nisba
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Noun
nisba (plural nisbas)
- An Arabic derivational adjective formed with the suffix ـِيّ m (-iyy) / ـِيَّة f (-iyya), or the equivalent construction in another Semitic (or other Afroasiatic) language.
- The part of an Arabic name consisting of such an adjective.
- 2013, Zouhair Ghazzal, The grammars of adjudication: The economics of judicial decision making in fin-de-siècle Ottoman Beirut and Damascus[1]:
- Knowing the nisbas of the litigants and their representatives was the qāḍī's single most important preliminary task.
Translations
grammar term
See also
Anagrams
Italian
Etymology
Sometimes hypothesized to be from German nichts or nix da.[1]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈniz.ba/
- Rhymes: -izba
- Hyphenation: nì‧sba
Adverb
nisba
- (colloquial, regional) nix, none
- 1959, La cambiale:
- - Lei testimoni li ha?
- Eh, l'avvocato! Testimoni - nisba!
- E allora lo facciamo venire.
- A chi?
- A Nisba.
- No, dicevo "nisba". Nessuno!- - Do you have any witnesses?
- Well, a lawyer! Witnesses, nix!
- Then we'll have him come here.
- Who?
- Nix.
- No, I meant "nix", no one!
- - Do you have any witnesses?
References
- ^ in Festschrift für Giovan Battista Pellegrini (1991, →ISBN, edited by Johannes Kramer), page 322: Als Beispiel eines Germanismus sei nisba "nichts" angeführt, das sich aus deutsch nix (da) ableitet und in Norditalien eine Entsprechung mit lomb. nies aufweist; ...
Further reading
- nisba in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana