If there is no light in the room, you say «Մութ է» (
Moot eh
) to mean “It is dark.” However, if you wanted to be less colloquial and a little more literary, you might use the word
խաւար
(
khavar
), which means both “darkness” and “dark.” If you wanted to translate “In the Darkness,” you could either say «Մութին մէջ» (
Mootin mech
) or «Խաւարին մէջ» (Khavarin mech
).
The word
khavar,
already recorded in the fifth century A.D., probably comes from an Iranian source (for instance, we have Middle Persian
xvarvaran
and Farsi
xavar
), meaning “west.” The West is where the sun goes down (Armenian
արեւմուտք/arevmoodk
)
; therefore, the idea of “west” would normally be associated with darkness.
The word
khavar
may remind you of one of the highlights of the Holy Week, as celebrated by the Armenian Apostolic Church: the
Խաւարում
(
Khavaroom
).
During this ceremony, held on Maundy Thursday, the twelve candles
lighted in the church are put out one after the other, symbolizing the
abandonment of Jesus by the twelve Apostles—including the black candle
representing Judas—after the Last Supper and his prayer at the garden of
Gethsemane. The church remains in the dark, while the poignant hymn
Where Are Thou, My Mother?
(
Ո՞ւր ես, մայր իմ
/
Oor es, mayr eem
) is sung. The action of darkening is called
խաւարել
(
khavaril
), but there is not an exact term in English to translate
khavaroom,
and thus the Latin translation
tenebrae
is used.
There is another
khavaroom
that became fashionable this week, after the total eclipse of the sun recorded on Tuesday, August 22, 2017.
Khavaroom
is the Armenian word for “eclipse” (from Greek
ekleipsis
“fail
to appear”), and, as we may notice, whoever created the Armenian
equivalent did not care about a literal translation, but applied the
concept of darkening also used in the Holy Week.
To end this small note on astronomy, let us remember that, if it is a solar eclipse like this one, we call it
արեւի խաւարում (arevi khavaroom
), while the moon eclipse becomes a
լուսնի խաւարում
(
loosnee khavaroom
).
Get your vocabulary ready for the next total solar eclipse in seven years!
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