Arabic edit

Root
ن د ر (n-d-r)

Etymology edit

Derived from the active participle of نَدَرَ (nadara, to be rare) and نَدُرَ (nadura, to be strange), from the root ن د ر (n-d-r). Compare Hebrew נדיר (nadír, rare).

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

نَادِر (nādir) (feminine نَادِرَة (nādira), masculine plural نَادِرُونَ (nādirūna), feminine plural نَادِرَاتٌ (nādirātun) or نَوَادِرُ (nawādiru), elative أَنْدَر (ʔandar))

  1. rare, extraordinary
  2. strange, unusual
  3. excellent, priceless, eminent, precious

Declension edit

Descendants edit

  • Azerbaijani: nədir
  • Persian: نادر
  • Ottoman Turkish: نادر
  • Uzbek: nodir

Noun edit

نَادِر (nādirm

  1. eccentric

Declension edit

References edit

References edit

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

Persian edit

 
Persian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia fa

Etymology edit

From Arabic نَادِر (nādir).

Pronunciation edit

 

Readings
Classical reading? nāḏir
Dari reading? nādir
Iranian reading? nâder
Tajik reading? nodir
  • (file)

Adjective edit

نادر (nâder) (comparative نادرتَر (nâder-tar), superlative نادرتَرین (nâder-tarin))

  1. rare

Proper noun edit

نادر (nâder)

  1. a male given name, Nader

South Levantine Arabic edit

Root
ن د ر
2 terms

Etymology edit

From Arabic نَادِر (nādir).

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /naː.dir/, [ˈnæː.dɪr]
  • (file)

Adjective edit

نادر (nāder) (feminine نادرة (nādre), masculine plural نادرين (nādrīn))

  1. rare, unusual, uncommon

See also edit