حشد حشر حشرج
1. ⇒ حشر
حَشَرَ, aor. ـُ
حَشَرَتْهُمُ السَّنَةُ, aor. ـُ
حَشَرَهُ, (Ṣ, A,) inf. n. حَشْرٌ, (Ṣ, Ḳ,) ‡ He made it (a spear-head, Ṣ, A) thin, or slender: (Ṣ, A, Ḳ:) he made it (a spear-head, and a knife,) sharp, or pointed, and thin, or slender: (TA:) he made it small, and thin, or slender: (Th:) he pared it; namely, a stick: (TA:) he pared it, and made it sharp, or pointed. (Ṣ.)
7. ⇒ انحشر
انحشروا They (people) became collected together from the desert to the places of settled abodes. (Abu-t-Teiyib.)
حَشْرٌ
حَشْرٌ ‡ Anything thin, or slender, or elegant. (TA.) You say أُذُنُ حَشْرٌ ‡ A thin, or an elegant, ear; (Lth, ISk, Ṣ, A, Ḳ;) as though it were pared, (Lth, Ṣ,) and made sharp: (Ṣ:) or small, elegant, and round: (Lth:) or thin at the end: (Th:) or sharp-pointed: (TA:) and the epithet is the same for the dual also and the pl.: (Ḳ:) [J says that] it does not admit the dual form nor the pl., because it is originally an inf. n., and the expression above mentioned is like مَآءٌ غَوْرٌ and مَآءٌ سَكْبٌ: but اذن حَشْرَةٌ is sometimes said: (Ṣ:) and the pl. حُشُورٌ occurs in a verse of Umeiyeh Ibn-Abee-'Áïdh: (TA:) and you also sayاذن مَحْشُورَةٌ↓. (TA.) حَشْرٌ is also applied in the same sense as an epithet to other things. (Ṣ) You say قُذَّةٌ حَشْرٌ ‡ A thin, or an elegant, feather of an arrow; (Lth, Ṣ, A, Ḳ;) as though it were pared: (Lth:) or sharp-pointed. (TA.) Also سِنَانٌ حَشْرٌ ‡ A thin, or slender, spear-head: (Ṣ, Ḳ:) or sharp, or sharp-pointed: and سِكِّينٌ حَشْرٌ in like manner: and حَرْبَةٌ حَشْرَةٌ: (TA:) and سَهْمٌ حَشْرٌ, and سِهَامٌ حُشْرٌ: like جَوْنٌ and جُونٌ, and وَرْدٌ and وُرْدٌ: (Akh, Ṣ:) or سَهْمٌ حَشْرٌ signifies an arrow having straight, or even, feathers; and soسهم مَحْشُورٌ↓; andحَشِرٌ↓, of the same measure as كَتِفٌ, an arrow having good feathers attached to it. (TA.) You also say بَعِيرٌ حَشْرُ الأُذُنِ ‡ A camel having a thin, or an elegant, ear. (TA.)
حَشِرٌ
حَشِرٌ: see حَشْرٌ.
حَشَرَةٌ
حَشَرَةٌ and حَشَرَاتٌ, (Ḳ,) each being a coll. n. without a sing.; (TA;) or the former is sing. of the latter; (Ṣ, Mṣb;) Any small animals that creep or walk upon the earth; (Ṣ, Mgh, Mṣb, Ḳ;) as jerboas and hedgehogs and lizards of the kind called ضَبّ and the like: (TA:) or the former, (Mṣb,) or latter, (Mgh,) is applied to rats or mice, and jerboas, and lizards of the kind above mentioned, (Mgh, Mṣb,) colleted together: (Mṣb:) or any venomous or noxious reptiles or the like, such as scorpions and serpents; syn. هَوَامُّ; (Aṣ, Ḳ;) as also أَحْرَاشٌ and أَحْنَاشٌ. (Aṣ.)
Also the former, Whatever is captured, snared, entrapped, hunted, or chased, of wild animals or the like, birds, and fish, &c.; (Ḳ;) whether small or great: (TA:) or the great thereof: or what is eaten thereof: (Ḳ:) thus in all the copies of the Ḳ; but the pronoun [in the latter case] does not refer to the animals, &c. above mentioned: it is expressly said in the T and M that the word signifies whatever is eaten of herbs, or leguminous plants, of the earth, such as the دُعَاع and فَثّ. (TA.)
حَاشِرٌ
حَاشِرٌ One who congregates, or collects together, people. (TA.) With the article ال, applied to Moḥammad; (Ṣ, Ḳ;) because he collects people after him (Ṣ, IAth) and to his religion. (IAth.)
A collector of spoils: (El-Hulwánee, Mgh:) and [its pl.] حُشَّارٌ signifies collectors of the tithes and poll-tax. (TA.)
مَحْشِرٌ
مَحْشِرٌ (Ṣ, Ḳ) and مَحْشَرٌ (Ḳ) A place of congregation: (Ṣ, Ḳ:) a term used when people are collected together to a town or country, and to an encampment, and the like. (TA.) Hence, يَوْمُ المَحْشِرِ [The day of the place of congregation; meaning the day of judgment]. (TA.)
مَحْشُورٌ / مَحْشُورَةٌ
مَحْشُورٌ; and its fem. with ة