هودج

Arabic

Etymology

Uncertain origin, natively associated with ه د ج (h-d-j) with the senses of taking short steps, to waver when one walks, to walk like an elder person, to walk like one carrying a burden; a reference to a camel's strain.

Possibly under influence of phono-semantic matching of Middle Persian [script needed] (kwpk' /⁠kōfag⁠/, saddle, the prominent parts at the front and rear of a saddle), from Middle Persian [script needed] (kwp /⁠kōf⁠/, mountain, hill; hump); cognate to Modern and Classical Persian کوهه (kōha, hump; saddle; hillock) and Persian کوه (kôh, mountain).

Compare also Jewish Babylonian Aramaic אוּכָּפָא (ʾukkāp̄ā, packsaddle), Classical Syriac ܐܽܘܟܳܦܴܐ (ʾukkāp̄ā, packsaddle), Jewish Palestinian Aramaic אכפי (/⁠*ʾukkāp̄ē⁠/, yoke, type of load bearing device) which form passed into Arabic أُكَّاف (ʔukkāf, packsaddle) and is itself from Akkadian 𒌑𒂵𒁍 (u2-ka3-pu /⁠ukāpu⁠/, saddle-cloth, pack), to illustrate matching and influence of saddle terms in the region.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /haw.dad͡ʒ/

Noun

هَوْدَج • (hawdaj) m (plural هَوَادِج (hawādij))

  1. camel litter, howdah (a closed compartment put on the back of camel, usually used for carrying brides and important women)
  2. sedan chair, litter

Declension

Descendants

  • English: howdah
  • Bengali: হাওদা (haōda)
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