الواصلة
be·he·mothالتركية النطق
bıhimıthالنطق
/bəˈhēməᴛʜ/ /bəˈhiːməθ/
علم أصول الكلمات
[ bi-'hE-m&th, 'bE-&-m&a ] (noun.) 14th century. From Middle English bemoth, behemoth, from Late Latin, from Hebrew בהמות (bəhēmōth), either an intensive plural of בהמה (bəhēmāh) 'beast', from Proto-Semitic (compare Ethiopic bəhma 'dumb, speechless', Arabic ʼabham (declined as bahma(t), bahīma(t)) 'animal'), or borrowed from Ancient Egyptian p-ehe-mau 'hippopotamus', literally 'water-ox'.