saraf

See also: šaraf and Saraf

English

Alternative forms

  • (obsolete): xaraffe, xaraffo, charaff, xaraf, xaroff, xeraffo, sarraf, saraff, serof, seraff

Etymology

From Urdu صراف (sarrāf) and Persian صراف (sarâf), from Arabic صَرَّاف (ṣarrāf).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /saˈɹɑːf/

Noun

saraf (plural sarafs)

  1. A provider of financial services in the Middle East and in South Asia, especially (historical) during the early modern and colonial period.
    • 1598, William Phillip translating Jan Huygen van Linschoten as Discours of Voyages into ye Easte & West Indies, Bk. i, Ch. xxxiii, p. 66:
      There is in euery place of the street exchangers of mony, by them called Xaraffos, which are all christian Iewes.
    • 1811, John Pinkerton translating Carsten Niebuhr as "Travels in Arabia" in A General Collection of Voyages and Travels..., Vol. X, p. 71:
      He sent us to receive the money from his Saraf, or banker.
    • 1877, James Carlile McCoan, Egypt As It Is, p. 115:
      The mâmour... till the recent reform appointing a Controller-General of Receipts, received the taxes from the saraffs.
    • 1897 July, Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, p. 24:
      They [Armenians] prospered as our Sarrafs.

Hypernyms

Derived terms

References

Anagrams


Ladino

Etymology

Borrowed from Arabic صَرَّاف (ṣarrāf).

Noun

saraf m (Latin spelling, Hebrew spelling סאראף)

  1. money changer
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