soal

See also: Soal

English

Etymology 1

From Middle English sol, sule, from Old English sol (mud, wet sand, wallowing-place, slough, a mire or miry place), from Proto-Germanic *sulą (mire, mud), from Proto-Indo-European *sūl- (thick liquid, muck). Compare sully. More at soil.

Alternative forms

Noun

soal (plural soals)

  1. (UK, dialect) Alternative spelling of sole

Noun

soal (plural soals)

  1. Obsolete form of sole (the fish)

References

Anagrams

Indonesian

Etymology

From Malay soal, from Classical Malay سوٴال (soal), from Arabic سُؤَال (suʔāl).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈso.ʔal/
  • Hyphenation: so‧al
  • Rhymes: -al, -l

Noun

soal (plural soal-soal, first-person possessive soalku, second-person possessive soalmu, third-person possessive soalnya)

  1. question, problem, matter, point.
  2. problem, difficulty, trouble.
    Synonym: masalah
  3. (education) problem, question, exercise, paper.
  4. concerning, about, regarding.

Synonyms

  • (education): soalan (Standard Malay)

Derived terms

  • bersoal
  • dipersoalkan
  • disoal
  • disoalkan
  • mempersoalkan
  • menyoal
  • menyoalkan
  • persoalan
  • soal jawab

Further reading

Malay

Etymology

From Arabic سُؤَال (suʔāl).

Verb

menyoal

  1. to ask, to question, to interrogate
    Polis sedang menyoal suspek tentang rompakan itu.
    The police are interrogating the suspect about the robbery.

Synonyms

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Indonesian: soal

Further reading

Mokilese

Verb

soal

  1. (stative) to be black

References

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