Σαρακηνός

Ancient Greek

Alternative forms

  • Σαρακινός (Sarakinós)

Etymology

Perhaps from an Old Arabic predecessor of Arabic شَرْقِيِّينَ (šarqiyyīna, easterners, oblique case), from شَرْق (šarq, east). In this case the word may originally have referred to the Arabs residing to the east of the fertile strip along the Mediterranean. Compare also Arabic شَرْقِيِّينَ (šarqiyyīna), a bedouin tribe, which gave its name to Arabic الشَّرْقِيّ (aš-šarqiyy), ruling dynasty of Emirate of Fujairah; though this may be entirely unrelated. The Oxford English Dictionary disputes this etymology.

According to Michael C. A. Macdonald, likely from Old Arabic or Ancient North Arabian 𐪆𐪇𐪑𐪄𐪚𐪌 (s²rʾqyn /⁠*s²arrāqīn⁠/, those who migrate to the inner desert), derived from 𐪆𐪇𐪄 (s²rq /⁠*s²arraqa⁠/, to migrate in the inner desert).

Pronunciation

 

Noun

Σαρακηνός • (Sarakēnós) m (genitive Σαρακηνοῦ); second declension

  1. (Koine) a desert-dwelling Arabic or para-Arabic nomad of North Arabia; a bedouin
  2. (Byzantine) a Muslim; a Saracen

Declension

Descendants

Unsorted
  • Old Church Slavonic: срацинъ (sracinŭ)
  • Classical Syriac: ܣܪܩܝ (sarqāyā)
  • Jewish Babylonian Aramaic: סרקי (sarqayy)
  • Hebrew: סרקי (sarqī)

Further reading

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