سائح
Arabic
Etymology
Derived from the active participle of the verb سَاحَ (sāḥa, “to travel”), from the root س ي ح (s-y-ḥ).
Noun
سَائِح • (sāʾiḥ) m (plural سُيَّاح (suyyāḥ))
- traveler, wanderer, tourist
- visitor
- someone who fasts in a mosque or mortifies himself
- hermit
- wandering dervish
Declension
Declension of noun سَائِح (sāʾiḥ)
| Singular | basic singular triptote | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Indefinite | Definite | Construct | |
| Informal | سَائِح sāʾiḥ |
السَّائِح as-sāʾiḥ |
سَائِح sāʾiḥ |
| Nominative | سَائِحٌ sāʾiḥun |
السَّائِحُ as-sāʾiḥu |
سَائِحُ sāʾiḥu |
| Accusative | سَائِحًا sāʾiḥan |
السَّائِحَ as-sāʾiḥa |
سَائِحَ sāʾiḥa |
| Genitive | سَائِحٍ sāʾiḥin |
السَّائِحِ as-sāʾiḥi |
سَائِحِ sāʾiḥi |
| Dual | Indefinite | Definite | Construct |
| Informal | سَائِحَيْن sāʾiḥayn |
السَّائِحَيْن as-sāʾiḥayn |
سَائِحَيْ sāʾiḥay |
| Nominative | سَائِحَانِ sāʾiḥāni |
السَّائِحَانِ as-sāʾiḥāni |
سَائِحَا sāʾiḥā |
| Accusative | سَائِحَيْنِ sāʾiḥayni |
السَّائِحَيْنِ as-sāʾiḥayni |
سَائِحَيْ sāʾiḥay |
| Genitive | سَائِحَيْنِ sāʾiḥayni |
السَّائِحَيْنِ as-sāʾiḥayni |
سَائِحَيْ sāʾiḥay |
| Plural | basic broken plural triptote | ||
| Indefinite | Definite | Construct | |
| Informal | سُوَّاح suwwāḥ |
السُّوَّاح as-suwwāḥ |
سُوَّاح suwwāḥ |
| Nominative | سُوَّاحٌ suwwāḥun |
السُّوَّاحُ as-suwwāḥu |
سُوَّاحُ suwwāḥu |
| Accusative | سُوَّاحًا suwwāḥan |
السُّوَّاحَ as-suwwāḥa |
سُوَّاحَ suwwāḥa |
| Genitive | سُوَّاحٍ suwwāḥin |
السُّوَّاحِ as-suwwāḥi |
سُوَّاحِ suwwāḥi |
References
- Lane, Edward William (1863), “سائح”, in Arabic-English Lexicon, London: Williams & Norgate
- Steingass, Francis Joseph (1884), “سائح”, in The Student's Arabic–English Dictionary, London: W.H. Allen
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