Ḥ-M-D
Ḥ-M-D (Arabic: ح-م-د, Hebrew: ח-מ-ד) is the triconsonantal root of many Arabic and some Hebrew words. Many of those words are used as names. The basic meaning expressed by the root is "to praise" in Arabic and "to desire" in Hebrew.[1][2]
Usage[]
Concepts[]
- Hamd (Arabic) — "praise" — a song or poem in praise of Allah
- Hemda חֶמְדָּה (Hebrew) — "desire, delight, beauty"
- Mahmad (Arabic) — "desire, desirable thing, pleasant thing, beloved, goodly, lovely, pleasant, desirable, precious ones, precious things, precious treasures, treasures, valuable"
- Mahmud (Arabic) — "desirable, precious thing, pleasant thing"
- נֶחְמָד (Hebrew) — "nice, cute, pleasant, lovely"
- Hamud חָמוּד (Hebrew) — "cute, lovely, sweet, pretty"
- Mahmad מַחְמָד (Hebrew) — 'something desirable', as in Hayat Mahmad חַיַּת מַחְמָד 'pet' ('desirable animal'), Mahmad Eino מַחְמַד עֵינוֹ 'someone's beloved' ('desired of his eyes').
- Hemed חֶמֶד (Hebrew) — 'grace, charm'
Names[]
- Ahmed — highly praised,
- Hamid — [the one] given praise
- Muhammad/Mahmud — praiseworthy
- ‘Abd al-Hamid — servant of the Most Praised
- Hamoudi חֲמוּדִי — (Hebrew colloquial name, lit. 'cutie')
- Hemed חֶמֶד — a village in Gush Dan, Israel
See also[]
References[]
Categories:
- Triconsonantal roots
- Semitic language stubs