وحد

See also: وجد

Arabic

Etymology 1

From the root و ح د (w-ḥ-d); compare وَاحِد (wāḥid, one).

Verb

وَحَدَ (waḥada) I, non-past يَحِدُ‎ (yaḥidu)
وَحِدَ (waḥida) I, non-past يَوْحَدُ‎ (yawḥadu)
وَحُدَ (waḥuda) I, non-past يَوْحُدُ‎ (yawḥudu)

  1. to be single
  2. to be alone
  3. to be unique
  4. to be incomparable
Conjugation
References

Etymology 2

Causative of وَحَدَ (waḥada) and وَحِدَ (waḥida) and وَحُدَ (waḥuda).

Verb

وَحَّدَ (waḥḥada) II, non-past يُوَحِّدُ‎ (yuwaḥḥidu)

  1. to unify, to reduce to one, to unite, to regularize
  2. to consider as single or unique
  3. to profess the unity of
  4. to connect
  5. to combine
Conjugation
References
  • Steingass, Francis Joseph (1884), وحد”, in The Student's Arabic–English Dictionary, London: W.H. Allen
  • Wehr, Hans (1979), وحد”, in J. Milton Cowan, editor, A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic, 4th edition, Ithaca, NY: Spoken Language Services, →ISBN

Etymology 3

Noun

وَحْد (waḥd) m

  1. verbal noun of وَحَدَ (waḥada, to be single, alone, unique, incomparable) (form I)
  2. verbal noun of وَحِدَ (waḥida, to be single, alone, unique, incomparable) (form I)
  3. solitude
Declension
References

Adjective

وَحْد (waḥd)

  1. by one's self (with pronoun affixes)
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.