Classical Arabic - English Dictionary

by Edward William Lane (1801-1876)

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سمحج سمحق سمد


سِمْحَاقٌ

سِمْحَاقٌ [The pericranium; i. e.] the thin skin, (T, Mgh, Mṣb,) or thin integument, (Ṣ, Mgh, Ḳ,) above the skull: (T, Ṣ, Mgh, Mṣb, Ḳ:) and any thin skin resembling that; (Mṣb;) or [the periosteum of any bone; i. e.] the skin that is between the bone and the flesh, above the bone and beneath the flesh; every bone having what is thus termed: (TA:) [pl. سَمَاحِيقُ.]

Root: سمحق - Entry: سِمْحَاقٌ Signification: A2

[Hence,] one says, عَلَى ثَرْبِ الشَّاةِ سَمَاحِيقُ مِنْ شَحْمٍ, (Ṣ, Ḳ, TA,) i. e. ‡ [Upon the fat that covers the stomach and bowels of the sheep or goat is or are] a thin integument [or thin integuments of fat]. (TA.)

Root: سمحق - Entry: سِمْحَاقٌ Signification: A3

And سَمَاحِيقُ السَّمَآءِThe [strata or] thin portions of cloud. (Ṣ, Ḳ, TA.)

Root: سمحق - Entry: سِمْحَاقٌ Signification: A4

سِمْحَاقٌ also signifies [The cicatrix which is] the mark of circumcision. (TA.)

Root: سمحق - Entry: سِمْحَاقٌ Signification: A5

And A wound by which the head is broken (شَجَّةٌ [q. v.]) reaching to the thin skin, or integument, thus called. (T, Ṣ, Mṣb, Ḳ.)


سُكْحُوقٌ

سُكْحُوقٌ Tall; applied to a palm-tree; (Ṣ, O, Ḳ;) as also سَحُوقٌ: (Ṣ:) or tall and thin: (Lth, TA:) not known to Az on any other authority than that of Lth. (TA.)

[J held the م in each of these words, as he says, to be augmentative; and has therefore mentioned them in art. سحق.]

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