ذي
Arabic edit
Pronunciation edit
Pronoun edit
ذِي • (ḏī) f
Noun edit
ذِي • (ḏī) m
Mozarabic edit
Alternative forms edit
- ذ (ḏi)
Etymology edit
Preposition edit
ذي (ḏī)
- of
- from
- c. 1100, al-Aʕmā al-Tuṭīlī, Kharja A8 :[2]
- مو الحبيب أنفرم ذ مو امار
- mū al-ḥabīb anfərmə ḏī mū amār
- My friend is ill with my love.
- مو الحبيب أنفرم ذ مو امار
- during
Notes edit
- Corriente interprets ⟨ḏī⟩ and other spellings as representing a Mozarabic de.[4]
References edit
- ^ Jones, Alan (1988) Romance Kharjas in Andalusian Arabic Muwaššaḥ Poetry (Oxford Oriental Institute Monographs; 9), Ithaca Press London, →ISBN, page 140
- ^ Jones, Alan (1988) Romance Kharjas in Andalusian Arabic Muwaššaḥ Poetry (Oxford Oriental Institute Monographs; 9), Ithaca Press London, →ISBN, pages 77-79
- ^ Jones, Alan (1988) Romance Kharjas in Andalusian Arabic Muwaššaḥ Poetry (Oxford Oriental Institute Monographs; 9), Ithaca Press London, →ISBN, page 29
- ^ Corriente, F. (1993) “Nueva propuesta de lectura de las xarajāt de la serie arabe con texto romance”, in Revista de Filología Española (in Spanish), volume LXXIII, number 1/2, pages 27, 31, 34