See also: ضوقى and صوفی

Arabic

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Relative adjective (nisba) composed of صُوف (ṣūf, wool) +‎ ـِيّ (-iyy), from the root ص و ف (ṣ-w-f).

Adjective

edit

صُوفِيّ (ṣūfiyy) (feminine صُوفِيَّة (ṣūfiyya), masculine plural صُوفِيُّونَ (ṣūfiyyūna), feminine plural صُوفِيَّات (ṣūfiyyāt))

  1. woolen
Declension
edit

Etymology 2

edit

Same as above, due to a popular clothing in pertinent orders. An alleged derivation from Ancient Greek σοφός (sophós, wise) has no formal or factual basis.

Adjective

edit

صُوفِيّ (ṣūfiyy) (feminine صُوفِيَّة (ṣūfiyya), masculine plural صُوفِيُّونَ (ṣūfiyyūna), feminine plural صُوفِيَّات (ṣūfiyyāt))

  1. Sufi
    الْأَدَبُ الْصُّوفِيُّ غَالِبًا يَسْتَخْدِمُ الْشِّعْرُ وَالْمُوسِيقَى لِلْتَّعْبِيرِ عَنِ الْتَّجْرِبَةِ الْرُّوحِيَّةِ.
    al-ʔadabu l-ṣṣūfiyyu ḡāliban yastaḵdimu l-ššiʕru wālmūsīqā lilttaʕbīri ʕani l-ttajribati l-rrūḥiyyati.
    Sufi literature often uses poetry and music to express the spiritual experience.
Declension
edit

Noun

edit

صُوفِيّ (ṣūfiyym (plural صُوفِيُّونَ (ṣūfiyyūna), feminine صُوفِيَّة (ṣūfiyya))

  1. Sufi
Declension
edit
edit

References

edit

Hijazi Arabic

edit
Root
ص و ف
1 term

Etymology

edit

From Arabic صُوفِيّ (ṣūfiyy).

Pronunciation

edit

Adjective

edit

صوفي (ṣūfi)

  1. (slang) non-smoker, does not smoke or use tobacco; analgesics (painkillers) and drugs.