رز

See also: زر and رژ

Arabic

Etymology 1

A wanderwort, see Middle Persian blnj (/*brinǰ/) for more forms, possibly ultimately Proto-Dravidian *wariñci (rice).

Noun

رُزّ (ruzz) m

  1. rice
    • c. 1200, يحيى بن محمد بن أحمد بن العوام‎ [Yaḥyā ibn muḥammad ibn ʾaḥmad ibn al-ʿawwām], José Antonio Banqueri, editor, كتاب الفلاحة [Book on Agriculture], volume 2, Madrid: Imprenta Real, published 1802IA, Cap. 20, Art. 1, pages 59–60:
      والوجه الآخر إن يقطع له الأرض أمشارا أمشارا ويدخل فيها الماء ويقام فيها مقدار شبرة ثم ينثر الحب عليه نثرا وإذا شربت الأرض ذلك الماء غطي الرز برقيق التراب ينثر علبه بالأيادي حتى إذا مضت ساعات وتندى التراب الذي غطي به فليقام الماء في تلك المشارات فياما دائما متّصلا
      And the other way [of transplanting rice] is when the earth is cut into divisions and water is introduced into it to stand a handspan high, then the seeds are strewn onto it, and when the earth is soaked by this water the rice is covered with sprinkled soil strewn onto it by the hands until some hours have passed and the soil which has been strewn on it is damp too, and the water shall stand in these beds continuously and without intermission.
Declension
Synonyms

Etymology 2

Verb

رَزَّ (razza) I, non-past يَرُزُّ‎ (yaruzzu)

  1. to insert, to drive in
Conjugation
  • رَزَّة (razza)
  • إِرْزِيز (ʾirzīz)

Noun

رَزّ (razz) m

  1. verbal noun of رَزَّ (razza) (form I)
  2. inserting, driving in
Declension

Persian

Etymology 1

Middle Persian lc, lz (raz). Cognates include Ancient Greek ῥάξ (rháx, grape) and Latin racemus

Noun

رز (raz)

  1. vine
  2. vineyard

Etymology 2

Borrowed from French rose, from Latin rosa, possibly from Ancient Greek ῥόδον (rhódon), itself possibly from an Iranian language. Compare Old Persian *vr̥da- (whence Persian گل). Doublet of گل‌ if the Greek is an Iranian borrowing.

Noun

رز (roz)

  1. rose
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