1
شَرِبَ , (S, A, K, &c.,) aor.
شَرَبَ , (A, K,) inf. n.
شُرْبٌ and
شَرْبٌ (S, A, Msb, K, &c.) and
شِرْبٌ, (S, A, K,) agreeably with three different readings of the Kur lvi.
55, (S, TA,) the first of which (with damm) is that generally obtaining, (Fr,
TA,) and is the only one admitted by Jaafar Ibn-Mohammad, notwithstanding which
the second form (with fet-h) is said by MF to be the most chaste as well as the
most agreeable with analogy, (TA,) or the second (with fet-h) is an inf. n., and
the first is a simple subst., (AO, S, Msb, K,) and so is the third, (AO, S, K,)
and
مَشْرَبٌ, (S, K,) which is also a n. of place [and of time], (S,) and
تَشْرَابٌ, (S K, TA,) a form used when muchness of the act is meant, (TA,)
and
تِشْرَابٌ, which is anomalous, (TA voce
بَيَّنَ, q. v.,) He drank, (KL, PS, TK,) or he swallowed, syn.
جَرِعَ, (A, K, [but the former meaning is evidently intended by this
explanation, and such I shall assume to be the case in giving the explanations
of the derivatives in the A and K. &c.,]) water, &c., (S,) or a liquid, properly
by sucking in, or sipping; and otherwise tropically; (Msb;)
[generally, gulping it; for] you say,
شَرِبَ
المَآءَ
فِى
كَرَّةٍ [He drank the water at once, or at a single draught];
and
فِى ↓
تشرّبهُ
مُهْلَةٍ [He drank it leisurely, or gently, or slowly]:
(Mgh:)
شُرْبٌ signifies the conveying to one's inside, by means of his mouth,
that in the case of which chewing is not practicable: (KT:) [but] Es-Sarakustee
says, one does not say of a bird
شَرِبَ
المَآءَ, but
حَسَاهُ. (Msb.) In the saying of Aboo-Dhu-eyb, describing clouds, “
شَرِبْنَ
بِمَآءِ
البَحْرِ
ثُمَّ
تَرَفَّعَتْ
” [which is evidently best rendered They drank of the water of the sea, then
rose aloft, agreeably with what has been stated respecting
بِ in the sense of
مِنْ in p. 143, it is said that] the
ب is redundant, or, as
رَوِينَ is rendered trans. by means of
بِ, [though I do not think that this is the case unless
بِ be used as meaning “ by means of, ” and I do not remember to have met
with an instance of it,]
شَرِبْنَ is thus rendered trans. (TA.) [See a similar ex. in the 28th verse
of the Mo'allakah of 'Antarah, EM p. 232. One says also,
شَرِبَ
فِى
إِِنَآءٍ, meaning He drank out of a vessel; agreeably with an
explanation of
مِشْرَبَةٌ, in the S and K, as meaning
إِِنَآءٌ
يُشْرَبُ
فِيهِ.] And one says,
إِِنِّى
لَأَمْكُثُ
اليَوْمَيْنِ
مَا
أَشْرَبُهُمَا
مَآءً, meaning
مَا
أَشْرَبُ
فِيهِمَا
مَآءً [i. e. Verily I tarry the two days not drinking in them water].
(O.) ― -b2- [شَرِبَ
الدَّوَآءَ, in the conventional language of the physicians, as is indicated
in the Mgh, voce
بَنْجٌ (q. v.), on the phrase
شَرِبَ
البَنْجَ, and as is shown in many instances in the K &c., means He took,
i. e. swallowed, the medicine, whether fluid or solid. ― -b3- And in the
present day, they say,
شَرِبَ
الدُّخَانَ, meaning He inhaled, properly imbibed, smoke of
tobacco; or he smoked tobacco, or the tobacco.] ― -b4- One says of
seed-produce, or corn, when its culms have come forth,
قَدْ
شَرِبَ
الزَّرْعُ
فِى
القَصَبِ (assumed tropical:) [The seed-produce, or corn, has
imbibed into the culms]: (O, TA:) and when the sap (المَآء)
has come into it,
شَرِبَ
قَصَبُ
الزَّرْعِ (assumed tropical:) [The culms of the seed-produce, or
corn, have imbibed]. (TA.) And one says,
شَرِبَ
السُّنْبُلُ
الدَّقِيقَ (tropical:) [The ears of corn imbibed the farina; or]
became pervaded by the farina; (En-Nadr, A, O;) or had in them the
alimentary substance; as though the farina were water which they drank.
(TA.) And
وَقَدْ
شَرِبَ
الزَّرْعُ
الدَّقِيقَ, occurring in the story of Ohod, (O, TA,) as some relate it, or ↓
شُرِّبَ as others relate it, means (tropical:) [And the seed-produce,
or corn, had imbibed, or had been made to imbibe, the farina, or]
had become hardened in its grain, and near to maturity. (TA.) [And ↓
أُشْرِبَ means the same: for one says,]
أُشْرِبَ
الزَّرْعُ (tropical:) [The seed-produce, or corn, was made to
imbibe the farina; or] became pervaded by the farina: and in like
manner,
أُشْرِبَ
الزَّرْعُ
الدَّقِيقَ, i. e. (tropical:) [The seed-produce, or corn, was made
to imbibe the farina, or] its alimentary substance. (TA.) ― -b5- One
also says,
أَكَلَ
غَنَمِى
وَشَرِبَهَا (tropical:) [He ate the flesh of my sheep, or
goats, and drank the milk of them]. (TA in art.
اكل.) And [in like manner]
أَكَلَ
فُلَانٌ
مَالِى
وَشَرِبَهُ (tropical:) [Such a one fed upon, devoured, or
consumed, my property]. (A.) And
أَكَلَ
عَلَيْهِ
الدَّهْرُ
وَشَرِبَ (tropical:) [Time wasted him, or wore him away; as
though it fed upon him]. (A.) ― -b6- And
مَا
لَمْ ↓
أَشْرَبْتَنِى
أَشْرَبْ [lit. Thou hast made me to drink what I have not drunk,]
meaning (tropical:) thou hast charged against me, or accused me of
doing, what I have not done; (S, A, K;) like
أَكَّلْتَنِى
مَا
لَمْ
آكُلْ. (S in art.
اكل.) ― -b7-
شَرِبَ also signifies He was, or became, satisfied with drinking:
(TA:) and in like manner
شَرِبَت is said of camels. (A 'Obeyd, S, TA.) And He was, or
became, thirsty; (K, TA;) thus having two contr. significations; (TA;) as
also ↓
أَشْرَبَ . (K, TA.) ― -b8- Also, and ↓
أَشْرَبَ , His camels were, or became, satisfied with
drinking: and, i. e. both these verbs, his camels were, or became,
thirsty: (K, TA:) or the former verb signifies, or signifies also, (accord.
to different copies of the K,) his camel was, or became, weak. (K,
TA.) -A2-
شَرِبَ
بِهِ, and
بِهِ ↓
أَشْرَبَ , He lied against him. (K.) -A3-
شَرَبَ, aor.
شَرُبَ , (O, K, TA,) inf. n.
شَرْبٌ, (O, TA,) He understood: (O, K, TA:) on the authority of AA.
(TA.) [In a copy of the A, the verb in this sense is written
شَرِبَ; and app. not through the fault of the transcriber, for it is there
mentioned as tropical: but in the O, it is said to be like
كَتَبَ, aor.
شَرُبَ , inf. n.
كَتْبٌ; and in the K, to be like
نَصَرَ.] One says,
شَرَبَ
مَا
أُلْقِىَ
إِِلَيْهِ, i. e. He understood [what was told to him]. (TA.)
And one says to a stupid person,
اُحْلُبْ
ثُمَّ
اشْرُبْ
Kneel thou; then understand. (O, TA. See also 1 in art.
حلب.) 2
شَرَّبَ [شرّبهُ,
inf. n.
تَشْرِيبٌ, He made him to drink water &c.; and so, as is indicated in
the S and K &c., and as is well known, ↓
أَشْرَبَهُ : and]
شَرَّبْتُ
المَآءَ I gave to drink the water; as also ↓
أَشْرَبْتُهُ . (TA.) ― -b2- [Hence,] one says,
ظَلَّ
مَالِى
يُؤَكَّلُ
وَيُشَرَّبُ [lit. My cattle passed the day made to eat and made to drink,]
i. e. (assumed tropical:) pasturing as they pleased. (S, TA.) And
شَرَّبَ
مَالِى
وَأَكَّلَهُ [lit. He made people to drink my property, and made
them to eat it; or to drink the milk of my cattle, and to eat the
flesh thereof;] i. e. (assumed tropical:) he fed people, (S,) or
gave people to drink and to eat, (TA,) [of] my property, or
cattle. (S, TA.) ― -b3- And
شرّب
الأَرْضَ
وَالنَّخْلَ (assumed tropical:) He gave drink to the land and the
palm-trees. (TA.) ― -b4- And
شرّب
لُقْمَةً
بِالدَّسَمِ (assumed tropical:) [He imbued, or soaked, a morsel,
or mouthful, with grease, or gravy]. (TA in art.
روغ.) ― -b5- And
شَرَّبْتُ
القِرْبَةَ, (A 'Obeyd, S,) inf. n.
تَشْرِيبٌ, (A 'Obeyd, K,) (assumed tropical:) I rendered the water-skin
sweet; (K;) I put into the water-skin, it being new, clay and
water, in order to render its savour sweet. (A 'Obeyd, S.) ― -b6- And
شُرِّبَ
الزَّرْعُ
الدَّقِيقَ: see 1, in the latter half of the paragraph. 3
شاربهُ , (S, A, K, TA,) inf. n.
مُشَارَبَةٌ and
شِرَابٌ, He drank with him; namely, a man. (TA.) ― -b2- [And He
watered his camels, &c. with his, i. e. with another's : or he
drew water with him for the watering of camels &c.:] see an ex. of the
latter inf. n. in a verse cited voce
شَرِيبٌ. 4
أَشْرَبَ see 2, in two places. One says,
أَشْرَبْتُ
الإِِبِلَ
حَتَّى
شَرِبَتْ [I made the camels to drink until they were satisfied with
drinking; or I watered the camels, or gave them to drink,
&c.]; (S, TA;) [for]
أَشْرَبَ is syn. with
سَقَى. (K.) ― -b2- [Hence,]
الثَّوْبُ
يُشْرَبُ
الصٍّبْغَ: see 5. And
أُشْرِبَ
الثَّوْبُ
حُمْرَةً (tropical:) The garment, or piece of cloth, was imbued,
or saturated, with redness. (A.) And
أَشْرَبَ
اللَّوْنَ (tropical:) He saturated the colour [with dye]. (K,
TA.) And
أُشْرِبَ
لَوْنًا (assumed tropical:) It was intermixed with a colour; as also
↓
اِشْرَابَّ . (TA.) And
أُشْرِبَ
الأَبْيَضُ
حُمْرَةً (assumed tropical:) The white was suffused, or tinged
over, with redness. (S, TA.) ― -b3- [Hence,
أُشْرِبَ is also said of a sound, as meaning (assumed tropical:) It was
mixed with another sound; as appears from the words here following:]
حِسُّ
الصَّوْتِ
فِى
الفَمِ
مِمَّا
لَا
إِِشْرَابَ
لَهُ
مِنْ
صَوْتِ
الصَّدْرِ (assumed tropical:) [The faint, or gentle, sound of the
voice in the mouth, of such kind as has no mixture of the voice of the chest].
(K in art.
همس.) ― -b4- [Hence also,]
أُشْرِبَ
الزَّرْعُ: see 1, latter half. ― -b5- And
أُشْرِبَ
فِى
قَلْبِهِ
حُبَّهُ, (S,) or
أُشْرِبَ
حُبَّ
فُلَانٍ, (K,) or
حُبَّ
فُلَانَةَ, (A,) (tropical:) [He was made to imbibe into his heart the
love of him, or of such a man, or of such a female;] meaning
that the love of him, or of her, pervaded, or commingled with, his heart, (S, A,
K, TA,) like beverage. (TA.) Whence, in the Kur [ii. 87],
وَأُشْرِبُوا
فِى
قُلُوبِهِمُ
الْعِجْلَ,
for
حُبَّ
العِجْلِ, (S, TA,) i. e. (assumed tropical:) And they were made to imbibe
[into their hearts] the love of the calf.. (Zj, TA.) ― -b6- And
رَفَعَ
يَدَهُ
فَأَشْرَبَهَا
الهَوَآءَ
ثُمَّ
قَالَ
بِهَا
عَلَى
قَذَالِهِ (tropical:) [He raised his hand, and made the air to swallow it
up, (i. e. raised it so high and so quickly that it became hardly seen,)
then gave a blow with it upon the back of his head]. (A, TA.) ― -b7- And
أَشْرَبْتَنِى
مَا
لَمْ
أَشْرَبْ: see 1, latter half. ― -b8- And one says to his she-camel,
لَأُشْرِبَنَّكِ
الحِبَالَ (tropical:) [I will assuredly put upon thee the ropes, or
cords], and
العِقَالَ [the cord, or rope, with which the fore shank and the
arm are bound together]. (A.) [Or]
اشربهُ means (tropical:) He put the rope, or cord, upon his neck;
namely, a man's, (K, TA,) and a camel's, and a horse's or the like: (TA:) and
اشرب
الخَيْلَ he put the ropes, or cords, upon the necks of the horses.
(K,) And
اشرب
إِِبِلَهُ (tropical:) He tied his camels, every one to another.
(K, TA.) -A2-
اشرب as an intrans. verb: see 1, last quarter, in two places. ― -b2- Also
He (a man, TA) attained to the time for the drinking of his camels.
(K, * TA.) -A3-
اشرب
بِهِ: see 1, near the end of the paragraph. 5
تَشَرَّبَ see 1, first sentence. ― -b2- Hence one says, (Mgh,)
تشرّب
الثَّوْبُ
العَرَقَ, (S, Mgh, * K,) and
الصِّبْغَ, (A, Mgh, L,) (tropical:) The garment, or piece of
cloth, imbibed, or absorbed, (S, A, Mgh, * L, K,) the sweat,
(S, Mgh, K,) and the dye; (A, Mgh, L;) as though it drank it by little
and little: (Mgh:) and [in like manner] one says,
الثَّوْبُ
يشرب
الصِّبْغَ [app. ↓
يُشْرَبُ , (like as one says
يُشْرَبُ
حُمْرَةً, as shown in the next preceding paragraph,) meaning (assumed
tropical:) The garment, or piece of cloth, is made to imbibe, or
absorb, the dye]. (TA.) [It is said that] the verb is not used
intransitively in the [proper] language of the Arabs. (Mgh.) [But] one says,
تشرّب
الصِّبْغُ
فِى
الثَّوْبِ, meaning (tropical:) The dye pervaded the garment, or
piece of cloth: (K, * TA:) and
الصِّبْغُ
يَتَشَرَّبُ
الثَّوْبَ (tropical:) [The dye pervades the garment, or piece of
cloth]. (TA.) [See also the explanation of a verse cited voce
تَسَقَّى.] 10
استشرب
لَوْنُهُ (assumed tropical:) His, or its, colour became intense.
(K.) And
استشربت
القَوْسُ
حُمْرَةً (assumed tropical:) The bow became intensely red: such is
the case when it is made of the [tree called]
شَرْيَان. (AHn, (TA.) 11
اِشْرَابَّ : see 4, near the beginning. Q. Q. 4
اِشْرَأَبّ , (S, A, O, K,) inf. n.
اِشْرِئْبَابٌ, (S, O,) (tropical:) He raised his head like the camel that
has satisfied his thirst on the occasion of drinking: (A:) or he
stretched forth his neck to look: (S, A, O, K:) not improbably, from
الشُّرْبُ in its well known sense, as though he did so when preparing to
drink: (O:) or, as is said in the L, from
مَشْرَبَةٌ as syn. with
غُرْفَةٌ: (TA:) you say,
اِشْرَأَبَّ
لَهُ, (S, A,) or
إِِلَيْهِ, (K,) or both; (TA;) [the former of which may be rendered He
raised his head at it, or he stretched forth his neck at it to look;
or, as also the latter, he stretched forth his neck to look at it;]
namely, a thing: (S:) or
اشرأبّ originally means he stretched forth his neck in preparing to drink
water: and then, in consequence of frequency of usage, he raised his
head, and stretched forth his neck, in looking; and hence is trans. by means
of
إِِلَى: (Har p. 152:) or he raised, or exalted, himself. (K, *
TA.)
يَشْرَئِبُّونَ
لِصَوْتِهِ, occurring in a trad., means (tropical:) They will raise their
heads at his voice to look at him. (TA.) And
اِشْرَأَبَّ
النِّفَاقُ
وَارْتَدَّتِ
العَرَبُ, in another trad., means (tropical:) Hypocrisy exalted itself
[and the Arabs apostatized, or revolted from their religion].
(TA.)
شَرْبٌ an inf. n. of
شَرِبَ [q. v.]. (S, A, Msb, K, &c.) -A2- And a pl., (S, Msb,) or [rather] a
quasipl. n., (ISd, TA,) of
شَارِبٌ, q. v. (S, ISd, Msb, TA.) -A3- [Golius assigns to it also the
meaning of “ Linum tenue, ” as on the authority of Meyd.]
شُرْبٌ an inf. n. of
شَرِبَ [q. v.]; (S, A, Msb, K, &c.;) like ↓
شِرْبٌ : (S, A, K:) or a simple subst. [signifying The act of
drinking]; (AO, S Msb, K;) as also ↓
شِرْبٌ . (AO, S, K.) -A2- In the phrase
أَخُوكَ
شُرْبٌ it is used as [an epithet,] meaning
ذُو
شُرْبٍ [which may be regarded as virtually syn. with
شَارِبٌ or as similar to this latter but intensive in signification]. (Ham
p. 194.)
شِرْبٌ : see the next preceding paragraph, in two places. ― -b2- Also
Water, (K, TA,) itself; so some say; (TA;) as also ↓
مِشْرَبٌ , (K, accord. to the TA,) with kesr, (TA,) or ↓
مَشْرَبٌ , (so in the CK and in my MS. copy of the K,) i. e. water
that one drinks; so says AZ: pl. of the former
أَشْرَابٌ. (TA.) [See also
شَرَابٌ.] ― -b3- [And A draught of milk: see an ex. in a verse cited
in art.
سلف, conj. 4.] ― -b4- And A share, or portion that falls to one's
lot, of water: (S, Mgh, Msb, K:) or so
شِرْبٌ
مِنْ
مَآءٍ. (ISk, TA.) It is said in a prov.,
آخِرُهَا
أَقَلُّهَا
شِرْبًا [The last of them is the one of them that has the least share of
water]: originating from the watering of camels; because the last of them
sometimes comes to the water when the watering-trough has been exhausted. (S.
[See also Freytag's Arab. Prov. i. 61.]) ― -b5- As a law-term, it means The
use of water [or the right to use it] for the watering of
sown-fields and of beasts. (Mgh.) ― -b6- Also A wateringplace; syn.
مَوْرِدٌ: (AZ, K:) pl. as above. (TA.) ― -b7- And (assumed tropical:) A
time of drinking: (K:) but they say that it denotes the time only by a sort
of tropical application; and they differ respecting the connexion of this
meaning with the proper meaning. (MF, TA.)
شَرَبٌ : see
شَرَبَةٌ, in two places.
شَرْبَةٌ A single act of drinking. (S.) ― -b2- And A single draught,
or the quantity that is drunk at once, of water. (S.) It is said in a
prov.,
نِعْمَ
مِعْلَقُ
الشَّرْبَةِ
هٰذَا [Excellent, or most excellent, is the traveller's
drinking-cup, or bowl, that will hold a single draught, namely,
this!]: the
مِعْلَق is said by As to be a drinking-cup or bowl which the rider upon a
camel suspends [to his saddle]: (Meyd:) it is said in describing a camel: (TA:)
and it means that, to the place of alighting to which he desires to go, he is
content with a single draught, not wanting another: (Meyd, TA:) the prov. is
applied to him who, in his affairs, is content with his own opinion, not wanting
that of another person. (Meyd.)
شَرْبَةُ
أَبِى
الجَهْمِ [The draught of Abu-l-Jahm] is said of a thing that is
sweet, or pleasant, but in its result unwholesome: (MF, TA:) Abu-l-Jahm was a
frequent visiter of the Khaleefeh El-Mansoor El-'Abbásee, who, finding him
troublesome, ordered that a poisoned draught should be given to him, in his
presence: which having been done, Abu-l-Jahm, pained by the draught, rose to
depart; and being asked by the Khaleefeh whither he was going, he answered,
Whither thou hast sent me, O Prince of the Faithful. (MF.) ― -b3- In the
Mo'allakah of Tarafeh, it is applied to A draught of wine. (EM p. 87.) ―
-b4- [In the conventional language of the physicians, it is a term applied to
A dose of medicine, such as is drunk and also such as is eaten.]
-A2- Also A palm-tree that grows from the date stone: (K:) pl.
شَرَبَاتٌ. (TA. [It seems to be there added that
شَرَائِبُ and
شَرَابِيبُ are also its pls.: the former may be like
ضَرَائِرُ pl. of
ضَرَّةٌ: the latter is app. a mistranscription, and should perhaps be
شَرَائِيبُ, for
شَرَائِبُ; like
مَحَامِيرُ for
مَحَامِرُ, &c.])
شُرْبَةٌ , (K,) or
شُرْبَةٌ
مِنْ
مَآءٍ, (S,) The quantity of water that satisfies thirst. (S, K.) ―
-b2-
شُرْبَةٌ is also syn. with ↓
إِِشْرَابٌ [originally an inf. n.] meaning (assumed tropical:) A
colour tinged over with another colour; as in the saying,
فِيهِ
شُرْبَةٌ
مِنْ
حُمْرَةٍ (assumed tropical:) [In him is a colour tinged with redness]:
(S, TA:) [and] (tropical:) somewhat of redness; as in the phrase,
فِيهِ
شُرْبَةٌ (tropical:) [In him is somewhat of redness]: (A:) or
(assumed tropical:) a redness in the face: (K:) or (assumed tropical:)
whiteness mixed with redness. (IAar, TA voce
حُسْبَةٌ.)
شَرَبَةٌ [The act, or habit, of] much drinking. (K.) One
says,
إِِنَّهُ
لَذًو
شَرَبَةٍ, meaning Verily he is one who drinks much. (AA, AHn, TA.)
-A2- It is also allowable as a pl. of
شَارِبٌ [q. v.]. (Msb.) -A3- Also A small trough, (S, K, TA,)
made, (S,) or dug, (TA,) around a palm-tree, (S, K, TA,) and
around any other kind of tree, and filled with water, (TA,) holding
enough to irrigate it fully, (K, TA,) so that it is plentifully irrigated
thereby: (S, TA:) pl. ↓
شَرَبٌ [or rather this is a coll. gen. n., of which the former is the n.
un.,] and [the pl. properly so termed is]
شَرَبَاتٌ. (S.) ― -b2- And i. q.
كُرْدُ
دَبْرَةٍ, (K, TA,) which is syn. with
مَسْقَاةٌ: (TA:) [from a comparison of the explanations of all of these
words, it seems to mean A channel of water for the irrigation of a plot,
or tract, of sown land: or, if the explanation
مسقاة, in the TA, be conjectural, the meaning may be a portion of such
land, having a raised border to retain the water admitted upon it:] pl.
شَرَبَاتٌ and [coll. gen. n.] ↓
شَرَبٌ [as above]. (TA.) -A4- Also Thirst. (Lh, T, O, K.) One
says,
لَمْ
تَزَلْ
بِهِ
شَرَبَةٌ
اليَوْمَ He has not ceased to have thirst to-day. (Lh, TA.) And
جَآءَتِ
الإِِبِلُ
وَبِهَا
شَرَبَةٌ The camels came thirsty. (T, O.) And
طَعَامٌ
ذُو
شَرَبَةٍ Food wherewith one has not sufficient water to satisfy thirst.
(O, TA.) Accord. to the L,
شَرَبَةٌ signifies The thirst of cattle after the being satisfied with
fresh pasture; because this invites to drink. (TA.) ― -b2- And Vehemence
of heat. (K.) One says,
يَوْمٌ
ذُو
شَرَبَةٍ A day of vehement heat, in which is drunk more water than at
other times. (TA.)
شُرَبَةٌ One who drinks much; (ISk, S, K;) as also ↓
شَرُوبٌ and ↓
شَرَّابٌ . (S.) One says
رَجُلٌ
أُكَلَةٌ
شُرَبَةٌ A man who eats and drinks much. (ISk, S.)
شُرْبُبٌ , applied to herbage, i. q.
غَمْلَى; (O, K;) i. e. Tangled and dense, one part above another.
(O.)
شَرَبَّةٌ , [said to be] the only word of this form except
جَرَبَّةٌ, (K,) [but to this should be added
بَغَتَّةٌ, inf. n. of
بَغَتَهُ,] A way, mode, or manner, of being, or
acting &c. (S, O, K.) One says,
مَا
زَالَ
فُلَانٌ
عَلَى
شَرَبَّةٍ
وَاحِدَةٍ Such a one ceased not to be [employed] upon one
affair. (S, O.) -A2- And A tract of land, (K, TA,) soft, or
plain, (TA,) producing herbs, but having in it no trees. (K, TA.) ―
-b2- [And] The side of a valley. (Mgh.)
شَرَابٌ A beverage, or drink, (Mgh, L, Msb, K,) of any of the
liquids, (Mgh, Msb,) or of anything that is not chewed, (L,) or of
whatever kind and in whatever state it be; thus in a copy of the K: (TA:)
and syn. with
شَرَابٌ are ↓
شَرِيبٌ and ↓
شَرُوبٌ , (K,) accord. to a saying attributed to AZ: (TA:) or these two
have another meaning, expl. in the next paragraph: (K:) the pl. of
شَرَابٌ is
أَشْرِبَةٌ; (Mgh, TA;) or it has no pl., as is said in the K in art.
نهر [accord. to one or more of the copies; but see
نَهَارٌ, where it is shown that in copies of the K, as well as in the S, the
word to which this statement relates is
سَرَابٌ, with the unpointed
س]. (TA.) The lawyers [and generally the post-classical writers, and
sometimes others,] mean thereby [Win, and] such beverage as is
forbidden. (Mgh.) [Also Sirup: pl.
شَرَابَاتٌ: so in the language of the present day.]
شَرُوبٌ and ↓
شَرِيبٌ are syn. with
شَرَابٌ, q. v.: or both signify Water inferior to the
عَذْب [or sweet]: (K:) or [brackish water; i. e.] water
between the salt and the sweet: (AO, S:) or water drinkable, or
fit to be drunk, but in which is disagreeableness: (Msb:) or the former
signifies water that has some degree of sweetness, and is sometimes drunk by
men notwithstanding what is in it; and ↓ the latter, water inferior to
what is sweet, and not drunk by men save in cases of necessity, but sometimes
drunk by cattle: (IKtt, TA:) or ↓ the latter, the sweet: and the
former is said to signify water that is drunk: (TA:) or ↓ the latter,
water that has no sweetness in it, but is sometimes drunk by men
notwithstanding what is in it; and the former, water inferior to this in
sweetness, and not drunk by men save in cases of necessity: (AZ, T, M, TA:)
or, accord. to Lth, ↓
شَرِيبٌ and ↓
شِرِّيبٌ signify water in which are bitterness and saltness, but not
abstained from as drink: and
مَآءٌ
شَرُوبٌ and
طَعِيمٌ are syn.: and ↓
مَآءٌ
مِشْرَبٌ is syn. with
شَرُوبٌ: this last word is used alike as masc. and fem. and sing. and pl.
(TA.) It is said in a prov., originally in a trad.,
جُرْعَةُ
شَرُوبٍ
أَنْفَعُ
مِنْ
عَذْبٍ
مُوبٍ [expl. in art.
وبأ]. (TA.) -A2- Also,
شَرُوبٌ, A man who drinks vehemently. (TA.) See also
شُرَبَةٌ: and
شِرِّيبٌ. ― -b2- And (assumed tropical:) A she-camel desiring the
stallion. (K.)
شَرِيبٌ : see
شَرَابٌ: and
شَرُوبٌ; the latter in five places. -A2- Also One who drinks with
another: (S, K:) and one who waters his camels with those of another:
of the measure
فَعِيلٌ in the sense of the measure
مُفَاعِلٌ: (S:) and one who draws water, or is given to drink,
with another. (IAar, K.) You say,
هُوَ
شَرِيِبِى [He is my companion in drinking; or in watering his
camels with mine: &c.]. (TA.) And a rájiz says, “
رُبَّ
شَرِيبٍ
لَكَ
ذِى
حُسَاسِ
كَالحَزِّ
بِالمَوَاسِى ↓
شِرَابُهُ
” [Many a one who waters his camels with thine, or who draws water
with thee for the watering of camels, having an evil disposition, his
watering &c. is like the cutting with razors]: i. e., thy waiting for
him at the watering-trough is [a cause of] killing to thee and to thy camels.
(TA.)
شَرِيبَةٌ
ذ is expl. in the S as meaning A sheep, or goat, which one
drives back, or brings back, from the water, when the sheep, or
goats, are satisfied with drinking, and which they follow: but in some of
the copies in a marginal note stating that the correct word is
سَرِيبَةٌ, with the unpointed
س. (TA.)
شَرَابِىٌّ A cup-bearer: or a butler: and a seller of wine
or of sirup. (MA.)
شُرَأْبِيبَةٌ a subst. (K) from
اِشْرَأَبَّ [q. v.; as such signifying (tropical:) A raising of the head
like the camel that has satisfied his thirst on the occasion of drinking:
&c.]: (S, K, TA:) like
طُمَأْنِينَةٌ [from
اِطْمَأَنَّ]. (K, TA.)
شَرَّابٌ : see
شُرَبَةٌ: and what here next follows.
شِرِّيبٌ Addicted to
شَرَاب [i. e. drink, or wine]; (S, K, TA;) like
خِمِّيرٌ; (S;) as also ↓
شَرَّابٌ and ↓
شَرُوبٌ and ↓
شَارِبٌ . (TA.) -A2- See also
شَرُوبٌ. [
شُرَّابَةٌ A tassel: so in the language of the present day: probably
post-classical: pl.
شَرَارِيبُ.]
شَارِبٌ Drinking, or a drinker: pl.
شَارِبُونَ (Msb) and ↓
شَرْبٌ , like as
صَحْبٌ is of
صَاحِبٌ, (S, Msb,) or, accord. to ISd, (TA,)
شَرْبٌ, which signifies people drinking, (K, TA,) and assembling
for drinking, is a quasi.-pl. n. of
شَارِبٌ, being like
رَكْبٌ and
رَجْلٌ; and
شُرُوبٌ, which is said by IAar [and in the S] to be pl. of
شَرْبٌ, is pl. of
شَارِبٌ, like as
شُهُودٌ is of
شَاهِدٌ; (TA;)
شَرَبَةٌ also is allowable as a pl. of
شَارِبٌ, like as
كَفَرَةٌ is pl. of
كَافِرٌ; (Msb;) and
أَشْرُبٌ is pl. of
شَرْبٌ, or it may be an anomalous pl. of
شَارِبٌ: (MF:) the pl.
شُرُوب occurs in the saying of El-Aashà, “
هُوَ
الوَاهِبُ
المُسْمِعَاتِ
الشُّرُو
بَ
بَيْنَ
الحَرِيرِ
وَبَيْنَ
الكَتَنْ
” [He is the giver of female singers to the drinkers, some clad in
silk and some in linen]. (S.) ― -b2- See also
شِرِّيبٌ. ― -b3- [Hence, The mustache; i. e.] the defluent hair
over the mouth; (Msb;) or so
شَوَارِبُ, (Lh, A, K,) which is the pl., (Lh, S, Msb,) as though the sing,
applied to every distinct part: (Lh:) the two [halves] are called
شَارِبَانِ: (S, TA:) or, as some say, only the sing. is used, and the dual
is a mistake: (TA:) accord. to AHát (Msb, TA) and AAF, (TA,) the dual is is
scarcely ever, or never, used; but accord. to AO, the Kilábees say
شَارِبَانِ, with regard to the two extremities: (Msb, TA:) and the pl., (A,
K,) or, accord. to the T &c., the dual, (TA,) signifies the long portions
[of the hair] on the two sides of the
سَبَلَة [q. v.]: (T, A, K, TA:) or (K, TA)
شَارِبٌ signifies the
سَبَلَة altogether, (A, K, TA,) as some say; but this is not correct.
(TA.) One says,
طَرَّ
شَارِبُ
الغُلَامِ [The mustache of the boy, or young man, grew forth].
(S.) ― -b4- And hence, as being likened to the two long portions of hair on each
side of the
سَبَلَة, the
شَارِبَانِ of the sword, (T, TA,) i. e. (tropical:) Two long projections
(أَنْفَانِ
طَوِيلَانِ) at the lower part of the hilt, (A, * K, TA,) [extending
from the guard,] one on one side and the other on the other side of the
blade, (T, * TA,) the
غَاشِيَة [or leathern covering of the scabbard] being beneath
them: so says ISh. (TA.) ― -b5-
الشَّوَارِبُ also signifies (tropical:) The
عُرُوق [or ducts] of the
حُلْقُوم [or windpipe]: (A:) or certain ducts (عُرُوق)
in the
حَلْق [i. e. fauces or throat], (K, TA,) that imbibe the
water [or saliva?], being the channels thereof: (TA:) and,
(K,) or, as some say, (TA,) the channels of the water [or saliva?]
(S, K, TA) in the
حَلْق [i. e. fauces or throat] (S) or in the neck: (K,
TA:) or certain ducts (عُرُوق)
adhering to the windpipe, and the lower parts thereof to the lungs: so
says IDrd: or rather, some say, the hinder part thereof [adhering]
to the
وَتِين [or aorta], having tubes from which the voice issues, and
in which choking takes place, and whence the saliva issues: and those of the
horse are said to be [certain ducts] by the side of the
أَوْدَاج [or external jugular veins], where the veterinary surgeon
draws blood by cutting the
اوداج: the sing. seems by implication to be
شَارِبٌ. (TA.) Hence the phrase
حِمَارٌ
صَخِبُ
الشَّوَارِبِ (assumed tropical:) An ass that brays vehemently. (S,
TA.) And
صَخِبُ
الشَّوَارِبِ (tropical:) [A man] having a disagreeable voice: thus
likened to an ass. (A, TA.) ― -b6- Accord. to IAar,
الشَّوَارِبُ signifies [also]
مَجَارِى
المَآءِ
فِى
العَيْنِ, which AM supposes to mean The channels of water in the spring,
or source; not in the eye. (L, TA.) ― -b7-
سُنْبُلٌ
شَارِبُ
قَمْحٍ means (tropical:) Ears of corn becoming, or being, pervaded
by the farina: (A, TA:) or, in which the grain has hardened, and nearly
come to maturity. (TA.) -A2- Also (assumed tropical:) Weakness, or
feebleness, in any animal: (K, * TA:) or a strain (عِرْق)
thereof; as in the saying,
نِعْمَ
البَعِيرُ
هٰذَا
لَوْلَا
أَنَّ
فِيهِ
شَارِبَ
خَوَرٍ (assumed tropical:) [Excellent, or most excellent, were the
camel, this one, were there not in him a strain of weakness or feebleness].
(TA.)
شَارِبَةٌ [a subst. from
شَارِبٌ, made such by the affix
ة,] A people, or party, dwelling upon the side (ضَفَّة,
in some copies of the K
صُفَّة,) of a river, (S, * A, K,) and to whom belongs the water
thereof. (S.)
إِِشْرَابٌ as syn. with
شُرْبَةٌ: see the latter.
مَشْرَبٌ
ذ is a noun of place, [and of time,] as well as an inf. n.: [i. e.] it
signifies [A place, and a time, of drinking: or] the quarter
(وَجْه)
whence one drinks: (S, TA:) and a place to which one comes to drink at
a river or rivulet: (TA:) and ↓
مَشْرَبَةٌ , (S, Msb, K, TA,) not, as is implied in the K,
مَشْرُبَةٌ also, (TA,) signifies [the same, as is indicated in the A; or]
a place whence people drink; (Msb, TA; *) i. q.
مَشْرَعَةٌ; (K;) or like a
مَشْرَعَة. (S, TA.) One says,
هٰذَا
مَشْرَبُ
القَوْمِ and ↓
مَشْرَبَتُهُمْ [This is the people's, or party's,
drinkingplace, or place whence they drink]. (A.) And it is said in a
trad., ↓
مَلْعُونٌ
مَنْ
أَحَاطَ
عَلَى
مَشْرَبَةٍ , (S, TA,) i. e. [Cursed is he] who takes entirely
to himself, debarring others from it, a place whence people drink. (TA.) ―
-b2- See also
شِرْبٌ.
مُشْرَبٌ
حُمْرَةً (tropical:) A man whose complexion is tinged over [or
intermixed] with redness. (TA.) [See 4: and see also
مُشَرَّبٌ.]
رَجُلٌ
مُشْرِبٌ A man whose camels have drunk [until satisfied with
drinking: see
أَشْرَبَ near the end of the first paragraph]. (TA.) And A man whose
camels are thirsty, or who is himself thirsty. (TA.)
اِسْقِنِى
فَإِِنَّنِى
مُشْرِبٌ is a saying mentioned by IAar, and expl. by him as meaning
عَطْشَانُ: it means [Give thou me to drink, for] I am thirsty
or my camels are thirsty. (TA.)
مِشْرَبٌ : see
شِرْبٌ: and see also
شَرُوبٌ.
مَشْرَبَةٌ : see
مَشْرَبٌ, in three places. ― -b2- Hence, (A, TA,) An upper chamber;
syn.
غُرْفَةٌ; (S, A, Msb, K, TA;) and
عُِلِّيَّةٌ; (S, * K;) both of which signify the same; (MF, TA;) because
people drink therein; (A, TA;) as also ↓
مَشْرُبَةٌ : (S, Msb, K, TA:) pl.
مَشَارِبُ, (TA,) syn. with
عَلَالِىُّ, (S,) and
مَشْرَبَاتٌ. (TA.) ― -b3- And the former, (K, TA,) not, as is implied in the
K, the latter also, (TA,) A
صُفَّة [i. e. roofed vestibule or the like]: (K, TA:) or the
like of a
صُفَّة in the front of a
غُرْفَة [expl. above]. (TA.) ― -b4- Also the former, (K, TA,) not, as is
implied in the K, both words, (TA,) Soft, or plain, land, in which is
always herbage, (K, TA,) i. e. green and juicy herbage. (TA.) ― -b5-
See also
مِشْرَبَةٌ. -A2- [Also A cause of drinking: a word of the class of
مَبْخَلَةٌ &c.] One says
طَعَامٌ
مَشْرَبَةٌ Food [that is a cause of drinking, or] upon
which one drinks much water: (T, TA:) or
طَعَامٌ
ذُو
مَشْرَبَةٍ food upon which the eater drinks. (A.)
مَشْرُبَةٌ : see the next preceding paragraph.
مِشْرَبَةٌ , (S, A, K,) and MF says that ↓
مَشْرَبَةٌ is allowable in the same sense, mentioning it as on the
authority of Fei, [in my copy of whose lexicon, the Msb, I do not find it,]
(TA,) A drinkingvessel. (S, A, K.)
مُشَرَّبٌ
حُمْرَةً (tropical:) A man whose complexion is much tinged over [or
much intermixed] with redness. (TA.) [See also
مُشْرَبٌ.] ― -b2-
مُشَرَّبَةٌ is an epithet applied to Certain letters the utterance of
which, in pausing, is accompanied with a sort of blowing, but not with the same
stress as the [generality of those that are termed]
مَجْهُورَة: they are
زَاى and
ظَآء and
ذَال and
ضَاد: [and Lumsden (in his Ar. Gr. p. 47) states that
رَآء belongs to the same class, likewise: and, as some say,
نُون when movent:] Sb says that some of the Arabs
utter with more vehemence of voice than others. (TA.) Credit:
Lane
Lexicon