طابور

Arabic

Etymology

Borrowed from Ottoman Turkish طابور (tabur, battalion) and extended in sense.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tˁaː.buːr/

Noun

طَابُور (ṭābūr) m (plural طَوَابِير (ṭawābīr))

  1. line, row, filequeue, column
    • 2016 September 25, “بالصور.. وزير التعليم يحضر طابور الصباح في مدرسة كلية النصر”, in أَهْل مَصْر (ʾahl maṣr):
      وطلبت مديرية المدرسة من الطلاب أثناء الطابور تحية الوزير عن طريق السباعية.
      And the school directorate demanded from the pupils in the row to greet the minister in groups of seven.

Declension

References

  • Procházka, Stephan (2004), “The Turkish Contribution to the Arabic Lexicon”, in Linguistic Convergence and Areal Diffusion: Case Studies from Iranian, Semitic and Turkic, Routledge, →ISBN, page 197
  • Vollers, Karl (1897), “Beiträge zur Kenntniss der lebenden arabischen Sprache in Aegypten”, in Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft (in German), volume 51, page 308

Ottoman Turkish

Etymology

Cognate with Crimean Tatar tabur (battalion), Chagatai [script needed] (tapkur, fortification), [script needed] (tabɣur, belt, fence).

Compare the Turkic borrowings: Czech tábor, Slovak tábor, Polish tabor, Serbo-Croatian tȃbor / та̑бор, Bulgarian табор (tabor), Old East Slavic та́бар (tábar, Turkish camp), Russian та́бор (tábor), dialectal та́бырь (tábyrʹ, herd of reindeer), Ukrainian та́бір (tábir), Hungarian tábor, Romanian tabără, English tabor. Has also been compared to Old Armenian թափօր (tʿapʿōr, religious procession).

Noun

طابور (tabur)

  1. (military) battalion

Descendants

  • Turkish: tabur
  • Arabic: طَابُور (ṭābūr)
  • Armenian: թապուր (tʿapur), թաբուռ (tʿabuṙ)

References

  • Ačaṙean, Hračʿeay (1902), թապուր”, in Tʿurkʿerēni azdecʿutʿiwnə hayerēni vray ew tʿurkʿerēnē pʿoxaṙeal baṙerə Pōlsi hay žołovrdakan lezuin mēǰ hamematutʿeamb Vani, Łarabałi ew Nor-Naxiǰewani barbaṙnerun [The Influence of Turkish on Armenian and Words Borrowed from Turkish in the Popular Armenian Language of Constantinople in Comparison with the Dialects of Van, Karabakh and Nor Nakhichevan] (Ēminean azgagrakan žołovacu; 3) (in Armenian), Moscow, Vagharshapat: Lazarev Institute of Oriental Languages, page 119
  • Kélékian, Diran (1911), طابور”, in Dictionnaire turc-français, Constantinople: Mihran, page 787b
  • Lokotsch, Karl (1927) Etymologisches Wörterbuch der europäischen Wörter orientalischen Ursprungs (in German), Heidelberg: Carl Winter’s Universitätsbuchhandlung, § 1974, page 156a
  • Vasmer, Max (1973), табор”, in Etimologičeskij slovarʹ russkovo jazyka [Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language] (in Russian), volume IV, translated from German and supplemented by Trubačóv O. N., Moscow: Progress, pages 6–7
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