كرسنة
Arabic
editEtymology
editFrom Aramaic כַּרְשִׁינָא (karšinnā) or Hebrew כַּרְשִׁינָה (karšīna). That is explained as from Sanskrit कृष्ण (kṛṣṇa, “black”) and so this is a doublet of كُشْنَى (kušnā, “Vicia palaestina”), which comes via Classical Syriac ܟܘܫܢܐ (kūšnā), also in Akkadian 𒄘𒃻𒄯𒊏 (/kiššanu/), or instead as from Classical Syriac ܟܱܪܣܴܢܳܐ (karsānā, karsannā, “ventrose”) (to Proto-Semitic *kariś- (“paunch”)) because of flatulence of the belly one has when eating from this plant.
Akin to Old Armenian քրսամն (kʻrsamn), Armenian քուռուշնա (kʻuṙušna), Azerbaijani kürüşnə, kürişnə.
Noun
editكَرْسَنَّة or كِرْسَنَّة or كِرْسِنَّة or كِرْسَنَة or كَرْسَنَة • (karsanna or kirsanna or kirsinna or kirsana or karsana) f
Declension
editDeclension of noun كَرْسَنَّة (karsanna); كِرْسَنَّة (kirsanna); كِرْسِنَّة (kirsinna); كِرْسَنَة (kirsana); كَرْسَنَة (karsana)
Singular | singular triptote in ـَة (-a) | ||
---|---|---|---|
Indefinite | Definite | Construct | |
Informal | كَرْسَنَّة; كِرْسَنَّة; كِرْسِنَّة; كِرْسَنَة; كَرْسَنَة karsanna; kirsanna; kirsinna; kirsana; karsana |
الْكَرْسَنَّة; الْكِرْسَنَّة; الْكِرْسِنَّة; الْكِرْسَنَة; الْكَرْسَنَة al-karsanna; al-kirsanna; al-kirsinna; al-kirsana; al-karsana |
كَرْسَنَّة; كِرْسَنَّة; كِرْسِنَّة; كِرْسَنَة; كَرْسَنَة karsannat; kirsannat; kirsinnat; kirsanat; karsanat |
Nominative | كَرْسَنَّةٌ; كِرْسَنَّةٌ; كِرْسِنَّةٌ; كِرْسَنَةٌ; كَرْسَنَةٌ karsannatun; kirsannatun; kirsinnatun; kirsanatun; karsanatun |
الْكَرْسَنَّةُ; الْكِرْسَنَّةُ; الْكِرْسِنَّةُ; الْكِرْسَنَةُ; الْكَرْسَنَةُ al-karsannatu; al-kirsannatu; al-kirsinnatu; al-kirsanatu; al-karsanatu |
كَرْسَنَّةُ; كِرْسَنَّةُ; كِرْسِنَّةُ; كِرْسَنَةُ; كَرْسَنَةُ karsannatu; kirsannatu; kirsinnatu; kirsanatu; karsanatu |
Accusative | كَرْسَنَّةً; كِرْسَنَّةً; كِرْسِنَّةً; كِرْسَنَةً; كَرْسَنَةً karsannatan; kirsannatan; kirsinnatan; kirsanatan; karsanatan |
الْكَرْسَنَّةَ; الْكِرْسَنَّةَ; الْكِرْسِنَّةَ; الْكِرْسَنَةَ; الْكَرْسَنَةَ al-karsannata; al-kirsannata; al-kirsinnata; al-kirsanata; al-karsanata |
كَرْسَنَّةَ; كِرْسَنَّةَ; كِرْسِنَّةَ; كِرْسَنَةَ; كَرْسَنَةَ karsannata; kirsannata; kirsinnata; kirsanata; karsanata |
Genitive | كَرْسَنَّةٍ; كِرْسَنَّةٍ; كِرْسِنَّةٍ; كِرْسَنَةٍ; كَرْسَنَةٍ karsannatin; kirsannatin; kirsinnatin; kirsanatin; karsanatin |
الْكَرْسَنَّةِ; الْكِرْسَنَّةِ; الْكِرْسِنَّةِ; الْكِرْسَنَةِ; الْكَرْسَنَةِ al-karsannati; al-kirsannati; al-kirsinnati; al-kirsanati; al-karsanati |
كَرْسَنَّةِ; كِرْسَنَّةِ; كِرْسِنَّةِ; كِرْسَنَةِ; كَرْسَنَةِ karsannati; kirsannati; kirsinnati; kirsanati; karsanati |
References
edit- Corriente, Federico, Pereira, Christophe, Vicente, Angeles, editors (2017), Dictionnaire du faisceau dialectal arabe andalou. Perspectives phraséologiques et étymologiques (in French), Berlin: De Gruyter, →ISBN, page 1099
- Dozy, Reinhart Pieter Anne (1881) “كرسنة”, in Supplément aux dictionnaires arabes[1] (in French), volume 2, Leiden: E. J. Brill, page 456
- Levey, Martin (1973) Early Arabic Pharmacology. An Introduction Based on Ancient and Medieval Sources, Leiden: E. J. Brill, , →ISBN, page 59
- Löw, Immanuel (1916) “Erwe und Wicke”, in Zeitschrift für Assyriologie und verwandte Gebiete[2] (in German), volume 30, pages 171–183, especially page 175 where a letter of Theodor Nöldeke from the 13th of Dec. 1914 is quoted about the etymology.
Categories:
- Arabic terms borrowed from Aramaic
- Arabic terms derived from Aramaic
- Arabic terms borrowed from Hebrew
- Arabic terms derived from Hebrew
- Arabic terms derived from Sanskrit
- Arabic doublets
- Arabic terms derived from Proto-Semitic
- Arabic lemmas
- Arabic nouns
- Arabic feminine nouns
- Arabic nouns with triptote singular in -a
- ar:Fabeae tribe plants