الأصلBorrowed from Aramaic, there with forms as עוזררא, אנזעררתא, זרדתא, זרתא, זודתא, זירדתא, אוזר, חוזרר, חזרור, חיזרר, ܥܙܪܪܬܐ. Perhaps from an Egyptian expression like Sahidic Coptic ⲥⲟⲩⲣⲉ ⲁⲣⲟⲟⲩⲉ (soure arooue, literally “needle-thistle”), which would explain the distribution of similar Ancient Greek μέσπιλον (méspilon, “medlar”), Moroccan Arabic مزاح (mzāḥ, “loquats, medlars”), Proto-Kartvelian *sxmarṭl- (“medlar”), Middle Armenian զկեռ (zkeṙ, “medlar”), Persian ازگیل (azgil, “medlar”), Georgian ასკილი (asḳili, “dog rose, briar”). However as the speech is of pome fruits, the form חֲזְרוּרָא (ḥăzrūrā) may be most original and reduplicated from the known term ܚܙܘܪܐ / חֲזוּרָא (ḥăzzūrā, “apple”).
- collectivethornapple, medlar (Crataegus gen. et spp., fruit and tree)
الصيغزُعْرُور(canonical) · زَعْرُور(canonical, masculine) · zuʕrūr(romanization) · zaʕrūr(romanization) · زُعْرُورَة(feminine, singulative) · زَعْرُورَة(feminine, singulative) · زُعْرُور(collective, indefinite, informal, triptote) · زَعْرُور(collective, indefinite, informal, triptote) · الزُّعْرُور(collective, definite, informal, triptote) · الزَّعْرُور(collective, definite, informal, triptote) · زُعْرُور(collective, construct, informal, triptote) · زَعْرُور(collective, construct, informal, triptote) · زُعْرُورٌ(collective, indefinite, nominative, triptote) · زَعْرُورٌ(collective, indefinite, nominative, triptote) · الزُّعْرُورُ(collective, definite, nominative, triptote) · الزَّعْرُورُ(collective, definite, nominative, triptote) · زُعْرُورُ(collective, construct, nominative, triptote) · زَعْرُورُ(collective, construct, nominative, triptote) · زُعْرُورًا(accusative, collective, indefinite, triptote) · زَعْرُورًا(accusative, collective, indefinite, triptote)
المصدر: ويكاموس