Classical Arabic - English Dictionary

by Edward William Lane (1801-1876)

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ثج ثجر ثخن


1. ⇒ ثجر

ثَجَرَ, aor. ـُ {يَثْجُرُ}, He mixed the ثَجِير of dates [i. e. the dregs of pressed dates] with other [dates] in the beverage called نَبِيذ: (Ṣ:) or he mixed the dregs of pressed unripe dates with dried dates in making نبيذ: (Mgh:) or ثَجَرَ التَّمْرَ he mixed the dried dates with the dregs of pressed unripe dates. (Ḳ.) The doing so is forbidden in a trad. (Ṣ, Mgh.)


ثَجِيرٌ

ثَجِيرٌ, an arabicized word, (Mṣb,) pronounced by the vulgar with ت, (Ṣ, Mṣb,) The dregs of anything that is pressed; (Ṣ, A, Mgh, Mṣb;) as of pressed unripe dates: (Ḳ:) or the dregs of pressed unripe dates, which are mixed with dried dates in making the beverage called نَبِيذ: (TA:) or the expressed juice of dates; or the dregs of pressed dates: (Aṣ, Mṣb:) or pressed grapes from which the juice has run, and of which the dregs remain. (Lth, TA.)


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