ħażin
Maltese
| Root |
|---|
| ħ-ż-n (evil) |
| 3 terms |
Etymology
From Arabic حَزِين (ḥazīn, “sad”). The semantic development was probably influenced by Sicilian tristu (“evil”) and tristi (“sad”), a doublet pair from Latin tristis (“sad”). Generally such a development is understandable from contexts like “sad news” and “bad news”, where they are more or less synonymous.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ħaˈziːn/
Adjective
ħażin (feminine singular ħażina, plural ħżiena, comparative agħar or eħżen)
Adverb
ħażin