See also: آت, آپ, أب, آب, and اب

Arabic edit

Pronunciation edit

Suffix edit

ـَات (-āt)

  1. Suffix used to pluralize feminine nouns and adjectives ending in ـَة (-a).
  2. Suffix used to pluralize non-human nouns.

Azerbaijani edit

Noun edit

ات (ət) (definite accusative اتی (əti), plural اتلر (ətlər))

  1. Arabic spelling of ət (meat)

Declension edit

Bulgar edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Turkic *erti, cognate with Turkish idi, Kazakh еді (edı). See also Proto-Turkic *-ti.

Verb edit

اَتِ (eti)

  1. (Volga Bulgar) was, were
    Synonym: اج (eçi)

References edit

  • A Volga Bulgarıan Inscription From 1307 A. Róna-tas, page 164 [1]
  • Tekin, Talât (1988) Volga Bulgar kitabeleri ve Volga Bulgarcası [Volga Bulgarian Ephitaphs and Volga Bulgarian Language]‎[2] (in Turkish), Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi, →ISBN, pages 182-183

Iraqi Arabic edit

Etymology 1 edit

From Arabic أَنْتَ (ʔanta).

Pronoun edit

اتَّ (ʔittam

  1. you (masculine singular subject pronoun)
    Alternative form: إِنْتَ (ʔinta)

Etymology 2 edit

From Arabic أَنْتِ (ʔanti).

Pronoun edit

اتِّ (ʔittif

  1. you (feminine singular subject pronoun)
    Alternative forms: إِنْتِ (ʔinti), إِتِّي (ʔitti), إنتي (ʔinti)

References edit

  • Dictionary of Baghdadi Dialect by Sheikh Jalal Al-Hanafi, part 1, page 65.

Karakhanid edit

Etymology 1 edit

Inherited from Proto-Turkic *at (horse).

Cognate with Old Turkic 𐱃 (at, horse), Chuvash ут (ut), Khalaj hat, Turkish at (horse), Uzbek ot, Bashkir ат (at) and Yakut ат (at).

Noun edit

اَتْ (at)

  1. horse
    قوُشْ قَنَتِنْ اَرْ اَتِنْQuš qanatïn er atïn.The bird with its wings, the man with his horse.
Related terms edit

Etymology 2 edit

Inherited from Common Turkic *et (meat).

Cognate with Turkish et, Bashkir ит (it) and Yakut эт (et).

Noun edit

اَتْ (et)

  1. meat, flesh
    اُلْ اَتْ آسْدٖىOl et asdï̄.He hung up meat.

Etymology 3 edit

Inherited from Proto-Turkic *ot (grass).

Cognate with Chuvash утӑ (ut̬ă), Turkish ot, Bashkir ут (ut) and Yakut от (ot).

Noun edit

اُتْ (ot)

  1. grass, vegetation, herbs, weeds
    اُتْ اُنْدٖىOt ündī.The grass grew.
  2. (medicine) medicine
    اُتْ اِجْتِمْOt ičtim.I drank the medicine.
  3. poison
    بَكْ اَنْكارْ اُتْ بٖيرْدٖىBeg aŋār ot bḗrdī.The beg gave him poison.

Etymology 4 edit

Inherited from Proto-Turkic *ï̄t (dog).

Cognate with Chuvash йытӑ (jyt̬ă), Turkish it, Bashkir эт (et) and Yakut ыт (ıt).

Noun edit

اِتْ (ït)

  1. dog

References edit

  • Clauson, Gerard (1972) “”, in An Etymological Dictionary of pre-thirteenth-century Turkish, Oxford: Clarendon Press, pages 32-34

Further reading edit

Khalaj edit

Noun edit

اَت (ət) (definite accusative اَتی, plural اَتلَر)

  1. Arabic spelling of ət (flesh, meat)

Declension edit

Kyrgyz edit

Noun edit

ات (at)

  1. Arabic spelling of ат (at).

Ottoman Turkish edit

 
ات

Etymology 1 edit

From Proto-Turkic *et (meat).

Noun edit

ات (et)

  1. meat; flesh
Derived terms edit

Etymology 2 edit

Noun edit

ات (it)

  1. alternative spelling of ایت (it, dog)

South Levantine Arabic edit

Etymology edit

From Arabic ـَات (-āt).

Suffix edit

ـات (-ātf pl

  1. Feminine plural suffix

Usage notes edit

  • Most feminine nouns take this plural suffix, but some are irregular (“broken plural”).
  • There are also some masculine nouns, especially loanwords, that take this suffix.

See also edit

  • Feminine ending: ـة (-e/-a)
  • Masculine plural suffix for nouns referring to people: ـين (-īn)