It is a bad word you say to someone.
No,it is not.
No,it is not.
lesharet, meaning "to serve" is pronounced leh-shah-RET
Being a Sheha from birth, I can tell you that it is a derivative of the word "Shah", as in king or a power holding member of society. Sheha is the female alternative to this rather popular term, meaning "Queen" or Wife of the Shah.
There is no one rootword. The word "checkmate" is from the 1300s and comes from the Arabic "Shah Mat" meaning the king is dead. Mat meaning dead. The word "stalemate" is from the late 1700s and takes the French word "estale" meaning standstill.
eeshah (אשה) is the Hebrew word for woman. It's simply the word for man (eesh, איש) with the femine suffix -ah (־ה) attached. The word can also be translated as wife.
A person how worship Allah (God)
woman
SHAH means King in Persian and Meer means Leader/King in Arabic, therefore, the name SHAH-MEER is a combination of these two and means King of Kings/Leaders. It is very common in Urdu language to form a new word by combining two separate words like Shah-Zeb, Shah-Rukh, Qurrat-ul-Ain, Shah-Nawaz, Dil-Nawaz, Aurang-Zeb etc...
No (unless one wants to explain the pronounciation of the word shah). The two names are unrelated. Shah is related to the Russian word Tsar, which means emperor.
he was called the Shah.
A shah's kingdom is typically called a "shahdom." The term is derived from the Persian word "shah," meaning king or ruler. Historically, shahdoms were prominent in regions like Persia (modern-day Iran), where the title was used by monarchs to denote their royal authority and governance over their territories.