skirmish
  7. place of exercise for horses
  8. circle
  9. sphere of action, elbow room
  10. power, capacity, possibility, opportunity
  11. road, passage
  12. career

Declension

[edit]

Descendants

[edit]
  • Amharic: መቻል (mäčal)
  • Azerbaijani: məcal
  • Ottoman Turkish: مجال (mecāl)
    > Turkish: mecal (inherited)
  • Tatar: мәҗал (mäcal)
  • Uyghur: ماجال (majal)
  • Uzbek: majol

References

[edit]

Persian

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

Borrowed from Arabic مَجَال (majāl).

Pronunciation

[edit]
 

Readings
Classical reading? majāl
Dari reading? majāl
Iranian reading? majâl
Tajik reading? majol

Noun

[edit]

مجال (majâl)

  1. opportunity, chance, capacity
    Synonyms: فرصت (forsat), موقع (mowqe')
    • c. 1520, Selim I of the Ottoman Empire, edited by Benedek Péri, The Persian Dīvān of Yavuz Sulṭān Selīm, Budapest, Hungary: Research Centre for the Humanities, Eötvös Loránd Research Network, →ISBN, page 104:
      وصلش چه مجال من این فکر محالم بس
      کز دور توان دیدن خیل سپه او را
      waslaš či majāl man īn fikr-i muhālam bas
      k-az dūr tawān dīdan xayl u sipah-i ō rā
      What opportunity for union with the beloved? For me, this impossible thought is enough
      That her cavalry and army might be seen from afar.
      (Classical Persian transliteration)

Further reading

[edit]