ħajjar

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Maltese[edit]

Root
ħ-j-r
3 terms

Etymology[edit]

Describing conservative accents of the early 19th century, Vassalli distinguished between two verbs, one with /ħ/ meaning “to allure” and one with /χ/ meaning “to let someone choose”. The contemporary ħajjar thus continues Arabic حَيَّرَ (ḥayyara, to confuse, abash). The semantic connection may be the Arabic use for “to make someone lose their head”, e.g. romantically, which developed into the notion of “alluring, tempting” in Maltese. The second verb, from Arabic خَيَّرَ (ḵayyara), has been lost.

Pronunciation[edit]

Verb[edit]

ħajjar (imperfect jħajjar, past participle mħajjar, active participle ħajjar, verbal noun taħjir)

  1. to entice, to attract
    Kif nistgħu nħajru lil uliedna għall-qari?
    How can we entice our children to read?
  2. to tempt
    Synonym: ttanta (ttenta)

Conjugation[edit]

    Conjugation of ħajjar
singular plural
1st person 2nd person 3rd person 1st person 2nd person 3rd person
perfect m ħajjart ħajjart ħajjar ħajjarna ħajjartu ħajru
f ħajret
imperfect m nħajjar tħajjar jħajjar nħajru tħajru jħajru
f tħajjar
imperative ħajjar ħajru

See also[edit]