צרה
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Hebrew[edit]
Etymology 1[edit]
Adjective[edit]
צָרָה • (tsará)
- feminine singular indefinite form of צַר (tsar)
Noun[edit]
צָרָה • (tsará) f (plural indefinite צָרוֹת) [pattern: קַטְלָה]
Derived terms[edit]
- צָרָה צְרוּרָה (tsará tsrúrá)
Noun[edit]
צָרָה • (tsará) f (plural indefinite צָרוֹת, masculine counterpart צָר) [pattern: קַטְלָה]
Etymology 2[edit]
From Proto-Semitic *ṣ́arrat- (“co-wife”). Cognate with Akkadian 𒁮𒋰𒁀 (ṣerretum) and Arabic ضَرَّة (ḍarra).
Noun[edit]
צָרָה • (tsará) f (plural indefinite צָרוֹת) [pattern: קַטְלָה]
Descendants[edit]
- → Aramaic: צָרָא (ṣārā, “co-wife”)
References[edit]
Anagrams[edit]
Yiddish[edit]
Alternative forms[edit]
- צאָרע (tsore) — Soviet phonetic spelling
Etymology[edit]
Noun[edit]
צרה • (tsore) f, plural צרות (tsores)
Derived terms[edit]
- צרהדיק (tsoredik), צרותדיק (tsoresdik)
- פֿאַרצרהט (fartsoret)
- אָנטאָן צרות (onton tsores)
Related terms[edit]
- צורר (tsoyrer)
Descendants[edit]
From the plural צרות (tsores):
Categories:
- Hebrew non-lemma forms
- Hebrew adjective forms
- Hebrew adjective feminine forms
- Hebrew adjective indefinite forms
- Hebrew lemmas
- Hebrew nouns
- Hebrew terms in the pattern קַטְלָה
- Hebrew feminine nouns
- Hebrew female equivalent nouns
- Hebrew terms inherited from Proto-Semitic
- Hebrew terms derived from Proto-Semitic
- he:Female family members
- Hebrew terms with quotations
- Yiddish terms borrowed from Hebrew
- Yiddish terms derived from Hebrew
- Yiddish terms derived from the Hebrew root צ־ר־ר
- Yiddish lemmas
- Yiddish nouns
- Yiddish feminine nouns