See also: Rasul

English edit

Etymology 1 edit

From Arabic رَسُول (rasūl, messenger).

Noun edit

rasul (plural rasuls or rusul)

  1. (Islam) A prophet or messenger in Islam; Muhammad, as a special messenger of God.

Etymology 2 edit

Noun edit

rasul (countable and uncountable, plural rasuls)

  1. A traditional mud spa treatment of Middle Eastern origin.

Anagrams edit

Indonesian edit

 
Indonesian Wikipedia has an article on:
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Etymology edit

From Malay rasul, from Arabic رَسُول (rasūl, messenger).[1]

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

rasul (plural rasul-rasul, first-person possessive rasulku, second-person possessive rasulmu, third-person possessive rasulnya)

  1. (Islam) A prophet or messenger in Islam; Muhammad, as a special messenger of God.
  2. (Christianity) apostle
    Kisah Para RasulActs of the Apostles

Derived terms edit

References edit

  1. ^ Erwina Burhanuddin, Abdul Gaffar Ruskhan, R.B. Chrismanto (1993) Penelitian kosakata bahasa Arab dalam bahasa Indonesia [Research on Arabic vocabulary in Indonesian]‎[1], Jakarta: Pusat Pembinaan dan Pengembangan Bahasa, Departemen Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan, →ISBN, →OCLC

Further reading edit

Maguindanao edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Malay rasul, from Arabic رَسُول (rasūl)

Noun edit

rasul

  1. (Islam) prophet
  2. (Christianity) apostle

Maltese edit

Root
r-s-l
2 terms

Etymology edit

From Arabic رَسُول (rasūl). Called an “arabism” by Falzon, but this may mean merely that the word was already highly archaic in the mid-19th century. At any rate it was inherited, not introduced later by Muslim captives, because old sources show that the place Għajn Rasul was always understood as “Spring of the Apostle [Paul]”.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

rasul m (plural rsul or rsiel or rsajjal or irsla or rosol)

  1. (obsolete) Synonym of appostlu (apostle)

Derived terms edit