دخن

Arabic

Etymology 1

From the root د خ ن (d-ḵ-n).

Verb

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دَخَنَ (daḵana) I, non-past يَدْخَنُ or يَدْخُنُ‎ (yadḵanu or yadḵunu)

  1. to smoke (emit smoke; for example as a chimney)

Conjugation

Verb

دَخِنَ (daḵina) I, non-past يَدْخَنُ‎ (yadḵanu)

  1. to be smokey (to taste or smell of smoke)
Conjugation

Verb

دَخَّنَ (daḵḵana) II, non-past يُدَخِّنُ‎ (yudaḵḵinu)

  1. to smoke (tobacco, etc.)
Conjugation

Noun

دَخَن (daḵan) m

  1. smoke, damp
Declension
دُخْن

Etymology 2

Borrowed from Aramaic דּוֹחַן (doḥan, millet), from Akkadian 𒌅𒄴𒉡 (/duḫnu; tuḫnu/, millet), ultimately from a variation of Proto-Semitic *ṭaḥan-/*ṭaḥaḥ- (to grind, to pound, to crush, to break down into pieces; especially of corn), found in طَحَّ (ṭaḥḥa, to scrape, to grate, to remove an outside surface, to make flakes or powder, to break down into pieces). Doublet of طَحَنَ (ṭaḥana, to grind, to mill) and cognate with Classical Syriac ܕܽܘܚܢܴܐ (duḥnā, millet) and Hebrew דֹּחַן (doḥan, millet). There is no direct connection to Proto-Indo-European *dʰoHnéh₂ although a distant relation has been suggested.

Noun

دُخْن (duḵn) m

  1. pearl millet
Declension
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