għakkes

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Maltese

Root
għ-k-s
4 terms

Etymology

The basic sense of the Maltese root is “being weak, feeble, deprived”, which is most readily derived from Arabic عَجْز (ʕajz) and its root; compare għaks (oppression, destitution, famine). Phonetically this is plausible since Arabic ج (j) becomes Maltese g in several words, especially in the vicinity of sibilants (compare gżira). Word-finally the sequence is devoiced to and this devoicing may have been generalised (equally a common phenomenon). On the other hand, the phonetically even closer Arabic عَكَسَ (ʕakasa) also shows meanings that are connectable with the Maltese form, namely “to tie a camel's neck to its forelegs”, “to let it starve in this position”, “to press to the ground”, “to prevent, restrain”. Presumably, both roots influenced each other.

Pronunciation

Verb

għakkes (imperfect jgħakkes)

  1. to oppress; to subdue
  2. to restrain; to deprive

Conjugation

    Conjugation of għakkes
singular plural
1st person 2nd person 3rd person 1st person 2nd person 3rd person
perfect m għakkist għakkist għakkes għakkisna għakkistu għakksu
f għakkset
imperfect m ngħakkes tgħakkes jgħakkes ngħakksu tgħakksu jgħakksu
f tgħakkes
imperative għakkes għakksu