Arabic

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Etymology

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From سَبَرَ (sabara) meaning to examine or probe a wound, to clean out a wound, to refresh it or to clean off purulent material, to express uncleanly substances or to attempt to release an illness through bloodletting, to wipe down or wipe off filth, to purify or clear up especially a surface like the skin around a wound; likely an extended semantic development from Aramaic סְבַר (sḇar, originally to consider, to look over; later to perforate or cut into, to check inside).

Root
س ب ر (s b r)
2 terms

Pronunciation

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Noun

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سَبُّورَة (sabbūraf (plural سَبُّورات (sabbūrāt))

  1. slate; blackboard; whiteboard; any display board whose content can be disposed of, commonly by erasure e.g. flip-charts, electronic and interactive whiteboards ...etc.

Declension

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Descendants

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  • Gulf Arabic: صبورة (ṣabūra, whiteboard, board)

References

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

Hijazi Arabic

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Root
س ب ر
1 term

Etymology

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From Arabic سَبُّورَة (sabbūra).

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /sab.buː.ra/, [sˤab.buː.ra]

Noun

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سًبُّورَة (sabbūraf (plural سَبُّورات (sabbūrāt))

  1. slate; blackboard; whiteboard