د ي ر
Arabic
Etymology
From the Classical Syriac root ܕ-ܘ-ܪ (d-w-r) through the spread of دَيْر (dayr, “cloister”) on the path of Christianity.
Root
د ي ر • (d-y-r)
- related to the habitation of a monk
Derived terms
- Verbs
- Form V: تَدَيَّرَ (tadayyara, “reside; make one’s domicile”)
- Verbal noun: تَدَيُّر (tadayyur)
- Active participle: مُتَدَيِّر (mutadayyir)
- Passive participle: مُتَدَيَّر (mutadayyar)
- Nouns
- دَيْر (dayr, “cloister”)
- دَيَّار (dayyār, “cloister inhabitant, monk”)
- دَيْرَانِيّ (dayrāniyy, “cloister inhabitant”)
- Adjectives
- دَيْرِيّ (dayriyy, “cloister”)
- دَيْرَانِيّ (dayrāniyy, “monasterial”)