2
كرّسهُ , (TA,) inf. n.
تَكْرِيسٌ, (K, TA,)
He put it, or
placed
it, namely, anything,
one part upon another.
(TA.) ― -b2-
He put it together, one part to another.
(TA.) ― -b3-
He founded it, namely, a building.
(K, TA.) 4
اكرست
الدَّارُ The house had in it compacted
dung and urine of camels or
of sheep or
goats: S, A, * TA:) and in like manner you say of a
place: (TA:) and
اكرست
الدّابَّةُ The beast of carriage had upon it,
(K, TA,) i. e.,
upon its tail, (TA,)
compacted
dung and urine. (K, TA.) See
كِرْسٌ. 5
تكرّس
ذ It (anything)
became put, or
placed, one part upon another. (TA.) ― -b2-
It
became compacted and cohering; (A, * TA;) as also ↓
تكارس . (TA.) ― -b3-
It (the foundation
of a building)
became hard and strong. (TA.) -A2-
He collected together fire-wood, &c. (Msb.) 6
تَكَاْرَسَ see 5.
كِرْسٌ Compacted, or
caked,
or
a cake of, dung and urine of camels and
of
sheep or
goats, (S, * A, * K, * TA,)
in a
house, and upon the traces of men's abode: (TA:) and
also,
compacted clay or
mud: (TA:) pl.
أَكْرَاسٌ. (A, TA.) [Hence,]
كِرْسُ
الحَوْضِ The place in which the camels stand at
the watering-trough or
tank, and which in
consequence becomes compacted [
by the mixture of
their dung and urine with the soil]. (TA.) ― -b2-
كِرْسُ
بِنَآءٍ [
The foundation, or
lowest part of
a building: see 2]. (TA.) -A2-
One of the
أَكْرَاس [meaning
series or
strings of
beads]
of [
the necklaces and similar
ornaments called]
قَلَائِد and
وُشُح and the like: you say,
قِلَادَةٌ
ذَاتُ
كِرْسَيْنِ [
a necklace of two such series],
and
ذَاتُ
أَكْرَاسٍ
ثَلَاثَةٍ [
of three such series],
when you
join one part to another [
in several places, by
larger beads: see
قِلَادَةٌ
مُكْرَسَةٌ, below]. (Lth, K. *)
كَرِسٌ : see
مُكْرِسٌ.
كُرْسِىٌّ
ذ and (sometimes, S, Msb)
كِرْسِىٌّ (S, Msb, K)
A throne; syn.
سَرِيرٌ: (K:)
a chair: (TK:)
a seat not
larger than is sufficient for one person: (Bd, ii.
256:) [and
a stool:] pl.
كَرَاسِىٌّ (S, Msb, K) and sometimes
كَرَاسٍ, agreeably with a rule mentioned by ISk. (Msb.)
It is the place [or seat] of the king, and of the
learned man: and hence, as used in the Kur ii. 256, it
is explained as signifying (tropical:)
Dominion:
(A:) and (tropical:) the
power of God, whereby He
holds the heavens and the earth: (TA:) and (tropical:)
knowledge: (A, K:) which last explanation is
ascribed to I'Ab: but the truth is, that I'Ab explained
it as there signifying the [
foot-stool of God;
or]
place of the feet: but as to the
عَرْش [of God], this is immeasurable: (Az, TA:) or
it signifies the
sphere of the stars. (TA, art.
عرش.) [Hence, also, you say,]
هُوَ
مِنْ
أَهْلِ
الكُرْسِىِّ (tropical:)
He is of the people of
science. (TK.) [And hence,]
الكَرَاسِىُّ is also used [elliptically] to signify
(tropical:)
The learned men; accord. to Ktr. (A.)
― -b2- Also,
A prop, or
support, for a
wall. (TA.) ― -b3- [
ذَاتُ
الكُرْسِىِّ The Constellation Cassiopeia: see
خَضِيبٌ.]
كِرْيَاسٌ A privy on the top of the
roof of a house, (S, A, * Msb, K,)
with a conduit
from the ground, (K,) or, as in some lexicons,
to
the ground: one that is below is not so called:
(TA:) or the
privy of an upper chamber: (MF:) of
the measure
فِعْيَالٌ, (Az, Msb, K,) from
كِرْسٌ, meaning, “ compacted dung and urine of
camels, or of sheep or goats: ” (Az, * A, * K, TA:) so
called because of the filth that adheres to it, and
becomes compacted: (Az, TA:) incorrectly said by some to
be also written
كِرْبَاسٌ, with the single-pointed letter [
ب]:
the pl. is
كَرَايِيسُ. (TA.)
كُرَّاسٌ : see what next follows.
كُرَّاسَةٌ [
A quire, or
parcel,
of paper, generally consisting of five sheets, forming
ten leaves, of a book; also vulgarly called
كَرَّاسَةٌ and
كَرَّاسٌ;]
one of what are termed ↓
كُرَّاسٌ and
كَرَارِيسُ; [
كُرَّاسٌ
being a coll. gen. n. and
كَرَارِيسُ a pl.;] (S, A, K;)
a portion of a
صَحِيفَة [i. e.
book or
volume]: (A,
K:) so called because compacted: (TA:) or from
تَكَرَّسَ signifying “ he collected together ”
fire-wood, &c. (Msb.) You say,
فِى
هٰذِهِ
الكُرَّاسَةِ
عَشْرُ
وَرَقَاتٍ [
In this quire of a book are ten leaves].
(A.) And
هٰذَا
الكِتَابُ
عِدَّةُ
كَرَارِيسَ [
This book is composed of
a
number of quires]. (A.) And
قَرَأْتُ
كُرَّاسَةً
مِنْ
كِتَابِ
سِيبَوَيْهِ [
I read a quire of the Book of
Seebaweyh]. (A.) And
التَّاجِرُ
مَجْدُهُ
فِى
كِيسِهِ
وَالعَالِمُ
مَجْدُهُ
فِى
كَرَارِيسِهِ [
The merchant's glory is in his
purse, and the learned man's glory is in his quires of
books]. (A.)
مُكْرَسٌ : see
مُكْرِسٌ. ― -b2-
قِلَادَةٌ
مُكْرَسَةٌ and ↓
مُكَرَّسَةٌ A necklace in which the pearls
or
other beads are strung upon two strings, and these
are joined together by divisions of large beads: so
in the TS and K, excepting that in the latter,
فِى
خَيْطٍ is erroneously put for
فِى
خَيْطَيْنِ. (TA.) [See
كِرْسٌ, last signification.] And [in like manner], ↓
نَظْمٌ
مُكَرَّسٌ and
مُتَكَرِّسٌ A string of beads one above another.
(TA.)
رَسْمٌ
مُكْرِسٌ (S) (in the L and TA
مُكْرَسٌ, but the former, being agreeable with the
verb, (see 4,) is probably the right reading,]
Traces
of men's abode in which is a compacted mixture of dung
and urine of camels or
of sheep or
goats.
(S, L, * TA. * [And accord. to the second and third of
these authorities, ↓
كَرِسٌ seems to signify the same.])
مُكَرَّسٌ : see
مُكْرَسٌ: the former, in two places.
مُتَكَرِّسٌ : see
مُكْرَسٌ: the former, in two places. Credit:
Lane Lexicon