Word
|
Meaning
|
Sources
|
Other forms
|
Etymology
|
bianqing
|
An ancient Chinese percussion instrument
|
[MW]
|
|
Chinese: 編磬
|
buqsha
|
A former Yemeni monetary unit
|
[L]
|
Also written bogache
|
Arabic
|
burqa
|
A veiled garment worn by some Muslim women
|
[ODE][LC][C][AHC][OED]
|
Also written burka, burkha, or burqua
|
Urdu and Persian burqa, from Arabic burqu`
|
cinq
|
The number five, as signified in dice or cards
|
[ODE][COD][OED]
|
|
French cinq 'five'
|
cinqfoil
|
A plant of the genus Potentilla, or an ornamental design thereof
|
[SOED][OED]
|
Much more commonly written cinquefoil
|
Middle English, from Latin quinquefolium, from quinque 'five' + folium 'leaf'
|
coq
|
A trimming of cock feathers on a woman's hat
|
[WI]
|
|
French coq 'cockerel'
|
faqih
|
An Islamic jurisprudent
|
[RHW]
|
Plural faqihs or fuqaha [RHU]
|
Arabic فَقِيه
|
faqir
|
A Muslim ascetic
|
[L]
|
More commonly written fakir
|
Arabic فَقِير 'poverty-stricken'
|
fiqh
|
Muslim jurisprudence
|
[ODE]
|
|
Arabic فِقْه 'understanding'
|
inqilab
|
A revolution in India or Pakistan
|
[C]
|
|
Arabic إِنْقِلَاب
|
jelq
|
Manual penis enlargement exercise
|
|
Is also a verb. Derived words include jelqs, jelqed and jelqing
|
Persian جلق 'masturbation, onanism'
|
mbaqanga
|
A style of South African music
|
[ODE][C][W]
|
|
Zulu umbaqanga 'steamed maize bread'
|
miqra
|
The Tanakh, or Hebrew text of the Bible
|
[WI]
|
|
Hebrew מקרא
|
muqaddam
|
A Bangladeshi or Punjabi headman
|
[C]
|
|
Arabic مُقَدَّم
|
nastaliq
|
An Arabic script used in Persian writings
|
[OED]
|
Also written nasta'liq [C], nestaliq [OED], nastaleeq, or shortened to just taliq [OED]
|
Persian نستعليق, from naskh + ta`liq
|
niqab
|
A veil for the lower-face worn by some Muslim women
|
[ODE]
|
Also written niqaab
|
From Arabic نِقَاب
|
nuqta
|
Diacritic mark
|
|
Also written nukta
|
|
pontacq
|
A sweet wine from Pontacq (France)
|
[OED]
|
|
French
|
q
|
Q or q, the 17th letter of the modern English alphabet
|
[MW]
|
|
Greek or Latin
|
qabab
|
A dish consisting of pieces of seasoned meat
|
[OED]
|
More commonly written kebab, kebap, kebob, kibob, kebhav, kephav, kebabie, or kabob
|
Persian کباب
|
qabalah
|
A form of Jewish mysticism
|
[C][AHC][WI]
|
More commonly written Kabbalah, and also written Qabala [AHC], Qabbala [WI], Cabalah etc. Derived words include qabalism, qabalist, and qabalistic.
|
Hebrew קַבָּלָה
|
qadarite
|
A member of the Qadariyah
|
[RHU]
|
|
|
qadariyah
|
In Islam, adherents of the doctrine of free will
|
[RHU]
|
Also written Qadariya [RHU]
|
|
qaddish
|
In Judaism, a prayer of mourning
|
[C]
|
More commonly written Kaddish
|
Hebrew קדיש
|
qadi
|
A Muslim judge
|
[L][C][W][OED][AOX]
|
Also written qadhi [OED], qaadi, kadi, kazi qaadee or qazi [OED]
|
Arabic قَاضِى
|
qadiriyah
|
In Islam, a Sufi order
|
[RHU]
|
Also written Qadiriya [RHU]
|
Arabic القَادِرِيَّة
|
qaf
|
ق, the twenty-first letter of the Arabic alphabet
|
[RHW]
|
Also written qaph or qap
|
Arabic قَاف
|
qaid
|
A Muslim tribal chief
|
[RHW]
|
Also written caid or kaid
|
Arabic قَائِد, 'leader', 'commander'
|
qaimaqam
|
A minor official of the Ottoman Empire
|
[C][OED]
|
Also written kaymakam, kaimakam, caimacam, or qaim makam
|
From Arabic قَائِم 'standing' + مَقَام 'place', meaning 'standing in place'
|
qalamdan
|
A Persian writing-case
|
[C]
|
|
Persian قلمدان
|
qalandar
|
A member of an order of mendicant dervishes
|
[RHU]
|
Also written calender, or capitalised
|
|
qanat
|
A type of water-supply tunnel found in north Africa and the Middle East
|
[ODE][C][OED][AOX]
|
Also written kanat, khanat, kunut, kona, konait, ghanat, or ghundat
|
Persian, from Arabic qanāt 'channel'
|
qanun
|
A type of harp
|
[OED]
|
Also written qanon or kanun [OED]
|
Arabic قَانُون, rule, principle or mode
|
qasida
|
An Arabian poem of praise or satire
|
[C][OED][AOX]
|
Also written qasidah
|
Arabic قَصِيدَة
|
qat
|
A kind of Arabian shrub used as a narcotic
|
[L][C][OED]
|
More commonly written khat, kat or gat
|
Arabic qāt
|
qawwal
|
A person who practices qawwali music
|
[ODE][C][AOX]
|
|
|
qawwali
|
Devotional music of the Sufis
|
[ODE][C][AOX]
|
|
Arabic قوَّالِي (qawwāli) 'loquacious' or 'singer'
|
qere
|
A marginal reading in the Hebrew Bible
|
[OED][WI]
|
Also written qeri [WI] or qre [WI]
|
Aramaic קְרֵי, '[what is] read'
|
qhat
|
An obsolete spelling of what
|
[OED]
|
|
Likely of Scots origin, in which an older spelling convention used "quh-" or "qh-" where English had "wh-".[9]
|
qheche
|
An obsolete spelling of which
|
[OED]
|
|
qhom
|
An obsolete spelling of whom
|
[OED]
|
|
qhythsontyd
|
An obsolete spelling of Whitsuntide (the day of Pentecost)
|
[OED]
|
|
qi
|
In Chinese culture, a physical life force
|
[ODE][C][AHC][OED]
|
Commonly written chi or ki
|
simplified Chinese: 气; traditional Chinese: 氣
|
qiana
|
A type of nylon
|
[OED]
|
|
Originally a trademark of DuPont, now generic
|
qibla
|
The point to which Muslims turn in prayer
|
[ODE][COD][C][OED][AOX]
|
Also written qiblah [OED], kiblah, qiblih, kibla or qib'lah [RHU], sometimes capitalised
|
17th-century Arabic for 'the opposite'
|
qibli
|
A local Libyan name for the sirocco, a southeasterly Mediterranean wind
|
[OED]
|
Also written ghibli
|
Arabic قِبلي, "coming from the qibla
|
qid
|
Four times a day
|
[MW]
|
|
Latin quater in die
|
qigong
|
A Chinese system of medical exercises
|
[ODE][C][AOX]
|
Also written chi gong, ki gong, or chi kung
|
simplified Chinese: 气功; traditional Chinese: 氣功
|
qin
|
A classification of Chinese musical instruments
|
[AOX]
|
|
Chinese: 琴
|
qinah
|
A Hebrew elegy
|
[WI]
|
Also written kinah; plural kinnot, qinot, qinoth and qindarkë
|
Hebrew קינה
|
qindar
|
An Albanian unit of currency, equal to one one-hundredth of a lek
|
[ODE][L][C]
|
Plural qindarka [L] or qindars [C]. Also written qintar [L][C][AOX] or quintal
|
Albanian
|
qing
|
A Chinese chime
|
[MW]
|
Also written as: ch'ing
|
Chinese: 磬
|
qinghaosu
|
A drug, artemisinin, used to treat malaria
|
[C]
|
|
Chinese: 青蒿素
|
qingsongite
|
A rare mineral found in China.
|
|
Plural qingsongites
|
named after geologist Qingsong Fang
|
qinter
|
An Albanian money system
|
[OED]
|
|
Albanian
|
qipao
|
A traditional Chinese dress
|
[OED]
|
Also written chi pao
|
Chinese: 旗袍
|
qiran
|
A currency of Iran between 1825 and 1932
|
[MW]
|
Also written as: kran
|
Persian qrān
|
qirsh
|
A monetary unit of Saudi Arabia and, formerly, various other countries
|
[RHU]
|
Also written qurush, qursh, gursh, girsh or ghirsh
|
|
qiviut
|
The wool of the musk-ox
|
[OED]
|
|
English
|
qix
|
A puzzle video game
|
[NA]
|
|
Inuktitut ᕿᕕᐅᖅ
|
qiyas
|
An analogy in Sharia, Islamic law
|
[RHW]
|
|
Arabic قِيَاس
|
qoph
|
The nineteenth letter of the Hebrew alphabet
|
[L][C]
|
Also written koph
|
Hebrew קוף
|
qorma
|
A type of curry
|
[Co]
|
Much more commonly written korma
|
Persian→Urdu قورمه
|
QWERTY
|
A standard English keyboard layout
|
[ODE][COD][LC][C][AOX][OED]
|
Plural qwertys or qwerties; also rendered QWERTY
|
Named after the first letters on the top row of the QWERTY keyboard layout.
|
Qyrghyz
|
Variant spelling of the people of Kyrgyzstan
|
[MW]
|
More commonly spelled Kyrgyz.
|
|
rencq
|
An obsolete spelling of rank
|
[OED]
|
|
|
sambuq
|
A type of dhow, a small Arabian boat
|
[OED]
|
|
Arabic سَنْبُوك
|
sheqel
|
A unit of weight originally used in Mesopotamia. The currency of Israel, divided into 100 agorot
|
[MW]
|
Plural sheqels or sheqalim; more commonly written shekel
|
Hebrew שקל, Yiddish ניי-שקל
|
souq
|
An Arab marketplace
|
[ODE][C][OED][AOX]
|
Also written sooq, soq, suq, souk, esouk, or suk
|
Arabic سُوق (sūq)
|
talaq
|
A form of Islamic divorce
|
[ODE][C][OED]
|
|
Arabic طَلَاق (talāq), from talaqa 'repudiate'
|
taluq
|
An Indian estate
|
[OED]
|
Also written taluk or talook
|
Arabic→Urdu تَعَلُّقَة (ta'alluqa) 'connection', 'relationship'
|
taluqdar
|
A person who collects the revenues of a taluq
|
[OED]
|
Also written talukdar or talookdar
|
Arabic→Urdu تعلقدار (ta'alluq-dar) 'landholder', 'possessor of an estate', 'lord of a manor'
|
taluqdari
|
An Indian landholding tenure
|
[OED]
|
|
|
taqiya
|
Concealing faith in Islam due to fear of persecution
|
[RHW]
|
Also written taqiyah [RHU], or capitalised
|
Arabic التَقِيَّة
|
taqlid
|
Acceptance of Muslim orthodoxy
|
[RHW]
|
|
Arabic تَقْلِيد
|
tariqa
|
A Sufi method of spiritual development, or a Sufi missionary
|
[E][AOX]
|
Also written tariqat [E] or tarika
|
Arabic طَرِيق
|
tranq
|
Tranquilizer (sedative)
|
[OED]
|
Also written trank [OED]
|
Apocopation from tranquilizer
|
tsaddiq
|
In Judaism, a title for a righteous person
|
[C][OED]
|
Plural tsaddiqs or tsaddiqim; also written tzaddiq [C], tzadik or tzaddik
|
Hebrew צדיק
|
umiaq
|
An open Inuit boat
|
[OSPD4]
|
Also spelled umiak, umialak, umiac, oomiac or oomiak
|
|
waqf
|
A charitable trust in Islamic law
|
[ODE][C][OED]
|
Also written wakf; plural waqf [ODE][C][OED] or waqfs [C][OED]
|
Arabic, literally 'stoppage' from waqafa, 'come to a standstill'
|
xiangqi
|
Chess variant native to China
|
|
|
Chinese: 象棋
|
xiqin
|
Traditional Chinese bowed string musical instrument
|
|
|
Chinese: 奚琴
|
yangqin
|
A trapezoidal Chinese hammered dulcimer
|
[C]
|
|
Chinese: 揚琴
|
yaqona
|
A Fijian intoxicating beverage, kava
|
[C][OED]
|
|
Fijian yaqona, in which q represents [ŋɡ]
|