سخن

Arabic

Etymology

From the root س خ ن (s-ḵ-n).

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Verb

سَخَنَ or سَخُنَ (saḵuna or saḵana) I, non-past يَسْخُنُ‎ (yasḵunu)
سَخِنَ (saḵina) I, non-past يَسْخَنُ‎ (yasḵanu)

  1. to be hot, to become hot
  2. to be ill, to become ill

Conjugation

Verb

سَخَّنَ (saḵḵana) II, non-past يُسَخِّنُ‎ (yusaḵḵinu)

  1. (transitive) to heat

Conjugation

Adjective

سُخْن (suḵn) (feminine سُخْنَة (suḵna), elative أَسْخَن (ʾasḵan))

  1. hot
  2. warm

Declension

References

  • Wehr, Hans (1979), سخن”, in J. Milton Cowan, editor, A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic, 4th edition, Ithaca, NY: Spoken Language Services, →ISBN

Persian

Etymology

Ultimately from Proto-Iranian *ĉánhati; see there for more.

Noun

سخن (soxan) (plural سخنان (soxanân))

  1. speech

Derived terms

  • سخن راندن (soxan rândan)
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