See also: ات, آپ, أب, آب, and اب

Arabic

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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Root
ء ت ي (ʔ t y)
14 terms

Derived from the active participle of أَتَى (ʔatā, to come).

Adjective

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آتٍ (ʔātin) (construct state آتِي (ʔātī), feminine آتِيَة (ʔātiya), masculine plural آتُون (ʔātūn), feminine plural آتِيَات (ʔātiyāt))

  1. active participle of أَتَى (ʔatā)
  2. coming, next
Declension
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References
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  • Haywood, J.A., Nahmad, H.M. (1965) “آت”, in A new Arabic grammar, 2nd edition, London: Lund Humphries, →ISBN

Etymology 2

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Verb

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آتِ (ʔāti) (form I)

  1. first-person singular non-past active jussive of أَتَى (ʔatā)

Etymology 3

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Verb

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آتِ (ʔāti) (form III)

  1. second-person masculine singular active imperative of آتَى (ʔātā)

Etymology 4

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Verb

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آتِ (ʔāti) (form IV)

  1. second-person masculine singular active imperative of آتَى (ʔātā)

Azerbaijani

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Noun

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آت (at) (definite accusative آتێ (atı), plural آتلار (atlar))

  1. Arabic spelling of at (horse)

Declension

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Khalaj

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Noun

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آت (ât, âat) (definite accusative آتؽ, plural آتلار)

  1. Arabic spelling of ât, âat (name)

Declension

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Ottoman Turkish

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آت

Etymology 1

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Inherited from Proto-Turkic *at (horse); cognate with Old Turkic 𐱃 ( /⁠at⁠/), Azerbaijani at, Bashkir ат (at), Chuvash ут (ut), Kazakh ат (at), Kyrgyz ат (at), Turkmen at, Uyghur ئات (at), Uzbek: ot and Yakut ат (at).

Noun

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آت (at)

  1. horse, any hoofed mammal of the species Equus ferus caballus, often used for riding and draft work
    Synonyms: اسب (esb), فرس (feres)
Derived terms
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Descendants
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  • Gagauz: at
  • Turkish: at
  • Albanian: at
  • Greek: άτι (áti)

Further reading

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Etymology 2

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Noun

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آت (at)

  1. (dialectal) Alternative form of آد (ad, name)