د ي ر

Arabic

Etymology

From the Classical Syriac root ܕ-ܘ-ܪ (d-w-r) through the spread of دَيْر (dayr, cloister) on the path of Christianity.

Root

د ي ر (d-y-r)

  1. related to the habitation of a monk

Derived terms

Verbs
  • Form V: تَدَيَّرَ (tadayyara, reside; make one’s domicile)
    • Verbal noun: تَدَيُّر (tadayyur)
    • Active participle: مُتَدَيِّر (mutadayyir)
    • Passive participle: مُتَدَيَّر (mutadayyar)
Nouns
  • دَيْر (dayr, cloister)
  • دَيَّار (dayyār, cloister inhabitant, monk)
  • دَيْرَانِيّ (dayrāniyy, cloister inhabitant)
Adjectives
  • دَيْرِيّ (dayriyy, cloister)
  • دَيْرَانِيّ (dayrāniyy, monasterial)
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.