سبت
Hijazi Arabic
editRoot |
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س ب ت |
1 term |
Etymology 1
editFrom Arabic اَلسَّبْت (as-sabt), the form with al- is usually used to designate a certain Saturday or Saturday day in general but when it is mentioned unspecifically then the form without the al- can be used in some contexts.
Pronunciation
editNoun
editسبت • (sabt) m
- a Saturday
- سواءً سبت ولا أحد
- sawāʔan sabt walla ʔaḥad
- either a Saturday or a Sunday
Etymology 2
editFrom Ottoman Turkish سبد (sebed, seped, sepet), from Persian سبد (sabad, “basket”).
Pronunciation
editNoun
editسبت • (sabat) m (plural أسبتة (ʔasbita) or سبتات (sabatāt))
- usually an immovable plastic basket, mostly a laundry basket
See also
editMalay
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editFrom Arabic السَبْت (as-sabt).
Pronunciation
editProper noun
editسبت (Rumi spelling Sabtu)
- Saturday (day of the week)
See also
edit- (days of the week) hari dalam minggu; Ahad/Minggu, Isnin, Selasa, Rabu, Khamis, Jumaat, Sabtu (Category: ms:Days of the week)
- (days of the week) ميڠݢو دالم هاري; احد/ميڠݢو, اثنين, ثلاث, رابو, خميس, جمعة, سبت (Category: ms:Days of the week)
Categories:
- Hijazi Arabic terms belonging to the root س ب ت
- Hijazi Arabic terms inherited from Arabic
- Hijazi Arabic terms derived from Arabic
- Hijazi Arabic terms with IPA pronunciation
- Hijazi Arabic lemmas
- Hijazi Arabic nouns
- Hijazi Arabic masculine nouns
- Hijazi Arabic terms with usage examples
- Hijazi Arabic terms borrowed from Ottoman Turkish
- Hijazi Arabic terms derived from Ottoman Turkish
- Hijazi Arabic terms derived from Persian
- Malay terms derived from Arabic
- Malay 2-syllable words
- Malay terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Malay/aptu
- Rhymes:Malay/tu
- Rhymes:Malay/u
- Malay lemmas
- Malay proper nouns
- ms:Days of the week