פתח

See also: פת״ח, פ־ת־ח, and פּתח

Aramaic

Etymology

Cognate with Arabic فَتَحَ (fataḥa) and Hebrew פָּתַח.

Verb

פְּתַח • (pəṯaḥ)

  1. to open

Hebrew

Root
פ־ת־ח (p-t-ḥ)

Etymology 1

From Proto-Semitic *pataḥ- (to open). Cognate with Akkadian 𒉿𒌅𒌑𒌝 (petûm) and Arabic فَتَحَ (fataḥa).

Verb

פָּתַח • (patákh) third-singular masculine past (pa'al construction, future יִפְתַּח, passive participle פָּתוּחַ, passive counterpart נִפְתַּח)

  1. (chiefly transitive) to open (something)
    היא פתחה את הדלת.pat'khá ét hadélet.She opened the door.
    באיזה שעה פותחים מחר?b'éize sha'á pot'khím makhár?What time do they open tomorrow?
    פותחים חקירה.pot'khím khakirá.An investigation is being opened.
Conjugation

Verb

פִּתֵּחַ • (pitéakh) third-singular masculine past (pi'el construction)

  1. defective spelling of פיתח.

Etymology 2

Cognate with Akkadian 𒁉𒌈 (pītum) and Arabic فَتْح (fatḥ). The name of the vowel point is a calque of Arabic فَتْحَة (fatḥa, fatha).

Noun

פֶּתַח • (pétakh, pɛ́ṯaḥ) m (plural indefinite פתחים, singular construct פתח־, plural construct פתחי־) [pattern: קֶטֶל]

  1. doorway
  2. entrance
  3. opening
Derived terms

Noun

פַּתָּח • (patákh, pattɔḥ) m

  1. The Hebrew diacritical mark patach (ִ◌ַ).

Alternative forms

References

ניקוד

Anagrams

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