1 أَلَا , (S, M, Mgh, K,) aor. يَأْلُو, (S, Mgh,) inf. n. أَلْوٌ (T, M, Mgh, K) and أُلُوُّ (K, TA [in a copy of the M أَلُوٌّ]) and أُلِىٌّ; (K, TA; [in a copy of the M أَلِىٌّ, and in a copy of the Mgh written with fet-h and damm to the أ;]) and ↓ أَلَّى , (S, M, K,) aor. يُؤَلّى, inf. n. تَأْلِيَةٌ; (S;) and ↓ ائتلى [written with the disjunctive alif اِيتَلَى]; (S, M, K;) [and ↓ تَأَلّى , as appears from an ex. in a verse cited in art. نشب, q. v.;] He fell short; or he fell short of doing what was requisite, or what he ought to have done; or he flagged, or was remiss; syn. قَصَّرَ: (S, M, K; and Fr, IAar, T, Mgh, in explanation of the first of these verbs:) and he was slow, or tardy: (M, K; and AA, T, S, in explanation of the second verb:) or he flagged, or was remiss, or languid, and weak. (A Heyth and T in explanation of all of the above-mentioned verbs except the last.) You say, أَلَا فِى الأَمْرِ, (Mgh,) and ↓ ائتلى فِيهِ, (S,) He fell short, &c., (قَصَّرَ,) in the affair. (S, Mgh.) In the saying, لَم يَأْلُ أَنْ يَعْدِلَ فِى ذلِكَ, i. e. He did not fall short, &c., (لَمْ يُقَصَّرْ,) in acting equitably and equally in that, فِى is suppressed before ان: but in the phrase, لَمْ يَأْلُو مِنَ العَدْلِ, as some relate it, [the meaning intended seems to be, They did not hold back, or the like, from acting equitably; for here] the verb is made to imply the meaning of another verb: and such is the case in the saying, لَا آلُوكَ نُصْحًا, meaning I will not refuse to thee, nor partially or wholly deprive thee of, sincere, honest, or faithful, advice: (Mgh:) or this last signifies I will not flag, or be remiss, nor fall short, to thee in giving sincere, honest, or faithful, advice. (T, S. *) It is said in the Kur [iii. 114], لَا يَإِْلُونَكُمْ خَبَالًا, meaning They will not fall short, or flag, or be remiss, in corrupting you. (IAar, T.) And the same meaning is assigned to the verb in the saying أُولُو الْفَضْلِ مِنْكُمْ, ↓ وَلَا يَأْتَلِ , in the Kur [xxiv. 22], by A'Obeyd: but the preferable rendering in this case is that of A Heyth, which will be found below: see 4. (T.) Ks mentions the phrase, أَقْبَلَ بِضَرْبَةٍ لَا يَأْلُ [He came with a blow, not falling short, &c.], for لا يَأْلُو; like لَا أَدْرِ [for لا أَدْرِى]. (S, M: [but in the copies of the former in my hands, for بِضَرْبَةٍ, I find يَضْرِبُهُ.]) ↓ أَلَّى [with teshdeed] is also said of a dog, and of a hawk, meaning He fell short of attaining the game that he pursued. (TA.) And of a cake of bread, meaning It was slow in becoming thoroughly baked. (IAar, IB.) [See also the phrase لَا دَريْتَ وَلَا ائْتَليْتَ in a later part of this paragraph.] ― -b2- You say also, مَا أَلَوْتُ الشَّيْءَ, (K,) or مَا أَلَوْتُ أَنْ أَفْعَلَهُ, (M,)
inf. n أَلوٌ (M, K) and أُلُوٌّ, (K, TA, [in a copy of the M أُلْوٌ,]) meaning I did not leave, quit, cease from, omit, or neglect, (M, K,) the thing, (K,) or doing it. (M.) And فُلَانٌ لَا يَأْلُو خَيْرًا Such a one does not leave, quit, or cease from, doing good. (M.) And مَا أَلَوْتُ جَهْدًا I did not leave, omit, or neglect, labour, exertion, effort, or endeavour: and the vulgar say, مَا آلُوكَ جَهْدًا; but this is wrong: so says As. (T. [See, however, similar phrases mentioned above.]) -A2- أَلَا, aor. as above, (TA,) inf. n. أَلْوٌ, (IAar, T, TA,) also signifies He strove, or laboured; he exerted himself, or his power or ability; (IAar, T, TA;) as also ↓ تَأَلَّى : (T, TA:) the contr. of a signification before mentioned; i. e. “he flagged;,” or “was remiss, or languid, and weak.” (TA.) You say, أَتَانِى فِى حَاجَةٍ فَأَلَوْتُ فِيهَا He came to me respecting a want, and I strove, or laboured, &c., to accomplish it. (T.) ― -b2- And أَلَاهُ, aor. as above, (T, S,) inf. n. أَلْوٌ, (IAar, T, S,) He was, or became, able to do it: (IAar, T, S:) and ↓ ألّى , inf. n. تَأْلِيَةٌ, also signifies he was, or became, able; (TA;) and so ↓ ائتلى . (ISk, S, TA.) You say, هُوَ يَأْلُو هذَا الأَمْرَ He is able to perform, or accomplish, this affair. (T.) And مَا أَلَوْتُهُ I was not able to do it. (T, M, K.) And أَتَانِى فُلَانٌ فِى حَاجَةٍ فَمَا أَلَوْتُ رَدَّهُ Such a one came to me respecting a want, and I was not able to rebuff him. (T.) It is said in a trad., مَنْ صَامَ ↓ الدَّهْرَ فَلَا صَامَ وَلَا أَلَّى [He who fasts ever, or always, may he neither fast] nor be able to fast: as though it were an imprecation: or it may be enunciative: another reading is وَلَا آلَ, explained as meaning وَلَا رَجَعَ: [See art. اول:] but El-Khattábee says that it is correctly أَلَّى and أَلَا. (TA.) And the Arabs used to say, (S, M,) [and] accord. to a trad. it will be said to the hypocrite [in his grave], on his being asked respecting Mohammad and what he brought, and answering “I know not,” (T in art. تلو,) ↓ لَا دَرَيْتَ وَلَا ائتَلَيْتَ , (T, S, M, K,) meaning, accord. to As, (T,) or ISk, (S,) Mayest thou not know, nor be able to know: (T, S: *) or, accord. to Fr, nor fall short, or flag, in seeking to know; that the case may be the more miserable to thee: (T:) or وَلَا أَلَيْتَ, as an imitative sequent [for ولا أَلَوْتَ, to which the same explanations are applicable]: (MK:) or لَا دَرَيْتَ وَلَا تَلَيْتَ, the latter verb being assimilated to the former, (ISk, T in art. تلو, S,) said to mean وَلَا تَلَوْتَ, i. e. nor mayest thou read nor study: (T in art. تلو ألوى لوى لوي تلو :) or لَا دَرَيْتَ وَلَا أَتْليْتَ, i. e. [mayest thou not know,] nor mayest thou have camels followed by young ones. (Yoo, ISk, T, S, M, K.) ― -b2- Also, (IAar, T,) inf. n. أَلْوٌ, (IAar, T, K,) He gave him a thing: (IAar, T, K: *) [doubly trans.:] the contr. of a signification before mentioned, (also given by IAar, T and TA,) which is that of “refusing” [a person anything: see, above, لَا آلُوكَ نُصْحًا]. (TA.) 2 اَلَّوَ see 1, in four places.
4
آلى
آلى
آلي , (T, S, M, &c.,) aor.
يُؤْلِى, inf. n.
إِِيلَآءٌ, (T, S, Mgh,) [and in poetry
إِِلَآءٌ, (see a reading of a verse cited voce
أَلِيّةٌ,)] He swore; (T, S, M, Mgh, K;) as also ↓
تألّى , and ↓
ائتلى . (T, S, M, K.) You say,
آلَيْتُ
عَلَى
الشَّىْءِ and
آلَيْتُهُ [I swore to do the thing]. (M.) [And
آلَيْتُ
لَا
أَفْعَلُ
كَذَا I swore that I would not do such a thing; and,
emphatically, I swear that I will not do such a thing. And
آلَى
يَمِينًا He swore an oath.] It is said in the Kur [xxiv. 22],
أُولُو ↓
وَلَا
يَأْتَلِ
الْفَضْلِ
مِنْكُمْ, meaning, accord. to A Heyth and Fr, And let not those of
you who possess superabundance swear [that they will not give to relations
&c.]; for Aboo-Bekr [is particularly alluded to thereby, because he] had sworn
that he would not expend upon Mistah and his relations who had made mention of
[the scandal respecting] 'Áďsheh: and some of the people of El-Medeeneh read ↓
وَلَا
يَتَأَلَّ , but this disagrees with the written text: A'Obeyd
explains it differently: see 1: but the preferable meaning is that here given.
(T.) And it is said in a trad.,
آلَي
مِنْ
نِسَائِهِ
شَهْرًا He swore that he would not go in to his wives for a month:
the verb being here made trans. by means of
من because it implies the meaning of
اِمْتِنَاع, which is thus trans. (TA.) [See also an ex. of the verb
thus used in the Kur ii. 226.]
عَلَى
اللّٰهِ ↓
التَّأَلِّى is said to mean One's saying, By God, such a one
will assuredly enter the fire [of Hell], and God will assuredly
make to have a good issue the work of such a one: but see the act. part. n.
below. (TA.) -A2-
آلَتْ, inf. n. as above, She (a woman) took for herself,
or made, or prepared, a
مِئْلَاة, q. v. (TA.) 5
تَاَلَّوَ see 1, in two places: -A2- and see 4, in three places.
8
إِِاْتَلَوَ see 1, in five places: -A2- and see 4, in two places.
أَلْوٌ , or
إِِلْوٌ: see
إِِلًى in art.
الى.
أُلُو , (so in some copies of the S, and so in the K in the
last division of that work, and in the CK in art.
ال, [and thus it is always pronounced,] but in some copies of the K
in art.
ال it is written
أُلُونَ, [as though to show the original form of its termination,])
or
أُولُو, (so in the M, and in some copies of the S, [and thus it is
generally written,]) i. q.
ذَوُو [Possessors of; possessed of; possessing;
having]; a pl. which has no sing. (S, M, K) of its own proper letters, (S,
K,) its sing. being
ذُو: (S:) or, as some say, a quasi-pl. n., of which the sing. is
ذُو: (K:) the fem. is
أُلَاتُ, (so in some copies of the S and K, [and thus it is always
pronounced,]) or
أُولَاتُ, (so in other copies of the S and K, [and thus it is
generally written,]) of which the sing. is
ذَاتُ: (S, K:) it is as though its sing. were
أُلٌ, (M, K, [in the CK
الٌ,]) the [final]
و [in the masc.] being the sign of the pl., (M,) for it has
و [for its termination] in the nom. case, and
ى in the accus. and gen. (M, K.) It is never used but as a prefixed
noun. (M, K.) The following are exs. of the nom. case:
نَحْنُ
أُولُو
قُوَّةٍ
وَأُولُو
بَأْسٍ
شَدِيدٍ [We are possessors of strength, and possessors of vehement
courage], in the Kur [xxvii. 23]; and
أُولُو
الْأَرْحَامِ
بَعْضُهُمْ
أَوْلَى
بِبَعْضٍ [The possessors of relationships, these have the best
title to inheritance, one with respect to another], in the same
[viii. last verse and xxxiii. 6]; (TA;) and
جَآءَ
نِى
أُولُو
الأَلْبَابِ [The persons of understandings came to me]; and
أُولَاتُ
الأَحْمَالِ [Those who are with child; occurring in the Kur
lxv. 4]: (S:) and the following are exs. of the accus. and gen. cases:
وَذَرْنِى
وَالْمُكَذَّبِينَ
أُولِى
النَّعْمَةِ [And leave thou me, or let me alone, with the
beliers, or discrediters, (i. e., commit their case to me,) the
possessors of ease and plenty], in the Kur [lxxiii. 11]; and
لَتَنُوءُ
بِالْعُصْبَةِ
أُولِى
القُوَّةِ [Would weigh down the company of men possessing strength],
in the same [xxviii. 76]. (TA.)
وَأُولِى
الْأَمْرِ
مِنْكُمْ, in the Kur [iv. 62], [And those, of you, who are
possessors of command], (M, K, *) accord. to Aboo-Is-hák, (M,) means the
companions of the Prophet, and the men of knowledge their followers, (M, K,)
and the possessors of command, who are their followers, when also possessors
of knowledge and religion: (K:) or, as some say, [simply] the possessors
of command; for when these are possessors of knowledge and religion, and
take, or adopt and maintain, and follow, what the men of knowledge say, to obey
them is of divine obligation: and in general those who are termed
أُولُو
الأَمْرِ, of the Muslims, are those who superintend the affairs
of such with respect to religion, and everything conducing to the right
disposal of their affairs. (M.)
إِِلَى
ألي
إِلى
إِلي
الى
الي
ولي
آل
آلى
آلي , accord. to Sb, is originally with
و in the place of the [ى,
i. e. the final] alif; and so is
عَلَى; for the alifs [in these two particles] are not susceptible of
imáleh; [i. e., they may not be pronounced ilč and 'alč;] and if either be used
as the proper name of a man, the dual [of the former] is
إِِلَوَانِ and [that of the latter]
عَلَوَانِ; but when a pronoun is affixed to it, the alif is changed
into yé, so that you say
إِِلَيْكَ and
عَلَيْكَ; though some of the Arabs leave it as it was, saying
إِِلَاكَ and
عَلَاكَ. (S.) It is a prep., or particle governing a noun in the gen.
case, (S, Mughnee, K,) and denotes the end, as opposed to [مِنْ,
which denotes] the beginning, of an extent, or of the space between two points
or limits; (S, M;) or the end of an extent (T, Mughnee, K) of place; [signifying
To, or as far as;] as in the phrase [in the Kur xvii. 1],
مِنَ
المَسْجِدِ
الحَرَامِ
إِِلَى
المَسْجِدِ
الأَقْصَى [From the Sacred Mosque to, or as far as, the
Furthest Mosque; meaning from the mosque of Mekkeh to that of Jerusalem]; (Mughnee,
K;) or in the saying,
خَرَجْتُ
مِنَ
الكُوفَةِ
إِِلَى
مَكَّةَ [I went forth from El-Koofeh to Mekkeh], which may
mean that you entered it, [namely, the latter place,] or that you reached it
without entering it, for the end includes the beginning of the limit and the
furthest part thereof, but does not extend beyond it. (S.) [In some respects it
agrees with
حَتَّى, q. v. And sometimes it signifies Towards; as in
نَظَرَ
إِِلَىَّ He looked towards me; and
مَالَ
إِِلَيْهِ He, or it, inclined towards him, or it.
― -b2- It also denotes the end of a space of time; [signifying To, till,
or until;] as in the saying [in the Kur ii. 183],
ثُمَّ
أَتِمُّوا
الصِّيَامَ
إِِلَى
اللَّيْلِ [Then complets ye the fasting to, or till, or
until, the night]. (Mughnee, K.) [Hence,
إِِلَى
أَنْ (followed by a mansoob aor.) Till, or until: and
إِِلَى
مَتَى Till, or until, what time, or when? i. e.
how long? and also to, till, or until, the time when. See
also the last sentence in this paragraph.] ― -b3- [In like manner it is used in
the phrases
إِِلَى
غَيْرِ
ذلِكَ, and
إِِلَى
آخِرِهِ, meaning, (And so on,) to other things, and
to the end thereof; equivalent to et cśtera.] ― -b4- Sometimes, (S,)
it occurs in the sense of
مَعَ, (T, S, M, Mughnee, K,) when a thing is joined to another thing;
(Mughnee, K;) as in the phrase [in the Kur iii. 45 and lxi. 14],
مَنْ
أَنْصَارِى
إِِلَى
اللّٰهِ [Who will be my aiders with, or in addition to,
God?], (S, Mughnee, K,) accord. to the Koofees and some of the Basrees; (Mughnee;)
i. e. who will be joined to God in aiding me? (M, TA;) and as in the
saying [in the Kur iv. 2],
وَلَا
تَأْكُلُوا
أَمْوَالَهُمْ
إِِلَى
أَمْوَالِكُمْ [And devour not ye their possessions with, or
in addition to, your possessions]; (T, S;) and [in the same, ii. 13,]
وَإِِذَا
خَلَوْا
إِِلَى
شَيَا
طِينِهِمْ [And when they are alone with their devils]; (S;)
and in the saying,
الذَّوْدُ
إِِلَى
الذَّوْدِ
إِِبِلٌ [A few she-camels with, or added to, a few
she-camels are a herd of camels], (S, Mughnee, K,) a prov., meaning (assumed
tropical:) a little with a little makes much; (S and A in art.
ذود, q. v.;) though one may not say,
إِِلَى
زَيْدٍ
مَالٌ meaning
مَعَ
زَيْدٍ
مَالٌ: (Mughnee:) so too in the saying,
فُلَانٌ
حَلِيمٌ
إِِلَى
أَدَبٍ
وَفِقْهٍ [Such a one is clement, or forbearing, with good
education, or polite accomplishments, and intelligence, or
knowledge of the law]; (M, TA;) and so, accord. to Kh, in the phrase,
أَحْمَدُ
اللّٰهَ
إِِلَيْكَ [I praise God with thee: but see another rendering
of this phrase below]. (ISh.) In the saying in the Kur [v. 8],
فَاغْسِلُوا
وُجُوهَكُمْ
وَأَيْدِيَكُمْ
إِِلَى
المَرَافِقِ, it is disputed whether [the meaning be Then wash ye
your faces, and your arms with the elbows, or, and your arms as far as
the elbows; i. e., whether] the elbows be meant to be included among the
parts to be washed, or excluded therefrom. (T.) A context sometimes shows that
what follows it is included in what precedes it; as in
قَرَأْتُ
القُرْآنَ
مِنْ
أَوَّلِهِ
إِِلَى
آخِرِهِ [I read, or recited, the Kurán, from the beginning
thereof to the end thereof]: or that it is excluded; as in
ثُمَّ
أَتِمُّوا
الصِّيَامَ
إِِلَى
اللَّيْلِ [explained above]: when this is not the case, some say that
it is included if it be of the same kind [as that which precedes]; some, that it
is included absolutely; and some, that it is excluded absolutely; and this is
the right assertion; for with the context it is in most instances excluded. (Mughnee.)
― -b5- It is also used to show the grammatical agency of the noun governed by
it, after a verb of wonder; or after a noun of excess importing love or hatred;
[as in
مَا
أَحَبَّهُ
إِِلَىَّ How lovely, or pleasing, is he to me! (TA in
art.
حب,) and
مَا
أَبْغَضَهُ
إِِلَىَّ How hateful, or odious, is he to me! (S in
art.
بغض;) and] as in the saying [in the Kur xii. 33],
رَبِّ
السِّجْنُ
أَحَبُّ
إِِلَىَّ [O my Lord, the prison is more pleasing to me]. (Mughnee,
K.) [This usage is similar to that explained in the next sentence.] ― -b6- It is
syn. with
عِنْدَ; (S, M, Mughnee, Msb, K;) as in the phrase,
هُوَ
أَشْهَى
إِِلَىَّ
مِنْ
كَذَا [It is more desirable, or pleasant, in my estimation
than such a thing]; (Msb;) and in the saying of the poet, “
أَمْ
لَا
سَبِيلَ
إِِلَى
الشَّبَابِ
وَذِكْرُهُ
أَشْهَى
إِِلَىَّ
مِنَ
الرَّحِيقِ
السَّلْسَلِ
” [Is there no way of return to youth, seeing that the remembrance
thereof is more pleasant to me, or in my estimation, than mellow wine?]
(Mughnee, K:) and accord. to this usage of
إِِلَى in the sense of
عِنْدَ may be explained the saying,
أَنْتِ
طَالِقٌ
إِِلَى
سَنَةٍ, meaning Thou art divorced at the commencement of a
year. (Msb.) ― -b7- It is also syn. with
لِ; as in the phrase,
وَالأَمْرُ
إِِلَيْكَ [And command, or to command, belongeth unto Thee,
meaning God, as in the Kur xiii. 30, and xxx. 3], (Mughnee, K,) in a trad.
respecting supplication: (TA:) or, as some say, it is here used in the manner
first explained above, meaning, is ultimately referrible to Thee: and
they say,
أَحْمَدُ
اللّٰهَ
إِِلَيْكَ, meaning, I tell the praise of God unto thee: (Mughnee:)
[but see another rendering of this last phrase above:] you say also,
ذَاكَ
إِِلَيْكَ That is committed to thee, or to thy arbitration.
(Har p. 329.) ― -b8- It also occurs as syn. with
عَلَى; as in the saying in the Kur [xvii. 4],
وَقَضَيْنَا
إِِلَى
بَنِى
إِِسْرَائِيلَ [And we decreed against the children of Israel]:
(Msb:) or this means and we revealed to the children of Israel (Bd, Jel)
decisively. (Bd.) ― -b9- It is also syn. with
فِى; (M, Mughnee, K;) as in the saying [in the Kur iv. 89 and vi.12],
لَيَجْمَعَنَّكُمْ
إِِلَى
يَوْمِ
القِيَامَةِ [He will assuredly collect you together on the day of
resurrection]: (K:) thus it may be used in this instance accord. to
Ibn-Málik: (Mughnee:) and it is said to be so used in the saying [of En-Nábighah,
(M, TA,)] “
فَلَا
تَتْرُكَنِّى
بِالوَعِيدِ
كَأَنَّنِى
إِِلَي
النَّاسِ
مَطْلِىٌّ
بِهِ
القَارُ
أَجْرَبُ
” [Then do not thou leave me with threatening, as though I were, among men,
smeared with tar, being like a mangy camel]; (M, Mughnee;) or,
accord. to some, there is an ellipsis and inversion in this verse;
الى being here in dependence upon a word suppressed, and the meaning
being, smeared with pitch, [like a camel,] yet being united to men:
or, accord. to Ibn-'Osfoor,
مطلىّ is here considered as made to import the meaning of rendered
hateful, or odious; for he says that if
الى were correctly used in the sense of
فى, it it would be allowable to say,
زَيْدٌإِِلَى
الكُوفَةِ: (Mughnee:) [or the meaning may be, as though I were,
compared to men, a mangy camel, smeared with pitch: for] I'Ab said,
after mentioning 'Alee,
عِلْمِى
إِِلَى
عِلْمِهِ
كَالقَرَارَةِ
فِى
المُثُعَنْجَرِ, meaning My knowledge compared to his knowledge is
like the
قرارة [or small pool of water left by a torrent] placed by
the side of the middle of the sea [or the main deep]. (K in art.
ثعجر.) It is also [said to be] used in the sense of
فى in the saying in the Kur [1xxix. 18],
هَلْ
لَكَ
إِِلَى
أَنْ
تَزَكَّى [Wilt thou purify thyself from infidelity?] because
it imports the meaning of invitation. (TA.) ― -b10- It is also used [in a manner
contr. to its primitive application, i. e.,] to denote beginning, [or
origination,] being syn. with
مِنْ; as in the saying [of a poet], “
تَقُولُ
وَقَدْ
عَالَيْتُ
بِالكُورِ
فَوْقَهَا
أَيُسْقَي
فَلَا
يَرْوَى
إِِلَىَّ
ابْنُ
أَحْمَرَا
” [She says, (namely my camel,) when I have raised the saddle upon
her, Will Ibn-Ahmar be supplied with drink and not satisfy his thirst from me?
i. e., will he never be satisfied with drawing forth my sweat?]. (Mughnee, K.) ―
-b11- It is also used as a corroborative, and is thus [syntactically] redundant;
as in the saying in the Kur [xiv. 40],
فَاجْعَلْ
أَفْئِدَةً
مِنَ
النَّاسِ
تَهْوَى
إِِلَيْهِمْ, with fet-h to the
و [in
تهوى], (Mughnee, K,) accord. to one reading, (Mughnee,) meaning
تَهْوَاهُمْ [i. e. And make Thou hearts of men to love them]:
(K:) so says Fr: but some explain it by saying that
تهوى imports the meaning of
تَمِيلُ; or that it is originally
تَهْوِى, with kesr, the kesreh being changed to a fet-hah, and the yé
to an alif, as when one says
رَضَا for
رَضِىَ, and
نَاصَاةٌ for
نَاصِيَةٌ: so says Ibn-Málik; but this requires consideration; for it
is a condition in such cases that the
ى in the original form must be movent. (Mughnee.) [See art.
هوى.] ― -b12-
اَللّٰهُمَّ
إِِلَيْكَ, occurring in a trad., [is elliptical, and] means O God,
I complain unto Thee: or take Thou me unto Thee. (TA.) ― -b13- And
أَنَا
مِنْكَ
وَإِِلَيْكَ means I am of thee, and related to thee. (TA.) ―
-b14- You say also,
اِذْهَبْ
إِِلَيْكَ, meaning Betake, or apply, thyself to, or
occupy thyself with, thine own affairs. (T, K. *) And similar to this is the
phrase used by El-Aashŕ,
فَاذْهَبِى
مَا
إِِلَيْكِ. (TA.) And
إِِلَيْكُمْ [alone is used in a similar manner, elliptically, or as
an imperative verbal noun, and] means Betake, or apply, yourselves to,
or occupy yourselves with, your own affairs, (اِذْهَبُوا
إِِلَيْكُمْ,) and retire ye, or withdraw ye, to a distance,
or far away, from us. (ISk.) And
إِِلَيْكَ
عَنِّى means Hold, or refrain, thou from me: (T, K:) or
remove, withdraw, or retire, thou to a distance from me:
اليك used in this sense is an imperative verbal noun. (Har p. 508.)
Sb says, (M,) or Akh, (Har ubi suprŕ,) I heard an Arab of the desert, on its
being said to him
إِِلَيْكَ, reply,
إِِلَىَّ; as though it were said to him Remove, withdraw, or
retire, thou to a distance, and he replied, I will remove, &c.
(M.) Aboo-Fir' own says, satirizing a Nabathćan woman of whom he asked for water
to drink, “
إِِذَا
طَلَبْتَ
المَآءِ
قَالَتْ
لَيْكَا
” [When thou shalt demand water, she will say, Retire thou to a distance];
meaning, [by
ليكا, i. e.
لَيْكَ with an adjunct alif for the sake of the rhyme,]
إِِلَيْكَ, in the sense last explained above. (M.) ― -b15- One also
says,
إِِلَيْكَ
كَذَا, meaning, Take thou such a thing. (T, K.) ― -b16- When
إِِلَى is immediately followed by the interrogative
مَا, both together are written
إِِلَامَ [meaning, To what? whither? and till, or
until, what time, or when? i. e. how long?]; and in like
manner one writes
عَلَامَ for
عَلَى
مَا, (S * and K voce
ما,) and
حَتَّامَ for
حَتَّى. (S voce
حَتَّى.)
أَلْوَةٌ and
أُلْوَةٌ and
إِِلْوَةٌ: see
أَلِيَّةٌ.
أَلىُّ One who swears much; who utters many oaths: (IAar,
T, K:) mentioned in the K in art.
الى; but the present is its proper art. (TA.)
أَلِيَّةٌ [A falling short; or a falling short of
what is requisite, or what one ought to do; or a flagging, or
remissness; and slowness, or tardiness:] a subst. from
أَلَا as signifying
قَصَّرَ and
أَلِيَّةً. (M.) Hence the prov., (M,)
إِِلَّا
حَضِيَّةً
فَلَا
أَلِيَّةً, i. e. If I be not in favour, and high estimation, I
will not cease seeking, and labouring, and wearying myself, to become so:
(M, K: *) or if thou fail of good fortune in that which thou seekest, fall
not short, or flag not, or be not remiss, in showing love, or
affection, to men; may-be thou wilt attain somewhat of that which thou
wishest: originally relating to a woman who becomes displeasing to her husband:
(S in art.
حظو:) it is one of the proverbs of women: one says, if I be not in
favour, and high estimation, with my husband, I will not fall short, or
flag, or be remiss, in that which may render me so, by betaking myself to
that which he loveth: (T and TA in art.
حظو:) Meyd says that the two nouns are in the accus. case because the
implied meaning is
إِِلَّا
أَكُنْ
حَظِيَّةً
فَلَا
أَكُنْ
أَلِيَّةً; the latter noun being [accord. to him] for ↓
آلِيَةٌ , for which it may be put for the sake of conformity
[with the former]; and the former having the signification of the pass. part. n.
of
أَحْظَى, or that of the part. n. of
حَظِىَ [or
حَظِيَتْ]. (Har p. 78.) -A2- An oath; (T, S, M, Mgh, K;) as
also ↓
أَلِيَّا (M, K) and ↓
أَلْوَةٌ (T, S, M, K) and ↓
أُلْوَةً and ↓
إِِلِيوَةٌ : (S, M, K: [in the CK,
والاُلُوَّةُ
مُثَلَّثَةً is erroneously put for
والِأَلْوَةُ
مثلّثةً:]) it is [originally
أَلِيوَةٌ,] of the measure
فَعِيلَةٌ: (S:) pl.
أَلَايَا. (S, Mgh.) A poet says, (namely, Kutheiyir, TA,) “
قَلِيلُا
الأَلَايَا
حَافِظٌ
لِيَمِينِهِ
وَإِِنْ
سَبَقَتْ
مِنْهُ
الأَلِيَّةُ
بَرَّتِ
” [A person of few oaths, who keeps his oath from being uttered on ordinary
or mean occasions; but if the oath has proceeded from him at any former time,
or hastily, it proves true]: (S, TA:) or, as IKh relates it,
قَلِيلُ
الإِِلَآءِ; meaning, he says,
قَلِيلُ
الإِيلَآءِ; the
ى being suppressed: see 4. (TA.)
أَلِيَّا : see the latter part of the paragraph next
preceding.
آلٍ
آل Falling short; or falling short of what is
requisite, or what one ought to do; or flagging, or remiss:
[and slow, or tardy: &c.: see 1:] fem. with
ة: and pl. of this latter
أَوَالٍ. (S, TA.) See
أَلِيَّةٌ, used, accord. to Meyd, for
آلِيَة. ― -b2- Niggardly, penurious, or avaricious;
impotent to fulfil duties or obligations, or to pay debts. (Har
p. 78.)
مِئْلَاةٌ The piece of rag which a woman holds in
wailing, (S, TA,) and with which she makes signs: (TA:) [it is
generally dyed blue, the colour of mourning; and the woman sometimes holds it
over her shoulders, and sometimes twirls it with both hands over her head, or
before her face:] pl.
مَآلٍ: (S, TA:) which also signifies rags used for the menses.
(TA in art.
غبر.)
مُتَأَلّ [part. n. of 5]. It is said in a trad.,
وَيْلٌ
لِلْمُتَأَلِّينَ
مِنْ
أُمَّتِى, explained as meaning Woe to those of my people who
pronounce sentence against God, saying, Such a one is in Paradise, and such a
one is in the fire [of Hell]: but see the verb. (TA.) Credit:
Lane Lexicon