كد

See also: کد

Arabic

Etymology

From the root ك د د (k-d-d).

Verb

كَدَّ (kadda) I, non-past يَكُدُّ‎ (yakuddu)

  1. to work hard, to toil, to exert oneself, to slog
    • 850–861, علي بن سهل ربن الطبري [ʿAlī ibn Sahl Rabban aṭ-Ṭabarī], Oliver Kahl, editor, ʿAlī ibn Sahl Rabban aṭ-Ṭabarī’s Health Regimen or “Book of the Pearl” كتاب اللؤلؤة (Islamic Philosophy, Theology and Science. Texts and Studies; 115), Leiden: Brill, published 2020, →ISBN, § 50, page 78:
      وما كان من الحيوان صلبا يرعى‭‬ في المراعي اليابسة الصلبة ويكد‬ في الأعمال الصعبة‭‬ فإنها أصلب وأبطأ استمراءً
      What there is of sturdy animals grazing the dry and harsh pastures and exerting themselves in hard works, they are tough and tardy (when to be digested).
  2. to make weary, to tire, to goad

Conjugation

Noun

كَدّ (kadd) m

  1. verbal noun of كَدَّ (kadda) (form I)
  2. toil, fatigue, assiduity

Declension

Iraqi Arabic

Alternative forms

  • گد (gad)

Etymology

From Arabic قَدْر (qadr). Usage similar to Turkish kadar, Persian قدر (qadr, qadar).

Noun

كد (gad)

  1. amount, quantity
    اشكد هذا
    ešgad hāḏā
    How much is this?
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