أنوق
Arabic
Etymology
Unknown. Maybe from the root ء ن ق (ʔ n q), maybe natively from نَاقَة (nāqa, “female camel”) or via a lost Aramaic term as in struthiocamelus (“ostrich”), but this is less likely since old dictionaries understand the word as ذَكَر الرَّخَم (ḏakar al-rraḵam, “male of the Egyptian vulture”), maybe from ع ن ق (ʕ n q) as in another name of a long-necked bird عَنْقَاء (ʕanqāʔ), the form of a color or defect adjective, compared to Aramaic אִינְקָא (ʾinqā) for a large bird, however regularly compared to Ge'ez አንቄ (ʾänḳe), አንቄት (ʾänḳet), maybe a borrowing from a regional form of it, since in Ethiopian Semitic the Proto-Semitic pattern KaLīM shifted to KaLūM.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ʔa.nuːq/
Noun
أَنُوق • (ʔanūq) m
Declension
| singular | basic singular triptote | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| indefinite | definite | construct | |
| informal | أَنُوق ʔanūq |
الْأَنُوق al-ʔanūq |
أَنُوق ʔanūq |
| nominative | أَنُوقٌ ʔanūqun |
الْأَنُوقُ al-ʔanūqu |
أَنُوقُ ʔanūqu |
| accusative | أَنُوقًا ʔanūqan |
الْأَنُوقَ al-ʔanūqa |
أَنُوقَ ʔanūqa |
| genitive | أَنُوقٍ ʔanūqin |
الْأَنُوقِ al-ʔanūqi |
أَنُوقِ ʔanūqi |
References
- Freytag, Georg (1830) “أنوق”, in Lexicon arabico-latinum praesertim ex Djeuharii Firuzabadiique et aliorum Arabum operibus adhibitis Golii quoque et aliorum libris confectum[1] (in Latin), volume 1, Halle: C. A. Schwetschke, page 66a
- Баранов, Х. К. (2011) “أنوق”, in Большой арабско-русский словарь (Bolʹšoj arabsko-russkij slovarʹ), 11th edition, Москва: Живой язык, →ISBN
- Lane, Edward William (1863-1893) “أنوق”, in Arabic-English Lexicon, London: Williams & Norgate.
- Levy, Jacob (1867) “אִינְקָא”, in Chaldäisches Wörterbuch über die Targumim und einen großen Theil des rabbinischen Schriftthums[2] (in German), Leipzig: Verlag von Baumgärtners Buchhandlung, page 43a
- Militarev, Alexander, Kogan, Leonid (2005) “*ˀan(V)ḳ-”, in Semitic Etymological Dictionary, volume II: Animal Names, Münster: Ugarit-Verlag, →ISBN, pages 9–10 Nr. 6
- Wehr, Hans (1960) “أنوق”, in J. Milton Cowan, editor, A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic, 3rd edition, Ithaca, NY: Otto Harrassowitz