See also: کندر

Arabic

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Classical Persian کندر (kundur).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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كُنْدُر (kundurm

  1. frankincense, Boswellia thurifera tree and produce
    • a. 1165, ابن التلميذ [Ibn al-Tilmīḏ], edited by Oliver Kahl, The Dispensatory of Ibn At-Tilmīḏ الأقراباذين الكبير (Islamic Philosophy, Theology and Science. Texts and Studies; 70), Leiden: Brill, published 2007, →ISBN, page 72 Nr. 80:
      سفوف ممسك للبول
      سعد سنبل أسطوخوذس كندر قشار الكندر جفت البلوط مشوي أجزاء سواء يدق ويجمع ويتناول منه بالغدوات مثقال وآخر النهار مثقال
      A powder which retains urine
      Cyperus, Indian spikenard, French lavender, frankincense and the bark of its tree, and the grilled inner skins of acorn-cups in equal parts. (This) is pounded, brought together, and one miṯqāl from it is taken in the mornings and (again) at the end of the day.

Declension

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Ottoman Turkish

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كندر

Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Inherited from Proto-Turkic *kentir, *kendir (hemp); compare Bashkir киндер (kinder), Chuvash кантӑр (kant̬ăr), Karakalpak kendir, Kazakh кендір (kendır), Kyrgyz кендир (kendir), Tatar киндер (kinder), Turkmen kendir, Tuvan хендир (xendir) and Hungarian kender, an Oghur Turkic loanword.

Noun

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كندر (kendir)

  1. hemp (Cannabis sativa)
    Synonyms: قنب (kınnap), كنویر (kenevir)

Descendants

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  • Turkish: kendir

Further reading

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