مخمور
Arabic
| Root |
|---|
| خ م ر (ḵ-m-r) |
Etymology
From the root خ م ر (ḵ-m-r).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /max.muːr/
Participle
مَخْمُور • (maḵmūr) (feminine مَخْمُورَة (maḵmūra), masculine plural مَخْمُورُون (maḵmūrūn), feminine plural مَخْمُورَات (maḵmūrāt))
Declension
Lua error: attempt to perform arithmetic on local 'h' (a nil value)
Ottoman Turkish
Etymology
From Lua error in Module:utilities at line 142: attempt to perform arithmetic on local 'h' (a nil value), from Arabic خَمْر (ḵamr, “wine”).
Adjective
مخمور • (mahmur) (comparative دخی مخمور (dahı mahmur), superlative اڭ مخمور (eñ mahmur))
- drunk, intoxicated, in a state of stupor
- Synonym: سرخوش (sarhoş)
- drowsy, heavy with sleepiness
- languorous, lacking vitality
Derived terms
- مخمور چیچگى (mahmur çiçeği, “crocus flower”, literally “drowsy flower”)
- مخمورلق (mahmurluk, “hangover”)
Descendants
- Turkish: mahmur (“drunk, drowsy, languorous”, adjective)
- Turkish: mahmurlaşmak (“to become drowsy”, verb)
- Turkish: mahmurlaşma (“state of drowsiness”, noun)
- → Armenian: մահմուռ (mahmuṙ), մախմուռ (maxmuṙ)
- ⇒ Bulgarian: махму́рен (mahmúren, “sleepy following intoxication”, adjective)
- ⇒ Bulgarian: махмурли́я (mahmurlíja, “hungover, drowsy”, adjective)
- ⇒ Greek: μαχμουρλής (machmourlís, “half-awake, drowsy”, adjective), see μαχμουρλής at the Greek wiktionary
- ⇒ Greek: μαχμουρλίδικος (machmourlídikos, “relating to drowsiness, languishing”, adjective)
- ⇒ Greek: μαχμούρικα (machmoúrika, “languidly”, adverb)
- ⇒ Hungarian: mámoros (“drunk, rapturous, ecstatic”, adjective)
- ⇒ Hungarian: mámor (“stupor, ecstasy”, noun) (back-formation)
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.