ܟܽܘܣܒܰܪܬܳܐ [?] kwsbrtʾ kusbarṯā coriander
Perhaps from an antecedent of NP kusbara, kuzbura coriander (Steingass 1029 and 1027; Horn 221 n. 2), Arab. kuzbara, kuzbura coriander. The Syr. word, morphologically adapted by means of the Syr. suffix -ṯā, is attested from early times, and could have been borrowed from OInd. kustumbarī- coriander (Turner 1966, no. 3380; Monier-Williams 1899, 298), which is the ultimate origin of the word. See also Laufer 1919, 299 ● Ex 16, 31; cf. ES 1, 218C; ESL 2, 675, 14; Geop 88, 5; SB 60, 7 ◆ LS 338a: Pers.? Lagarde GA 57, 145: Arab. kusburat, kuzbarat; Löw n. 155; Duval index pers. 225