دخل

Verb

 * 1) to enter, go in, come in
 * 2) to penetrate, to pierce
 * 3) to befall, to seize
 * 4) to take up (a profession, etc.), to start
 * 5) to drop in on, to come to see, to call on
 * 6)  to consummate the marriage, to cohabit, to sleep with
 * 7) to convert to (a religion or faith)
 * 1) to convert to (a religion or faith)

Verb

 * 1) to make enter, to bring in, to let in
 * 2) to enter, to insert, to include

Noun

 * 1) income
 * 2) revenues, receipts, returns
 * 3) interference, intervention
 * 4) doubt, misgiving

Noun

 * 1) disturbance, imbalance, derangement, disorder, mental defect
 * 2) defect, infirmity

Etymology 1
From.

Verb

 * 1) to enter, to go in, to come in
 * 2) to have to do with something
 * 1) to have to do with something
 * 1) to have to do with something
 * 1) to have to do with something
 * 1) to have to do with something

Usage notes

 * In the second sense, the subject is always a null subject, and the topic of the sentence is grammatically the object. If a referent for the relation is included (as in the second example), it is through a prepositional phrase.

Etymology 2
From.

Verb

 * 1) to bring in, to put in, to let in
 * 2) to deposit (money)
 * 1) to deposit (money)