1
قَرِدَ , aor.
قَرَدَ , (S, L, K,) inf. n.
قَرَدٌ, (S, L),
It (wool)
fell off by
degrees from the sheep, and became compacted in lumps,
or
clotted: (S:) or
it (wool, L, and hair,
L, K)
became contracted together, (L, K,)
and
knotted in its extremities; (L;) as also ↓
تقرّد . (L, K.) ― -b2-
It (a tanned skin)
became worm-eaten. (S, K.) -A2- (tropical:)
He
(a man)
was, or
became, silent by reason of
impotence of speech; (S, K;) as also ↓
اقرد and ↓
قرّد : (K:) or
he was, or
became,
abject, and
humble, or
submissive: or,
acc. to IAar ↓
اقرد signifies
he (a man)
was, or
became, silent by reason of abjectness: [see also
خرِدَ:] or, acc. to another,
he was, or
became, still and abject. (TA.) See
اقرد below. The verbs are used in these senses
because, when a raven or crow lights upon a camel and
picks off the ticks (
قرْدَان),
the beast remains still on account of the ease which it
occasions him. (TA.) -A3-
قَرَدَ, (L, K,) aor.
قَرِدَ , (K,) inf. n.
قَرْدٌ, (L,)
He collected together, and gained,
(L, K,)
for his family. (L.) [You say]
قَرَدَ
فِى
السِّقَآءِ He collected clarified butter in the
skin; (L, K;) as also
قَرَدَ
سَمْنًا
فى
السِّقَآءِ: (S, L:) or
he collected milk in the
skin. (L, K.) See also
قَلَدَ. 2
قرّدهُ , inf. n.
تَقْرِيدٌ, (K,)
He plucked off his (a
camel's, S, A)
قِرْدَان [or
ticks]: (S, A, K:)
it (a
raven, or crow)
lighted upon him (a camel),
and picked off his
قِرْدَان [or
ticks]. (A.) ― -b2- [Hence,]
(tropical:)
He rendered him (a camel, L,)
submissive, or
tractable: (L, K:) because a
camel, when he is freed from his ticks (
قِرْدَان),
becomes quiet. (L.) [And, of a camel (?) it is said,]
قرّد, (tropical:)
he became submissive, and
tractable. (K.) [And]
قرّدهُ, (A, L, K,) and ↓
نَزَعَ
قُرَادَهُ , (A,) [signify] (tropical:)
He
beguiled him (S, A, L, K) and
wheedled, or
cajoled, him; (L;) because a man, when he desires to
take a refractory camel, first plucks off his ticks (
يُقَرِّدُهُ).
(S, L.) See also
قَرِدَ. 4
اقرد He (a camel)
became still,
quiet, or
tranquil, in consequence of his having
his ticks pulled off. (A.) [And hence] (tropical:)
He (a camel)
went at a gentle pace, not
shaking, or jolting, his rider. (A.) ― -b2-
(tropical:)
He was, or
became, silent,
(K,)
still, or
quiet, (S, K,)
and
submissive, (K,) and
feigned himself dead.
(S, K. See
قَرِدَ in two places.) ― -b3- (tropical:)
He
(a man)
clave to the ground by reason of abjectness,
or
submissiveness. (A.) See art.
خَرِدَ. 5
تقرّد , see
قَرِدَ ― -b2-
It (flour)
became heaped up,
one
part upon another. (L, from a trad.)
قِرْدٌ [The
ape; the
monkey;
and the
baboon;]
a certain animal, (TA,)
well known: (L, K:) fem. with
ة: (S, L, Msb:) pl. [of pauc., of the masc.,]
أَقْرُدٌ, (L, Msb,) and
أَقْرَادٌ, (L, K,) and [of mult., of the same,]
قُرُودٌ and
قِرَدَةٌ, (S, L, Msb, K,) and [quasi-pl. n.]
قَرِدَةٌ; (K;) and pl. of the fem., (S, L, Msb,)
قِرَدٌ. (S, L, Msb, K.) Hence the proverb
أَزْنَى
مِنْ
قِرْدٍ [
More incontinent than an ape];
because the
قِرْد is the most incontinent of animals: (K:) such
is generally said to be the meaning of this proverb:
(TA:) or (accord. to A'Obeyd, S, L) by
قرد is here meant a man of the tribe of Hudheyl,
named Kird, the son of Mo'áwiyeh. (S, L, K.) -A2-
اِبْنُ
القِرْدِ The
حَوْدَل. (TA in art.
بنى.)
قَرَدٌ [a coll. gen. n.]
Refuse of
wool; (L, K;) afterwards applied also to
soft
hair (
وَبَر),
and other hair, and flax: (L:) or
soft hair
and wool that fall off by degrees from the animals, and
become compacted in lumps, or clotted: (L, K:) or
refuse of wool, and what falls off by degrees from the
sheep, and becomes compacted in lumps, or
clotted: (S:) or
bad wool: (R:) or the
worst of wool and soft hair, and what is picked up
thereof from the ground: (Nh:) a piece thereof is
termed
قَرَدَةٌ. (S.) It is said in a proverb,
عَكَرَتْ
عَلَى
الغَزْلِ
بِأَخَرَةٍ
فَلَمْ
تَدَعْ
بِنَجْدٍ
قَرَدَةٌ,
عَكَرَتْ meaning
عَطَفَتْ, [
She returned to spinning at last, and
left not in Nejd a piece of refuse of wool]: (S, L:)
in the K,
عَثَرَتْ is put for
عَكَرَتْ; and both readings are mentioned by the
relaters of proverbs: [
عثرت
على
الغزل app. signifies she applied herself by chance
to spinning:] the proverb is applied to him who neglects
a needful business when it is possible, and seeks to
accomplish it when it is beyond his reach: (K:) its
origin is the fact, that a woman neglects spinning while
she finds that which she may spin, (of cotton or flax
&c., L,) until, when it is beyond her reach, she seeks
for refuse of wool among sweepings and rubbish. (L, K.)
― -b2- Also,
Palmbranches stripped of their leaves:
n. un. with
ة. (K.) ― -b3- Also,
A thing like down, sticking
to the [
plant called]
طُرْثُوث. (K.) ― -b4- Also,
Little things, [i.
e.,
little flocks of clouds,]
less than [
what
are termed]
سَحَاب [or
clouds in the common acceptation of
the term]
not conjoined; as also ↓
مُتَقَرِّدٌ ; (K;) in some copies of the K ↓
مُتَقَرِّدَةٌ . (TA.) See also
قَرِدٌ. -A2- Also,
A hesitation in speech;
(El-Hejeree, L, K;) because a man who hesitates in his
speech is silent respecting somewhat of that which he
would say. (L.) See also
قَرِدَ.
قَرِدٌ Wool
sticking together, and
compacted in a lump or
lumps: (A:) wool,
and hair,
contracted together, and
knotted in
its extremities. (L.) ― -b2- [Hence,] a cloud, or
collection of clouds,
dissundered, in the tracts of
the sky, in parts, or
portions, one upon another;
cirro-cumulus: (S, L:) or
of which the several
portions are compacted together, (M, K,)
one upon
another; likened to soft hair such as is thus
termed: (M:) or compacted in lumps, not smooth; as also
↓
مُتَقَرِّدٌ . (AHn.) See also
قَرِدٌ. ― -b3-
قَرِدُ
الخَصِيلِ A horse [
compact in frame;]
not
lax. (L, K.) -A2- A camel [&c.] abounding with
قِرْدَان [or
ticks]. (K.) -A3- And
قَرِدٌ [an epithet used as a subst.]
Accumulated
foam which the camel casts forth from his mouth. (TA
in art.
توج. See an ex. in that art. voce
مَتَاوِجُ.)
قَرْدَدٌ (in which the second
د is not incorporated into the first because the
word is quasi-coordinate to the class of those of the
measure
فَعْلَلٌ, S, L,)
Elevated ground; (L, K;) as
also ↓
قُرْدُودَةٌ : (K:) or
elevated and rugged
ground; as also ↓
قُرْدُودٌ : (L:) or
a rugged and elevated
place; (S, L;) as also ↓
قُرْدُودٌ : (S:) or
a tract similar to what
is termed
قُفّ: (As:) or
a prominent portion of ground by
the side of a depressed place, or hollow: (M:) also,
even, or
plain, ground: (L:) pl.
قَرَادِدُ and
قَرَادِيدُ; (S, L, K;) the latter form being adopted
from a dislike to [the concurrence of] the two dáls: (S,
L:) Sb says, that
قَرَادِيدُ is a pl. of
قَرْدَدٌ; but as one also says
قُرْدُودٌ, there is no reason for this assertion:
(L:) ISh says, that ↓
قُرْدُودَةٌ signifies
elevated and rugged
ground producing little herbage, and all of it gibbous:
and Sh, that it signifies
an extended strip [
of
ground], like the
قردودة of the back. (TA.)
قُرْدُودٌ : see
قَرْدَدٌ, in two places.
قُرْدُودَةٌ : see
قَرْدَدٌ. ― -b2-
قُرْدُودَةُ
الظَّهْرِ The upper, or
highest, part of
the back (L, K) of any beast of carriage: (L:) or
the
withers; syn.
سِيسَآءٌ: (As, L:) or
the elevated portion of the
part called the
ثَبَج; (S, L;) also called
قُرْدُودَةُ
الثَّبَجِ. (L.) ― -b3-
قُرْدُودَةُ
الشِّتَآءِ The severity and sharpness of winter:
(K:) or its
sterility and severity. (Aboo-Málik,
L.)
قُرَادٌ [a coll. gen. n., The
tick;
or
ticks;]
a certain insect, (L, K,)
well known, (L,)
that clings to camels and the
like, (Msb,) [
and to dogs &c.,]
and bites
them; (L;)
it is, to them, like the louse to man:
(Msb:) [see also
حَلَمَةٌ and
حَمْنَانٌ:] n. un. with
ة: (Msb:) pl. (of pauc., TA,)
أَقْرِدَةٌ, (L,) and (of mult., L,)
قِرْدَانٌ (S, L, Msb, K) and
قُرُدٌ: (L:)
قُرْدٌ also signifies the same as
قُرَادٌ, (K,) or is a contraction of the pl.
قُرُدٌ. (L.)
أَذَلُّ
مِنْ
قُرَادٍ and
أَسْفَلُ
من
قراد [
Viler than a tick] are proverbial
sayings. (TA.) -A2-
القُرَادُ, (K,) or
قُرَادُ
الثَّدْىِ, (L,) or
قُرَادُ
الصَّدْرِ, (S, A,) (tropical:)
The nipple (
حَلَمَة)
of the breast: (S, A, L, K:) called
قُرَادٌ and
حَلَمَةٌ as being likened. to a large tick: (Mgh in
art.
حلم:)
the nipple of the dug of a mare. (K.)
-A3-
أَمُّ
القِرْدَانِ The place between the fetlock and
hoof of a horse: (S, L:) also,
the part between
the phalanges (
سُلَامَيَات)
of the foot of a camel. (L.) ― -b2- See also 2.
قَرُودٌ A camel
that does not
impatiently avoid having his ticks (
قِرْدَان,)
plucked off. (L, K.) ― -b2- [Hence,] (tropical:)
a still, or
quiet, man. (A.)
قَرَّادٌ A trainer of the
قِرْد [or
ape, monkey, or
baboon].
(K.)
مُتَقَرِّدٌ : see
قَرَدٌ and
قَردٌ.
مُتَقَرِّدَةٌ : see
قَرَدٌ. Credit:
Lane Lexicon