Arabic

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Root
ه ج ر (h j r)
17 terms

Etymology

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Derived from the passive participle of هَجَرَ (hajara, to abandon).

Pronunciation

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Adjective

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مَهْجُور (mahjūr)

  1. deserted, abandoned, forsaken
  2. (linguistics) in disuse, archaic (describing a term that is not longer used)

Declension

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Descendants

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  • Persian: مهجور (mahjur)
  • Ottoman Turkish: مهجور (mehcûr)

Persian

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Arabic مَهْجُور (mahjūr).

Pronunciation

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Readings
Classical reading? mahjūr
Dari reading? mahjūr
Iranian reading? mahjur
Tajik reading? mahjur

Adjective

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مهجور (mahjur)

  1. deserted, abandoned, forsaken
    • c. 1520, Selim I of the Ottoman Empire, edited by Benedek Péri, The Persian Dīvān of Yavuz Sulṭān Selīm, Budapest, Hungary: Research Centre for the Humanities, Eötvös Loránd Research Network, →ISBN, page 139:
      نه آسایم بجز در بیخودی از محنت هجران
      چه باشد جان مهجورم اگر بیخویشتر گردد
      na āsāyam ba-juz dar bēxwadī az mihnat-i hijrān
      či bāšad jān-i mahjūr-am agar bēxwēštar gardad
      I find no peace from the calamity of separation except by losing sense of self,
      What shall become of my forsaken soul if I lose yet more of myself?
      (Classical Persian transliteration)

Further reading

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