חרס
Hebrew
Root |
---|
ח־ר־ס (ḥ-r-s) |
Etymology
From Hittite 𒂁 (ḫarši-, “a kind of rough pottery vessel”); in the Tanakhic passages it does not mean the material itself, but only a kind of vessel, which apparently derives from Asia Minor with the borrowing. Other Semitic languages have instead of this word a phono-semantic matching, under which are Classical Syriac ܚܶܙܦܳܐ (ḥezəp̄ā), Classical Syriac ܚܶܨܦܳܐ (ḥeṣəp̄ā, “piece of pottery”), whence Arabic خَزَف (ḵazaf), and Ge'ez ጻሕብ (ṣaḥb), ጻኅብ (ṣaḫb, “earthen vessel”).
Noun
חֶרֶס • (khéres) m (singular construct חֶרֶס־) [pattern: קֶטֶל]
Derived terms
- חַרְסִינָה (kharsína)
References
- Rabin, Chaim (1963) “Hittite Words in Hebrew”, in Orientalia, volume 32, number 2, , pages 118–120
- “חרס” in the Hebrew Terms Database of the Academy of Hebrew Language
Further reading
חרס on the Hebrew Wikipedia.Wikipedia he
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.