شرع

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See also: سرع, ش ر ع, and س ر ع

Arabic

Etymology 1

From the root ش ر ع (š-r-ʕ).

Verb

شَرَعَ (šaraʕa) I, non-past يَشْرَعُ‎ (yašraʕu)

  1. to prescribe a road to walk upon or a law to follow, to lead, to give laws
  2. to have an outlet into the street
  3. to publish
  4. to be open and distinct
  5. to strip the skin
  6. to lift very high
Conjugation
References

Steingass, Francis Joseph (1884) “شرع”, in The Student's Arabic–English Dictionary[1], London: W.H. Allen

Verb

شَرَعَ (šaraʕa) I, non-past يَشْرَعُ‎ (yašraʕu)

  1. to go (into the water)
  2. to engage in a business, to begin
  3. to make ready for
  4. to be straight
  5. to stretch the neck
Conjugation
References

Steingass, Francis Joseph (1884) “شرع”, in The Student's Arabic–English Dictionary[2], London: W.H. Allen

Verb

شَرَّعَ (šarraʕa) II, non-past يُشَرِّعُ‎ (yušarriʕu)

  1. to mark or show the way distinctly
  2. to open a path
  3. to lead the cattle to the most convenient watering place
  4. to make clear
  5. to lift up
Conjugation
References

Etymology 2

Noun

شَرْع (šarʕm

  1. verbal noun of شَرَعَ (šaraʕa) (form I)
Declension

Etymology 3

Noun

شُرُع (šuruʕm pl

  1. plural of شِرَاع (širāʕ)

Persian

Etymology

From (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Arabic شَرْع (šarʕ).

Pronunciation

Noun

شرع (shar')

  1. religious law

Related terms