ثمنة
Arabic
| Root |
|---|
| ث م ن (ṯ m n) |
| 8 terms |
Alternative forms
- ثُمْنِيَّة (ṯumniyya), pl. ثَمَانِيّ (ṯamāniyy)
- ثُمْن (ṯumn), i.e. the normal word for ’an eighth’
- ثَمِين (ṯamīn), pl. أَثْمَان (ʔaṯmān)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /θum.na/
Noun
ثُمْنَة • (ṯumna) f (plural ثُمَنَات (ṯumanāt) or ثُمْنَات (ṯumnāt))
Declension
| singular | singular triptote in ـَة (-a) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| indefinite | definite | construct | |
| informal | ثُمْنَة ṯumna |
الثُّمْنَة aṯ-ṯumna |
ثُمْنَة ṯumnat |
| nominative | ثُمْنَةٌ ṯumnatun |
الثُّمْنَةُ aṯ-ṯumnatu |
ثُمْنَةُ ṯumnatu |
| accusative | ثُمْنَةً ṯumnatan |
الثُّمْنَةَ aṯ-ṯumnata |
ثُمْنَةَ ṯumnata |
| genitive | ثُمْنَةٍ ṯumnatin |
الثُّمْنَةِ aṯ-ṯumnati |
ثُمْنَةِ ṯumnati |
| dual | indefinite | definite | construct |
| informal | ثُمْنَتَيْن ṯumnatayn |
الثُّمْنَتَيْن aṯ-ṯumnatayn |
ثُمْنَتَيْ ṯumnatay |
| nominative | ثُمْنَتَانِ ṯumnatāni |
الثُّمْنَتَانِ aṯ-ṯumnatāni |
ثُمْنَتَا ṯumnatā |
| accusative | ثُمْنَتَيْنِ ṯumnatayni |
الثُّمْنَتَيْنِ aṯ-ṯumnatayni |
ثُمْنَتَيْ ṯumnatay |
| genitive | ثُمْنَتَيْنِ ṯumnatayni |
الثُّمْنَتَيْنِ aṯ-ṯumnatayni |
ثُمْنَتَيْ ṯumnatay |
| plural | sound feminine plural | ||
| indefinite | definite | construct | |
| informal | ثُمَنَات; ثُمْنَات ṯumanāt; ṯumnāt |
الثُّمَنَات; الثُّمْنَات aṯ-ṯumanāt; aṯ-ṯumnāt |
ثُمَنَات; ثُمْنَات ṯumanāt; ṯumnāt |
| nominative | ثُمَنَاتٌ; ثُمْنَاتٌ ṯumanātun; ṯumnātun |
الثُّمَنَاتُ; الثُّمْنَاتُ aṯ-ṯumanātu; aṯ-ṯumnātu |
ثُمَنَاتُ; ثُمْنَاتُ ṯumanātu; ṯumnātu |
| accusative | ثُمَنَاتٍ; ثُمْنَاتٍ ṯumanātin; ṯumnātin |
الثُّمَنَاتِ; الثُّمْنَاتِ aṯ-ṯumanāti; aṯ-ṯumnāti |
ثُمَنَاتِ; ثُمْنَاتِ ṯumanāti; ṯumnāti |
| genitive | ثُمَنَاتٍ; ثُمْنَاتٍ ṯumanātin; ṯumnātin |
الثُّمَنَاتِ; الثُّمْنَاتِ aṯ-ṯumanāti; aṯ-ṯumnāti |
ثُمَنَاتِ; ثُمْنَاتِ ṯumanāti; ṯumnāti |
Descendants
- Maltese: tomna
References
- Batatu, Hanna (1999) Syria's peasantry, the descendants of its lesser rural notables, and their politics[1], Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, →ISBN, pages 358–359, end note 9 to chapter three
- Piamenta, Moshe (1991) Dictionary of Post-Classical Yemeni Arabic, Leiden: Brill, →ISBN, page 57b
- Wehr, Hans (1979) “ثمنة”, in J. Milton Cowan, editor, A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic, 4th edition, Ithaca, NY: Spoken Language Services, →ISBN, page 128b