دبيل

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See also: دبیل

Arabic[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

Etymology 1[edit]

From the root د ب ل (d-b-l). Similar meanings are found in د م ل (d-m-l) and د ء ث (d-ʔ-ṯ).

Noun[edit]

دَبِيل (dabīlm (plural دُبُل (dubul))

  1. anything solid that loosens from something and is perceived by an individual as excessive or abscessive by reason of impairing him.
Declension[edit]

Etymology 2[edit]

In most of the time this city was relevant and the Arabs have expanded thus far it was chiefly populated by Kurds, so potentially mediated by Proto-Kurdish, otherwise obtained via Middle Persian during the conquest of the Sasanian Empire culminating in the Arab conquest of Armenia, which must have obtained this word from Parthian as the settlement was built 335 under Arsacid rule, however searches for Iranian origin have been in vain, leading to the suspicion of the Arsacids bringing a Turkmen name from their homeland. As Ardabil was even less known it is neither known whether it contains the same word.

Proper noun[edit]

دَبِيل (dabīlf

  1. Dvin (a former city in Ararat Province, Armenia, in the early Middle Ages the capital of Great Armenia and larger than Ardabil, now the village Դվին (Dvin) 20 km south of Yerevan)
Declension[edit]

Further reading[edit]

  • Freytag, Georg (1833) “دبيل”, in Lexicon arabico-latinum praesertim ex Djeuharii Firuzabadiique et aliorum Arabum operibus adhibitis Golii quoque et aliorum libris confectum[2] (in Latin), volume 2, Halle: C. A. Schwetschke, page 6b
  • Le Strange, Guy (1905) The Lands of the Eastern Caliphate: Mesopotamia, Persia, and Central Asia, from the Moslem Conquest to the Time of Timur, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pages 182–183
  • a. 1229, Yāqūt al-Ḥamawīy, edited by Ferdinand Wüstenfeld, كتاب معجم البلدان [kitāb muʿjam al-buldān][3], volume 2, Leipzig: F.A. Brockhaus, published 1867, web page 438, pages 548–549: