assassin
berber, mongol, or European This question doesn't specify in what way something would follow Arab. In the dictionary, the first word after Arab is typically "arabesque".
Its Ankaboot
Shams is the Arab word for sun. This word has roots that go back to the time of the writing of the Epic of Gilgamesh, which references the Akkadian deity called Shamash.
Jihad
No. It can be but only if you mean it in an offensive way. Arab is what an Arab person is. Just please say Arab and not A-rab. A-rab is offensive to some people. Well , Arab is just a word that points to a group of people . It is like the words Spanish , African , American , British , Australian. It has nothing to do with offensive. Some people may use it sometimes thinking it diminishes a person , or thinking it is a synonym of terrorist . Well it is not.
The word assasin comes from hashishi the name of a group of heathens that used hashish and murdered crusaders in their sleep. The crusaders could not pronounce their name so they called them assasins.
it comes from the word portokal which means the orange and portokal is the name that the arab in andalucia named the modern town of porto back in the mid ages
Modern word: dungeon
berber, mongol, or European This question doesn't specify in what way something would follow Arab. In the dictionary, the first word after Arab is typically "arabesque".
In modern English that is 'to carry'.
Salarium - Salary
"Arabesque" comes from the Arabic word 'arab, meaning "Arab". This root was borrowed into Greek as araps and into Latin as arabs. The -esque suffix is the French version of an adjective-forming suffix that is apparently of Germanic origin and is cognate with English "-ish" as in "Jewish" or "Spanish".
The word "thermometer" has roots in English, Modern Latin, and French. The word is a combination of the French "thermometer" and the Modern Latin "thermometrum." The word "thermometer" came about in the 17th century.
Barbarians.
Phrenology was an antecedent of modern neuroscience. something that comes before....
The modern English word "dragon" comes from the classical Greek word "δράκων" (drakōn) which means "a large serpent".
The modern English word "pugnacious" comes from the Latin word "pugna," which means to fight or quarrel. It is used to describe someone who is eager or quick to fight or argue.