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Etymological Dictionary of Arabic

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Click to Expand/Collapse OptionEtymArab
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ḪYM خيم 
ID – • Sw – • BP – • APD … • © SG | 15Feb2021
√ḪYM 
“root” 
▪ ḪYM_1 ‘tent, pavilion’ ↗ḫaymaẗ
▪ ḪYM_2 ‘…’ ↗
 
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ḫaymaẗ خَيْمَة , pl. ‑āt , ḫiyām , ḫiyam 
ID 276 • Sw – • BP 3255 • APD … • © SG | 15Feb2021
√ḪYM 
n.f. 
tent; tarpaulin; arbor, bower; pavilion – WehrCowan1979. 
▪ … 
▪ eC7 Q 55:72 ‘tent; pavilion’ 
▪ Orel&Stolbova1994#2058: Within Sem, the many cognates of Ar ḫaym-at‑ have either the ‎meaning ‘tent’ (Ug ḫm-t, Gz ḫaymat, Jib ḫom = pl.) or ‘hut, cabin’ (SAr ḫym, Tgr ḫaymät, ‎Amh haym-ät), while Ḥrs ḫīm-ēt‑ can mean both.
Outside Sem the word has cognates in Berb ‎‎*γ(˅)yam‑ (ta-γyam-t, Kby a-ḫḫam, Ahg ta-ḫyam-t ‘tent’; another ta-ḫyam-t ‘village’), ‎Eg ḫm ‘temple’ (pyr), ECh *kam-kam‑ (redupl.; reconstructed from the forms kankama and kamkama). 
▪ Jeffery1938: »It is found only in the pl. ḫiyām ‎in an early Meccan description of Paradise, where we are told that the Houries are maqṣūrāt fī ‘l-‎ḫiyām ‘kept close in pavilions’. – The word is obviously not Ar, and Fraenkel, Fremdw, 30, ‎though admitting that he was not certain of its origin, suggested that it came to the Arabs from ‎Abyssinia.1 Eth [Gz] ḫaymat means ‘tentorium’, ‘tabernaculum’ (Dillmann, ‎‎Lex, 610), and translates both the Hbr אהל‏ and Grk skēnḗ. Vollers, however, in ZDMG, ‎‎1, 631, is not willing to accept this theory of Abyssinian derivation,2 and thinks we must look to ‎Persia or NAfrica for its origin. The Pers ḫaymat, ḫiyam and ḫiyām, however, are direct ‎borrowings from the Ar3 and not formations from the root ‎‎√ḪMY meaning ‘curvature’. – We find the word not infrequently in the early poetry, and so it ‎must have been an early borrowing, probably from the same source as the Eth ḫaymat

▪ Orel&Stolbova1994#2058: The common Sem ancestor is to be ‎reconstructed as *ḫaym‑ ‘tent; hut, cabin’. The cognates in Berb, ‎Eg, and ECh make the ‎authors suggest a common etymon in AfrAs *q̇am‑ / *q̇ayam‑ ‘tent, house’. 

– 
ḫayyama, vb. II, ‎to pitch one's tent, to camp; to settle down; to stay, linger, rest, lie down, lie; (fig.) to reign (e.g., ‎calm, silence, peace, etc.), settle: denominative.
taḫayyama, vb. V, to pitch one's tent; to camp: denominative.

ḫayyām, n., tentmaker: n.prof.
BP#1249 muḫayyam, pl. ‑āt, n., camping ground, camp, ‎encampment: n.loc. II. 

dāl دال 
ID – • Sw – • BP – • APD … • © SG | 15Feb2021
√ 
R₁ 
The letter d of the Arabic alphabet. 
▪ From protSem *dalt‑ (*‑t‑ feminine suffix) ‘door’ – Huehnergard2011.
 
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▪ (Huehnergard2011:) Cf. Engl daleth, from Hbr dālet, from Phoen *dalt ‘door, fourth letter of the Phoen alphabet’; delta, deltoid, from Grk delta, from Phoen *dalt (see above) or from a dialectal variant *dilt
 
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