1
لَهِثَ , aor.
لَهَثَ , inf. n.
لَهَثٌ and
لَهَاثٌ and
لَهَثَانٌ,
He thirsted; was thirsty: (S, K:)
or
thirst heated his belly, or
inside.
(L.) ― -b2-
لَهَثَ, aor.
لَهَثَ , inf. n.
لَهْثٌ and
لُهَاثٌ; (S, K;) and
لَهِثَ, aor.
لَهَثَ ; (TA;) and ↓
التهث ; (K;)
He (a dog, S, and a man,
and, in the case of the second verb, a bird also, TA)
put forth his tongue, by reason of thirst, or
fatigue, or
weariness: (S, K:) or
لَهَثَ signifies
his breath (
نفس)
rose, by reason of fatigue, or
weariness:
or
he (a dog)
put forth his tongue, by reason
of thirst: and
he (a man)
was fatigued,
or
weary. (TA.) 8
إِِلْتَهَثَ see 1.
لُهْثَةٌ Thirst. (K.) ― -b2-
Fatigue. (AA, K.) ― -b3- The
red speck in a
palm-leaf, (K,)
which you see when you split it.
(TA.) ― -b4-
لُهَاثٌ [for
لِهَاثٌ, pl. of
لُهْثَةٌ,] The
specks in palmleaves: (Fr, K:)
the
red specks in palm-leaves, when they are split:
(Fr, TA:) accord. to rule, it should be
لِهَاثٌ, like
نِقَاطٌ. (K.)
لَهْثَانُ Thirsty: (S, K:) fem.
لَهْثَى. (S.)
لُهَاثٌ The
heat, or
burning, of
thirst; (S, K;)
vehemence of thirst. (TA.) ―
-b2- (tropical:) The
severity, or
vehemence,
of death. (K, TA.) -A2- See
لُهْثَةٌ.
لُهَاثِىٌّ (assumed tropical:) A man (TA)
having many red moles (
خِيلَان)
on his face: (Fr, K:) from
لُهَاثٌ, signifying the “ specks in palm-leaves. ”
(Fr.)
لُهَّاثٌ [pl. of
لَاهِثٌ?]
Manufacturers, with palm-leaves, of the
kind of baskets called
دَوَاخِلُّ, (K,) pl. of
دَوْخَلَّهٌ,
in which dates are put. (AA.)
فِى
سَكْرَةٍ
مَلْهَثَةٌ In intoxication is a cause,
or
an occasion, of
لهث [i. e.,
thirst; or
putting forth the
tongue by reason of thirst]. (TA, from a trad.)
Credit:
Lane Lexicon