Talk:داذي

Obscure words
I thought this may be a rare plural of, which is usually , but old poets have often surprising ones, like e.g. those mentioned at , for which the linked Nöldeke has cited all the quotes he could get. It also reminded me of a poem I quoted under inter alia at and translated metrically, where first  is done away with by boozing and then the alkie is also said to be, so it reminded me of a common idea of being free from sorrows because of being well provided in food and drink. If you have a better meaning go for it, I am bad at poetry. Which Arjan though is it, perhaps we need a Wikipedia link? Unless it is about  molasses, for which it is probably too early – I see it has some place pattern like the in the poem at  (which however has variants in that place if one searches this poem; T:var did not exist yet and would break the transcription). Fay Freak (talk) 13:42, 16 September 2020 (UTC)


 * It makes sense, that's how I understood it as well. The problem with * is that plurals with the pattern have their singular's pattern  (e.g., ) or that their singular's first  is not part of the root (e.g. , ). So the expected singular would be * or *. Though some nouns have irregular plurals regardless of its root.
 * The adjective is the nisba of  which was an old city in Persia and was known for their molasses.
 * . فين أخاي (talk) 16:26, 16 September 2020 (UTC)