غالب

Arabic

Root
غ ل ب (ḡ-l-b)

Etymology

Derived from the active participle of غَلَبَ (ḡalaba).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɣaː.lib/

Adjective

غَالِب • (ḡālib) (masculine plural غَالِبُونَ (ḡālibūna) or غَلَبَة (ḡalaba), elative أَغْلَب (ʔaḡlab))[1]

  1. triumphant, victorious
  2. predominant, preponderant

Declension

Descendants

  • Azerbaijani: qalib
  • Bengali: গালিব (galibo)
  • Spanish: Gálvez
  • Ottoman Turkish: غالب (galib)
    • Turkish: galip
    • Crimean Tatar: ğalip
  • Uyghur: غالىپ (ghalip)
  • Uzbek: gʻolib

Noun

غَالِب • (ḡālib) m (plural غَلَبَة (ḡalaba) or غَالِبُون (ḡālibūn), feminine غَالِبَة (ḡāliba))[1]

  1. victor
  2. (contextual) more numerous, most numerous, plurality, majority, more, most (+ genitive: of)

Declension

References

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

Ottoman Turkish

Etymology

From Arabic غَالِب (ḡālib).

Proper noun

غالب • (Galib)

  1. a male given name from Arabic

Adjective

غالب • (galib)

  1. triumphant, victorious

Noun

غالب • (galib)

  1. victor

Descendants

Further reading

  • Avery, Robert et al., editors (2013), “galip”, in The Redhouse Dictionary Turkish/Ottoman English, 21st edition, Istanbul: Sev Yayıncılık, →ISBN

Persian

Etymology

From Arabic غَالِب (ḡālib).

Pronunciation

 
  • (Dari, formal) IPA(key): [ɣɑː.lɪ́b]
    • (Kabuli) IPA(key): [ɣɑː.lɪ́b]
    • (Hazaragi) IPA(key): [ɣɔː.líb̥]

Readings
Classical reading? ğāliḇ
Dari reading? ğālib
Iranian reading? ğâleb
Tajik reading? ġolib

Adjective

Dari غالب
Iranian Persian
Tajik ғолиб

غالب • (ğâleb)

  1. dominant, major
  2. victorious, conqueror
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