طرق

See also: ظرف and طرف

Arabic

Etymology 1

From the root ط ر ق (ṭ-r-q).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tˤa.ra.qa/

Verb

طَرَقَ (ṭaraqa) I, non-past يَطْرِقُ‎ (yaṭriqu)

  1. to beat, to knock, to ring (a bell), to hammer
Conjugation
Descendants
  • Ladino: almodrote

Etymology 2

From the root ط ر ق (ṭ-r-q), cognates with طَرِيق (ṭarīq, road).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tˤar.ra.qa/

Verb

طَرَّقَ (ṭarraqa) II, non-past يُطَرِّقُ‎ (yuṭarriqu)

  1. to make a road, to pave the way, to ready the way
    • a. 1222, نجيب الدين السمرقندي [ʿNajīb ad-Dīn as-Samarqandīy], Juliane Müller, editor, كتاب الأغذية والأشربة [kitāb al-ʾaḡdiya wa-l-ʾǎšriba] (Islamic Philosophy, Theology and Science. Texts and Studies; 101), Leiden: Brill, published 2017, →ISBN, page 132:
      التُوث. إنّ التوث إذا ورد على المعدة وهي خالية من الطعام نقية من الخلط أسرع في الانحدار عنها وطَرَّقَ لسائر الأطعمة ولم يولّد خلطًا رديئًا إلا ان يُكثَر منه، فإن لم يصادف المعدة خاليةً نقيًا فسد فيها فسادًا عجيبًا.
      Mulberries: Mulberries, when they arrive in the stomach and it is empty of food and clean of humour, go down very swift and pave the way for other foods without engendering bad humour except when eaten in excess, and when they don’t encounter the stomach empty and clean they rot away in a wondersome decay.
Conjugation

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tˤu.ruq/
  • (file)

Noun

طُرُق (ṭuruq) pl

  1. plural of طَرِيق (ṭarīq)

Noun

طُرُق (ṭuruq) pl

  1. plural of طَرِيقَة (ṭarīqa)
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