See also: خارجی and جارچی

Arabic

edit
Root
خ ر ج (ḵ r j)
11 terms

Etymology

edit

Relative adjective (nisba) composed of خَارِج (ḵārij, outer, exterior) +‎ ـِيّ (-iyy).

Pronunciation

edit

Adjective

edit

خَارِجِيّ (ḵārijiyy) (feminine خَارِجِيَّة (ḵārijiyya), masculine plural خَارِجِيُّونَ (ḵārijiyyūna), feminine plural خَارِجِيَّات (ḵārijiyyāt))

  1. outer, external, extraneous, foreign, nonresident

Declension

edit

Descendants

edit
  • Azerbaijani: xarici
  • Ottoman Turkish: خارجی (haricî)
  • Persian: خارجی (xâreji)
  • Urdu: خارجی (xārijī)
  • Uzbek: xorijiy

Noun

edit

خَارِجِيّ (ḵārijiyym, plural خَوَارِج (ḵawārij), feminine خَارِجِيَّة (ḵārijiyya)

  1. (Islam, historical) Kharijite
  2. (Islam, religious slur) resembling or compared to historical Khawarij, i.e. prone to treating people as non-Muslims, a takfirist
    Synonym: تَكْفِيرِيّ (takfīriyy)
    Antonym: مُرْجِئِيّ (murjiʔiyy)

Declension

edit

References

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