عورت
Arabic
Etymology 1
Verb
- first-person singular past active of عَوِرَ (ʕawira)
Verb
Verb
Verb
Etymology 2
Verb
عَوَّرْتُ • (ʕawwartu) (form II)
- first-person singular past active of عَوَّرَ (ʕawwara)
Verb
عُوِّرْتُ • (ʕuwwirtu) (form II)
- first-person singular past passive of عَوَّرَ (ʕawwara)
Verb
عَوَّرْتَ • (ʕawwarta) (form II)
Verb
عُوِّرْتَ • (ʕuwwirta) (form II)
Verb
عَوَّرْتِ • (ʕawwarti) (form II)
Verb
عُوِّرْتِ • (ʕuwwirti) (form II)
Verb
عَوَّرَتْ • (ʕawwarat) (form II)
Verb
عُوِّرَتْ • (ʕuwwirat) (form II)
Persian
Etymology
From Arabic عَوْرَة (ʕawra, “genitals; nudity”).
Noun
عورت • ('aurat)
Urdu
Etymology
From Persian عورت, from Arabic عَوْرَة (ʕawra, “genitals; nudity”). The shift to “woman” is due to the doctrine of some Islamic schools that the whole female body is a form of “nudity” that must be covered in public.