manaal
Lollypop's Mama
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- Islam

I'm very interested to know how many Arabic words have found their way into English vocabulary and other languages as well. I got intrested in this when I discovered that a condiment called "tamarind", comes from "tamer hind", which means "indian date"! I imagined Arab merchants sailing east along the silk route in search of exotic spices. They return home with a black sweet and sour fruit. When the people back home asked them what it was, the merchants would have replied, "these are Indian dates". They do not resemble actual dates in any way, but in colour. But it would have been the best way to explain to the locals, given their limited experiences!
Also, English "cup" = Arabic "coob"
Similarly I found these words in other languages:
In Tamil, "Asal" means original. In Arabic it is "asli" (right?)
In Sinhalese (Sri Lankan language - Arab merchants traveled here too) "kadadhasi" means paper. In Arabic "Qurthasi" means stationary. Also "one pound" (in weight) means "raththala", I think it is the same in Arabic.
So, let's make a whole glossary shall we?