feddan
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowing from Arabic فَدَّان (faddān).
Noun
[edit]feddan (plural feddans)
- A Middle Eastern unit of area, divided into 24 kirats, and typically equivalent to 4200.8 square metres.
- 1986, Alan Richards, Food, states, and peasants: analyses of the agrarian question in the Middle East:
- The first involved a general limitation of ownership to 200 feddans per individual, with another 100 feddans which could be transferred to the owner's own immediate family, the excess to be expropriated and redistributed to peasant cultivators in small plots of up to five feddans.
Anagrams
[edit]Manx
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Old Irish fetán (“whistle, pipe”) (compare Irish feadán (“tube”)), from fet (“whistle”) (compare Irish fead, feadóg).
Noun
[edit]feddan m (genitive singular feddan, plural feddanyn)
- flute, whistle, fife, pipe, chanter
- Kiaull y chassey ass y feddan millish.
- Tootle on the flute.
- Lhig eh feddan er y voddey.
- He whistled to the dog.
- pipe, tube, tubing, channel, aqueduct
- Ren eh lhoobey y feddan.
- He bent the tube over.
- barrel, vessel
- sleeve, sleeving
Mutation
[edit]Categories:
- English terms borrowed from Arabic
- English terms derived from Arabic
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with quotations
- Manx terms inherited from Old Irish
- Manx terms derived from Old Irish
- Manx lemmas
- Manx nouns
- Manx masculine nouns
- Manx terms with usage examples
- gv:Musical instruments