חתן
Hebrew
Etymology
Root |
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ח־ת־ן (ḥ-t-n) |
Cognate with Arabic خَتَن (ḵatan, “son-in-law or brother-in-law”), which comes from a root (خ ت ن (ḵ-t-n)) related to both circumcision and matrimonial links.
Pronunciation
Audio (file)
Noun
חָתָן • (khatán) m (plural indefinite חֲתָנִים, singular construct חֲתַן־, plural construct חַתְנֵי־)
Usage notes
The term may be used to describe any male who has a party, e.g., a bris, a bar mitzvah or the birthday boy.
Derived terms
- שבת חתן (shabát khatán)
Related terms
- חֲתֻנָּה (khatuná)
See also
- כַּלָּה (kalá)
Verb
חִתֵּן • (khitén) third-singular masculine past (pi'el construction)
- defective spelling of חיתן
References
- H2860 in Strong, James (1979) Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance to the Bible
- “חתן” in the Hebrew Terms Database of the Academy of Hebrew Language
Yiddish
Alternative forms
- כאָסן (khosn) — Soviet phonetic spelling
Pronunciation
- (Litvish) IPA(key): /ˈχɔsn̩/
- (Poylish) IPA(key): /ˈχuːsn̩/
Derived terms
- חתן־כּלה (khosnkale, “bride and groom”)
- חתן־בּחור (khosnbokher, “a marriageable young man”)
- חתן־מאָל (khosnmol)
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