زند

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) a combustible typically wooden rod for making fire through friction (as in )
 * 2) the trigger of a gun with which it is fired
 * 3)  either of the two bones of the forearm, the ulna or the radius
 * 4)  the comparatively longer and thinner long bone of the two bones in the forearm that is connected with the carpus at the wrist joint and with the humerus at the elbow joint, the ulna
 * 1) the trigger of a gun with which it is fired
 * 2)  either of the two bones of the forearm, the ulna or the radius
 * 3)  the comparatively longer and thinner long bone of the two bones in the forearm that is connected with the carpus at the wrist joint and with the humerus at the elbow joint, the ulna
 * 1)  either of the two bones of the forearm, the ulna or the radius
 * 2)  the comparatively longer and thinner long bone of the two bones in the forearm that is connected with the carpus at the wrist joint and with the humerus at the elbow joint, the ulna
 * 1)  the comparatively longer and thinner long bone of the two bones in the forearm that is connected with the carpus at the wrist joint and with the humerus at the elbow joint, the ulna

Usage notes

 * is a singular noun, while is either the plural of  (on the pattern of such plurals as ) or a singular with the plural  (similarly to the pluralization of such singulars as ). Either may be employed to mean "a fire-making rod" or, by extension, "a trigger", though  is far more common in the latter sense.
 * The ulna and radius are often not lexically distinguished in medieval texts. The Modern Arabic scientific vocabulary, however, reserves for the thinner bone (the ulna).

Etymology 1
Reborrowed from, from. Cognate with 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1) forearm bone

Etymology 2
, from, from Avestan verbal root , ultimately from. Cognate with 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1) exegesis, interpretation

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) wrist
 * 2) forearm