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ر د خ ل

Root entry · 2 derived lemmas

This root appears to relate to the concept of fatness or plumpness, specifically in animals. It is primarily discussed in relation to a specific term for a fat animal.

Derived headwords

الإِرْدَخَلُnoun
  1. 1.
    fat animalclassical

    A fat, plump animal, particularly a sheep or ram.

كَسَرَverb
  1. 1.
    to breakboth

    This verb form is mentioned in relation to the root, possibly indicating a secondary or less common meaning, or a grammatical point.

Parallel reading

الإردخل، الكسر، أهمله الجوهري، وقال الليث: هو التار السمين
Al-irdakhal, the breaking, Jawhari neglected it, and Al-Layth said: it is the fat ram.
قال الأزهري: لم أسمع الإردخل لغير الليث
Al-Azhari said: I have not heard of Al-irdakhal except from Al-Layth.
وقد تقدم للمصنف ذلك في الهمز بعينه
And this has preceded from the author in the section on hamza itself.
وكأنه أشار إلى الاختلاف في أصالة الهمزة وزيادتها
And it is as if he was pointing to the disagreement regarding the originality of the hamza and its addition.