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In Hebrew: 'Airshow'

מַטָּס
If you were in Israel early yesterday afternoon, you probably heard and saw fighter jets flying overhead.
The makers of Modern Hebrew took the root ט.ו.ס - t.w.s - meaning flying and plugged it into a noun structure beginning with a מ (m), yielding the common word for airplane, מָטוֹס
. It's the same noun structure as that of מָקוֹם
- place, which also comes from a root whose middle letter is ו (w) - ק.ו.מ (k.w.m).
To create the word for airshow, Hebrew plugs מטוס into another noun structure, with מַטָּס
as the resulting word.
Note that the same word-change (morphological) process takes place to create the word for flotilla: Hebrew takes the word for oar or paddle - מָשׁוֹט
, plugs it into that other noun structure, and מַשָּׁט
is born.
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