Lexicographical Neighbors of Arabicized
Literary usage of Arabicized
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An Arabic-English Lexicon: Derived from the Best and the Most Copious by Edward William Lane (1893)
"(L.) 0 ЛО *• * > '• see what follows. j, an arabicized word, (S, A, Msb,) from
j«j>>, (A, K,) which in Persian; meaning "new day;" (ТА;) and *j^; ..."
2. A Geographical View of the World: Embracing the Manners, Customs, and by Richard Phillips, James Gates Percival (1826)
"The S. and W., more arabicized, and less modified by the French. ... The Andalusian
and Grenadian, highly arabicized, and the most corrupt in Spain. III. ..."
3. Synopsis of the Greek Drama Including Biographical Notices ...: With a by John William Donaldson (1838)
"The Southern and Western, more arabicized, and less modified by the French ; the
Castilian, the basis of the Spanish : the Gallician, the basis of the ..."
4. The Journal of Heredity by American Genetic Association (1914)
"... so that Muhammad declared it to have been created from the soil left over
after the creation of Adam; and no wonder that the arabicized Berber in remote ..."
5. African Game Trails: An Account of the African Wanderings of an American by Theodore Roosevelt (1910)
"... negroes who have acquired the Moslem religion, together with a partially
arabicized tongue and a strain of Arab blood from the Arab warriors and traders ..."