See also: خباز, خبار, and حبار

Arabic

edit

Etymology 1

edit
Root
ج ب ر (j-b-r)

From Proto-West Semitic *gabbār-. Compare Hebrew גיבור / גִּבּוֹר (gibbōr) and Classical Syriac ܓܢܒܪܐ (ga(n)bbārā).

Adjective

edit

جَبَّار (jabbār) (feminine جَبَّارَة (jabbāra), masculine plural جَبَّارُونَ (jabbārūna) or جَبَابِرَة (jabābira) or جَبَابِر (jabābir) or جَبَابِير (jabābīr))

  1. almighty, omnipotent, superhuman
  2. mighty, powerful
  3. colossal, giant, gigantic, titanic, tremendous, huge
Declension
edit
See also
edit

Noun

edit

جَبَّار (jabbārm (plural جَبَّارُونَ (jabbārūna) or جَبَابِرَة (jabābira) or جَبَابِر (jabābir) or جَبَابِير (jabābīr))

  1. giant, colossus, Goliath, titan
  2. tyrant, oppressor, strongman
Declension
edit

Etymology 2

edit
Root
ج ب ر (j-b-r)

Noun

edit

جِبَار (jibārm

  1. verbal noun of جَابَرَ (jābara) (form III)
Declension
edit

Etymology 3

edit
Root
ج ب ر (j-b-r)

Appellative for some martial god, whose name then stood for planets and then like Latin diēs Mārtis or Proto-West Germanic *Tīwas dag after war-gods for Tuesday.

Proper noun

edit

جُبَار (jubārm

  1. (obsolete) Tuesday
Declension
edit
See also
edit

References

edit
  • Rotter, Gernot (1993) “Der dies veneris im vorislamischen Mekka, eine neue Deutung des Namens „Europa“ und eine Erklärung für kobar = Venus”, in Der Islam[1] (in German), volume 70, number 1, →DOI, page 120

Persian

edit

Pronunciation

edit
 

Readings
Classical reading? jaḇār
Dari reading? jabār
Iranian reading? jabâr
Tajik reading? jabor

Adjective

edit

جبار (jabâr) (comparative جبارتَر (jabâr-tar), superlative جبارتَرین (jabâr-tarin))

  1. unmerciful

Adverb

edit

جبار (jabâr)

  1. unmercifully

Noun

edit

جبار (jabâr)

  1. taskmaster