שומשום
Hebrew
Etymology
Root |
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שׁ־מ־שׁ־ם (š-m-š-m) |
Ultimately from Old Aramaic שושמא (šūššmā), shortening of שומשומא (šumššemā), from Akkadian 𒃻𒈦𒌑𒈬 (/šamaššammū/), 𒊭𒈦𒌑𒈨 (/šamaššammi/, literally “oil plant”), compound of 𒉌 (/šaman/, “oil”) and 𒌑 (/šammu/, “plant”). Compare with Arabic سِمْسِم (simsim) and Classical Syriac ܫܘܫܡܐ (šūšmāʾ, šuššəmāʾ).
Usage notes
- While the later variant סוּמְסוּם (súmsum) is indeed pronounced with an s-sound, this word contains the letter shin, not sin, and should therefore be pronounced shumshóm. The variant súmsum is most common in daily speech.
Synonyms
- סוּמְסוּם (súmsum)
References
- “שומשום” in the Hebrew Terms Database of the Academy of Hebrew Language
Further reading
- שומשום on the Hebrew Wikipedia.Wikipedia he
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