علجوم

Arabic

Etymology

From the root ع ل ج (ʕ l j) meaning “to be strong or sturdy”, “to be robust or bulky”, “to be massive”, “to be big or thick”, “to be long or tall”; a variant of عَلْجَن (ʕaljan, a female camel with a bulkier male-like frame; a camel strong enough to use for work). Applied semantically to a great variety of things mostly to animals of bulky shape, or for describing the male figure in the dichotomy of sexes of animals, like the generic usage of the terms bull or buck. The sense of a kingfisher derives from Ancient Greek ἀλκυών (alkuṓn).

Noun

عُلْجُوم • (ʕuljūmm (plural عَلَاجِيم (ʕalājīm))

  1. kingfisher, halcyon
  2. toad, male frog
  3. male duck, mallard
  4. male ostrich
  5. wild he-goat
  6. dragon
  7. deep water, big wave
  8. louse
  9. dense orchard of palm-trees
  10. darkness of night, big shadow blocking light

Declension

Declension of noun عُلْجُوم (ʕuljūm)
singular basic singular triptote
indefinite definite construct
informal عُلْجُوم
ʕuljūm
الْعُلْجُوم
al-ʕuljūm
عُلْجُوم
ʕuljūm
nominative عُلْجُومٌ
ʕuljūmun
الْعُلْجُومُ
al-ʕuljūmu
عُلْجُومُ
ʕuljūmu
accusative عُلْجُومًا
ʕuljūman
الْعُلْجُومَ
al-ʕuljūma
عُلْجُومَ
ʕuljūma
genitive عُلْجُومٍ
ʕuljūmin
الْعُلْجُومِ
al-ʕuljūmi
عُلْجُومِ
ʕuljūmi
dual indefinite definite construct
informal عُلْجُومَيْن
ʕuljūmayn
الْعُلْجُومَيْن
al-ʕuljūmayn
عُلْجُومَيْ
ʕuljūmay
nominative عُلْجُومَانِ
ʕuljūmāni
الْعُلْجُومَانِ
al-ʕuljūmāni
عُلْجُومَا
ʕuljūmā
accusative عُلْجُومَيْنِ
ʕuljūmayni
الْعُلْجُومَيْنِ
al-ʕuljūmayni
عُلْجُومَيْ
ʕuljūmay
genitive عُلْجُومَيْنِ
ʕuljūmayni
الْعُلْجُومَيْنِ
al-ʕuljūmayni
عُلْجُومَيْ
ʕuljūmay
plural basic broken plural diptote
indefinite definite construct
informal عَلَاجِيم
ʕalājīm
الْعَلَاجِيم
al-ʕalājīm
عَلَاجِيم
ʕalājīm
nominative عَلَاجِيمُ
ʕalājīmu
الْعَلَاجِيمُ
al-ʕalājīmu
عَلَاجِيمُ
ʕalājīmu
accusative عَلَاجِيمَ
ʕalājīma
الْعَلَاجِيمَ
al-ʕalājīma
عَلَاجِيمَ
ʕalājīma
genitive عَلَاجِيمَ
ʕalājīma
الْعَلَاجِيمِ
al-ʕalājīmi
عَلَاجِيمِ
ʕalājīmi

Descendants

  • Hebrew: עלגום

References

  • Blois, François de (1990) Burzōy’s Voyage to India and the Origin of the Book of Kalīlah wa Dimnah, London: Royal Asiatic Society, →ISBN, page 12