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Arabic

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Etymology 1

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Root
ص و ل (ṣ w l)
3 terms

Verb

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صَالَ (ṣāla) I (non-past يَصُولُ (yaṣūlu), verbal noun صَوْل (ṣawl) or صِيَال (ṣiyāl) or صَوَلَان (ṣawalān) or مَصَالَة (maṣāla) or مَصَال (maṣāl)) [with عَلَى (ʕalā) ‘onto’]

  1. to jump furiously against the enemy, to spring in agitation
  2. to rush upon, to make an assault, to attack
  3. to be in power, to hold sway
    يَصُولُ وَيَجُولُyaṣūlu wayajūluIt is rampant
Conjugation
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Etymology 2

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Root
ص ل ي (ṣ l y)
8 terms

Adjective

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صَالٍ (ṣālin) (feminine صَالِيَة (ṣāliya), masculine plural صَالُونَ (ṣālūna), feminine plural صَالِيَات (ṣāliyāt))

  1. active participle of صَلِيَ (ṣaliya)
    • 609–632 CE, Qur'an, 38:59:
      هَـٰذَا فَوۡجࣱ مُّقۡتَحِمࣱ مَّعَكُمۡ ۖ لَا مَرۡحَبَۢا بِهِمۡ ۚ إِنَّهُمۡ صَالُوا۟ ٱلنَّارِ
      hāḏā fawjun muqtaḥimun maʕakum lā marḥaban bihim ʔinnahum ṣālū an-nāri
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)
Conjugation
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Ottoman Turkish

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صال

Etymology

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Inherited from Proto-Turkic *sāl (raft); cognate with Azerbaijani sal, Bashkir һал (hal), Kazakh сал (sal), Kyrgyz сал (sal), Southern Altai сал (sal), Turkmen sal, Tuvan сал (sal), Uyghur سال (sal), Uzbek sol and Yakut аал (aal).

Noun

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صال (sal)

  1. raft, a primitive, flat-bottomed, usually wooden watercraft able to float and drift on water
    Synonym: رمث (remes)
  2. winepress, a press used to extract juice from grapes as the first step of winemaking

Derived terms

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  • صالجی (salcı, conductor or constructor of rafts)

Descendants

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  • Turkish: sal

Further reading

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