Difference between revisions of "Kesceharire"

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m (moved Kescearite to Kesceharire)
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ﻗﺸﻌﺮﻴﺭﺓ /qušaʕrīra/ «t. de médec. frisson dans le dos, qui précède la fièvre» {i.e. medical term: “shiver in the back which precedes a fever”}
 
ﻗﺸﻌﺮﻴﺭﺓ /qušaʕrīra/ «t. de médec. frisson dans le dos, qui précède la fièvre» {i.e. medical term: “shiver in the back which precedes a fever”}
  
Cf. Cf. Lane p.2526: ﺍﺧﺬﺗﻪ ﻗﺸﻌﺮﻴﺭﺓ  /aḫḏathu qušaʕrīra/ “a tremor, quaking, or quivering, of the skin” {lit. “a shiver has seized him”}
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Cf. Lane p.2526: ﺍﺧﺬﺗﻪ ﻗﺸﻌﺮﻴﺭﺓ  /aḫḏathu qušaʕrīra/ “a tremor, quaking, or quivering, of the skin” {lit. “a shiver has seized him”}
  
 
Latin ''horripilatio'' is a compound of ''horri''- {compound form of "horror"} + -''pil''- {pilus "hair"} + -''atio'' nominal ending.
 
Latin ''horripilatio'' is a compound of ''horri''- {compound form of "horror"} + -''pil''- {pilus "hair"} + -''atio'' nominal ending.

Revision as of 09:33, 1 August 2014

Kesceharire arabice oripilatio liber de doctrina arabica.


Apparatus:

Kesxcharire f | Kersceharire ms. e | Kescearite AC | Kesceharite B | Kesceharire scripsi (Wilf Gunther)

oripilatio B | oripilao f | orpilon (-lõ A) AC | oripilla͞c͞o ms. e

liber (li. B) de (d’ A) ABC f | uel ms. e


Translation:

Kesceharire is Arabic for Latin oripilatio {"bristling of hair”} according to the liber de doctrina arabica.


Commentary:

Simon’s often quoted source, the Liber de doctrina arabica, has so far not been identified, but cf, what must be a similar glossary/dictionary - Vocabulista - (ed. Schiaparelli) [[1]]: p.161: ﻗﺸﻌﺮﻳﺮﺓ /qašʕarīra or qušʕarīra/ Oripilacio; p.504: ORIPILATIO ﻗﺸﻌﺮﻳﺮﺓ /qašʕarīra or qušʕarīra/ …

Also: Dozy II, p.350, quoting Vocabulista as one of his sources, s.v. ﻗﺸﻌﺮ /qšʕr/: ﻗﺸﻌﺮﺓﺍﻟﺠﻠﺪ /qašʕarat al-ğild/ «horripilation» … {lit. “shiver of the skin”}; ﻗﺸﻌﺮﻳﺔ /qšʕryah/ «frisson de peur» {“shiver with fear”}; ﻗﺸﻌﺮﻴﺭﺓ /qušaʕrīra/ «t. de médec. frisson dans le dos, qui précède la fièvre» {i.e. medical term: “shiver in the back which precedes a fever”}

Cf. Lane p.2526: ﺍﺧﺬﺗﻪ ﻗﺸﻌﺮﻴﺭﺓ /aḫḏathu qušaʕrīra/ “a tremor, quaking, or quivering, of the skin” {lit. “a shiver has seized him”}

Latin horripilatio is a compound of horri- {compound form of "horror"} + -pil- {pilus "hair"} + -atio nominal ending.

WilfGunther 22:54, 10 July 2014 (BST)


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