It comes from the Ancient Greek ὄασις (oasis), meaning basin, and the Coptic ouahe, both from an earlier Egyptian word.
The word Oasis comes from the dead language of Latin, with several ties to Egypt.
You may be thinking of the oasis now known as the Faiyum (an Arabic name), which the ancient Egyptians called She-resy, meaning the Southern Lake.The Faiyum is a large, fertile depression about 65 kilometres across with a lake in the north-west. This lake was anciently five times larger than it is today and there would have been trees, crocodiles and birds - the crocodile god Sebek was the chief deity in the area.The English word "oasis" derives (via Greek) from the ancient Egyptian word wHAt, which may have been pronounced something like "owah'at".
It comes from the Greek word lógos.
It came from the Latin word mentula...
The word dungarees come from the Hindi (Indian) word dungri
The word "oasis" comes from the Ancient Greek word "oasis," which means a fertile spot in the desert where water can be found, typically surrounded by vegetation. This term was then adopted into Latin before being borrowed into other languages.
The plural of oasis is oases.
The word Oasis comes from the dead language of Latin, with several ties to Egypt.
The plural of "oasis" is "oases."
The singular form is oasis, the plural form is oases.
Egypt
oases
The singular form of the plural noun 'oases' is oasis.
The Igbo meaning for the word "Oasis" of the African origin is Ala na-emeta nri dị nọzara.
...
oasis
Oasis = Nevé (× ×•×•×”) or nevé midbár (× ×•×•×” מידבר)