Arabic edit

Etymology 1 edit

Root
خ ل ط (ḵ-l-ṭ)

Noun edit

خِلَاط (ḵilāṭm

  1. verbal noun of خَالَطَ (ḵālaṭa) (form III)
Declension edit

Etymology 2 edit

Tool noun from the root خ ل ط (ḵ-l-ṭ).

Noun edit

خَلَّاط (ḵallāṭm (plural خَلَّاطَات (ḵallāṭāt))

  1. blender, mixer, any implement that joins things by warping them together
Declension edit

Etymology 3 edit

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

 
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Alternative forms edit

Pronunciation edit

Proper noun edit

خِلَاط (ḵilāṭf

  1. Ahlat (a town in Bitlis Province, Turkey; at Lake Van, 40 km northeast from Tatvan along the coastline)
    • a. 1338, ʿabd al-muʾmīn ibn ʿabd al-ḥaqq ṣafīy ad-dīn al-baḡdādīy, مراصد الاطلاع على الأمكنة والبقاع[1]:
      خِلَاط
      بكَسر أوله، وآخره طاء مهملة: بلدة عامرة مشهورة كثيرة الخيرات، وهى قصبة أرمينية الوسطى، يضرب ببردها فى الشتاء المثل، وبُحَيْرَتُها يُجلَبُ منها السمك الطّرّيخ، [على وزن سكّين] «٣» ، ليس فى غيرها، يُحمَلُ إلى سائرِ البلاد البعيدة، وهى من العجب، فإنها عشرة أشهر لا يوجد فيها حيوان، لا سمك ولا غيره، ثم يَظهر بها السمك مدة شهرين، فيُصاد ويكبس.
      Xlat: A flourishing, famous town, full of amenities, it is a fortress of Central Armenia, and its burd clothing sets an example in winter, and there is Lake Van whence one imports the pearl mullet, to which there is no equal, which is carried to the rest of the towns far away, it’s wonderful, ten months the animal is not found therein, no fish nor anything, then there appears fish for two months, and is caught and pickled.
      Turkish translation in Gök, H. İbrahim (2014) XIII ve XIV. Yüzyıla ait bir coğrafya sözlüğü: Merâsidü’l-ittılâʾ ve Anadolu’ya dair kayıtları[2], Kırıkkale, page 147
Declension edit

Further reading edit

Hijazi Arabic edit

Root
خ ل ط
1 term
 
خَلَّاط

Etymology edit

From Arabic خَلَّاط (ḵallāṭ).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

خلاط (ḵallāṭm (plural خَلَّاطات (ḵallāṭāt))

  1. (cooking) blender, mixer

Ottoman Turkish edit

 
خلاط

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Byzantine Greek καλόδιο (kalódio, rope); compare Greek καλώδιο (kalódio, cable, cord).

Noun edit

خلاط (halat)

  1. rope, cord, line, thick strings of other cordage that are twisted together
    Synonyms: ایپ (ip), حبل (habl), رسن (resen), ریسمان (risman), طنب (tunb, tunüb)
  2. (nautical) hawser, a cable or heavy rope used to tow or moor a ship

Derived terms edit

Descendants edit

  • Turkish: halat

Further reading edit