murid

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English

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Etymology 1

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Noun

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murid (plural murids)

  1. Any rodent in the family Muridae.
Usage notes
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  • The hypernymy of the words in their strict/narrow senses is muroid (superfamily Muroidea) > murid (family Muridae) > murine (subfamily Murinae), although in broad use the taxon-specific distinctions below superfamily are often ignored.
Translations
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Etymology 2

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Arabic مُرِيد (murīd, literally seeker)

Noun

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murid (plural murids)

  1. A Sufi novice committed to enlightenment under a spiritual guide.

Anagrams

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Indonesian

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Etymology

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From Malay murid, from Arabic مُرِيد (murīd).

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): [ˈmurɪt̚]
  • Hyphenation: mu‧rid

Noun

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murid (first-person possessive muridku, second-person possessive muridmu, third-person possessive muridnya)

  1. (education) disciple, pupil, student
    Synonyms: pelajar, peserta didik, siswa, siswi

Further reading

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Maguindanao

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Malay murid (pupil; student), from Arabic مُرِيد (murīd).

Noun

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murid

  1. disciple

See also

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Malay

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Etymology

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From Arabic مُرِيد (murīd).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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murid (Jawi spelling موريد, plural murid-murid, informal 1st possessive muridku, 2nd possessive muridmu, 3rd possessive muridnya)

  1. pupil, student

Descendants

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  • Indonesian: murid

Further reading

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