طمر

Arabic

Etymology

From the root ط م ر (ṭ-m-r).

Verb

طَمَرَ (ṭamara) I, non-past يَطْمِرُ‎ (yaṭmiru) (obsolete)

  1. to rise, to leap upwards, to spring
    • a. 1059, by Abū al-ʿAlāʾ Maʿarri
      وَلَيْسَ الطِمِرُّ سِوَى مَا طَمَر
      wa-laysa ṭ-ṭimirru siwā mā ṭamar
      There is nothing swift that does not leap.

Conjugation

Verb

طَمِرَ (ṭamira) I, non-past يَطْمَرُ‎ (yaṭmaru) (obsolete)

  1. to become inflated, to become swollen, to intumesce

Conjugation

Verb

طَمَرَ (ṭamara) I, non-past يَطْمِرُ or يَطْمُرُ‎ (yaṭmiru or yaṭmuru)

  1. to bury, to landfill, to embed, to inter, to slam

Conjugation

Verb

طَمَّرَ (ṭammara) II, non-past يُطَمِّرُ‎ (yuṭammiru)

  1. to fold up, to roll up
  2. to groom, to currycomb
  3. to lock up, to put into the silo (مَطْمُورَة (maṭmūra))

Conjugation

Noun

طَمْر (ṭamr) m

  1. verbal noun of طَمَرَ (ṭamara) (form I)

Declension

Noun

طَمَر (ṭamar) m

  1. verbal noun of طَمِرَ (ṭamira) (form I)

Declension

Noun

طِمْر (ṭimr) m (plural أَطْمَار (ʔaṭmār))

  1. tatter, worn-out garment

Declension

Adjective

طِمِرّ (ṭimirr) (feminine طِمِرَّة (ṭimirra))

  1. swift, fleet, of active legs
    • a. 1059, by Abū al-ʿAlāʾ Maʿarri
      وَلَيْسَ الطِمِرُّ سِوَى مَا طَمَر
      wa-laysa ṭ-ṭimirru siwā mā ṭamar
      There is nothing swift that does not leap.

Declension

Ottoman Turkish

Alternative forms

  • طامار (damar), طمار (damar), دامار (damar)

Etymology

From Proto-Turkic *dạmor (vein, root).[1] Compare Bashkir тамыр (tamır).

Noun

طمر (damar)

  1. vein (blood vessel)
  2. vein (linear feature resembling a vein)

Derived terms

  • طمرسز (damarsız)

Descendants

  • Turkish: damar
  • Albanian: damar
  • Aromanian: dãmar
  • Bulgarian: дама́р (damár)
  • Greek: νταμάρι (damári)
  • Laz: დამარი (damari)
  • Macedonian: дамар (damar)
  • Middle Armenian: տամար (tamar)
    • Armenian: տամար (tamar), դամար (damar)
  • Serbo-Croatian:
    Cyrillic: да̏мар
    Latin: dȁmar

References

  1. Starostin, Sergei; Dybo, Anna; Mudrak, Oleg (2003), *dạmor”, in Etymological dictionary of the Altaic languages (Handbuch der Orientalistik; VIII.8), Leiden, New York, Köln: E.J. Brill
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