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Etymological Dictionary of Arabic

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Click to Expand/Collapse OptionEtymArab
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al-šiʕrà الشِعْرَى
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ID 466 • Sw – • BP – • APD … • © SG | 15Feb2021
√ŠʕR
gram
n.
engl
Sirius, Dog Star (astron.) – WehrCowan1979.
conc
Unless just another of the many derivations of ↗šaʕara ‘to know in detail, feel, perveive’ or directly from ↗šaʕr ‘hair’, the name of the Dog Star, widely worshipped in pre-Islamic Arabia, may go back to its Grk counterpart, Seírios. Until recently, this has been a common assumption. But it has been contested by the theory that it is the other way round and the Grk name is a borrowing from the East.
hist
▪ eC7 Q 53:49 wa-ʔanna-hū huwa rabbu ’l-šiʕrà ‘and that He it is Who is the Lord of Sirius’
cogn
▪ …
▪ …
disc
▪ Rolland2014: »Peut-être du Grk Seírios, à moins que ce ne soit l’inverse.« 1
▪ Jeffery1939: »The common explanation of the philologers is that it is from √ŠʕR and means ‘the hairy one’, but there can be little doubt that it is derived from the Grk Seírios,2 whose r, as Hess shows, is regularly rendered by Arab ʕ. The word occurs in the old poetry3 and was doubtless known to the Arabs long before Islam.«
1. Dans son «Nomenclature stellaire internationale et divinités arabes antiques», in Bulletin de la SELEFA no 17: 11-26, Roland Laffitte conteste en effet cette étymologie. Il voit dans ce nom propre un simple dérivé du verbe šaʕara ‘sentir, percevoir’. 2. Hess, ZS, ii: 221, thinks we have formal proof of the foreign origin of the word in the fact that the Bedouin know only the name mirzam for this star. LA, ii: 116, and vi: 84, gives mirzam as a synonym for šiʕrà, and this word is found again in the Bishari Mirdim. 3. See Hommel, ZDMG, xlv: 597, and Horovitz, KU, 119.
west
▪ Perhaps the Ar name is not loaned from Grk, but Grk Seírios is from an eastern source, perhaps Ar šiʕrà.
deriv
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