عبد

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See also: ع ب د

Arabic

Root
ع ب د (ʕ b d)
9 terms
عَبْدٌ مَسِيحِيٌّ

Etymology 1.1

A Central Semitic innovation, cognate with Hebrew עֶבֶד (ʿéḇeḏ), Phoenician 𐤏𐤁𐤃 (ʿbd), Ugaritic 𐎓𐎁𐎄 (ʿbd), Classical Syriac ܥܒܕܐ (ʿaḇdā), Old South Arabian 𐩲𐩨𐩵 (ʿbd).

Pronunciation

Noun

عَبْد (ʕabdm (plural عَبِيد (ʕabīd) or عِبَاد (ʕibād) or عُبْدَان (ʕubdān) or أَعْبُد (ʔaʕbud), feminine أَمَة (ʔama))

  1. a person who is under the ownership of another, a slave, a bondservant
    Synonyms: (dated) مَوْلَى (mawlā, servant), رَقِيق (raqīq, slave)
    Coordinate terms: (dated) مَوْلَى (mawlā, overlord), رَبّ (rabb, lord), سَيِّد (sayyid, master)
    • 609–632 CE, Qur'an, 24:32:
      وَأَنْكِحُوا ٱلْأَيَامَى مِنْكُمْ وَٱلصَّالِحِينَ مِنْ عِبَادِكُمْ وَإِمَائِكُمْ إِنْ يَكُونُوا فُقَرَاءَ يُغْنِهِمُ ٱللَّهُ مِنْ فَضْلِهِ وَٱللَّهُ وَاسِعٌ عَلِيمٌ
      waʔankiḥū l-ʔayāmā minkum waṣ-ṣāliḥīna min ʕibādikum waʔimāʔikum ʔin yakūnū fuqarāʔa yuḡnihimu l-lahu min faḍlihi wal-lahu wāsiʕun ʕalīmun
      And marry the unmarried among you and the righteous among your male slaves and female slaves. If they should be poor, Allah will enrich them from His bounty, and Allah is all-Encompassing and Knowing
    • (Can we date this quote?), عَميرة بن جُعَل التَّغْلِبيّ, (Please provide the book title or journal name):
      جَمَعْتُ رُدَيْنِيًّا كَأَنَّ سِنَانَهُ / سَنَا لَهَبٍ لَمْ يَسْتَعِنْ بِدُخَانِ
      لَيَالِيَ إِذْ أَنْتُمْ لِرَهْطِيَ أَعْبُدٌ / بِرَمَّانَ لَمَّا أَجْدَبَ ٱلحَرَمَانِ
      jamaʕtu rudayniyyan kaʔanna sinānahu / sanā lahabin lam yastaʕin biduḵāni
      layāliya ʔiḏ ʔantum lirahṭiya ʔaʕbudun / birammāna lammā ʔajdaba l-ḥaramāni
      I held up my Rudayni spear, its teeth like splendid, smokeless flames
      For nights, you were bondsmen for my troop, in Ramān, when the Sanctuaries dried.
    1. someone resembling, likened to, or related to a slave (as in status, worth, condition, and so on)
      • (Can we date this quote?), اَلْمُتَنَبِّيّ, (Please provide the book title or journal name):
        أَكُلَّمَا ٱغْتَالَ عَبْدُ السَّوْءِ سَيِّدَهُ / أَوْ خَانَهُ فَلَهُ فِي مِصْرَ تَمْهِيدُ
        صَارَ الْخَصِيُّ إِمَامَ الْآبِقِينَ بِهَا / فَٱلْحُرُّ مُسْتَعْبَدٌ وَٱلْعَبْدُ مَعْبُودُ
        نَامَتْ نَوَاطِيرُ مِصْرٍ عَنْ ثَعَالِبِهَا / فَقَدْ بَشِمْنَ وَمَا تَفْنَى العَنَاقِيدُ
        الْعَبْدُ لَيْسَ لِحُرٍّ صَالِحٍ بِأَخٍ / لَوْ أَنَّهُ فِي ثِيَابِ الْحُرِّ مَوْلُودُ
        لَا تَشْتَرِ الْعَبْدَ إِلَّا وَٱلْعَصَا مَعَهُ / إِنَّ الْعَبِيدَ لَأَنْجَاسٌ مَنَاكِيدُ
        مَا كُنْتُ أَحْسَبُنِي أَحْيَا إِلَى زَمَنٍ / يُسِيءُ بِي فِيهِ كَلْبٌ وَهْوَ مَحْمُودُ
        ʔakullamā ḡtāla ʕabdu s-sawʔi sayyidahu / ʔaw ḵānahu falahu fī miṣra tamhīdu
        ṣāra l-ḵaṣiyyu ʔimāma l-ʔābiqīna bihā / fal-ḥurru mustaʕbadun wal-ʕabdu maʕbūdu
        nāmat nawāṭīru miṣrin ʕan ṯaʕālibihā / faqad bašimna wamā tafnā l-ʕanāqīdu
        al-ʕabdu laysa liḥurrin ṣāliḥin biʔaḵin / law ʔannahu fī ṯiyābi l-ḥurri mawlūdu
        lā taštari l-ʕabda ʔillā wal-ʕaṣā maʕahu / ʔinna l-ʕabīda laʔanjāsun manākīdu
        mā kuntu ʔaḥsabunī ʔaḥyā ʔilā zamanin / yusīʔu bī fīhi kalbun wahwa maḥmūdu
        Can any fiendish slave who slew or stabbed his master find in Egypt refuge, there to be advanced?
        The Castrate King became the Chief of Runaways! The servants are revered; the freeman is disgraced!
        The Egyptian shepherds, they all are now asleep, and foxes roam, and all were drowsed with endless grapes!
        A freeman and a slave are neither peers nor brothers, though the slave may be in freemen's clothing raised.
        Never pay for any slave without the stick too: a slave, to noble men, is foul, and vile, and damned!
        I never thought that I would live and see a dog degrading me while he himself is hailed and praised!
  2. (vulgar, ethnic slur, offensive, colloquial) term of abuse for a black person, equivalent to English nigger
Declension
Derived terms
Descendants
  • Libyan Arabic: عبد (ʕabəd)
  • Maltese: għabd (obsolete, chiefly in names), għabid (obsolete, from the plural عَبِيد (ʕabīd))
  • South Levantine Arabic: عبد (ʕabad)
  • English: abid
  • Malay: abdi, abid
  • Maranao: abdo
  • Ottoman Turkish: عبد (abd)
  • Persian: عبد ('abd)
  • Sundanese: abdi
  • Tajik: абд (abd)

Etymology 1.2

Pronunciation

Verb

عَبَدَ (ʕabada) I (non-past يَعْبُدُ (yaʕbudu), verbal noun عِبَادَة (ʕibāda) or عُبُودَة (ʕubūda) or عُبُودِيَّة (ʕubūdiyya))

  1. to worship, to serve, to be devoted to; to venerate or adore in a subservient manner
Conjugation
Descendants

Etymology 1.3

Pronunciation

Verb

عَبَّدَ (ʕabbada) II (non-past يُعَبِّدُ (yuʕabbidu), verbal noun تَعْبِيد (taʕbīd))

  1. to enslave, to subjugate, to subject
    • 609–632 CE, Qur'an, 26:22:
      وَتِلْكَ نِعْمَةٌ تَمُنُّهَا عَلَيَّ أَنْ عَبَّدْتَ بَنِي إِسْرَائِيلَ
      watilka niʕmatun tamunnuhā ʕalayya ʔan ʕabbadta banī ʔisrāʔīla
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)
Conjugation
Descendants

References

  • Wehr, Hans (1979) “عبد”, in J. Milton Cowan, editor, A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic, 4th edition, Ithaca, NY: Spoken Language Services, →ISBN

Libyan Arabic

Root
ع ب د
1 term

Noun

عبد (ʕabdm (plural عبيد (ʕbīd) or عبدّة (ʕbədda))

  1. slave

Noun

عبد (ʕabdm (plural عبيد (ʕbīd))

  1. (derogatory, ethnic slur) black man

Verb

عبد (ʕbad) I

  1. to worship

Malay

Proper noun

عبد

  1. Jawi spelling of Abdul‎.

Persian

Etymology

Borrowed from Arabic عَبْد (ʕabd).

Pronunciation

Readings
Classical reading? aḇd
Dari reading? abd
Iranian reading? abd
Tajik reading? abd

Noun

Dari عبد
Iranian Persian
Tajik абд

عَبْد ('abd) (plural عباد)

  1. slave
  2. servant

Synonyms

South Levantine Arabic

Root
ع ب د
1 term

Etymology 1

From Arabic عَبَدَ (ʕabada).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ʕa.bad/,
  • Audio (al-Lidd):(file)

Verb

عبد (ʕabad) I (present بعبد (boʕbod))

  1. to worship
Conjugation
    Conjugation of عبد (ʕabad)
singular plural
1st person 2nd person 3rd person 1st person 2nd person 3rd person
past m عبدت (ʕabadt) عبدت (ʕabadt) عبد (ʕabad) عبدنا (ʕabadna) عبدتو (ʕabadtu) عبدو (ʕabadu)
f عبدتي (ʕabadti) عبدت (ʕabdat)
present m بعبد (baʕbod) بتعبد (btoʕbod) بعبد (boʕbod) منعبد (mnoʕbod) بتعبدو (btoʕbodu) بعبدو (boʕbodu)
f بتعبدي (btoʕbodi) بتعبد (btoʕbod)
subjunctive m أعبد (ʔaʕbod) تعبد (toʕbod) يعبد (yoʕbod) نعبد (noʕbod) تعبدو (toʕbodu) يعبدو (yoʕbodu)
f تعبدي (toʕbodi) تعبد (toʕbod)
imperative m اعبد (oʕbod) اعبدو (oʕbodu)
f اعبدي (oʕbodi)

Etymology 2

Learned borrowing from Arabic عَبَّدَ (ʕabbada).

Pronunciation

Verb

عبّد (ʕabbad) II (present بعبّد (biʕabbed))

  1. to pave
    Synonym: زفّت (zaffat)
Conjugation
    Conjugation of عبّد (ʕabbad)
singular plural
1st person 2nd person 3rd person 1st person 2nd person 3rd person
past m عبّدت (ʕabbadt) عبّدت (ʕabbadt) عبّد (ʕabbad) عبّدنا (ʕabbadna) عبّدتو (ʕabbadtu) عبّدو (ʕabbadu)
f عبّدتي (ʕabbadti) عبّدت (ʕabbadat)
present m بعبّد (baʕabbed) بتعبّد (bitʕabbed) بعبّد (biʕabbed) منعبّد (minʕabbed) بتعبّدو (bitʕabbdu) بعبّدو (biʕabbdu)
f بتعبّدي (bitʕabbdi) بتعبّد (bitʕabbed)
subjunctive m اعبّد (aʕabbed) تعبّد (tʕabbed) يعبّد (yʕabbed) نعبّد (nʕabbed) تعبّدو (tʕabbdu) يعبّدو (yʕabbdu)
f تعبّدي (tʕabbdi) تعبّد (tʕabbed)
imperative m عبّد (ʕabbed) عبّدو (ʕabbdu)
f عبّدي (ʕabbdi)