different between saum vs saim

saum

English

Alternative forms

  • sawm

Etymology

Borrowed from Arabic ?????? (?awm, fasting).

Noun

saum

  1. (Islam) fasting; one of the five pillars of Islam
  2. (ecology) A herbaceous border found at the edge of a woodland patch. It is usually found below and farther out from the woodland than the woody shrub mantel and the tree canopy.

Derived terms

  • wajib saum
  • nathr saum

References

  • 1986, R. T. T. Forman and Michel Godron, Landscape Ecology, pp. 108-109.

Anagrams

  • AMUs, MSAU, MUAs, Maus, Musa, UMAs, USMA, amus, aums, masu

Icelandic

Noun

saum

  1. indefinite accusative singular of saumur

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From Old Norse saumr.

Noun

saum m (definite singular saumen, indefinite plural saumar, definite plural saumane)

  1. seam
  2. the act of seaming

See also

  • søm (Bokmål)

References

  • “saum” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.

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saim

English

Etymology

From Middle English saim, a variant of seime (grease), from Old French saim (fat). See seam.

Noun

saim (plural saims)

  1. (dialect) lard

Anagrams

  • AMIs, Amis, ISAM, Isam, M'sia, MIAs, Masi, Sami, Siam, Sima, Sámi, aims, siam, sima

saim From the web:

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