أشقر

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Archived revision by Fenakhay (talk | contribs) as of 09:08, 26 July 2022.
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Arabic

(sense 1)
(sense 2)
(sense 2)
(sense 3)

Etymology

Color or defect adjective from the root ش ق ر (š-q-r).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ʔaʃ.qar/
    • Lua error in Module:parameters at line 360: Parameter 1 should be a valid language or etymology language code; the value "Hejazi" is not valid. See WT:LOL and WT:LOL/E. IPA(key): /ʔaʃ.ɡar/

Adjective

أَشْقَر (ʔašqar) (feminine شَقْرَاء (šaqrāʔ), common plural شُقْر (šuqr))

  1. (Modern Standard Arabic, of hair) yellowish; fair, blond
    1. (Modern Standard Arabic, of a person) fair-haired, blond
  2. (dated) yellow-brown or yellow-red; red-brown; coppery; tan, tawny; chestnut; sorrel
    Synonym: أَمْغَر (ʔamḡar, ocher)
    1. (obsolete, of a person or a complexion) swarthy; dark
      • 1290, Ibn Manẓūr, “ر”, in لسان العرب [The Tongue of the Arabs]‎[1], فصل الراء المهملة [The section of the undotted letter ر (rāʾ)], page 421:
        ابْنُ الْأَعْرَابِيِّ قَالَ : لَا تَكُونُ حَوْرَاءُ شَقْرَاءَ وَلَا أَدْمَاءُ حَوْرَاءَ وَلَا مَرْهَاءُ ، لَا تَكُونُ إِلَّا نَاصِعَةَ بَيَاضِ الْعَيْنَيْنِ فِي نُصُوعِ بَيَاضِ الْجِلْدِ فِي غَيْرِ مُرْهَةٍ وَلَا شُقْرَةٍ وَلَا أُدْمَةٍ وَلَا سُمُرَةٍ وَلَا كَمَدِ لَوْنٍ حَتَّى يَكُونَ لَوْنُهَا مُشْرِقًا وَدَمُهَا ظَاهِرًا .
        Ibn al-ʾAʿrābī said, "A ḥawrāʾ woman is not tawny-skinned, nor would a dark-skinned one be ḥawrāʾ, nor would a pale one. A ḥawrāʾ woman would have scleras as pure-white as the skin, with no paleness, nor tawniness, nor darkness, nor brownness, nor dullness in skin-tone, so that her skin is clear and her blood-flow is showing through."
  3. (obsolete) blood-red

Declension

See also


Colors in Arabic · أَلْوَان (ʔalwān) (layout · text)
     أَبْيَض (ʔabyaḍ), أَشْيَب (ʔašyab)      رَمَادِيّ (ramādiyy), أَشْهَب (ʔašhab), أَغْبَر (ʔaḡbar), أَعْفَر (ʔaʕfar), رَصَاصِيّ (raṣāṣiyy)      أَسْوَد (ʔaswad), غِرْبِيب (ḡirbīb), أَحَمّ (ʔaḥamm), أَدْهَم (ʔadham)
             أَحْمَر (ʔaḥmar), أَصْهَب (ʔaṣhab); قِرْمِزِيّ (qirmiziyy)              أَمْغَر (ʔamḡar), بُرْتُقَالِيّ (burtuqāliyy); بُنِّيّ (bunniyy), أَسْمَر (ʔasmar), أَشْعَل (ʔašʕal), أَشْهَل (ʔašhal)              أَصْفَر (ʔaṣfar), أَشْقَر (ʔašqar); قِشْدِيّ (qišdiyy)
             لِيمِيّ (līmiyy)              أَخْضَر (ʔaḵḍar), أَحْوَى (ʔaḥwā)              نَعْنَاعِيّ (naʕnāʕiyy), زُمُرُّدِيّ‎ (zumurrudiyy)
             سَمَاوِيّ (samāwiyy), فَيْرُوزِيّ (fayrūziyy); حَذَفِيّ (ḥaḏafiyy), شَرْشِيرِيّ (šaršīriyy)              لَازُوَرْدِيّ (lāzuwardiyy), بَحْرِيّ‎ (baḥriyy)              أَزْرَق (ʔazraq)
             بَنَفْسَجِيّ (banafsajiyy), فِرْفِيرِيّ (firfīriyy); نِيلِيّ (nīliyy)              فُوشِيّ (fūšiyy); أُرْجُوَانِيّ (ʔurjuwāniyy)              وَرْدِيّ (wardiyy), زَهْرِيّ (zahriyy)

References