ش ب ب
Arabic
Root
ش ب ب • (š-b-b)
- related to being raised
Derived terms
- Form I: شَبَّ (šabba, “to become a young man, to grow up”)
- Form I: شَبَّ (šabba, “to be brisk, to be lively, to be sprightly; to be raised, to be lifted; to raise the forelegs, to prance”)
- Form I: شَبَّ (šabba, “to raise, to lift, to heighten (also figuratively, and particularly if done with colours); to kindle, to inflame (also figuratively, such as of war kindled)”)
- Form II: شَبَّبَ (šabbaba, “to heighten by words, to ornate, to speak of in an amatory manner, to embellish; to kindle, to ignite”)
- Form IV: أَشَبَّ (ʔašabba, “to have young men as children; to make a young man; to excite, to make brisk, to make sprightly”)
- Form V: تَشَبَّبَ (tašabbaba, “to become ablaze, to become kindled; to be in a relation to X wherein one employs amatory language; to experience rejuvenation”)
- Verbal noun: تَشَبُّب (tašabbub)
- Active participle: مُتَشَبِّب (mutašabbib)
- Passive participle: مُتَشَبَّب (mutašabbab)
- Form VII: اِنْشَبَّ (inšabba, “to become ignited, to become kindled”)
- Verbal noun: اِنْشِبَاب (inšibāb)
- Active participle: مُنْشَبّ (munšabb)
- شَبَب (šabab, “grown up”)
- مِشَبّ (mišabb, “grown up”)
- شَبَّة (šabba, “prance”)
- شَبَّة (šabba, “lass”)
- شَبِيبَة (šabība, “youth, the state of a youngster”)
- شُؤْبُوب (šuʔbūb, “downpour”)
- شَبُوب (šabūb, “thing for igniting fire; horse that prances; thing that beautifies”)
- شَبَّابَة (šabbāba, “a kind of flute”)
References
- Dozy, Reinhart Pieter Anne (1881) “ش ب ب”, in Supplément aux dictionnaires arabes[1] (in French), volume 1, Leiden: E. J. Brill, page 718
- Freytag, Georg (1833) “ش ب ب”, 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, pages 386–387
- Lane, Edward William (1863) “ش ب ب”, in Arabic-English Lexicon[3], London: Williams & Norgate, pages 1492–1494
- Wehr, Hans with Kropfitsch, Lorenz (1985) “ش ب ب”, in Arabisches Wörterbuch für die Schriftsprache der Gegenwart[4] (in German), 5th edition, Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, published 2011, →ISBN, pages 627–628