أسد

Arabic

Etymology 1

Unknown. Dubious relation to عَنْبَس (ʿanbas, lion), Ge'ez ዐንበሳ (ʿänbäsa, lion), عَبَّاس (ʿabbās, lion) which are explained by عَبَسَ (ʿabasa, to scowl).

Noun

أَسَد (ʾasad) m (plural أُسُود (ʾusūd) or أُسُد (ʾusud) or آسَاد (ʾāsād), feminine لَبُؤَة (labuʾa))

  1. lion

Synonyms

Arabic has over 300 words and epithets for lions.

Hypernyms

Declension
Derived terms
  • دَاء الأَسَد (dāʾ al-ʾasad)
  • الأَسَد (al-ʾasad)
  • أَسَد البَحْر (ʾasad al-baḥr)

Etymology 2

From the root س د د (s-d-d).

Verb

أَسَدَّ (ʾasadda) IV, non-past يُسِدُّ‎ (yusiddu)

  1. to provide, to bestow, to confer
    أَسَدَّ لَكَ مَعْرُوفًا
    ʾasadda laka maʿrūfan
    He has done you a favour.
Conjugation

Adjective

أَسَدّ (ʾasadd)

  1. elative degree of سَدِيد (sadīd)
Declension

Etymology 3

Verb

أَسِدُّ (ʾasiddu) (form I)

  1. first-person singular non-past active indicative of سَدَّ (sadda)

Verb

أَسِدَّ (ʾasidda) (form I)

  1. first-person singular non-past active subjunctive of سَدَّ (sadda)
  2. first-person singular non-past active jussive of سَدَّ (sadda)

Verb

أَسِدِّ (ʾasiddi) (form I)

  1. first-person singular non-past active jussive of سَدَّ (sadda)

Verb

أَسُدُّ (ʾasuddu) (form I)

  1. first-person singular non-past active indicative of سَدَّ (sadda)

Verb

أَسُدَّ (ʾasudda) (form I)

  1. first-person singular non-past active subjunctive of سَدَّ (sadda)
  2. first-person singular non-past active jussive of سَدَّ (sadda)

Verb

أَسُدِّ (ʾasuddi) (form I)

  1. first-person singular non-past active jussive of سَدَّ (sadda)

Verb

أُسَدُّ (ʾusaddu) (form I)

  1. first-person singular non-past passive indicative of سَدَّ (sadda)

Verb

أُسَدَّ (ʾusadda) (form I)

  1. first-person singular non-past passive subjunctive of سَدَّ (sadda)
  2. first-person singular non-past passive jussive of سَدَّ (sadda)

Verb

أُسَدِّ (ʾusaddi) (form I)

  1. first-person singular non-past passive jussive of سَدَّ (sadda)

References

  • Hommel, Fritz (1879) Die Namen der Säugethiere bei den südsemitischen Völkern als Beiträge zur arabischen und äthiopischen Lexicographie, zur semitischen Kulturforschung und Sprachvergleichung und zur Geschichte der Mittelmeerfauna. Mit steter Berücksichtigung auch der assyrischen und hebräischen Thiernamen und geographischen und literaturgeschichtlichen Excursen (in German), Leipzig: J. C. Hinrichs’sche Buchhandlung, page 293
  • Leslau, Wolf (1991) Comparative Dictionary of Geʿez (Classical Ethiopic), 2nd edition, Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, →ISBN, page 64
  • Nöldeke, Theodor (1904) Beiträge zur semitischen Sprachwissenschaft (in German), Straßburg: Karl J. Trübner, page 77
  • Kogan, Leonid (2011), “Proto-Semitic Lexicon”, in Weninger, Stefan, editor, The Semitic Languages. An International Handbook (Handbücher zur Sprach- und Kommunikationswissenschaft – Handbooks of Linguistics and Communication Science; 36), Berlin: De Gruyter, →ISBN, page 208

Egyptian Arabic

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ʔæˈsæd]

Noun

اسد (ʾasad) m , اسود (ʾusūd) pl or اسدة (ʾusúda)

  1. lion
  2. (astrology) Leo

Synonyms

References

  • Spiro, Socrates (1895). An Arabic-English vocabulary of the colloquial Arabic of Egypt, containing the vernacular idioms and expressions, slang phrases, etc., etc., used by the native Egyptians Cairo: Al-Mokattam Printing Office.
  • Hinds, Martin; Badawi, El-Said (1986). A Dictionary of Egyptian Arabic Beirut: Librairie du Liban.
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