Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
There are two types of prepositions, based on whether they arise from the triconsonantal roots system or not.
Despite sharing the same triconsonantal root, this name is distinct from the name Muhammad.
All triconsonantal onsets begin with a sibilant, s or ŝ.
Triconsonantal nouns follow one of the following patterns.
Quadriconsonantal and some triconsonantal nouns follow the following pattern.
Verb systems are based on triconsonantal roots.
Like majority of adjectives in the Arabic language, al-Ghaib has a triliteral or triconsonantal root.
Verb formation in Ugaritic is based on (like all Semitic languages) triconsonantal roots.
The word genizah comes from the Hebrew triconsonantal root g-n-z, which means "hiding", and originally meant "to hide" or "to put away".
K-T-B is a triconsonantal root of a number of Semitic words, typically those having to do with writing.
Ḥ-R-M (triconsonantal root of these words in Arabic)
Semitic languages typically utilize triconsonantal roots, forming a "grid" into which vowels may be inserted without affecting the basic root.
The following are some of the forms which can be derived from the triconsonantal root k-t-b (general overall meaning "to write") in Hebrew and Arabic:
Islam associates Ahmad with Muhammad, both words deriving from the h-m-d triconsonantal root which refers to praiseworthiness.
In addition to the triconsonantal Bases, there existed also in Adunaic a large number of biconsonantal Bases.
Shin-Lamedh-Mem is the triconsonantal root of many Semitic words, and many of those words are used as names.
Lane's Arabic-English Lexicon, for example, reports that the term daha is rooted in the triconsonantal root, dal-ha-waw.
It is a liturgical phonology that is formed from two components; the pronoun prefix "mu" and the triconsonantal root "slim".
Ahmad comes from the Arabic triconsonantal root of Ḥ-M-D, meaning "highly praised", which in turn implies "one who constantly thanks God."
The premise that the term ud-hiya is the root of the word daha is inconsistent with the fact that most Arabic words have a triconsonantal root.
Q-D-Š is a triconsonantal Semitic root meaning "sacred, holy", derived from a concept central to ancient Semitic religion.
Roots are usually triconsonantal, with biconsonantal roots less common (depending on how some words are analyzed) and rare cases of quadri- and quinquiconsonantal roots.
Hamid refers to two different but related Arabic given names, both of which come from the Arabic triconsonantal root of Ḥ-M-D:
The very term "Islam" can be interpreted as "surrender (to God), humility", from the triconsonantal root S-L-M; other words used are tawadu and khoshou:
An example of a triconsonantal root would be d-r-b in Arabic, which can be inflected to create forms such as daraba 'he beat' and idribunna 'beat them (feminine)'.