أمير
Arabic
editEtymology
editFrom ء م ر (ʔ m r), meaning to command, to order.[1][2]
Pronunciation
editNoun
editأَمِير • (ʔamīr) m (plural أُمَرَاء (ʔumarāʔ), feminine أَمِيرَة (ʔamīra))
Declension
editsingular | basic singular triptote | ||
---|---|---|---|
indefinite | definite | construct | |
informal | أَمِير ʔamīr |
الْأَمِير al-ʔamīr |
أَمِير ʔamīr |
nominative | أَمِيرٌ ʔamīrun |
الْأَمِيرُ al-ʔamīru |
أَمِيرُ ʔamīru |
accusative | أَمِيرًا ʔamīran |
الْأَمِيرَ al-ʔamīra |
أَمِيرَ ʔamīra |
genitive | أَمِيرٍ ʔamīrin |
الْأَمِيرِ al-ʔamīri |
أَمِيرِ ʔamīri |
dual | indefinite | definite | construct |
informal | أَمِيرَيْن ʔamīrayn |
الْأَمِيرَيْن al-ʔamīrayn |
أَمِيرَيْ ʔamīray |
nominative | أَمِيرَانِ ʔamīrāni |
الْأَمِيرَانِ al-ʔamīrāni |
أَمِيرَا ʔamīrā |
accusative | أَمِيرَيْنِ ʔamīrayni |
الْأَمِيرَيْنِ al-ʔamīrayni |
أَمِيرَيْ ʔamīray |
genitive | أَمِيرَيْنِ ʔamīrayni |
الْأَمِيرَيْنِ al-ʔamīrayni |
أَمِيرَيْ ʔamīray |
plural | basic broken plural diptote | ||
indefinite | definite | construct | |
informal | أُمَرَاء ʔumarāʔ |
الْأُمَرَاء al-ʔumarāʔ |
أُمَرَاء ʔumarāʔ |
nominative | أُمَرَاءُ ʔumarāʔu |
الْأُمَرَاءُ al-ʔumarāʔu |
أُمَرَاءُ ʔumarāʔu |
accusative | أُمَرَاءَ ʔumarāʔa |
الْأُمَرَاءَ al-ʔumarāʔa |
أُمَرَاءَ ʔumarāʔa |
genitive | أُمَرَاءَ ʔumarāʔa |
الْأُمَرَاءِ al-ʔumarāʔi |
أُمَرَاءِ ʔumarāʔi |
Derived terms
edit- أمير البحر
- أَمِير الْمُؤْمِنِين (ʔamīr al-muʔminīn)
- إِمَارَة (ʔimāra)
Descendants
edit- → Assyrian Neo-Aramaic: ܐܲܡܝܼܪܵܐ (amīrā)
- → Azerbaijani: əmir
- → Bashkir: әмир (əmir)
- → Bengali: আমীর (amīr)
- → Byzantine Greek: ἀμιράς (amirás)
- → Chagatai: امیر
- → Classical Syriac: ܐܡܝܪܐ (ʾămīrāʾ) (see there for further descendants)
- → Chinese: 埃米爾 / 埃米尔 (āimǐ'ěr) (transliteration)
- → English: amir
- → Georgian: ამირი (amiri)
- → Japanese: アミール (amīru)
- → Kazakh: әмір (ämır)
- → Korean: 아미르 (amireu)
- → Maranao: amir
- → Medieval Latin: amiralis
- Italian: ammiraglio
- Old French: amiral (see there for further descendants)
- → Medieval Latin: admiralis
- Old French: admiral (see there for further descendants)
- → Ottoman Turkish: امیر (emir) (see there for further descendants)
- → Ottoman Turkish: آمر (amir)
- Turkish: amir
- → Persian: امیر (amir) (see there for further descendants)
- → Punjabi:
- → Swahili: amiri
- → Tatar: әмир (ämir)
References
edit- ^ “أمر” in Edward William Lane (1863), Arabic-English Lexicon, London: Williams & Norgate, pages 95-99, meaning to command, to order, to state or tell, to counsel or advise, to enjoin or bid, to mandate or exhort, to demand, to delegate responsibility; originates in hunting, the leader of the hunting party who would give orders and commands, guide people into position.
- ^ Wehr, Hans (1979) “ءمر”, in J. Milton Cowan, editor, A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic, 4th edition, Ithaca, NY: Spoken Language Services, →ISBN
Categories:
- Arabic terms belonging to the root ء م ر
- Arabic 2-syllable words
- Arabic terms with IPA pronunciation
- Arabic lemmas
- Arabic nouns
- Arabic masculine nouns
- Arabic nouns with basic triptote singular
- Arabic nouns with broken plural
- Arabic nouns with basic diptote broken plural
- ar:Heads of state
- ar:Military ranks
- ar:Monarchy
- ar:Nobility