חתן

Hebrew

Etymology

Root
ח־ת־ן

Compare with Arabic خَتَن (ḵatan, son-in-law or brother-in-law), which comes from a root (خ ت ن (ḵ-t-n)) related to both circumcision and matrimonial links.

Noun

חָתָן (khatán) m (plural indefinite חֲתָנִים, singular construct חֲתַן־, plural construct חַתְנֵי־)

  1. groom (bridegroom)
  2. son-in-law

Usage notes

The term may be used to describe any male who has a party, e.g. a bris, a bar mitzvah or the birthday boy.

Derived terms

  • שבת חתן (shabát khatán)

Descendants

See also

References

Noun

חֹתֵן (khotén) m

  1. defective spelling of חותן

Yiddish

Etymology

Borrowed from Hebrew חתן (khatán, bridegroom)

Noun

חתן (khosn) m, plural חתנים (khasonem)

  1. groom, bridegroom, fiancé

Derived terms

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.