نجران

Arabic

Etymology

From the root ن ج ر (n-j-r) in the sense نَجْر (najr, a root or stock or shape or figure) + ـَان (-ān) the sense of door-sill develops, and the walled city of Nejran, part of the Himyarite Kingdom, that already called it in its Old South Arabian inscriptions 𐩬𐩴𐩧𐩬 (ngrn /⁠nagrānu⁠/), had many gates. The same derivation for the sense of “thirsty” works from نَجْر (najr, heat; violent thirst).

Proper noun

نَجْرَان • (najrān) f

  1. Najran (A city in Saudi Arabia in the southwest close to Yemen)

Declension

Noun

نَجْرَان • (najrān) m (obsolete)

  1. a horizontal piece of wood serving as the foot or sill of a door upon which it turns

Declension

Adjective

نَجْرَان • (najrān) (obsolete)

  1. affected by a heating thirst

Declension

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