Yoke
"Yoke" in Arabic
in Lower Egyptian Arabic نَاف
nāf
(bar or frame by which two oxen or other draught animals are joined at their necks enabling them to pull a cart, plough, etc.; device attached to a single draught animal for the same purpose)
in Upper Egyptian Arabic كَرَب
kaṛab
(bar or frame by which two oxen or other draught animals are joined at their necks enabling them to pull a cart, plough, etc.; device attached to a single draught animal for the same purpose)
in Ḥaḍramawt هِجّ
hijj
(bar or frame by which two oxen or other draught animals are joined at their necks enabling them to pull a cart, plough, etc.; device attached to a single draught animal for the same purpose)
أُرْعُوَّة
ʔurʕuwwa
(bar or frame by which two oxen or other draught animals are joined at their necks enabling them to pull a cart, plough, etc.; device attached to a single draught animal for the same purpose)
فَدَّان
faddān
(pair of draught animals yoked together to pull something)
مِضْمَد
miḍmad
(bar or frame by which two oxen or other draught animals are joined at their necks enabling them to pull a cart, plough, etc.; device attached to a single draught animal for the same purpose)
مِضْمَدَة
miḍmada
(bar or frame by which two oxen or other draught animals are joined at their necks enabling them to pull a cart, plough, etc.; device attached to a single draught animal for the same purpose)
نِير
nīr
(bar or frame by which two oxen or other draught animals are joined at their necks enabling them to pull a cart, plough, etc.; device attached to a single draught animal for the same purpose)
نِير
nīr
(something which represses or restrains a person — see also burden)
وَيْج
wayj
(bar or frame by which two oxen or other draught animals are joined at their necks enabling them to pull a cart, plough, etc.; device attached to a single draught animal for the same purpose)
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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.