halis
See also: halís and halíš
Catalan
Verb
halis
- second-person singular present subjunctive of halar
Ladino
Alternative forms
- halís
Etymology
Borrowed from Ottoman Turkish خالص (halis),[1] from Arabic خَالِص (ḵāliṣ).
Adjective
halis (Hebrew spelling חאליס)[1]
- authentic; original; natural
- Synonyms: auténtiko, puro
- 2000, La Lettre Sépharade[1], numbers 1–19, La Lettre Sépharade, page 9:
- Mi padre tambyen favlava el ladino ma konoseva de mas el turko, el franses i el grego, ke favlava sin el mizmo aksento ke teniyamos, los otros, i pareseva grego halis.
- My father also spoke Judezmo but he knew more Turkish, French and Greek; he spoke without the same accent that we ourselves had, and he seemed like [an] authentic Greek.
Adverb
halis (Hebrew spelling חאליס)[1]
- certainly; definitely; surely; no doubt
- (Can we date this quote?), Folkmasa[2]:
- manyana viene halis
- Tomorrow certainly comes.
References
Saisiyat
Noun
halis
Turkish
Etymology 1
Clipping of halüsinasyon (“hallucination”).
Noun
halis (definite accusative halisi, uncountable)
- (chiefly Internet) abbreviation of halüsinasyon (“hallucination”)
- Karizman halis mi?
- Is your charisma a hallucination?
Usage notes
- For those who are confused, this meaning has a meaning like "is it real?". Thinking through the example above, the person asking the question thinks it's too good to be true because they like the charisma of the other person so much.
Etymology 2
Inherited from Ottoman Turkish خالص (halis), from Arabic خَالِص (ḵāliṣ).
Adjective
halis
Further reading
- Nişanyan, Sevan (2002–) “halis”, in Nişanyan Sözlük