THE LIBRARY
OF
THE UNIVERSITY
OF CALIFORNIA
LOS ANGELES
%7
\^:r
m
^;
A
COMPENDIUM
OF
MOLESWORTH'S
MAPtATHI AND ENGLISH DICTMARY.
BY
BAB A PADMANJI.
" a causeway designed to facilitate the transmission of all knowledge,
religious and scientific, from one people to the other." Dr. Judson. — " Gospel in
Burmak."
1 0 m b a 11 :
PRINTED AT THE ED L CATION SOCIETY'S PRESS, BYCULLA.
1863.
7
M 731c
TO
THE REV. J. MURRAY MITCHELL, LL.D,,
MISSION/VPtY OF THE FREE CIIUECH OF SCOTLAND,
lis siiuill uUili is hbitatcir,
AS A TOKEN OF RESPECT, AFFECTION, AND GRATITUDE,
BY
THE AUTHOll
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2008 with funding from
IVIicrosoft Corporation
http://www.archive.org/details/compendiumofmoleOOmole
PREFACE.
The success which attended the publication of the Compendium of Major
Candy's EngHsh and Marathi Dictionary, has induced its Editor to undertake
an abridgment of the invaluable work of J. T. Molesworth, Esq., — the Mara-
thi and English Dictionary, — and he now presents the fruit of his labours to the
enlightened public. It was a comparatively easy task for the Editor to prepare
an abridgment of the admirable work of Major Candy, but to prepare this
Compendium was by no means a light labour. Besides going over sixty
thousand words, and nearly four times that number of significations, line by
line, and selecting the most useful and practical terms with their synonyms, the
Editor had to deal more than in the former case with the language foreign
to himself. All this has been done single-handed. He entreats the public
to look upon the work with an indulgent eye. He is sensible of the many
deficiencies and shortcomings which it contains. During the preparation of
this work, which was begun in 1860, it has been the lot of the Editor to live
in the midst of a noisy neighbourhood, and he was required to devote his
attention to numerous pressing duties, and earn his livelihood by the labours
of his pen. And now his heart overflows with gratitude to the g'reat Disposer
of all things, when he sees his labours in connection with this Compendium
brought to a happy issue.
In abridging the original work, the Editor has neither changed the style
of its learned and venerable i\uthor, nor curtailed the number of significations
given. For the most part it will be found, that the abridgment consists in the
careful selection of the number of Marathi words (which amount to upwai'ds
of twenty-nine thousand), and the employment of not more than two synonyms
generally, for every Marathi term; only in a very few unimportant cases have
any of the significations been omitted.
The Editor has done his best to render the work useful to all classes of
the community, who are concerned in the study and use of the Marathi and
English languages. He trusts it will be specially serviceable to advanced
Scholars attending seminaries of learning, to Translators and Interpreters, to
Merchants and Missionaries, who cannot always conveniently carry the large
Dictionary with them on their tours, to private Families and Schools that
cannot afford to pay thirty-six rupees for a copy of the great Lexicon^ to the
VI PREFACE.
numerous Teachers engaged in teaching European gentlemen the Maratlii
language, and to the gentlemen themselves wlien they have dispensed witli
the services of their pandits.
The price has been fixed as low as is consistent with safety to accuracy
(if printing and a moderate remuneration to the Editor.
He gratefully acknowledges the pecuniary aid rendered to him by his
venerable and affectionate father, Mr. Padmaxji' Ma'xickji', and by his
long-tried friend, the Kev. Dr. INIitchell, and by the numerous Subscribers ;
the united aid of all of whom has enabled him to meet in part the expenses
of the Press. His thanks arc due to the Dakshina Prize Committee who,
aj)i)reciating the utility of such a work, voted him an award of four hundred
rupees. He is also deeply indebted to several of his friends, among whom
he would mention the name of Mr. .Tana'rdan Ra'mchandraji, (author of
" Kavicharitra,") who, with a truly disinterested heart, took in hand the
general agency of the work. Nor does he think it just to conclude without
some tribute of acknowledgment to Mr. J. Firth, the able Superintendent of
the Bombay Education Society's Press, for the accuracy and taste with
which the typography has been executed.
And now may He, who giveth to all life, breath, and all things, and who
alone can communicate efficacy to any means of doing good, bestow on this
instrumentality the blessing from on high, that ignorance may be dispelled,
good-will reciprocated between the Rulers and People of the countries through
which the Marathi language is spoken, and His own holy VV^OllD made to
grow mightily and prevail.
BABA PADMANJI.
Pound, June 18G3.
MARKS AND CONTRACTIONS USED IN THIS WORK-
(s) signifies that the word against which it stands is a Sanskrit word, but
of well-estabhshed use amongst the educated speakers of Mar athi. s intimates
that the word is stili Sanskrit, occurring in, but not naturaUzed in Marathi.
C denotes that the word is specially used in the Conkan. r expresses that the
city and province of Rajapore and the country southward are the seat specially
of the currency of the word, w expresses the same with respect to Wari. (p)
stands for Persian; p Provincial ; (h) Hindustani; (Port.) Portuguese ; (a)
Arabic; (t) Turkish.*
App. means applied ; attrib. attributively ; corr. corrupted ; comp. composi-
tion; contra, contradistinguished; disting. distinguished; esp. especially; imit.
imitative; ind. indechnable; opp. opposed; gen. generally or in general; dim.
diminutive ; Pr. proverb ; Poet, poetry, or used in poetry ; Pop. popularly ; v. c.
verb common (verb used both actively and passively) ; v. i. verb intransitive;
V. t. verb transitive ; m. f. n. pi. Sec. denote mascuHne, feminine, kc. ; a. ad.
&c. adjective, adverb, &c. Nouns against which no mark of the gender stands
are m.
g. of o. (genitive of object) means that the object must be in the genitive
case; g. of s. (genitive of subject) means that the subject must be in the geni-
tive case ; in. con. (inverse construction) means that the idiom requires the in-
verse construction ; neg. con. (negative construction) means that the word is
in a negative construction or in a construction of negative import.
The hyphen - is used to connect two or more words with another word
which is common to all. The dash — after a sense points out the application
of that sense, or shows the subject of the verb; the parenthesis ( ) includes a
supplementary or an elucidatory portion of the sense, or shows the subject of
the verb. The colon : is used in the place of " also " when it stands between
two English words or significations, and in the place of " ex. " (example) when
it precedes a Marathi word or sentence. Much space has been saved by this
arbitrary use of the sign.
* " These marks have reference simply to the languages to which the words belong, and ai"e by no
means to be viewed as intimating (invariably) that to those languages \iQ\Qn§ Wxe significations ;" this
remark is applicable, with some modifications, to the marks s and (s),
^rwT^^T.
f f^r^jTi sTrfoT ^T\i\ ^m^ m'l mm^j ^^rr-^r ^"4r ^tr ^rr^r m^u\^\
ii^ # 3Tr H ^m ??'i^F^7 ^ c^r^rq^ffir ^r^ err ^r^[?:rs; ^rffay ^y^f^r^
^rar^fr ^^q ^^r^^r^ ^w ?ifr ^mt i\ '^^r^r ^rr^r °q"^ ^^i ^rfr ^t^^t
STrcTF il i'^Tl^ ^r^'^R iT^:fT^% ^-q^IT ^U^^l.
ifnst irrq"^ ^ i-crr ^Ti^-icr ff s:r^ j^q"Rr % it^f^tt %^ ^ricr ^q-f^r ^^^
qr[%^. ^>Tr T^r ?t^-^[TR irnr^rr ^crfr a-q^fr f^?fr ^rr, ^ri^ tr ^^n^
ffSTcT ^r^^r s[^crr ^rr^rtr ^RTfr^ ^c^r ^\i\ ^iq" ?
^^ ^^:?r ^€m\w^ "Tcfc^R m:RRr 3Tr^cr irr^r^ s-q^r^^^rir^ i^\^ pq^i,
jrr^, ^(RT zft'Tr #5t?- ?ir?5T ^rfh ur ^tft^f ^?:?: ^kr\^ jtr^ r^ i?[g" qrcr.
°^j^i^^ mrii^r ^r?^^ tfT^rrr ^^^^rr^^, fr ^=7r3- ?t3:^ l#n m^
^rz^\ : i^m w>\^^>R\^m ^f^cr ^^^q ^rt^f =f fJTST^JTTiT^ ^irro ^rqc^r ^rs-
NJ 7 -^^ "sj 0\
^irr^ ^f^, ^rq^ iif^TJircr ^m, €rj^ I" ^mt^rt grr^. irifcr ^^\^\ '^m^ jtc^-
^qr ^^^m w\ s^f^r ^rt^^i Tch ^ifj^^rr, cirrr^rTK, ^qr cfoTcrairrqr Jif^nr q'i^r
^fSKfr q^^^r. sj^r ^^^r ^^crf irrW^ ^^rc^^f^r^r jtW rr3R .^rit itr?^f
5TFqrqr err 3T?"n:[S" irfert ^q qrr^^^ ^^^^. Rc^r f^fr ^rrcrr ^^?:rr ^m\ fct
^m^u Rt m^^ q Pq^q" srrsrq fcp-^rr jrf q^rfe-^ q ^^rr^ arrc^r. ^tift qt
sT^rw ^^ ^^j^^] 3j^^i ^[5T §Tf^ 3T'Ef^ t ^^^, qt^ T^qr^r ^f^^r ^^^
'm^Nrn^ JT^rrrs; irrq"^ ^(^^ ^^r ^ih" §rr^r. 5f ^^r^, ^rR^^q-iTR w^^^
m( q q^rqmr q^TRl f^^r q;fq^^ '^r^ =^r^^ R^r jts- srf^i'cr ^jij^^ r^si|
f^^ ^^Ccfr. griTr^T q^ Riqrff^r q^ q qsiqrfcr ^ ^w(\^ ^\f^ q;rq ?ir^ ^^ri^
pcf^r ^rairr qf^^^^n^ ^m^m ^^m 'k^^ q Ri^r ^rrq^^rr ^^rq^ ^^q=T qj=^ ^J^rof
R^ 5rr?^^ qf^=r 1;^, q mw>^ irrq^r ^'qr^g' qf^=r Rc^r ^w^^\ q^r^ ^rrq^*-
II
w^ "iTrlcT ^"JT^ -c3TW ?rr ^^-^r ^K^^'\ sM'i sti%^ -, qg irfuq^rmK^s^
sT^5rr^ ^^ii- ^^fTrT^rofl- II ^-^ ^ri-r?f>5r ^rr^ m^ 11
q'rr "^ frr qr^V ^f=f ^1- 11 ^r^^ sr^r ^^fi" f^s^ 11
rfrf^ ^TTrirrflT w ?^r 11 rrr?^R-r^ ^qr f r 11 ^('-:rT.
^^fTT ^^T ^Tg-^r T^rrfq- S7$r^^\ ir^r^r^ 11
^^r, ^\ mmm-^\ ^r^r ^'^g ^-^r qrfc^- m^>^ ^?Rr q^t^^rr ^f\^ ^m
^WK\^ ^N-^ a^rifqjf^ r<^^ ^^ i%===5"r ^rrrr arR^qr ^f^s" ^ r=[?:f^ tpc=5-^
f^c^r ^rq?^ R^r ii'Kfr ^\A'^'^ \?^ ^\k, ^ ^K\T\'^ sf^itf^ m\^i\ \H^
aircTf 5^r iT^ru^rriqr cr c^wsr %^r ^fl" ^^if^ ^"^=1 ^?:fj?Tr# ^^r w^
rzn^qr W€r R^rr^ f ri", Rr%^ f^gr^r, f^^f^ ^r^T, ^\^ m^, ^^f^^^t^,
^ ^r^??^rf^r^r r'^^w ^[^=Tr €r qr^ w.ei ^^^\ ^]z^\' r^m ^\^ ^\m,
^ ^^lR^^\ sTJTsT^ffT ^m^^ qr^rcr ^r" c^[jt^, ir sT5rr=Tr^i" ^^ ^:^^ 5iT=fFrr
^1 Xl^"^^ fsrqsifr? ^^J?II% 'arjlf^ in^'lTTrl D
^j^^ m f^?i: 3Tr"kcr, rP^^ t^ikf ^{^q- g'r^^^r ^r%". 2T5^rjs--5Tr ^"^i^r ^ ^%q
r^F?"f=^r ^4 ^r^^^ iT^cTrf^cT ^iRicTc^r ^rV.crff %^ m:^^ q;^ fr^ Tw^" cr^ mm.
^r ^s^Tji- (s) s (a) (p) i:° ^"^r ^irccr ^q-f-qr ^^f^i? i^sircfrq- ^5^ t^
(s) t f^§" ^f^^ ^fl:, ^ ^^p'^r ^r^r ^^F^r ^ri^rt \y ^^^ ^icct ^jriqt
^ff r R^ %^ ^rf r. sr?: ^q-fj?^'^ P^^rr^fq- ?([5^ q^rq ^iTif fi ^rr^^r ^^crr cr
j^: '^qr-qr ^rc=5-xzrr ^[rs^g- r^pccr ^m ^r^T^ ^^^. ^-^rci^r^ f^^ur ^
{\) ^^^\^ m^^ ^r^rVqr^ ^^^ ^t^i" ^rcf^ sjrlcT, crfr q:^r^5i§f[cr %§
^fr^ ^^m 3Tr> srrrcr k^ (;) (0 f'r f^-l ^frR^r ^rlcr. irt "s{q?fr srmfr
^^ 3T[|:" 3Tt ^m ^^^ q^^ ?^ t^rr ^sff^^n- iir (:) t fi:i% r^^Rr^'^
%^ ^fe. ^FFT^^ v^'W %5?r JRFjr ^5^[-q"r ffj^r fr^q"[-q"[irR ^er Wi ^r ^t
(y) JToJ^F JT^Fsr ^s^fqt pop CF ^^"^ ^Fq"[^ '^^it ^\ ^m\ ^s?:
q'^F ^rt F^^n q^?qF ^T^f^T^F^^ ^JT^Flf .
STFcTF IT^-T^^^rf F t^^TFTfEfF fF^ ^TFq-^F ^f?" ^F, ^ ^^Fcff^ JTg'FnS' iTFq"F
^^orrfF ^m ^ TcT^TC TF"'^ ^'^^it tKcrsj ^rfrr ^[c^t^FFc ^^[?: m^^^ ^Tw:
^?9T^^[€r |f^ c>q"F^, f ^i^ ^^^ 5rrf=Ff% ^jst ^tfcct art t Tfl^ ?rR^
urrrr^ itrt w^if ^^^ 11
T-fl- qr^^l" ^Ffl"5ff 5Tscrrr^ 11
aTffr ^?T q"ft?Tr ^p?^^ II I 11
^iT?fl"55' ^^T m^ wa % ^f^ ^'^i^ ^jTrflr^ 11 \ 11*
<^r\^ sircfi=^Tr w.m^m um^^^ srr^r q"% crq-[^ %?JTr arr^cr
^fCr ??: JTcTr^ r^Jicr . . ^. ^
^r'^R^ ^r^irr^T c^rq^^qr ^^^. ....... ,, ^v
COMPENDIUM
OF THE
MAllATlli AND ENGLISH DICTIONARY.
^
sT^rr
^
^ The first letter of tlie
alphabet. 2 A particle ; it is useil
in comp. with nouns, adjectives,
and particles introihiced from
the particles. Its senses or ]iow-
ers are — I. Privation or negation:
as mK. II. Deterioration : as
BT^ffl. III. Diminution : as
Bi['«(T^r. IV. Enhancement :
as 3{iTI«T^. V. Return; re-
verting to the former state :
as ^T^T^wf, ^f^5i5i.
^* An interjection expres-
sing contempt ; unconcern : miiph.
^t'f f. (p) (3ood breeding,
manners, or hearing : ^T ^^-
Tf\^\ ir^^ ^T%.
^Tdir ^\^'^\ a. A quarter
or so, less or more : ^» '^T'^
^^T^'r^rr a. That holds or directs
any agricultural imi)lement or
operation. 2 A plough-hoy.
^^JTcT n. An implement; a
plough. 2 As much ground as
can be tilled by two bullocks
— eighty bighcis.
^n> (s) A number, figure.
2 A mark. 3 s An act of a play.
4 The thigh. 5 (commonly ^t'^)
A temple of the head.
^^taFTcf n. Arithmetic.
3?^"^ a. (s) That wears the
iJTrT^ or 'Wfl^ without tucking it
in behind.
^T^^I^ n. s. An arithmetical
table.
3T^J^ a. (s) Thornless. 2 fig.
Free from a trouble or a tioubler.
1
^^7[%^3ra. Particular, scru-
pulous; rigorously exact aud
minute. 2 Doggedly persisting ;
importunate. 3 Tough, well-
concocted — counsels. 4 Scruti-
nising.
BT^f^^ or ^j^Jif^^ a.
Hideously huge. 2 Frightful,
shocking. Used of appearances
and of actions.
^W.Z{ /; See ^T?T.
'^^'S f. (ii) Airs or affecta-
tion, a strut. 2 Priding one's
self upon. V. ^\^^^, "^I^, '<^1^^.
g. of^o.
^T^^^ V. i. To Strut, stalk;
to move pomponsly, stiffly,
haughtily. Also ^«R^W %ig#-
^J^^lcT^^ n. Incoherent
speech. 2 Evasion, ad. Irrele-
vantly, inconsistently — speaking,
acting.
sf^:3"^fsr c. (ii) A beau, one
fond of dress, show, and H utter.
3T^^^tr f. The airs, strut,
and swell of a beau.
^^^ A number, figure. 2 A
hook or crook. 3 The tail of a
scorpion, claw of a crab, curved
pod of a tamarind, &c.
• «^
^^^r f. A pole with a hook
at the extremity for gathering
fruits or flowers, a meak. 2 A
wooden catch fastened on the hip
of a labourer to receive his bill.
^^^ a. Devoid of ^^, or
grit — cleaned rice. 2 Wanting
corn in the car. 3 Having no
corn to eat.
^^OT^^^ w. The burden of
a song.
^T^f^r /. A ruler. 2 Marking,
&c. 3 A compartment (as in a
box).
^^ V. c. To mark; to
number ; rule with lines, figures,
&c. ; to describe, sketch.
^T^RTcT a.(s) Untold; unsaid.
^T^^^ a. Unspeakable, in-
eifable.
^^ ??. (s) Marking gen.;
numbering, stamping, &c.
^^nf^ a. To be marked, &c.
"^^TS" a. (s) Free from
uile ; forgiving, frank. 2 Real,
■enuiue. u. Candor.
^Wff/. The label appended
(to a bale of cloth, &c.) showing
the number aud price.
^^^^5T1C a. Of the currency-
established by the emperor
Akbar — a rupee, &c. Also
3T^^^ Relatiug to the reign of
Akbar.
^^^r ^r /. A golden
coin ; fig. app. to a substantial
and reputable trader, to a lu-
crative business, to a fertile soil,
&c.
3T?;^[^qr /. Cyphering. 2
Style of forming the figures (as
from left to right or reversely).
'^^^^ n. A common term
for the tables which exhibit the
products of the numbers 1 1 to
20 multiplied severally into one
another.
<k?^^"^r?T a. (s) Improper to
be done.
^^^'f^^ a. Perverse, self-
willed.
ar^rr
3?^r^
ST^rirr^r or -5ft a. Of elevou
vidsu wfif^lit — a rupee. 2 Wliich
carries in the womb eleven
months — a buffalo. 'A Illegiti-
mate. 4 Also ^T^^'^lft In
whicli only eleven months pay
is paid of the twelve months
pay due — a service ; as^T^J^^TT,
^+<l a. Kleven.
^^Tm] m. ^f^Tft n. A cere-
mony in the eleventh day after
the decease of. 2 Close friend-
ship, cronyship (Because if
^^^frT come into the eleventh
Tlf»i: from sj-J^'Tg'^ it is
considered as extremely auspi-
eu)us).
^^Tf^ ^^ The eleventh
Avtar of Shiva : a name of
Hanuman. All the ^?t are fierce,
but the eleventh is of course
tl\e fiercest. Hence a term app.
to a person wroui^ht up into ex-
travairant fury : to one habitu-
hIIv lurious.
^TTfrT^T^^f^ a. Frightful,
ludeons.
^T^rfJ" The walnut tree. 2
in. II. A walnut.
^^"f^^^ «. s. That is not
(|)r()i)er, possible) to be done.
^'F^l a. Incapable, incom-
petent.
^^^^ a. H That is without
nntlior, maker, li In gram. Ini-
nersnnal.
^^H'T 7/. 8 Incapability,
ini|>otence.
^^A 71. (8) A bad action , a
sin.
'if^^^ a. In gram. Intran-
Kiti\(' or neuter.
^^T^Hf a. Wicked, criminal,
^^*r[T f. (h) Figure writiuL;';
the method of denoting ninnbers
bv numeral diaractcrs.
^^-^[T a. (s) Uniuiauin-
nbl(! or inconceivable : unmvent-
ul)le.
<^f^['^7'T a. Unfancied, un-
tliought of. 2 Tnexpectcd. .'<
I'npremedifated. 4 Uucoutrivcd.
It I'nintended.
^^rH^ a. s; Sinless.
^^^m n. (s) Infelicity,
wretchedness.
^mWm.f. (a) Spite, malice.
^^^?^K,ST^;^ra. iMalicious
^^^^frT a. (s) Unexpectedly.
2 Inconsiderately.
^T^^ a. Poet. Unintelligi-
ble, unknowable.
^^3"^orr 71. Untimely rain.
'^^r /. A respectful comjjel-
lation for an elder sister or any
elderly female. 2 See ^T^T^lt-
~^^^ Immoderate bellow-
ing, V. ^T, '^^. 2 A superlative-
ly grievous misfortune.
^^[cP^ y. i. To cry immoder-
ately .
^^Rrr /. The elder sister
of fortiuie ; Miss Fortune ; a term
for misfortune, 2 A term for
a vixen.
^^r^fl:^rqRr Used for in-
fatuation or folly as betokening
the approach of ruin.
^^f*^ a. H Disinterested
or unselfish. 3T» ^fr-"^^-%WT.
^^K"^ a. (s) Causeless. 2
Useless. 3 Destitute of grounds.
^T^Rta«. s pop. ST^Rofi
I seless — person or thing. 2
Needless ; uncalled for.
SiT^^rf?^^ /;/. (s) The al-
|)lKil)et.
■^*T^rq''^ir ?*. (s) Freedom from
miserliness.
^^T^r^ a. Improper, n. An
im|)roper deed j a sin.
^=^P>^ pop. '^T^f^ An unsea-
sonable |)eriod. In comp, ^'
3I'5JT An nntinu'Iy birth,
'^^f'^^ (I. Untimely born or
proihu'ed.
N^l^/i. Untimely.
iT?;r^?=f^ a. Uninvented;
uniiuMginary ; lujforged,
'i^\^^^\ 71. Untimely rain.
^^f^^r a. Unseasonable :
^to p. (s) Marked. 2 Cir-
cumscnbi-d ; oliedieiil. In com[).
as ^il^lHiff, qiqiflifT,
^T^r a. Figured, numbered.
^m^T a. (s) Unfit to he
lauded ; unworthy of eulogistic
mention.
^*frTl f. Disrepute, infamy.
^5^^^ «. Unstopped, un-
arrested. 2 Unhesitating-speech,
step, procedure.
^^IJ^ (s) A sjjrout or shoot. 2
Germination, v. V. ^'^Xvi To
sprout.
^5^^ a. (s) Of low birth,
vulgar, base,
^S^ (s) An elephant goad.
2 Also ^Jfl/. A meak.
^^'T a. (s) Unperformed, n.
a An evil deed.
^f^ See ^fcT-
^^^ a. s Ungrateful.
^fm a. (s) Inartificial,
natural. 2 Uncreated, self exis-
tent—the Deity. 3 Real, not
illusory. 4 Genuine. 5 Guileless,
honest. 7t Sincerity.
~*I^H" a. 8 Un framed : un-
devised.
^^^ /'. (a) Sense, wisdom,
understanding.
^^^^fU^r^Tf (A) Pellitory.
^^c^^fcT a<L Altogether,
wholly : ^'^T W^' ^o ^^If*ff.
Used only with verbs expressing
ruin,
^'^c=y^f5[-t?r-it^ a. Sen-
sible, intellisjent.
^f^c^^^irff^ A phrase used
in bonds, notes. With sound
mind and full ])nrpose ; with
free-will and consent.
^^^^[ 51^^ A term for
a w iseacre.
^^^^r m^ A logger-
^T3r% iPT a. Firm, solid-
used of edifices, vK:c. f^^t^V
^T^TJT (s) Disorder.
^^^^ or -*^T n. (s) Unpur-
ehiisablt! ; unsaleable.
^if^i^ Sec ^^^r^.
<t?r3>^ a. (s) Uncreating or
unworknig; subsisting in absf)-
lutc quiesci^^nce. Used of God
^afbr
arT^
after the fashion of the philoso-
phy imported by such terms as
■^ITOT, fsr^T^T':, &c.
^^r^ ad. Exorbitantly —
selling, buyin}?, &c. v. %, ^, '^•
2 Extrava<iantly. 3 Gratuitously
(as unmerited or unduly acquir-
ed) : ^ ^» 'ilfr ^T'S'f I
eat not bread without working
for it; ^t ^mi'^ 3To ^TTTT':
•fT^ I will not pocket any one's
mistake : ^T" sj^^K Disho-
nest trading.
^T^'FT'T' V. i. To contract or
draw together; to shrink,
slirivel.
•\
^JHT? or -^ The walnut tree.
2 m. 71. Its fruit.
ST^f ^mm ad. Imit. With
loudness and vehemence ; with
wild action — crying, sobbing.
^^ See ^^. 2 See ^f^.
^^^ a. (s) Undivided,
whole. 2 Unpieced. 3 Continu-
ous, unending, lit. fig.
^^^ See W^^-
^^is- ^^^m^a. s Infinite-
time or (luration.
^^q^-^^r/. In arith. Con-
tinued progression.
ar^t^triTFq" «. (s) Uninter-
rujjted prosperity : ])articuiarly
exemption in perpetuity from
widowhood.
^t^^tim^^^^r /. A woman
blessed with the unbroken joy
of wedlock.
^?I3" ^^ n. s Knowledge
by synthesis, &c. 2 Unceasing
consciousness, i. e. undying
state.
ar'^f^cT „, (s) Unbroken :
un])arted off. 2 Continuous. 3
fig. Immense, vast, '^o ^T«T-
'^^f^-Tftif'Tj 4 Unrefuted.
iT'I^fr nd. Always, ever.
^W^m< (a) Delegated au-
thority. 2 Choice, ojjtion. 3 See
?^?TR: q^ n. Power of at-
orney.
^^^<Tffr a. Invested with
aithority ; a commissioned nia-
lager./. See ^'afqK.
ST'^^rr Z'. ( a) News; especi-
ally reports of emissaries at
foreign courts.
^^?fr^?fq"or-%^ A writer
of 3^'a^T'C ; a new^ reporter.
^<5rr ad. (a) In the end ;
finally, s. Villagc-|)recincts. Pop.
A spot near the village whither
the pasturing herds are gathered
morning and evening.
^M^ ^i^r ad. At the very
last, -^o ^^T^T'^T^.
^^<l See ^^tr.
^^r a. Whole, unimpaired.
2 All, total; the whole (mass or
multitude, quantity or inunber).
-^^[^r (h) a community, or
the common ])lace of residence,
or of assembly, of ))ersons enga-
ged in study or some particular
])ursuit ; a college, a dis|)utation
hall, a gymnasium; n stand of
idlers, gossips. 2 An order of
men. 3 A stand or station (of
people, animals, vehicles).
^?3r?T a. 8 Inedible, ines-
culent.
^f^^ a. All, every one.
^rr^^^T^t The sum and sub-
stance (of a matter) ; the whole
import.
^^S^r ;■., c. To contract, v. i.
To stop, draw in. 2 To slirink.
sfj^qtr or ^'JT^rntr (u)
A respectful compellation for
schoolmaster.
-^^^ a. Contracted ; short.
*^
^^ IK (pi) a side or half of
a bullockload or horseload ; of
a pakhal, &c., or of the sack or
basket containing the load ; a
pannier, a dorscr, &c.
^^^r & ^%f[5r /. Corr.
from 3TSg^ Wrpl^T.
^^r a. (p) Ended, ad. In
the end ; eventually.
3T^?:^rc7 n. The close of
the year. 2 The last year of a
cycle or number. 3 The last of
the year of account.
^^ff /. The end (as of a
work): also the state of be-
ing consumed ( as of provision ).
^^fltr^T-^^ pi. In ngricul.
The end of the circle of seasons,
i. e. the last fortnight of May.
^'^R'l arf.According to the
number or price marked (on the
ticket, label, &c.) ; at prime
cost — selling or buying.
■^'^FHrr A groove (as around
a peg or stick) for a rope. 2 A
projecting point, v. ^TJI.
^T ind. A familiar vocative
particle in addressing a female.
^72. The body. 2 A limb;
a member; an organ. 3 Side,
quarter, direction. 4 A branch
of learning comprehending such
science as is considered depend-
ent upon the Vedas: hence also
called the Veddnga. 5 Concern
in ; a hand in : '^T ^^^^rftrf SfT^
^WSTT^T. 6 Colhision: clandes-
tine support : "^T 'Ikt^T^T-
cT^TvTT^ 3fJT BTT? . 7 Person
or body ; considered as the seat
of agency or .subject of demerit
on occasion of any evil deed :
f T t.T^ *?T^T 3fiff ^fTT^f. H
Minor or subordinate part (as of
an article or a business) : f^f^T^r
{) A face or aside : T:fTiTT3 'cr'S-
The portion of intestine which
descends in procidentia ani. 11
Ability, capacity (for any parti-
cular work). 1 2 One on cme's side
(in iiigh places); an advocate:
'^TvifT ^T€f. 13 Any ])oint of
the ecliptic on or incidental upon
the eastern horizon. 14 In cer-
tain applications : as ^i^ ^^T
•q^^, &c. 3^31 bears the implied
sense of bodily jiarts required
by pudor to be covered.
^^t An interjection of ad-
miration or fear.
^n^q (s) Tremors.
^ly^c^ The leaning of the
body.
^q^^r /. Poet. Clasping;
an embrace.
^'l^Sr pi. Bodily labour.
m^^ f. The bloom or
freshness of the body ( as in
health).
^iJ^rJr /. The ''rame or make
of the body.
^^
m^
^^FTor -Z^J f/.That meanly
\\itlnlr;nvs himsi-lt'; i\ llincher.
^^Ttr A dumb i^artner,
a dummy — at cards, dnuiglits, &c.
^^r Of the body, material ;
extraiicnns : as ^o '^t^- -
Pertaiiiin<j to self: not derived :
as 3tn"^1 ^ST luliereiit bright-
ness. .'5 Of one's own (making).
4 Of one's own invention ; fabri-
cated. ;") Personal ; jjrivate.
^'fj'^T^ //.^Activity; smart-
ness of the body.
^TO3: a. That works with
reservation of strength and
spirits.
^jJ^ (s) Chopping off a
limb, amputation.
^^sl^^/J leavy of body, dull.
SJ^^T Bodily strength.
S?rr^r?7 Poet. The long outer
garment of nniles.
^^i\ f. A little fire ; a cruset.
^TSrr A thumb or a great
toe. U A form of dovetailing.
:i Used like ^T^, ^THt, &c. ia
the sense of Frame, make.
^^<Z( f. A finger-rino; or toe-
ring. 2 The little linger or little
toe. 3 A finger or a toe gen.
STifjfi^ /. The cast, com-
])leNion, or fashion of the bodv.
^^Tr[^T if, (II) Trash, rub-
bish. 2 Any jioor stiilf by way
of food. 3 Prate, unmeaning
Kpcech.
iiU]l^^^T ad. Wildly, extra-
vagantly — speaking, acting. 2
lloughly ; in some sort of way.
n. A term of reviling for any
])Oor stuff aa food.
<i|J7s^T c. A term for a huge,
fat iirrson ; a porpoise.
^!^T-V\ rt. A term for Gosavi
or nakeil mendicant gen. ; also
for any huge, burly fellow.
^TfT?^? a. Gorbellied, cor-
pident.
'4^i\ f. "^T n. A long frock
( of men oi- cliildrcu).
3TiTf { 2TTtf ^rf q"! ?^^. ,r -^f^^t
To. cast a jierson into great dif-
fieidtios or trouljles.
^Kl^ 71. A houseyard. App.
also to the cleared and dnng-l)e-
smeared level in front of the
doorway. 2 fig. An area, a
field, an arena : ^ifiTTJl, ^Wt-
VTJT.
Innumerable.
^WJ^ a. (s) ITncountod. 2
Pop. Innumerable. -3 Held or
esteemed lightly.
^cfr?5" The inclining of the
body.
3?3lf<i^?, B?3lr?jl^ ff^/.Certaiii-
ly, surely : positively, neces-
sarily.
^n'^^ n. vulg.^TcT. v.f. Tndis-
jiensableness ; concernedness,
earnestness in, for.
>^n^'7^r^ Maintenance or
view of as Indispensalile.
^iFTflff a. Zealous for;
interested in.
^^^l"^ n. s Armour for the
body.
m'^^A or '4W^ ad. Repre-
sentatively for ; in connection
with ; luider shelter of.
aTir^rfcr /. (s) The morals
inculcated upon Ruvan by the
monkey Angada. 2 Hence, Good
morals or laws.
^^^r^S^rt /. A term app.
to oHicious and awkward inter-
ference betwi.vt couteudmg par-
ties with the view of reconciling
them.
^nfr ov-^\ad. Altogether,
wholly, perfectly ; without re-
servation. 2 To the uttermost
degree ; quite, indeed : corres-
ponding with the ])articles-.s7o/;r'
(l)liMd)..s7(7r^-(mad),i'/w(/ (drunk).
(lf)Wiiri(/fit lass, rogue, &c.) li
Kxtrenu'ly, exceedingly. 4 None
at all : '^t'T ""o? 31 o -^Tf^.
^■jT^^rr a. The actuul cul-
tivator on a farm ; the party
whose province it is to render
bodily labour.
^iFr7^r/.(s) A satellit(>,-god.
2 fig. An attendant or follower.
WTT a. Of brutal or over-
bearing manners.
m^Zlf or-tef|- /. Mere
bodily effort; brutal" force ;-as
opp. to art or skill. 2 Rude
violence.
^W „. Bathincr, ablution.
^TiR Fire.
^'H n. s See ^'m.
^"^^r /. a A woman. 2
One's wife.
^*^=?Tr^ s A religious rite
in fixing the ^^, Sic. Touching
the body in si.xteen ])laces, re-
peating the mantra, &c.
^^T ad. Early ; early ripe
or ready.
^Jiqr^=^=r n. (s) Turning
over from one side to the other.
^mi^ .s Reduction of body ;
maceration. "2 Throwing one's
self down (a j)rccipice, &e). 3
I'aralysis of the body. 4 Pro-
lapsus uteri, i)rolapsus ani.
mW-^l f. A private share;
the share in the j)r<)titsof a com-
mon mercantile adventure, dis-
tinct from the share due in
common to all, and arising upon
a sum embarked in the business
upon private accoiuit. 2 Some-
times used for ^fJI^t^T.
^TlT^r Stretching and yawn-
ing. 2 Contortions of the body
under <lemoniap possession, v. ■^.
'.i Writhing.
mT\^\, mWlJ f. (s) Any
disorder or disease natural to the
body ; — as distinguished from
Wrf ^^■^\ or fq?iI^^T>4T.
~A^^^m „. (^) The body and
its members; the whole body.
^^^r*-^ The make of the
body.
'<i\^^ (s) The feeling cf
luxation of joints, of shatterec-
ness or great relaxation and la-
situde. 2 Corporeal gestures anl
actions ; scenic turning and twii-
ing.
^^iR (id. Sufhcient to clotie
the l)0(ly — ajjparel.
^^^^ a. (s) Belonging .o,
being a meinl)er or part tf:
9|inr
aTnR?r
=aFPr^^ a.(s) Unapproach-
able.
3W5f=T n. (s) Rubbing or
kneading of the body.
^IPT^M or ^PPtfr /. Mere
bodily effort or force.
WT^% /. See ^n«^f.
^FPTT^ n. A loose term for
the body.
^FR^H^ /. Bodily or per-
sonal labour.
3?iTRr^^or -^ «.That gains
his living by bodily labour. 2
The personal or actual cultivator
on a farm.
SJiPTrT/. Spending or fati-
guing one's self; working hard.
o?iT^^ Yawning and stretch-
ins:. V. %• 2 The lassitude
which precedes fever. Esp. pi.
^^'•^ a. (s) Inaccessible,
impassable. 2 Improper to be
approached, lit. fig. — places, sa-
cred sciences, degrees of kin-
dred. 3 Abstruse, profound. 4
Unattainable ; in comp. \f?-
3?JTf?Tr/. A female too near-
ly related to be ]iermitted in
marriage. All such are summed
up in ■^^^, ■W.m^, fiTsr«ITf?T,
aud 3TT-quTT^-sT ^^^^^.
^^l^\^^^,^. incest. Nofe.^o
is incestuous intercourse with a
female : incest with a male would
be expressed 9^317^ 5[l*T«r.
^FR m. n. Aloe- wood. conj.
(p) Or.
^WJ^\ or-Tr?^r The outer
garment of the males, a sort of
iVock.
mT'^^j f, (s) See ^n'^m.
STn^^TTr J. A wick covered
over with a composition of fra-
grant substances.
^T?"^ (s) The native juice of
fruits or simples as obtained fby
squeezing, mashing, &c.) without
the use of water.
3fiT?:r^^r a. That spares him-
self; one that, from dishonesty or
indolence, works with reserva-
tion of strength.
^ilft/. (Usually ^ninjThe
sprouting (of trees), w. t^, ^.
^W (s) Aloe-wood. W^ n.
Prolapsus ani ; the descending
bowel. 3 Ulceration of the tongue
from the chronic disease of the
alimentary canal.
MHTJTA push with the body:
711 ^Tl ^.
W\^'Z\t f. Rude violence.
. »\
^FRPT (s) Any disorder na-
tural to the body.
^^^oY -^\ f. The driver's
seat at the head of a team, &c.
^rn^^ a. Belonging unto, or
connected with (by kin, friend-
ship, service).
^^I^^l The patronage, pro-
tection, or support of.
m'^z^ ^^^\z, ^^^\ or
-3^T The cast, air, or gene-
ral complexion of the body.
^^^F a. (h) Fore, anterior.
2 The head, or director of. 3 In
angry or vulgar speech. The
father of.
^^^'\ or -^^r n. Headmost,
leading: — used of the head bul-
locks of a team, or of the boy
directing them.
^JF^f^?^! a. A protege,
or servile dependant of.
^^ /. Ability from prac-
tice, habitude. 2 Force, vigour :
prowess or power. 3 A pock-pit,
a scar. v. xj^, ^g^, ^, «n.
^^^^ n. (s) a cloth worn
loosely over the shoulders. 2 A
cant term for a ke]it mistress. 3 A
polite name for ^iri^.
^rjq-SJiJr n. The cast, or
mould of the body. 2. Used in
the phrase : ■aiTr^^Trff ^^v\
To fall under practice ; to be-
come the subject of one's daily
exercise.
BJTT^IZT Yawning and stretch-
ing. 2 Contortions of the body.
3 Wriggling and fidgeting (as
of children), r. '^.
m^\Z\ One of the three
shares of the produce of a field ;
the share of the actual cultivator.
2 In trade or business. The share
of the labouring partner, as dis-
tinguished from that ©f the nio-
nied partner.
^W>^?'r The actual cul-
tivator considered as a sharer
of the produce. 2 The labimrhiff
partner, as distinguished from
the monied partner.
^nf^RT, ^f^fcT /. (s)
Bodilv disease or disorder.
• f^ "^
^ni^?TT s. Gesture; orato-
rical action.
^^l^fC ( s. Enlarcrement or
growth of the body.) App. to
Swelling of the scrotum.
. •x
^Tf^ Native or inherent
velocity. 2 The expansive force
of the animal body in growth.
^%?^ n. s. Mutilation of
the body ; maimed state. 2 fig.
Defectiveness (as of a ceremony
performed with omission of some
essential point).
^TTT: ad. s. Member by
member; piece by piece.
3tf[frRr?q- „. f,. Slackness of
bodily frame, or of bodily state.
^IJ^ & m^ Better ^rffEF
^TieCr^^ (s) Drawing up of
the body ; contraction.
^^t^ Contact of bodies.
2 Carnal connection. 3 Close
quarters (in fighting).
^JJ^Trrf /. Lightness and
nimbleness of body or of action.
^IT^1T?;% See ^^Ifl^f.
^n^C-^f^ s Dressing up of
the body ; i. e. ablution and in-
unction. 2 Contact of body.
^Jl^r^qr a. Epithet of that
%T»TT'C who is not employed in
coining. 0pp. to iC^^TsajT.
MW?! n. (s) The delight of
sexual congress.
^iT^2"^r f. Escape from
(any difiaculty or danger) without
sustaining loss or injury.
^^^^ a. Light bodied,
agile.
sITT^cT (s)The name of a saint.
He is the Kegent of the star
9T»T^
G
Mr^T
Canopus. 2 The star Canopus.
li App. to a {glutton : bccaust'the
saint 3T» swallowed up the
ocean. 4 Pop. 3T1^T or -^T
A tree.
aiiTHirrf (s) Native consti-
tution, temper, or disposition.
^nfR a. (s) Lackincr a
member or a part ; mutilated ;
incomplete.
^T^S" m. f. A bar (for a
door or window). 2/- The pit at
marbles, &c.
^iJoS^r a. (ii) Superior to,
suvpassins. 2 lUyond, over,
above : ix ^^^ ^W. '-i
Greater or larj^er : also more nu-
merous or more in quantity. 4
Pre-eminent in a bad sense ; i. e,
wild. mischievous. 5 Saucy — used
of the speech of a servant, &c.
^^TT^r y. A finger or a toe.
3Ff^r, ^JTS^f^, ^T^^Fcf /.
Exceedinj^ of bounds ; trespas-
sinfj; ; agressive forwardness,
^nr /'. m. (p) Expectation;
consideration of as likely to hap-
])en : 3TTaI X(\^^ ^t^ "^T-
^1 TfflT 3TJI1 ^^?fl 2. I'ro-
Kence of mind rejjiardinir ; clear
recfdlection of : ff^l ^ ^o5^
^T^ir hid. A civil vocative
liarticle in callin<r to or addres-
sin<< a male. 2 The plural of
3^rr.
<ii^Jn ind. Tiie bob of a song
sun<j bv nurses as a hdlaby. 1.
/. Nursery language. Sleep.
^^^T^rf An interjection of ad-
miration or fear.
^J[|* tid. (n) In advance;
ill iiiitieipnf ion.
A kept mistress.
^M'^fsTF (I-) Uproar, outcry. 2
I'liblieityirqi i^l^'t^T ^T<»^I'?T-
'A Renown, celebrity : ^TJlT^Iuf
r. i. To be noised abroad. 2 To
be rciiilti'd.
^nr?r ad. (h) I'larly — sown or
rii)ening n. (u) The early grains.
ariTR^r & ^m^^ See ^R-
5i?Jir^T (I. (s) Bottonilrss. 2
Diliieult to haj)pen; unlikely :
arnrPTtJrdOThe front and the
l)ack ; the van and the rear.
^K (s) A live coal : also a
fire})rand.
^mr n. (s) A house. In comp.
as sfi^^IJIK Pleasure-house.
3?JTR^ s The planet Mars.
mK\ Charred wood, &c.
obtained l)y Ijurning before an
idol :— rubbed by its worshippers
on their foreheads. 2 The seeta-
riai or ornamental mark so made.
3 Ashes bestowed by a saint, ike.
conferringsome superhuman pow-
er or comiH'tency to cast out de-
mons. A Blight. .5 A live coal.
^irnn^qRr with ^^ To rub
^f JIKI. (Sig. 1) upon the body or
forehead of, in order to counter-
work some demoniac visitation
or maladv, or to confer some
])reternatural gift. 2 fig. Scanty
supply : ifK:iT^ HT^at'^T ^I''?!
^^\^ See ^^f^.
^*JTW# 3T?7 „. A term for
On
an infant or a babe.
m]\^^ V. c. Poet. To em-
brace, ado])t, espouse.
^iTf5Tr or -HF/. A chunam-
med and uncovered terrace.
^^n f. The long body gar-
ment or frock of children. 2 A
long, loose garment, a. (s) Hav-
ing liml)s, members.
m\ ^"^r (ir ^?r m\ or ^ff
^aWT n. That lacks one side, i.e.
a wife or a husl)and. 2 Wanting
in any nuiterial matter. .'< fig.
That is not (piite upright ; a irca/i
side ; that is lame of a leg ; — used
ol I'ogm^s, ikc.
ai"lf[^q n. s ^'nr^R w. (s)
Claiming,acknowledging.es))o>is-
ing. 2 (iranting. 'A Taking up ;
uiidcrtiiking. 4 Acce))tance.
MJir^lff^ V. c. To claim,
es)i()usc. 2 To allow, admit. 3
'I'o luulertake. 4 To aecej)t.
-M\f^ p. s Claimed, kc.
See tin: veil).
^^R ,//. IN.ct. Fire.
^5"^ ». (.sj A measure o)
eight barley corns joined side by
side. 2 The measure of a finger's
breadth.
^?J^'^./- (^) ^ finger or a toe.
^irr^r^fe a. K Pointed
ont with the finger,
^^R^r^lT^ Indigitation.
^nfc^^^ Taking with the
fingers.
^3^ (*^) A thumb or a great
toe.
M5i?"T^iTT V. A thumb-joint-
full, an inchmeal.
^*iTg"R,^*rT^rr^, ^qfmq-R n. A
tliimble. 2 A finger-ring.
^5^%/. The thrill, or creep-
ing sensation on seeing or feel-
ing any thing grating or dis-
gusting; or as proceeding from
fever, v. ^, ^1^. 2 A shrug of
the shoulders. ?'. ■^.
^jT^r/. See %f^.
^JJT'T prep. By the side of;
beside or by ; noting passage. 2
From the jierson of or on the part
of from ; noting mission or re-
presentation, g. ofs.
■^^ (p) Grape or a grape.
2. ^;/. (B^W^'^ s) The granula-
tions of a healing sore. r. ^.
^R^ n. A measure. See
^^ pi. W\\ A familiar voca-
tive particle in calling to or ad-
dressing a female.
^FTfr /. The pit, or the
enclosed sjiace, or the house in
which Fire-worshippers preserve
tiieir sacred tire.
^r c. See ^n.
^^RF"^ n. (s) Inapprehensi-
ble bv sense, s New, strange,
iniliKird <)/■ before.
^TF^" or -^ f. The commence-
ment of the agricultural year ;
the period just before or after
tlu' beginning of the rains.
W?rr ad. I'irst; before.
^?Tl ^^F.^F^fF?^, ^RF'-TT^,
^nr^^Tl^ rt. Prior, anterior in
time.
■AWM ./. The ^'^^'^ or cloth
»nr
^^rrl"
which is worn loosely over the
shoulders.
^^ in.f. Fire.
^r^T (s) Fire. 2 The divinity
presiding over fire. 3 Gastric
iieat, considered as the jiower of
digestion. 4 The Regent of the
south-east quarter. 5 The south-
east quarter.
^f^^.^ A spark.
ajmrS" n. A firebrand. 2 A
live coal.
^f^f^ n. A hole in the
ground or an enclosed s])?.ce on
the surface, or a metal square-
mouthed vessel, for receiving and
preserving consecrated fire.
^fif<^R A heated irtm pillar.
One of the materials of the fiery
ordeal, or instruments of Savage
persecution.
"^pTK^ ji. Fiery ordeal.
^fMJi or -S" n. An applica-
tion unto of fire ; a baking or a
healing (of a chemical or me-
dical ])reparation).
^r^r^?" a. s. Digestive,
peptic.
^m^?r (s) Self-immo-
lation by a widow upon the
])yre of her deceased husband.
^Rr^f^ A rocket.
^\^^^^ s. The sun-stone.
^T^^'m n. Languor of the
digestive power.
^ffr^'^ a. Of the color of
fire, flame-colored. 2 Red hot.
^r^T^^^ a. See ^m?.
^r^Rrrr^r /. The house in
which the consecrated fire is
preserved.
^r?Tf?T^T/. A tongue or spire
of flame.
^f?r?r^ n. Maintenance of
a perpetual and sacred fire.
^filtrtr A Brahman that
maintains a perpetual fire. 2
App. jocosely to a perpetual to-
bacco smoker.
^^'5?Trcr Conflagration. 2 A
fiery meteor; a falling star, &c.
^^^Ui. Foremost. 2 s. First
or fore part. v. ^fi^iX, % ^X-
'<^mf\ f. See^nfr.
^nr ji. (s) The point, tip : also
the top, peak. 2 The forepart.
3 In comp. Fore, front : also
chief.
^^^^ a. Principal; that
leads, conducts, presides.
Bjq-iimt a. 8 That leads,
precedes.
^T^Tl'^ n. s. The early corn,
the corn reaped on the close of the
rains, the ^R^?^ crops. They
consist of aii"S?afT, ^T«!Vt, rice,
&c.
^^W /• (^) 'The honors
and attentions which, at assem-
blies, are rendered to the princi-
pal man present ; the chief
honors.
3?l1TTir=^^R The respect
involved in 3fTj-j;3^j.
^W^m The forepart; the
van. 2 The point; summit,
apex.
^nrm^/i. Eating first ; the
right or dignity of having one's
meal before others.
^Wtr a. That is entitled
to BT^M^T«J>r.
^^^Tff a. That goes before,
is situate at the end ; — referring
whether to time or phace.
^T^(^ a. A complainant
or plaintiff. 2 That holds or
maintains (a position or tenet)
stoutly.
^r^^X See m^T-
•^^Tfrr Villages or lands
assigned to Brahmans for their
maintenance.
^?n^=f n. The chief seat at
assemblies ; the chair.
^mm, ^m'^m a. (s) Unac-
ceptable, inadmissible.
^^^^ a. That leads, man-
ages, presides.
^^^ a. 8 Chief, principal.
^^ 71. a Sin. 2 Fault,
crime.
^T^r^rT n. fs) Improbable,
unlikely. 2 Sliockiiii:, linrriltli .
3 Any wonder or minvel.
miZ^ ^^^f / A strange
occurrence, a wonder.
^^r?:^l^?7^/i.Poet. Wonders
marvels; also a wonder or feat
(of time, fate, nature, or the
pervading divinity, &c.)
^^?r a. Poet. All, the
whole.
'^W^^\ or ^m^ V. c. To
shake about in water (a cloth,
&c.) in order to rinse or wash.
B^q'S'qt^cd a. Spacious,roomy.
2 fig. Free, intimate — address,
friendship.
^q-5?q^3- ad. Roomily,
loosely, at large — sitting,placing.
^T^T^^^^ /. Reiterate
shaking about (of a cloth, &c.)
in water.
^^r^r A plant. 2 Or ^-
^t^T The tips or ends of (a
female's) hair. v. ^^\•^, fsf"^^,
^^f^r/. (h) The front. 2
The van (of an army). 3 Head-
ropes (of a horse).
^^rt^r ad. Before, in the
front.
s?q-rt|fqnjrf r /. (h) The fore-
part and back part ; the van and
rear. 2 The head and heel-ropes
(esp. of a horse), ad. Before and
behind.
^^f. See^^r^.
^^K a. Careless, unsolicit-
ous. (.s) Formidable, terrible,
shocking; app. to objects, ac-
tions, places.
^tirq^T n. An order of men-
dicants. They wander about
naked, carrying in the left
hand a human skull contain-
ing urine and ordure, and a pan
of burning coals in the right.
They are exceedingly filthy, and
eat every thing, even human
carcases, a^gtrxfqt An in-
dividual of the 3fgKtriq.
^^f^ A free formation to
designate the abominable and re-
volting rites and practices of the
vagrants observing ^jgy^xj^.
"^^r?r a. Horrible, hateful :
also vile, filthy, loathsome— used
freely of -persons inspiring fear
or amazement or exciting nausea.
2 An individual of the order
3rqi«r
8
arsmr
^55" /. Ablution of the
body, batliinu;.
<lec('iit, foul — speech or speaker.
^iT^^:%^^ or ^^^^^^ arl.
Ill a slovenly or disorderly man-
ner— weeding, jjicking at meals.
^^^fj^^^r Any mass or
material disorderly tossed about;
or disorderly tossing action ; any
messing or mess : also fig. des-
troying, smashing (of a counsel,
scheme, character, &c.)
^^■^^ a. (s) Unshaking. 2
Unchangeful.
3T=^tf^7 ad. Unequally,
unsmoothly — used of cutting
of grass, plucking out hairs (of
head or beard), of cow dung-
smearing.
3{=q'q'3" a. Wild, wanton,
restless — a chihl, ike. 2 Lively,
brisk — one's destiny or fortune.
^^^r (ii) Wonder, astonish-
ment. 2 An object of wonder.
^^qt^ a. A laxly used word
agreeing with 3T^T^^. 2
Astonished.
^^^a. (s) Fixed, stationary.
•^^^'^ a. Unrestrained, wild,
foolish — speech or speaker.
^^{dM^-Kd a. Dry, coarse,
unsavoury — food. 2 See af'^-
^^?:q^ror^^^^^n. Dry,
unsavoury food ; hard fare.
^"^c^a.Cs) Fixed, stationary.
s. A mountain.
^^T^ (s) The end or border
of a clotli.
^^^Rfr/. (s) A name for
the woman whom, on the day of
f^^X 'f'JBtf^i the iieighhouriug
women assemble to fix in a scat
nnd feed and serve ; not suffi-riiKj
her to move.
^^r':^'T a. (s) Unmoved :
immovable.
3?^^ n. Washing the
mouth after a meal. v. ^^,
^^^■^ V. i. To wash one's
month after a meal. 2 (To wash
one's moutli irilh respect to, i. e.
to give uj) as over, over
j)assecl, passed by). To lose utter-
ly : assjUHTW '^o To lose one's
life.
^^r^ V. c. To wash the
mouth (of another) after his
meal.
^T^l^ or ^^H'^T A teat or dup;.
Vs. O
^^^/.w. See ^^^. 2 m. pi
The unwoven threads at the end
of a web, the thrum.
^^ToS" a. Slovv, of a quiet
disposition. 2 Still, — water, &c. 3
Fixed. 4 Of firm purpose. 5
Unmoved, unaftected by use or
touch — articles of food, &c.
ad. Steadily— carrying, moving,
placing.
^^^q^ See 3TS^q^.
^^JTZT See ^^^T sig. 2
^T^rtr or ^^SJrsrr Terms
for a bulky, bloated drone, a
lobcock ; a fat, lazy, happy fel-
low, a Falstaff.
^^f^?^ 71. s Steadfastness.
2 Unchangefuhiess.
^^12" a. Strange, wild, ex-
travagant— used freely of per-
sons, actions, qualities.
^"^R^ ad. in) Suddenly or
unexpectedly : BT<» JF^TI 'q^'JT
T?^wtT, 2 Straight, directly :
3 Softly, steadily. 4 Readily,
easily : ^ ^t"^ 3T » 'g^s?^ 3^.
.5 Untouched — an article of food,
clothing, &e. (i CovertW:
^^(^?^ n. 8 Steadiness,
firmness.
^^'^ f. Stoppage, stopped
state: ^"^1 3T« ^^^T^J
^^i^^r, ^^R[^r, ^^r^^r
ad. U'nmeaningly, miconueet-
edly— speaking. 2 Dirtily, mes-
singly — eating, .'i In a slubber-
iiiii^ manner — doing.
^M^"^^%^ a. s That can-
not be jirescribed for, immedi-
cable —a malady.
'iTf^rr^ a. Unthought of,
uneoiieeived.
^(^'^•7 a. Inconceivable,
srr^iqr^^W a. Unknown
and unimaginable. A title of
God.
STf^^^rS" A short period.
^rf^^^rtt a. Transitory,
fugitive.
^r^cT a. {^) Unkissed. ^^
^^«fT or jfl^ /. Xi\ oriyinal
device or thought.
-^^ a. Correct, infallible.
^^^ ad. Suddenly, unin-
tentionally.
-^^^^^ilT'T n. Unerring aim.
2 fig. Unerring planning ; sure
counsel.
aT^^e^r% a. Of unerring
aim ; of correct conjecture.
^^cr=f a. (8) That is without
sensation of life, inanimate. 2
Insensible.
^^^'^ n. 6 Insensibility,
unconsciousness.
^^^ A half-sher.
"^"^^ a. s That does not
sli]) or move ; steady.
^^^''^^ n. A mango.
^^ a. s Unborn — used of
God. A he-goat.
^^^i< (s) A large serpent,
a species of boa. 2 fig. A devotee
dead to the pursuits, pleasures,
and pains of humanity. 3 App.
to a dull, sluggish fellow.
^5ITlT|rTf^. A dronish course
of life ; sturdy mendicancy.
^^1<'-h ind, (p) From. A
phrase in letters from a superior.
•^"^Ff n. (s) A collyrium. 2
Particular application to the
eye-lashes (as lamp-black, i!te.) to
confer superhunian ])owers of
vision. 3 App. fig. To instruc-
tion from a spiritual teacher,
to a '!7'3T^ from an idol, &c.;
considered as a means of remov-
ing mental darkness.
^^-T or -nl f. Ironwood-
tree.
^^^Kr (s) An adept at
thievery.
^^^ a. (s) Uncreated;
ctcruul.
ar^r^
9
STSR"
^sf^ a. (a) Strange, won-
derful. BfST^T'l /. Strange-
ness.
^^^\^ /. (a) Articles of
property ; goods and chattels. 2
Munitions of war.
^^^ a. (a) An epithet pre-
fixed in notes to the name of
any great person. (Esp. app. to
the names of Mahammadaus or
of the British).
STsT^cf f. Greatness, power-
fulness.
^W\m (ij) Trial. 2 Esti-
mate or computation.
ST5[iTr^^ V. i. To attempt or
try.
BT^PTff^^ v.c. To try ; to
make experiment of.
^^^r^(p) Estimate, com-
putation, rough calculation.
ST3[qT^^ ?;. c. To compute,
deterujine — -conjecturally.
^sfirr^r «. Conjectured,
computed. 2 Shrewd at guess-
ing.
^Sfq'i^r y. m. (s) A sort of
parsley. 2 A kind of lovage. 3
Bishop's weed or the seed of it.
^SfJJT a. s Invincible.
^^T a. s Imperishable.
«i?^rRr a. (s) Incorrupti-
ble, immortal.
^^r^ w./ (s) ^^^r ^z
in. n. (s) pop. 3f3Ti3l/. The
cavity formed by putting the
hands side by side, hollowing
the])alms; gowpen.
^^^^r Black basil.
^^^R (h) The seed of
Ligusticum ajwaen.
^^r^fr^l" ^wm or ^^r-
^^UTT/. s. A definition con-
veying a sense which, to he ap-
prehended, demands the assump-
tion of some manifest implica-
tion, whilst it retains its appro-
priate or verbal sense : ^T%
3?!^ Spears are come — im-
pliedly (the literal sense remain-
ing) spearmen are come.
^^51T n. s A vowel.
^^r /. (s) A she-goat. 2
Illusion, ideahty ofthe universe.
Q
^^r A grand-father, pat.
or mat.
^^(7i^^cr=f n. (s) pop. ^^r-
JI^ or -s. The teat or nip-
ple hanging from the throat of
a goat. 2 A term for a good-for-
nothing person.
^^flST /. Licentious tricks
and pranks; riotous doings.
^^R^ The Guru or spiri-
tual jireceptor of one's Guru.
^SflOT a. Ignorant of; un-
acquainted with. 2 Ungrateful.
3 Irrational.
^^FTcTf a. Simple, silly,
unknowing.
^^r^ a. s Unborn or un-
produced ; as a^o-^Tf Of whom
the teetk are not come. 2 (Ad-
zat) Base-born ; ignoble.
^STF^rir^I?: Non-distinction
of castes (as at Tuljapur, &c.)
^STfcTiTq" a. s That has ne-
ver had fear.
^STFcrsq-^l-lT s A lad under
his fifteenth year, a minor.
^3r[cT5T^ a. (s) Mild, gentle,
harmless.
^^TlcrfH^ a. Existing un-
born, uncreate.
^^fTSrr a. Mine and thine ;
own and other.
^^T^'T a. (h) Ignorant, un-
knowing.
aj^lR^rj" a. Common corr.
of ^T^Tn^TS.
^SfrqrcJT^'^a. (s) a goat-herd.
^'sfm (s) A kid or a lamb.
^^TRf Gaffer, &c.
^^R^ n. (s) Blustering me-
naces ; empty intimidation.
^^[^ (p) Disease, distemper.
^^K^r or ^^TRot feR^r
V. c. To smooth down in smooth-
ing or coaxing.
^^if^in a. (h) Diseased, sick,
ill.
^^rCcT (a) An acting func-
tionary of a village or dis-
trict. App. to tfi^ST, ffa^-
^ttT, ■^^g'a, -^^tql^T, and to
^rT^TTfTT^S. 2 ad. pop. Un-
derstood in tlie sense of unin-
terruptedly (from generation to
generation) : ?tT^ if^l fft?! fq"
^f^T^ a. (s) Unconquerable.
^f^^ a. (s) Unconquered.
^i%crq^ n. (s) Amongst Pan-
dits and Athleta;. A writing tes-
tifying the pre-eminence at dis-
putations, or in the exercises of
the gymnasium, of him that
bears it. 2 The writing fiu'uished
by the ])arty cast in a suit, ad-
mitting his failure. The word has
doubleaspect — to\^'ards the bearer
of the x\-^, and towards the
furnisher ; and is (or ought to be)
written respectively 3^° and
arilf^JT a. s Of unsubdued
senses or passions.
^RK^^?Ie^f^ (p) From
one attached with a pure affec-
tion. A phrase in notes from an
inferior.
•^[^tr a. Fig-colored —
clothes, &c.
^f^§R (p) From. A phrase
constant in notes from a
superior.
^^If /. A grand-mother.
^^r ind. A respectful com-
pellation in accosting man or
woman.
^Tsff^rf/. A term of respectful
compellatiou for a grand-mother
or an old woman gen. ; granny.
^€Rr# (m^l^) / Laud of
altogether remitted assessment.
#1"^ (p) The earden-fig,
the plant or the fruit.
^^l^ n. ^Mm^^K m. (s)
Indigestion. 3^■5flDT «. Un-
digested. 2 Unworn.
^^FTT^ Slight indigestion.
2 Undigested food.
^^R ad. Poet. Yet, still,
hitherto,
'"^^m a. (p) Unconcerned,
careless. 2 Sorrowful, sad.
'^^n (a) Hire or wages
(esp. to a journeyman or jobber)
af^^r y. S;^??TJT m.n. Po-
pular forms of ^'sif^, ike.
M^ or -^ at/. Yet, till.
STif^
10
3T2Tr
^^c3" n. INIat. Grand-father's
bouse.
^^5^ Tlie Gurri of one's
Guru.
^sfq" a. s Invincible.
arifHT^r The father of one's
fiither-iu-l;i\v, or onu's mother-
in-law.
^t^q" f. The mother of
one's iuotlier-iu-l;i\v or father-in-
law .
_*\
^^f^r A res|)ectrul term of
comiiellntioii for a graiul-father
or ail old man ;.^en., Gaffer.
'<^'^oS 11. ST^f53T or ^^^\
or -o5T Maternal grand-father's
lioiise.
m^^^ ajcfr, ^^tr^cr See
under '^^.
^TcT /.An obstruction, ht.
fijr. 2 A stone, &c. put under a
wheel to scotch it. 3 Forfeit or
jieualty, as attached to engajre-
inents. 4 Obstinacy, v. T^^.
5 The bridge of a f^tfiT or a
similar instrument, (i A bar,
nail, &c. used as a lever. 7 A
catch or ravel (of a rope, &c.)
Hence, fig. a knot in t'le mind ; a
prejudice against. 8 The water
which flows on (in a tfi^ or
channel) after stoppage of the
iilZ or other j-oiirce : ^W^T
^7 '^Z f. Vehement efforts.
«??^ /. (II) Obstruction. 2
Restraint, control. .3 Penalty (as
attached to engagements).
^Z^^ n. commonly ^^^"T.
W:^,^ v.i. (n) To be stop-
ped, obstructed, hindered.
^^^^ a. Obstinate, stub-
born.
^T^>^ V. c. To stop, hinder.
^ZW>^ f. (ii) Guess, con-
jucture. 2 lUile (as of arith-
metic, &c.) the proper, or po-
pular method (as of riding,
wrestling, &c.j
<i|T*ai'J| V. c. To compute or
estimate ; to calcuhite roughly.
r. c. See ^"S^airf.
^?:5R^'t^F^^/. Meregucss;
crude, uawarrauted fancy.
^Z^\ commonly ^^^F A
copjier piece of money.
^ZW^m or-^r(ii;Obstruction,
impediment, v. ?IT^, 'RT'S'. 2
Stopfiage, detention, v. ^^.
^J^R'fr /. Obstructing,
stoppinir,
^HT^rr^o'r V. c. To obstruct,
hinder.
^d^^rt ^Vk n. k term for
any thing of little worth.
^ZmX a. Obstinate.
^Jt^I^S-/. Price of fusing.
^Z^l f. A goldsmith's cru-
cible. 2 Melting (of metals), o
Drawing up. 4 llcstraiut, ciirb-
intr.
*T2:°r y.i. Poet. To travfd, pere-
grinate : tr^ ^JT??lf*T^ ^-
■Zr{\ II Tf;iTrlUT ^Ilff^l 11- 2 To
thicken— milk, &c. '6 lo be re-
duced into narrow compass ; to
become compact and firm :
to shrink ; to be contracted —
leather, cloth, &c. 4 To be con-
snincd or used in. 5 To turn
out or be short — a thing made.
(3 To waste or dry up — the body,
a well. V. c. To twist ; to form by
complication : %' h^t frl^^ <>T-
^•T ^Tin". 2. To wear and
waste through teasing or tor-
menting ; to torment ; ^fsf??
ftlfgffr trif^fff f^^^ ll^flT'^
fs|f^^ ■^^^Trfflj: to wear out
or make an utter end of: ^fl^
^reif^ T^^'l'^^^. 4 To fuse
(metals).
^I^'cTi^r^ Time of decline,
decay.
^^cfiqr^r Declining state (of
business, of affairs) ; waning
fortunes.
^Z'<\^ a. Obstinate, stub-
l)orn.
-^TTT Contracting, or draw-
ing into narrow compass. 2
Control. 3 Management, skill,
and despatch at business.
^TT'Pr V. c. To gather toge-
ther, in, up ; to draw in or wind up.
2 To gather up, as in order to
put by (books, ])apcrs, &;c.) 3
To taiic up ; to take jiossessionj
ifmi'^l ^qffl ^^1^ Hi-gri^
^Z"?^!- 4 To do smartly.
to despatch. 5 To come up with,
to overtake ; to reach, arrive i
To manage, to control. 7 To
finish : to gather nj) and dispose
of. i. e. to make nn end by killing.
sTJq^i;,. o. ^z^mx --^zq-
■3X1[ a. Small, tight, commo-
dious, on a manageable scale —
the body, a building, affairs,
&c. ^^■ci'^T^ is further, short-
ish and well fitting — a garment :
^f ZT:[rI1^ ?l' or T^ru\ To short-
en (a work or business). 2 To
bring towards conclusion. 3 To
draw towards the end.
^cTq^*^ V. c. To gather to-
gether, in, up. 2 To despatch
or dispose of; to devour.
^Z^^ or ^^'T:s- n. A
breadth (of a cloth, &c.)
STJqFSjTg y. Gathering to-
gether; putting up (as of scat-
tered articles) : contracting, re-
trenching (as of engagements,
e.\penses, &c. ) : despatching
promptly (as of several jobs).
^Z^\^ ,', Obstinate. "^Zm^l
f. 01)stinacy.
^HTT.?:^ n. Trash, trum-
pery. 2 Prate, nonsense.
^jff/. A forest, wood.
^Z^ a. Extensive and
dreary ; vast and frightful, — used
of a forset or desert : iiiZfZ and
hoicliiKj.
^Z^ a. Small and tight.
(id. Tightly, closely.
^Z^ a. That cannot be
averted.
'^zv^z, ^z\^\Zm.f. ^z\^f,
T^2: /". Vehement efforts ; toil,
pains. 2 The state of crdiaus-
tion. '.\ Harassing and worrying:
the state of being harassed and
worried (as of a debtor by his
creditor, of labourers by task-
UKisters, of a peojile by marau-
ders). V, ^^, ?T, ^^.
W:\i See ^2:'^rW^. 2 Wast-
ed and dried up state (as of
wells. &c.)
BTcTITlST (i.i) The common
and mean jobs of a poor widow
(grinding and cake making)- 2^
The assigumeut upon the villa-
5TTm
11
^r?^
gers of T^^\ for a sepoy sent to
collect the revenue. 3 Worry-
ing:, working hard.
^PCm Preferably ^JfC^Ex-
ceeding eflfort-
STJi^;7.of^2^^.Tiucken6d—
milk, syrup, &c. hy hoiling. 2
Rendered compact and strong —
the body, &c. by exercise. 3
Fused — a metal. 4 Contracted,
drawn up.
^S'RK Obstinate, disputing,
or disputatiousness.
STJf^r Grasp, compass.
BTJI^rr or ST?r?;2"rt. Exceed-
ing, superlative ; — used of ex-
cellencies or good qualities. 2
Surpassing, clever, capable; —
used of persons in good and in
bad sense. 3 All, absolutely all ;
hiirh and low.
^m, '<^im See ^2"T.
^^f^r a. Smart, clever of
despatch (at business).
^?^ o. Arrant, arch: a*?
^f ^ "^T^. 2 Genuine, sterl-
ing: as 3T1«1 fT"^ ; also Adept,
expert : as 3Tf w1 ^'fT^T, ■f%f'?-
^^^T^ s Violent laughter,
^ll^m m. ^p"r=E^ n. Vehe-
ment action ; exceeding effort.
2 Toil, pains.
^Ir^lT a. ~^l\^\^ a. Ob-
stinate.
^l\^K m. See ^2:f[^.
^^rnrfz^rr /. pi. a play
amongst children.
STJIJST or ^t^^ a. Born in
the eighth month of gestation.
^Z^m a. Thirty-eight.
^Z^l a. Eighteen.
^ZT\ ?|IT „. The eighteen
castes or classes of people. All,
everybody.
^j^r^^r-^r ^i"Rr a term
for a variously gifted and pre-
eminent rogue. 2 A term for a
person full of maladies and ail-
ments.
^zx\ zw^ or ^sn fiqt /.
A term for the peo))le of Europe.
term for a bastard : also for a
mixed caste, or an individual of it.
ar^rr ^^TTsncr/. a compre-
hensive term for the people ; tout
le mondc. 2 An indiscriminate
multitude; a promiscuous as-
sembly.
^ZT\ ^If pL (h) a term for a
pack of knaves, a crew of idlers.
^ZT\ ^\T ^^^IcT /. A gene-
ral term for the herbs and
plants on the globe.
^TS'?:r r^% or sTs:3:iR"?r^ ad.
Very much ; almost alto-
gether : r^T^T ^<^ 3T3 ° '^f<'^
^Z^ Recollection ; an abid-
ing in or returning into the mind.
^5^^ A week : a period of
eight days.
^Z^^l or -^^Ui. That gives
milk for eight days a)id then
stops and kicks; — a cow. &c.
Hence 2 That is well and ill
alternately — a servant, a child,
&c.
^'?:^i"TTf ^ or -^k^ a. That
continues but a short time;
liable to sudden dismissal — a
servant or public officer. 2 Not
]iormanent ; hebdomadal.
iJJ^'^ f. Remembrance;
memory,
STJ^"^/. Remembering. 2
A memorial or memento.
'^Z^^ V. i. To come to
mind ; to remember. ^T'sf^^
V. c. To bear in the mind.
3^15^^^ ad. Within one's
remembrance.
^Z^\ a. Eighth.
' _ *~»
^5^r m. or ^Z^ n. A nipa-
sure of capacity ; half a -^^
or ^ of a T^i?}^Tt.
SJjarr f. The seed-stone of
certain fruits (as the jack, the
date, &c.) 2 A testicle.
5T5f^r ad. In a dangerous
place ; in a bad or awkward part
of the body — a blow, &c. given,
2 In some out-of-the-way place:
STJfTftri^ilf ad. A phrase
signifying Never ; answering to
^^■^T ^TlfVf^TX:'^ or Ad
Groecas kalendas, &c.
^JT or ^5" ijid. Particles
used in multiplying a number
by 8 : as ^^ 3fB^ 3TT3.
^ST/.A wrinkle of the brow.
V. gi^. 2 fig. A knot in the
mind, a ju'ejudice. 3 fig. A
hard and tough ])oint ; a knotty
particular. 4 The seed-stone of
the jack, date, &c.
STJr^TT^Sr or ^JPT^^STt?.
A humorous term for a word un-
compounded and nnderived ; a
simple word. 2 App. to au un-
teachable blockhead ; a natural;
a pure simpleton of Nature.
^mWK ad. Through the
eight watches; constantly, un-
ceasingly.
^5rq[?rr ^^m ^im ad. Con-
tinually, constantly.
^Zr^\ f. See ^Z^\'
'Ml\^ a. (ri) Fifty-eight.
^ir^r^ a. (h) Twenty-eight.
-i^ a. Forty-eight.
fiT: a. Seventy-eight,
m^- "^€r- ^r- ^r a.
Eighty-eight.
5Tf5F°T^ a. Ninety-eight.
'A^ a. (s) A testicle. 2 The
nnisk l)ag regarded as the scro-
tum of tiie deer. 3 s An egg.
^^ ind. An inseparable pre-
fix expressing Lessness, subor-
dinacy, irregularity,&c.; answer-
ing to By, minor, sub, off, extra,
odd, &c,
^^ f. (h) Obstruction,
impediment. 2 Obstinacy. 3
Penalty— as attached to engage-
ments.
^^^ /, A surname or a
family name.
i^'^^F^ s A term for the
universe : also for the eight orbs
environing and defining it.
^J?;'^ 71. Any thing to re-
strain, obstruct : i. e. R stone
placed; a knot; a bolt; a catch.
^^mi f. Stopping, ob-
structing.
^TT^
12
arr^T
^T^>^ V. i. To catch, stick
fiist in or at : to be stojjped,
iin^)e(1f(l.
STT^^r/. A by-tale, an in-
cidental narrative; a (li«;ression.
2 Wild discourse or talk.
^T^C a. Obstinate. 2 Res-
tive— ahorse, li That tits tight!}'.
^^^^^ ft. See ^^^'^. '
^^^r^q" V. c. To obstruct,
to stop.
'^T^^r A copper piece of
money. 2 Money or small money.
^^^W n. A suboidiiiate
work ; a job. BT^^T^t or -jgi
a. .'\ joljber.
Set' 3^2^!^, &C.
^?r^^r A sort of scissors
for cutting betel nut. 2 fig. A
restrainer.
^-J^r/. A testicle. 2 Tes-
tides.
^■?^>^ or -^ (s) The scro-
tum : the scrotum and testicles.
2 The universe.
^3"^^iTr a. A laboiirino- lad.
2 A fellow for minor uork ; an
Uiulerliiig.
^T^^' Minor expenses;
extra expenses.
^Tt^^TJT /. A stumbling
bh)ek. 2 n. A lock to tlie aiT-
■^S"^ or ring; a stand or Ind
for an ink-bottle, iSco. ; a button
for a door : a tiling or device
gen. to secure, fix, sto|).
^T^^ofr y. Stumbling, kc.
See the verb.
^??f^ or ^?^^ /). i. To
stuml)le. 2 To falter ; to hesitate.
.'H To falter in action ; to stagger.
4 To get entangled in or with,
and V)e embarrassing unto.
'<i\-lWE'i-{^ r, c. To make to
stiiuibje, falter, trip, lit. fig.
^T^FT „. '^^T^Kf. A term
for the extra, secondary articles
of iuiman food, — as fruits, sweet-
ini'ats, iVc.
^T^^ Obstruction. 2 A
stumbling place, lit. lig. v. ^K.,
^s<^K a. Obstinate, lestive.
^^■^^^r'^ n. Rough-dug well.
2 \ well almost filled up with
rubl)ish ; or a well incompletely
dug and quitted.
3TTJT??r/. A by lane.
^^13" /. Things lying about
disorderly.
ST^i^ A petty village ; a
hamlet.
fjI<:TT^«'.13onghtof, or offered
for sale l)y, one not a dealer, — of
or by some ])riviite jiersou.
^:j3Fr^3-3rT n. Lumbering or
non-descript articles.
^RJTf'IilT A strijiling lad,
youth.
^zk^ f. A digre>sion.
■^^N^ n. An out-house; a
hut.
^^^r¥r m. A small horse.
3^3"=^ or -W rtc/.Tightly,firm-
ly — tying, fitting, entering into.
^^^'^ /'. Continedness, nar-
rowness. 2 Crovvdedness. .S
Cumbering things. 4 fig. Dis-
tress, diHieulty.
aT:?^aj^ V. To be thronged.
2 To he straitened, distressed.
aT;3-^afr^ 5-:?I or ^wh n.
An awkward disorder or pain ; any
disorder situate in the ^judenda.
^^"^^J^J. See ^^^^T sig. 4
^^^1^ V. To be tight ; to
pinch — a garment. 2 fig. To be
in narrow circumstances.
^¥^r f. Framework to con
fine a vicious cow or butfalo
whilst milking her.
^T^^ or -^ Two and a
half times. Used in multiplying
by 2.1. "^I^ 3To ^^T-
^^^ n. (s) Oviparous.
^^^rrT/. See ^F^^f^.
^^fsf^r 7ft. Back-stairs or
bv-stairs.
^^5T^r or ^^^ a. Half-old;
rather worn.
*T?'^ n. The dugs of a cow,
tkc, udder.
I^"?^ m. ^^"^ 7j. A door-
I bar.
^^■^r /. A (metal or wood-
en) three-legged stand, — for the
"iiǤ, eating- vessels, &c. 2 The
boh of a door. 3 A common
term for the two cross pieces of
wood supporting a low t?t^
or stool.
^^^f- An obstinate resist-
ing. V. im, ^. 2 Stopping.
^^^ V. i. (h) To be stopped.
2 To work or go tightly ; to
pinch. 3 To stop, to refuse; to
refrain obstinately. 4 To be res-
tive— a horse. 5 To suffer stoj)-
page in j)!uturition.
^^^ /. Mercantile corres-
pondence or agency: the busi-
ness of holding in charge the
merchandise of dealers : the re-
muneration for this service or
agency.
^^^ A term for a horse or
Ijcrson which, by restiveness or
perverseness, constantly c."osses
or baffles one.
^¥^r f. Opposition or resist-
ance, v. ^'\^.
^^^f^ a. Thirty-eight
^^^^r A factor or agent.
^^^W (s) Consternation,
dismay.
^^^3-q- V. c. To obstruct,
stop.
^Z'-^^ Hinderance. 2 Stop-
page, detention,
3T3-?"r?or ^^^rUiTfrA Rude,
boisterous.
^^^f^rr Any corn given to
horses, except '^^^TT or gram,
which, 2^^^ eminence, is called
^^■^(^f Ground gram with
TT'SS (as given to colts).
ar^^loS" f. Irregular bits of
pulse ; — as lying amongst split
])idse.
st^'^^f^r/. Servile courting;
mean cringing.
Sj^s-Tr^ V. A small sized
^\r\'K or rather large ^^^\.
<i\'m'^ The sub-channel of
a water-wheel.
3T.?^[:§-_^lT-%^-"^5- a. In-
exact; somewhat excelling or
arr^
13
aTTTT
Bomewhat falling short of; —
used of numbers, measures less
or greater than the ordinary
round numbers (of dozen, score,
hundred) or the ordinary mea-
sures (of w':, *T'n", '^■^l, &c.)
2 ad. In a confused manner ;
neither this nor that : ^\t\
3T3^'Tt^ 11, Surname or fami-
ly name.
ST^^^r An extremely small
Bi:?q?T3-q ad. By force of
fraud ; by hook or crook ; through
countless ends and means — gains,
pickings, &c. Slily, clandestinely.
a. Indirect, incidental — profits,
expenses : of no note or name —
persons : minor, petty — works,
jobs.
3T3-(TTT^r/. A small cloth
used as girding for waist during
ablution.
aT;?qcTrT^crr/. That checks,
curbs •, — used of parents, &c.
^^^^^f. Checking, con-
trolling.
^^mrr A litter of undes-
cribables or odds and ends,
ST3"q"3" /. A small ^3", a town
of little consideration.
B^jq^oT It. A breadth (as of a
^t^^T, -s:^!, &c.)
BT^t^, ^:?tiT, 3?.^^% ^^-
^x\\, ^^^gf* a. Stubborn and
stupid ; heady and perverse. 2
Restive — a horse.
^^«1'^< An inferior trading
port. 2 A dangerous landing
place for vessels.
3?^^!^^ The market after
market-day ; the stale market.
3fj^p:q-f ^ young man ; a
youth, stripling.
^T^^PT^r A young woman •
a girl entering her teens.
^jiTsjoTr See ^^^^"jfr.
^^^r^ II.. An odd or irre-
gular measure.
^T^'lHS'^cT j^. By gains ; ex-
tra profits, perquisites.
3T:?5^r[r A lad, a stripling.
^^IT^ a. That is in the
^»
state of choking. 2 Drawn up
and rolled together — a person in
a fever, v. t[;?, ^t.
3?;?5g-ot r. i. To labour under
strangling. 2 To be drawn and
rolled up as in fever.
^TS^J^Frt. Suffering the sense
of strangling or choking.
^3"ITJ a. Stupid, dull ; un-
handy, awkward. 2 A striiding
or lad.
BJ^fgTcnrr a. Advanced in
years ; growing old.
3T^??3" a. That crosses and
thwarts; cross, perverse.
^^■c^rfiT^^r a. Distressed,
straitened; pressed by difficulties.
^?^ ^\^^ Pq^^ pi. The
straitened and troubled.
^^^ n. A handful of gram-
plants — as up-rooted and lying
on the field.
^^^r a. Cross, transverse.
2 Broad or wide. 3 fig. Adverse.
4 Contrary. 5 Crosswise ; — used
with such words as 'VT^T, jtT-
oSJ, &C-; with such verbs as ^,
^T*. "^vT, ■^lafi, ^. To pass
from hand to hand ( stones,
balls. &c.)
^^^r^3"f y. A general or a
hurried stopping and hindering.
2 Ilarassjng, dunning.
^^ff^'irr «, Horizontal and
vertical : transverse and direct.
^^^rRT^^a.Rather oblique ;
curved ; cross and crooked.
ar^^rS" a. Obstinate.
^^l^'T V. c. To stop, hinder.
^^^\ f. A small door or win-
dow bar. 2 Passing (a thing)
from hand to hand (of people in
a line), v. ^.
^^^t^ f. s Enlargement of
the scrotum.
^^t/i. A stack of unthrash-
ed bundles.
^^^ 3"^ n. Crooked poli-
cies ; fraudulent procedure.
^i^ m^\ n. A term for the
water of rivers, tanks, &c. with
I reference to irrigation, and as
distinguished from Rain,
Tg'i^T «• Short and stout ;
thick-bodied.
^^33Tr TiTir^T a. Of rude
speech ; that speaks a barbarous
tongue : also prompt at quar-
rellmg, reviling, or scolding.
3r?5qT ^■^^m^r ^ /. A
term of vulgar abuse for a widow
or woman.
^^OT /. A weight of two
and half ^^. 2 The monthly
grain given (to a servant, &c.)
for his sul)sistence. 3 A measure
of capacity, a half payali.
^^^ a. Tight; that which
enters with difficulty and fits
closely.
^J^E" a. Sixty-eight.
*\»
^^'^J^ V. c. To estimate
roughly,
^^^r (h) Estimate or
computation.
3?^^ ad. See ^^m.
^^^S" a. Sixty-eight.
^^^713- or -^r /. An off
float. 2 A float (of two linked
gourds, &c.) for a swimmer.
^^^fi[tr or -^iJTfl.That plies
the 3T^^til^. 2 That swims
without a^t^^-
^3-^ilTfr ad. Without a ^f-
3T^ — swimming, v ^l"^, «IT,
^T^R V. A minor charac-
ter in a dramatic representation.
^-TCarT or ST^r^JTir «. An
inferior weapon ; a dagger, &c. ;
as disting. from musket, sword,
&c.
^^r?;rr a.(s) Oval, elliptical.
^T^r'T n. The people of a
village not employed in cultiva-
tion ; as contrjid. from »[?i^rt.
2 Udder.
^T^r^^r^ n. A comprehen-.
sive terra for the artisans, trades-
men, and workmen of a village.
ST^RSTrcT or ^^lorf^rrrT / A
designation for a ])eople or a
person viewed as rude and bar-
barous.
^^mfr /. A cess levied
srrnT
14
5if^
upon nil professions nnd trades
of a villace. exoept thosa includ-
ed umlcr g^H^T^.
^ir^^^cf 7,. A wild opinion.
aT¥R^^ /. A villasze or
the qiiaitiT in a village inliahited
l)y the classes of people distingr.
iVoin gwl^^T^.
^^RF a. (ii) Inexpert, un-
Bkilfnl — persons ; rude— lan-
j;uaLjc, manners ; clumsy — things.
^Tf^r^^ffr pi. The clumsy
and awkward ; the very low and
hard-working classes.
^^r^ m. n. A general or abs-
tract account; a balance-sheet.
V. ^rl^. 2 A rough compu-
tation or statentient of expenses.
^Ti'l"^^ n. 2.^ or any single
nniltiple of it (as set down hi a
tuhle).
SJfJ^IS"' a. Stubborn, re-
sisting; esp. used of children.
^^r /'. A layer of fruits on a
lird of Straw. 2 The hasin of a
tlira--hing-Hoor. 3 See 3^¥\.
"^"^F"^ or -"^ a. Two and a
half.
^ffnic^F V. pi. The most
])rivate and most minute con-
cerns, circnnistances, or condi-
tion of; all tlie particnlars, se-
crets, and niiiinti;e concerning.
^tf?5" or ^^^ a. That has
testicles ; not castrated. 2 That
is kc[)t for l)reeding ])uri)oses— a
horse, !k.c. ■'i tig. (Lowl A mi-
nion. 4 Libidinous ; full of youth-
fnl vigour — a male.
'^oi^ a. Obstinate, stub-
born. 2 Situate in the shelter,
cover of.
s?j?;?^r See ^^-^^r.
^j^FT (I, The weapon des-
cribed under fli^. 2 Bold, he-
roic — used of a soldier. Hence,
ust'dofa pretender; a Gascon,
Hector. .'1 Ajjp. both in praise
and irony to w riters, orators, &c.
as c.\i)ressive of cleverness or
cjij)al)ility.
^TfTS" a. Si.xty -eight.
^FT A clnsp of iron connect-
ing or binding two stones or
tuni)eis. 2 The perch of a bird
cage. ."J A bar (to keep ]ieople
off, &c.) 4 An instrument of
stone breakers. 5 A stick used to
tighten by twisting round. 6 A
stone or any thing used as a lever.
^^ fid. ^^ prep. From be-
hind; from the shelter of.
^^ 7i. An e^g.
^"^^ a. Ob.stinate, self-will-
ed.
Wi'^m Distressed, ob-
structed condition : ^VUIT'^T
3^0 irur qw-if^.
•\
^^?5"crf 7?. A term for an
obstinate person — a mule.
^^F^F ad. On one side, out
of the direct wav.
^^FTr /. Stoppaue, obstruc-
tion. V. qsT, ^^^[^, ^I^^. 2
Urging, pressing. .'3 Insisting
upon, r, >^T, ^T^, ^T^W. 4
Starting objections. 5 E.xigency :
3f [51 ^t^^' -q^S^' H'T]^ ^f^-
^1^3^o ^\^. GObstructed-
ness.
^i'F^F^i'r^r a.^ Neighbour-
ing, ^i-mt qiiarf. ad. In
the ))Iace round about.
^^f^r Shelter, covert.
^ir (ii) A company (as of
carts or cattle- owners, of ham-
mals, coolies, &c.) 2 The place
of assembling of such people,
animals; a stand. .'3 Any l)usi-
ness ]u-oeeeding constantly : as
JIToay^T 3^ o 4 Making profes-
sion of, priding one's self upon.
r. -^T^TT.
^Wr The keeper of an '^IF
or station.
»\
•iTl^FSr One that sets up
pretension to; that })rides himself
upon.
^"^^F a. Having swelled
testicles.
^sIJF^ ad. (Low) On this
side ; on the near side.
^T5"2r a. Firm, fixed, fast. s.
A meeting of itself before ; an
instance, a case : FEJT "^T^T^^l
2 Spl ere of e\j)erienrc : ^^
^S^"^ V. i. To meet ; to oc-
cur unto or fall in the way of.
^TSa5"7?" n. A fixed place ;
a seat established above all
changes ; — used in speaking of
the ii.\edness of the polar star.
^^TST A turn (as round a post)
with a rope. 2 An intervolved
part (of a cord) ; a curl.
-^iF3T?5T A doubling or curl-
ing u]) (as in cord, &c.); a tangle.
V. •q'3". 2 Tangledness (i. e.
restraint) of tongue : fsi^SFTT
^o ^^^^ ^v\^ •^'li^ -^^T.
3 A perverse objection or sugges-
tion of difiiculty. v. ^X, ^.
'^r j. A layer of fruits on a
bed of straw (to be ripened). 2
A posture — that of a person
sitting or lying with the leg
stretched and the feet crossed. 3
A divining jiroeess observed on
the day of the change of the
moon ofqfT^HiT. -^ An erection
in a field composed of bundles
of ^^S"^!- 0 A turn with a
a ropo. G A curl or doubling,
r. q'S', ^(fTI^- 7 fiy:- A knot
in the mind. r. tT^, q^. 8
A wrinkle.
^S^F^I RTSt ad. Extrava-
gantly, immoderately — speaking,
acting.
_ •^
^^TT n. A ridge-pole. 2 fig.
The ridge along the shoulders.
3 A saw worked I)y two, a whip-
saw. 4 A bar inserted into a
bodv to turn it. 5 An udder.
^2" ^\l^ pi. The dues of
the qT^^<?l of the village from
the produce of the soil.
^M^^S" jd. Irrcgulai" and in-
harmonious rpiavering or tremu-
lous singing, v. ■§. 2 Crooked
arguments ; evasive reasoning
V. g.
^2'TF^rf?r A whip-saw.
3T°F# ad. iMore, besides. 2
Again. 3 Cniij. And.
^F'^l'jfF, ^'^'^m ^m^ ad.
l?arefoot.
N'^F A proverb, saying. 2
A riddle. 3 See 3fmT.
Wrjl]]^ a, (Poet.) Invalu-
able.
arfl"
15
^rfti
^^ Conj. And./. A point
and extremity. 2 fig. A point of
time ; the " time and tide." 3 A
small silver coin equivalent to an
anna. 4 The spike of a playing
top, the back-ward curved tip
of a shoe. (> The i)oint of a rein.
W^ or -5^ ad. More. 2
Again. 3 Covj. And. 4 Other,
diverse.
^TqRJir^R j^l Various sort?.
ST'^Tf^^r a. Singular, strange.
^"^ITR a. Pointed, peaked.
^%^Hr /. A passion, rage.
crisis, a critical period : HIT'^
^^ (s) An atom, a sixth
part of a mote in a sunbeam.
2 a. Small, little : ^^^\■^.
Merely an atom.
<i\^l^ (s) An atom, a mote
in a sunbeam.
^•^■^r ind. A term of respect-
ful compellation for a male.
^cT (s) End. 2 Death. 3
In arith. or geo. The last term
of a series. 4 fig. End, extreme
capability : ^r{T:i^IffI To try
to the utmost. 5 Remaining
strength, substance, goodness :
•TT^'Y. prep, (s) As far as ;
to or unto.
^:^ f,7'ep. s Within, between.
^?r:,^ciq:q- ad. s On this ac-
count.
"^^^ (s) A name of Yama.
2 An executioner : the deadly
enemy or dreaded object of; a
vatural foe : a mortal malady.
^rf: ^V^ n. (s) The heart,
the conscience, the spirit or soul.
^'cTi^^i^q^^ n. The soul or
mind as constituted of ^fH:-
M^-^l'^^f. (s) Clearness
of mind ; " purity in the inward
parts."
STcT^r^ (s)The time of death.
2 The time of the end.
^cT^ry; ^^i n. An entrail,
bowel.
^cT^ ^Jr\t n. Bowels and
skin : ^ ^T"^ ^o ^t%. Said
by a yearning mother of a child.
tornal yearning or tender love.
N^^ An interjection of sud-
den admiraton : ^^o ^'51^1 "^T
^^^ ^T ^T'?T !
*?c(crcTr /. Stuttering, v. ^,
^T^, ^t^. 2 fig. Demurring,
hesitating.
STcT^^rr'Tl" a. A term for one
subject to wild sallies of rage and
prepense to desperate deeds.
Ann. also to a mischievous child.
^cTaq- a. (s) Untrue.
3^cf'43■ (s) A curtain inter-
posed, at weddings, between the
bride and the bride-groom, or
at the thread investitures, be-
tween the l)oy and the otiiciating
priest, until the moment deemed
aus|)icious is announced by the
astrologer.
iTcf*4?r ad. s Henceforwards.
^crqK End, limit.
^:^QT n. (s) The seraglio.
^^C n. (a) Interval. 2 In-
termission. 3 Difference. 4
Disagreement. 5 Variance, (i
Omission (in duty, &c.) 7 In-
accuracy. 8 The mind or the
heart. !< In comp. Another ; as
»TITTtfl^, "^^itfr^. 10 Poet.
The heavens or midspace. 11
The inside or inner jjlace.
^?r^?^f^ or sfcf^^r ?3"'JT f. A
secret mark, lit. fii^.
^^t^ a. (s) 'WcrtJTi^r, m-
T^^^T a. Near to, closely con-
nected with self; of the circle of
one's family, followers, &c. 2
Own, personal. 7i. The mind
or heart. 3 The interior.
^cT?:iT52r See ^cffe
« *^
^cT^^ V. c. To pass, omit ; to
leave without regarding. 2 To
surj'ass, outstri)). 'A To lose :
^lfti??>:|fiTH 3friK~^I. 4 To i)e
lost iiulM : 3RS,T-^T^':l^'ff'C«?f1
^fRflH" /; (s) The inward
eye.
^^^T?: or m^^\l The "'ed-
ding-curtaia.
^cRJTr^r /. ;;/. A fanciful
term for the bowels — used when
any sutfering is to be expressed.
V. tl^, "^T^, "^T^ : ^ ^(<*IT^
^cfiC^T/. A dividing fence.
^fcT^r^Tr^ Defilement IVoni
mediate contact.
■^'cTT^^/. A threadlike and
twining plant. Called also :3^t-
^clT^F'^ f. The inner and
fine bark of plants; the true skin
or vera cutis of animals.
^cr^ei?^r (s) pop. ^crr^r^T «.
That knows the thoughts and
intents of the heart.
^crrH'?^?^. Internal comfort;
h;vp)3iness.
^*?Rg-fr a. Of which the
texture is half of cotton — a web.
2 That works within ; that
secretly influences the operations
of. 3 Of hidden import.
^?^cR2T a. s intrinsic.
^?fW a. (s) That knows
intuitively what passes in the
world ; one ])ossessed of secoml
sight ; a clairvoyant. 2 See
^*cRrn^^ n. (» Interposi-
tion, interference.
-^ff^r^^r 'i'he inherent si)irit
or sentient soul. 2 The inner
feclmgs. [intermediate space.
^cf^fo?" n^ „,^ (s) Intei-val,
^cl^Sr J,. The atmosphere,
the heavens. 2 Interval, ad. In
the air, up in the heavens.
^cTIT5T or ^m^ ad. (s) In
the air ; up, aloft, n. (s) The
sky or heavens.
-^cfl^cT a. (s) Unexpected.
2 Un])remeditated.
^?^^^ a. Inconceivable.
^cT^cT a. Included anionpst. ■
2 Iiiterjiosed. 3 Interval, n. The
inner mind or secret purpose.
^»M 'I'he heart, core. 2
fig. 'I'iie inward meaning.
^cJiFl^^ a. a Involved or
implied.
^hi
16
arT^frn
^rfitS" Hernia of the intes-
tines and descent into the scro-
tum.
^r\^^ n, (.;;) The inner
jipaitments of a house ; the
cooking apartment, the hall, &c.
^'^■^'Ija, s.Thatsees within;
a seer, s An inward-seeing eye
or power of virion.
^cTsfSr n. The stomach.
^rlT^Tl a. Given to abs-
tract contem])latiou.
^er^r^rrr / The influence of
any of the minor planets as
qualifying the 'T'^T^TITT (the
rule of the predominant planet).
2 One's internal state or case.
^-T^r?" (s) Heat or burnincr
within (as of fever, fig. as of lust,
anjrer, &c.)
^^|T5"y. Lookino; into one's
heart. '2 That looks into his
own mind.
^'TTir n. An inner door. 2
The door of the seraglio. 3 fig.
A person secretly serving as a
mediator or means of access.
^T^^ 72. Sudden disap-
pearance. 2 A covering body or
j)ower; as a screen, a film over
the eye. Maya or Illusion.
^^^■^R 71. I'rofound and
abstract meditation.
^>r% n. See ^Wt^.
^cTfer/. s Abstract medi-
tation.
^^^k See ^^=T3:
^rRf^T 71. (s) The inside
and the outside. 2 The inner
spirit anil the outward walk; the
lu-art and the practice, ud. (s)
^Vlthin and withotit; in everv
point of view. ^rvrfTT"^ ^^-
^W? s Inclusion (as of
individuals under species). 2
mnid ; inward feeling.
^^^ n. s. Included, in-
volved.
. »»
^^^^ (s) Piivatp matters.
2 Disclosure of such matters. 3
Kuowled^je of such matters.
^^^^n. s One ever absorbed
in meditation (esp. upon the
Deity); contemplative.
^rnrPT 71. (s) The inner
spirit. 2 fig. The heart.
^*rrqf#r a. Intimate, fami-
liar.
3f?T?7RNrr a. Intimate. 2
Hearty, sincere.
^cT^n 71. (s) Knowledge of
the secrets of hearts. 2 Intuition.
^cTlf?% a. That knows the
secrets of hearts. 2 A seer.
^^^ n. (s) A division of
the infernal regions, the hell
immediately below the earth.
Wl^^ a. (s) Perishable,
mortal.
• i\
^^;^(^ 71. s Cleanness of
the heart and affections.
^rTi^Rfr a. That witnesses
or knows the mind or interior of.
^^r/. {s)pop.^^^ n. Com-
mon fiax-plant. 2 Bengal flax.
■*ir^TW «.(s)Money, kc. given
secretly to bribe, a. Secret. 2
Situated or standing within.
^'rT^^T^fr /. A cess laid to
make up the amount required
for a bribe.
^*rR2^-q^ „. The letter of ad-
vice which accompanies a "^'^.
^^K a. That has learned,
or that has been learned, without
the assistance of a teacher — a
singer, musician, &c.
^^TRHT or ^^TTclT Interjections
of astonishment.
^^FT-ffA vender of ^TTT5r,&c.
^cTTSTF, 5t-m ad. Now, at
this present.
^r^ ad. (s) Much, very, ex-
cessively. 2 prep. Over, beyond.
^Frf^ a. ad. s Near or niijh.
Used in translations in the
sense of Page, body-servant.
^f^r^nr m ^'\H^iW^ „. (s) Pas-
sing over. 2 fig. Transgressing.
3 Transgressed state.
^f'T^^I'^r v,i. To pass beyond,
to cross. 2 fig. To tresspass, to
transgress.
^rcT^icT^.s Passed. 2 Cros-
sed. 3 Violated.
^cl^i*tl a. Inquisitive.
STrcTf^/. (s) Great covet-
ousness.
<^lfclT^ (s) A person coming
uninvited at the meal hour, and
entitled to the rights of hospi-
tality.
^fcTRTrq" Inhospitality.
^fcfr^^JT^T n. Hospitality or
guest-rights.
^Rr^^ n. Much debt. Pr.
■qiTt ^ HJT^T ■^T5T •TTTf, ^ •
^mW^ Exhorbitance or
ill-ending excess (of an action)
'AfH^ a. s Last, final.
^rcTflJ^r?- a. (s) Much, ex-
cessive. r •
^Icfirr^ ad. s Much, exces-
^fcWRq" a. s Superhuman.
^fcT^^ or ^fcRarf (s) Mighty
warrior ; a great captain.
^Icfn^ a. Extremely pas-
sionate.
^mKrJT ^. (s) Proceeded
beyond (due bounds) ; exuber-
ant. 2 In comp. l?eyond, over :
as ^rf^fflf^^ Beyond this,
?T^fWf<:w Farther than that.
^fcT^ Excess, superfluity.
^r^fR" Obstinate disputing.
'arf^^T^ «. Perverse in
argument.
^kT?!^ Superabundance. 2
Excess (of any action); impor-
tunity, &c. 3 Pressing at a feast.
o. Su|)era])undant, too much.
^rcfyRrpTS" /. s Exagsiera-
tion or hyperbole. 2 Loquacity.
^rcT^rr^r a. Cunning over
much ; a .scheming knave that
overshoots his mark.
^Pm?: (s) An individual of
any of the low classes of people
beyond the division ofShiidra:
as ITTTTT, Tfl, ^t^I^, &c.
^n^?: Dysentery or diar-
rhoea.
'^r^^r
17
3T^
^]Tcr?Trfr o. Afflicted with
dysentery.
^fcf'rlT Close attachment;
fsuuiliar fiiemlslu[J.
^frT^ft A familiar friend :
» oiony.
"^^cfr prep. After, upon, at
vance of uncommamled rites ;
superstitious scrupulosity. 3
attrib. Fastidious, superstitious.
^m^in a. That deviates
from rites, &c. enjoiued. 2 Punc-
tilious.
^Mr^^^ a. (s) That is in
the last a^ionies.
^^F^tH" (I. (s) Exceedingly
intent : much devoted.
^^raTrR" /: Intentness of
application unto; extreme attacli-
ment.
ST^irfry. (s) Extravagance
of speech, hyperbole.
^^ or ^^T or -^ n. Equi-
vocality,vagueness. V. ^^,^1^.
ad. Vaguely, undecidedly, a.
Surplus.
^^^R: See ^0:117.
the end of:^'§]T^rrf.T^^T3io
2 Inconsequence of; because of:
^T^Tl 3to ^^ ^T'^ ^IT^".
^cIlcT p. (s) Past; gone
over or bv — space, time, pleasure,
&c. ^'^Tfflfl, ^T^irftfJ. s. A
])erson (h-opping in (J. e. coming
uninvited) at the meal hour.
STtrcT-^^^RcT A loose term
for religious mendicants.
^^fr /. Poet. A wife or
Moman generally.
3Tf55r«.s Pop. ^^ Unequal- \^^^^^ ^ yi,^ ^^^^^
led. 3T'g"??I"f11^ or "^-^m a. a'
Incomparable.
^^S" a. s Unpleased, dissa-
tisfied.
'^m a. (s) Unsatisfied. ^"flR"
/. Insatiety.
^^Rf^ ad. Excessively, ex-
ceedingly.
^tT^ 71. (a) Ottar of roses.
3TT)^'5Tirf or -■511/. J>.A vessel
for ^mx.
^r\\ cuL Now(emphatically); {^^^^ofq-^ /g\
at this very moment. ' ^ ^
^STtTIT or -^r See ^^IT.
^^^ a. (s) Last, latter, final.
n. s A thousand billions.
^'^'mn n. (s) ^^#^^r /:
Funeral rites ; the last otKces.
ST^^r^T „. See ^HTSJ^.
^^^^ ad. s Extremely, very
much.
^^ ind. s A particle. It
corresponds to Therefore, thus,
further, moreover.
mX^ V. c. To spread. 2 To
cover by spreading; to over-
spread.
^^r/. Matting, carpeting,
or a mat or carpet,
afaf^nip „ Matting, bedding.
^f^j^ur T^fg^tT n. Beds and
bedding.
The fourth
Veda.
^'m\ cnnj. (s) Or. This dis-
junctive differs from f^^T. It
disjoins things opjjosite or dif-
ferent and not to be included un-
der one predicate; f^^T dis-
tinguishes varieties.
^T^Tn ad. s From beginning
to end, throughout.
'^^ a. Half; as ^o ^^-^'n.
^.5T^4 a. s That is at the |5^?^?r^ & ST^Rl^ a. Spare
point of death
SJ^^Tt^ -s The third term of
the rule of three.
^"^^r^T?" (s) Excessive impor-
tunity.
^tJTI^ft a. (s) Unweariedly
importunate.
^^r^lT (s) Deviatino: from
prescribed observances. 2 Obser-
3
or surplus.
"^~^^, ^^^r^ a. S Unpun-
ishable.
^^'^ n. Presents made at
marriages by the father of the
bride to his daughter or to his
son-in-law.
^'Tqr, wA\, ^■5:^^r a. Re
^T^tT a. (s) StiniiV, miserly.
Terms for a miser. The very
prince of misers.
^?'^T? A weight or measure
or quantity of an eighth of asher.
^T^'^ /'. (a) Hes])ect, regard.
V. ■§^, KJ^, ^^T^. 2 m. Toil
and trouble; fag and ado. r.
■qi-g, f TH, •R^, '^T- 3 Urgency
(of a matter), v. ^^^.
^^^5I(?: a. Respectful, ad.
Carefully, v. X'\^, 3^, ^T^-
^?"W^ n. Poet. Exemp-
tion from ostentatiousness, love
of display, or arrogation of
greatness.
^?'^'^T A weight or measure
of qu&ntity of half a niaund.
^"5:5T'TT^r a. Of the weioht
or capacity of a lialf maund — a
weight, a stone, &c.
^^^^ / A weight of half
maund.
^RJTig" See ^"^^ftf.
^?5t or -^rr ;?. Imperfectly
coagulated milk.
^?^r u. The first or fore-
most of a series.
BT^c^r^^T^ /. (h) Inter-
changing or exchanging.
^T^^-if^ a. s Incombustible.
S^'^cS" m.f. Wear and tear ;
treading and trampling. r.^T^,
S5}t^X^ "closed withMI^I'^T
or'^T'^T^T^T). Unretentive or
lax of bowels. 2 (Used with
^T55i'=gT). Incapable of secre-
cy ; tattliuij, blabbing.
Flinging t!ie arms and body
a))out ; tossing and stamping
wildly, or throwing things
about, passionately banging and
dashing them.
^^gToT v. c. To dash down
or aa;ainst. v. i. To rusli violently
towards and upon ; to dash at :
^i"^! ?^T'-^¥ oIT^W ^I^^^o
ccived ill or relating to ■^-^v\. ^Rf (a) The airs and aits
aRT5IT
18
«T^
of coquetry ; blandishments. 2
Gesticulation. 3 Gain, profit. 4
Stock, fund. 5 Income, revenue.
"^^T^r (p) Proportion or
rntio. 2 A certain quantity.
^^1^ a. (s) Ungenerous;
not liberal.
^?rf^T 11. (s) Miserliness.
^T^^cTy. (a) a court of jus-
tice. 2 Judicial proceedings.
^?r?cT/. (a) Enmity. 2 A
false and malicious accusation.
^^[^^\ or -^^ a. That de-
lights in aspersing and maligning.
^Tr^rT^ /. (s) The name of the
mother of the gods.
s?T:?^ ^^H\ /. The ninth of
the first fortnight of the *TT1f-
^'^. On this day '^f^ is wor-
shiped by women, that all evil
may be averted during the en-
suing year.
BTT^ofPT a. 9 Unblamable.
^5^ a. (s) Invisible.
^^2" a. Unseen, n. Fortune,
destiny, consequence of one's
deeds. 2 (Because the lot is
supposed to be written on the
forehead). Tlie forehead. '^
Virtue or vice as the source of
eventual pleasure or pain.
^i{^'\tcS n. The unseen of
future fruit of one's deeds.
^2"iPT n. Regard to the
fruit or retril)utioiiary conse-
quences of one's deeds.
aTTS-fSTrcT ad. s Casually,
haply.
^I^ w. -iTfT.«. The doctrine of
retributionary fortunes ; the doc-
trine of future reward and
punishment ; the holding or
believing of things imseen.
^T7f[fr One that holds the
doctrine of invisible world and
of future reward and punishment;
a believer of things not seen.
^T^^Ra. s Fortunate.
^V^ a. Envious. ^ ^^"^
a. Unsightly. 3^^^!?/. Envy.
^^^11 (p) Doubt, apprehen-
sion.
•^C^y f. (a) Instruction im-
pressed ; admonition, a lesson :
^^I3To ^^^. a. Exact, just,
true ; — ■ used of weights and
measures. 2 Adept, adroit : as
3T» 1T^ ; or in a bad sense,
Arrant: as 3{o '%K-5I^T^.
^TOTf a. Luckless.
^^^ 11. (s) A prodigy ; a won-
der; any marvellous phenomenon.
a. (s) Strange, surprising.
ar^rq^rtcT, ^t^tfr ad. Hi-
therto, until now, as yet.
^T^r^ a. 8 Insoluble, in-
fusible.
^\^ s A mountain or hill.
^T^TcfCr a. Wild, inconsistent,
extravagant — speech, conduct.
j^fl"tnT a. 8 Unparalleled,
I unequalled.
^Ccf n. (s) The doctrine of
the identity of the human soul
and the divine essence, or of the
Deity and the universe; pan-
theism.
^^'cf^'f^ Unity of sentiments
and views or of interests and feel-
ings ; close intimacy.
#cTf ^fr /. The profound
mystery or wisdom of ^Tf <T.
^ST^W^ a. (The name of a
forest fabled in the Purans. A
place wherein all the animals
dwelt together in concord). App.
to any place of which the inmates
are in peaceful agreement.
^^T^^r^ a. That maintains
the doctrine 3?^fT.
-^C^5"^ "• I'he bliss arisino
from the realization of the iden-
tity of one's own soul and the
divine essence.
'4^ a. (s) Blind.
-=^'"4^ a. Dim — a light or
luminous body. 2 Faint, weak
— a color or colored body. ad.
Also -^^^ 3f^* Dindy, dul-
ly. V. f^W. 2 Hazily — wea-
ther prevailing or coming.
'4'-^K {?,-) Darkness. 2 fig.
Mental darkness.
m^"^ (s) A blind well; a
well tilled up witli rubbi'sh, 2
The name of a hell.
^^^riT^4^r a. Of the places
or parts about the middle,
^T^ n. Ebullition, v. ^. 2
Boiling water or water set to
boil. 3 fig. Ch.irge, responsibi-
lity (as of a business), v 3^.
^'^^ 11. s Blindness.
^>-^:TcT=r n. s Falling down ;
descending to hell, &c.
^^m The road to the in-
fernal regions.
^'TOqrr/. (s) A succession
of the blind. 2 Implicit adoption
of the practices of one's ances-
tors or of a multitude.
^^■^\^ (s) Falling^down. 2
fig. Falling from ^if, &c. into
hell or upon this earth ; in conse-
quence of the e.xhaustion of tsuji
or moral merit : descent into hell
gen. 3 The infernal regions, hell.
'3?^:q(fff (loc. case) In the
abyss of despondence ; particular-
ly in the difficulties arising from
the frustration, by the fraud or
failure of another, of one's hopes
and projects, v. 'Efi^, t|^.
^^T a. Inferior or low. 2
fig. ]\Iean, vile.
STHiqi'^^r A disorder of
horses in which is prescribed
the blood of goats' liver. 2 A
disease of ancient time, for which,
according to the legend, human
liver was prescribed. .'3, App.
by some to ^ToST^oat. 4 A
term for a person ever ailing.
^^^rt.(s) Lower, inferior, ac?.
Lightly, loosely, (s) The lower
lip : also the lips. 2 or ^^^'C-
F^?JT./'. The nadir.
^TTfTH 11. Drinking the
nectar of the lips, viz. kissing.
^q'rjJ" n. A poetical term
fur the lips.
^■"^^'Rcf n. Nectar of the lips.
Sfi-WS" The lower lip.
^3^^^ (s) Unrighteousness,
sin ; all behaviour contrary to
the ^^X^ and ^m. 2 A sin, a
crime.
^^R^^r c. An extremely
wicked person. 3T'*^«f «• Sin-
ful, wicked.
^'^l^^ a. Of the middle
3T^T^
19
siF^gr
place, rank, or kind ; of neither
side, party, character perfectly
and unequivocally.
^^^\ a. See ^SIT.
3T'<^c^RWrTr a. Of the place
or part about the middle.
^^m a, (Vuloar) Eldest (of
three children) : ^•y W^^T,
ST^^r^r a. One ofF the road,
viz. one suddenly risen into
power or wealth, an upstart.
m^\ a. Blind. 2 ficr. Ig-
norant : confused — as proceed-
ings : blind — » government, &c.
BJq"3T 3T3T A blind person,
esp. a person blind of one eye.
st^ST fcT^SST a. That offici-
ates (at certain games) as
dummy. 2 fig. That plays
double.
^^[ ^rPtrtR /. Blind-
man's butF.
afvT5?r TTR /. A term for a
feel)le, inoffensive person.
SJT£f55" 7\[^^ n. Covert coun-
sel or purpose ; dark and suspi-
cious proceedings. 2 An intri-
gue, a machination.
SjtfS" icRoS" n. Playing or a
game with a dummy.
• •-,
S^'ifS'^^^ n. A common term
for Nakshatras, during which a
thing lost is not found but after
great search.
Sj^OTJir /. pi. A term for
f^^'^T ^^?^^^ and for the rain
which falls under it.
3f(^SJTf=q-[iTfJtT^crr-^f7 A term
for a straight, broad way ; a road
for the blind.
sfj^Jir^r^rsr/. a leader or
supporter of one blind, infirm, &c.
3T5ii55?Tr^r^^or-*Tr^/. a
string of blind men. 2 fig. A long
succession of the ignorant and
foolish.
^T^sqi^irrrsr /. A close
grasp or clinging to ; a Cronisk
hug.
^^rcRfor-ffac^. Intheair;
up aloft.
m^^ or -^J a.(H) Wild, con-
fused, tumultuous— affairs, a
kmgdom. f. Anarchy, misrule.
sfs^rr, ^^[l\ Darkness, lit.
^-- .
^«^R^r5^r,/. A dark room
as a place of solitary imprison-
ment. 2 Solitary confinement, v.
^'^rtrtr, ^*^Tn:?i'jfr /. a
dark chamber, a dungeon ; a
black hole.
^'■'^nTJTS^cr ;i. Thick darkness.
V. q^, %, ^^^T. ad. In thick
darkness.
^^m V. i. To gather and
darken in — clouds or rain, 2 Also
3fiJT^*r ^uf . To be lowering ;
to fall dark.
Wfr/. Murk, dimness. 2
A blind (for a horse, &c). 3 Dark-
ness coming over the eyes (from
biliousness) or the dimness from
age, hauglitiness, &c. 4 An inter-
stice. .5 Dungeon. 6 Darkness,
lit. V. $, q^,
3?m^rf '^fr or -^r^^^r ad. in
dark and dusky places. 2 fig-
Secretly, privily.
^^J(r[?T^/. A night of the
waning fortnight.
^^rfe s a. Unjust.
^'^rn^r-^r a. Greedy, covet-
ous.
^f^ a. (s) More. 2 Greater
or larger. 3 Additional. 4 Above,
beyond. 5 In comp. with nume-
rals, as the middle member of
the compound. Augmented by ;
as TT^if^il^ ^»I A hundred
and one. 6 Pre-eminent in a
bad sense ; i. e. wild, wilful — a
child.
3Tf^ ^\^o^ a. Rather more.
^TteTorr a. More or less,
^OT^rrC^ir An intercalary
^"^T^^t^ n. (s) A term of
grammar signifying comprehen-
sion or location ; the sense of
the 7th case. 2 A basis, subject,
support.
^m^Fsi J, Excess, super-
fluitr.
^Tl^^n n. (s) A member or
part excessive (as a sixth finger,
&c.) 2 attrib. One so deformed.
^f^^r^T^a. More and more.
^'^^K s A public charge or
employment. 2 Right, title. 3
Province ; proper oiiice or busi-
ness. 4 lu gram. A general rula
laid down. 5 Subject, theme. 6
Rule, government.
^f^^f^r^S"!^ /. Civility of
oflioe.
^f^^rfr a. (s) An officer. 2
That has just title or claim ; that
has worthiness, fitness for. 3
A director. 4 A certain district
officer ranking next below the
■^?rg^. ^ Freely. That presides
over, that rules.
^Ti^^rrTr a. (s) Extraordi-
nary, extra.
^TF^C^cT n. s A divinity re-
siding as the principle of perci-
pience in a sense, an organ, or a
faculty of man ; a Surya in the
eye, Ashwi'm the nose, Dishd
in the ear, Varuna in the palate,
Vuyu in the cuticle, &c. Thus
3Tf^v»T is the ■%?? or thing
knowable, ^TtgiTjr is the '^TW-
■^T'^'T or means of apprehen-
sion, and ^TH^^^fT is the ^TffT
or principle of percipience.
^\m, ^\m\^
s A lord,
master. In comp. TTTflTf>i?qf?r.
^l'^^ 7«. s An entity ; a
real existence.
^l^f^-T n. (s) A summon-
ing and fixing of the presence
of a divinity upon an image
when he is wanted for any so-
lemnity. 2 The placing of a new
image into water, ^^j^rf, &c.;
the day before the divinity is to
be summoned to inhabit it. 3 fig.
Fixing one's self in restraint at
a jierson's door ; — in order to en-
force payment of a debt, &c.
3Tf^OT V. I. To dwell, make
one's seat in.
^^TfeR ;?. (s) Abiding, stay-
ing in. 2 The subject of indwell-
ing. 3 Ostentatious display (of
piety, wealth, learning). 4 Sitting,
&c. See ^f^^T^T sig. 3.
aroY
20
^^^
^T'^r aff. Before, in time
previous. 2 Already.
'^f'^TFT n. (s) Dependent up-
(y.). In comp. ^i^l'^l'T, tjiqi-
^'"Tprri^^fr or ^^m'-^\ mi
Abuiit the midille : round about —
people or tilings lying : at unsea-
sonable times.
^-4i"r a. (s)Impatient. 2 Un- :
btt-ady. 3 Irresolute.
^^Tf^ ft. Prior, antecedent.
^'lrcTR'<f[55" a. or the places
about the middle.
^'■fi^ or ^^Ir^^ (s) A lord,
master, ruler.
^"T^ ad. s Now.
"^^r a. (h) Incomplete.
2 Unready, not proiieieut-^a
per«on.
"^ij^f (-/.Impatient. '2 Greedy.
^T'"T a. Weak, deformed — a
luiib, faculty; the ])erson so
affected : %TcSJT^ ^'^ or fJT
^^^ See ^*^^.
^v^r, ^^[r^ifr, Wr. See
vnuh-r ^T^K.
^"1^1 A copper C"in, a half-
pice. 2 A serpent of a large but
iiiivenomons kind.
sjr^ooT f, A silver com, a
h.;ilf rupee.
^'''T-M ?«. (s) Lack of patience
or fortitude, a. Unsteady, infirm
of pnr|)osc : imi)Htieut.
^'Jr^T (I. (s) De-cended. 2
Siruntfd below, ad. Downwards.
'^V-^\^P^ f. Descending. 2
Descending into hell ; or into an
inferior form of existence ; or
iiito poverty, disgrace, &c. -i
11(11. 4 ad. That is descending.
^•"Tir^Trr /. The nadir.
^"M^r at!. Witliiu one's
liiilh ; not ronualely : ^o
^"-^[irnT (s) The lower part.
mrq^i n. s ^•"Tf^r^ m.
The infernal regioni.
ST^m?^, ^'^^^^I 71. (s)
^Vitli the face downward. 2 fig.
Dejected ; crestfallen; abashed.
^T^lltr a. Greedy. 2 Unre-
i teiitive of secrets : impatient.
l^'^Fc^I f. A u)easuie of
I canaoity equal to a half ]a\li.
i '^"^TTr^ (s) 'I he air j-tntioned
I in the fundament. 2 Ventris 1
; crepitus.
^■^^ 7). (?) Reading or
study (esp. of the sacred books).
2 Matter read or studied; one's
reading.
^-^■^^^7^:^ a. Studious.
^^^•^ a. (s) An overseer,
director. In cnmp. ■^i^ni;^,
^^n^ n. s The sense, or
power which receives impres-
sions from an SiffclWrT or eu-
tity. 2 Discourse on the Deity as
the pervading and ruling spirit.
^^TR^R^ n. A treatise up-
on, or the science of, spirit.
^'<;5Tr^JT5fR 71. Science of, or
knowledge acquired of spirit.
iT'ciTniTI The soul. 2 Know-
ledge of self, or of the Deity.
5T>^^ri^^^ «. (s) Relating to
the Supreme spirit, or to the
sold as the presiding spirit (over
the body), spiritual. 2 Used in
the sense of Affectedly spiritual,
hypocrisy, hypocritical.
^'^■^FT^ A teacher.
^■'-^r^ (s) A section, part,
chapter.
^^-?ir^ s Profound contem-
])lation. 2 Intent application
unto, li Erroneous supj)osition.
il^TrgrT Adding a word to
complete a sentence, supplying
an ellipsis, v, ^ii»r. 2 The
ellipsis to be supplied.
^•1 ind. A particle of empha-
sis constant in the Desji, imply-
ing, Exceedingly, snpeilatively,
j at the utmost iieight, pitch, cve.
I SlTlT^t. '^
i ij-i-fioo See ^n^^.
j^^Ti'T /'f.fs /Eternal : unbound-
i ed : innuinerable. 2 m. A name
of Vishnu. 3 The chief of the
Niiga or Serpent race that in-
habit xjTfi]^. 4 A silken cord
with fourteen knots, tied in the
right arm, and worshiped on
the fourteenth of ^T5T:fk ^W-
■qg. .0 An ornament for the
ear. G Abridged from 3T^'fT-
^3'4^- 7 A flower. 8 lii
arith. Infinite quantity.
ST^rT^^r/. (s) The four-
teenth of ^15-q^ IJWrg sa-
cred to Vishnu.
^•icfiT^r The name of a
composition by ^■*r«T ^"3, a
learned man. Hence, iig. Empty
jiretension to scholarship, v.
^'ioTfw/.s Afterward.-, then.
2 prep. After, a. Following with-
out interval ; consecutive.
^=lteRr a. (s) Unentitled.
2 Disinherited.
^^r^T^cf a. s Unknown;
nnreaclied.
■il=^*^qi^ (s) Suspension of
the reading of the Veda. &c.;
a day on which the reading of
it is prohibited.
^'1^ w. Dining or eating a
meal. Pr. ^^if ^^o sfJI rii^^'
Food before talk ; supper before
song.
^H^^ or-=lW/. w. 71. (II) A
pine-apple. 2/. The plant pro-
tlueing it.
^^'^HlJlfcT or ^TR^lffl^ «.
Having no other resource.
^=R" a. (s) That lias no
other (object of worship, pro-
tector, patron, mind, ikc.)g^T
^■^o *T5} fl II
^i-^iTP^/. (s) Worship or
love exclusively of the one God
(or of one (lod^
3T=7^iT(^Singleness of heart.
I 2 Simplicity, opp. to duplicit}\
j3^=i'^rW?T a. Having one
object ; single minded.
SiT^^frfT/. s Closely at-
tcntive.
m-^^T^ a.
other refuge.
s That has no
Inconsistency,
unconnectedness.
BT^pg*
21
3T^R
ST^r^'cT rt. (s) Unconnected, Upf^^F a. Barefoot.
inconsistent. '2 Irregular, impro-
per— conduct.
^^^^ a. (s) Childless.
^'IH'^ a. (s) Undesirous of;
inilitFerent: exempt from desire
or want.
■^•^m'^f a. s Unacquainted
with, unknowing.
^n^^^cT a. s Unpractised,
unversed.
SR^qr^ (s) Want of practice.
^'TJJfT'Jt a. Unpractised. 2
'Ihiit does not practice.
^^^\^ Slight, disregard.
Ilenc'C, Vacilliition, hesitation.
^J^qf^crj- ,,_ g_ 'p^ disregard;
to view with indifference.
;^JTR-:T^TF;r Mere guess;
guess work.
^•TRTi-fcr a. Ambiguous, va-
gue— speech or business.
^=R:^r (h) a kind of liglit,
rich, and sweet cake. 2 A kind of
cloth.
^^'•^ (s) Anyexceefling,over-
whelming calamity, e. g. an inun-
dation, hostile irruption, &c. 2
Excess, extravagance. It is used
with the uttermost freedom :
^t^^T He is straining every
nerve and employing every
means to build the temple ;
'^lofjl^ 3To iTI^^^T. The
IvMJa has set on a grievous op-
pression. '6 Used a. and ad. in the
above sense; =?l 3T"» %T*1^T.
4 Nonsense, #l3FI^r 3i^ ti'r-
■^^ ^o en^r. 6 Uusatisfac-
toriness, inanity.
^^'I^^ a. Meaningless. 2
Unproductive.
^T4krcf The falling upon
of any exceeding calamity. 2
Excess.
^•Tc7 s. Fii'e. In comp. ^^F-
^•T?^^ a. s. Not lazy; in-
dustrious.
^=[^^r?r a. (s) That is with-
out leisure, busy. 2 That is
without room, crowded, s. Want
of leisure or room.
^T'l^'-^R n. (s) Inattention.
attrib. Inattentive.
^Hf^^RF a. That loses or
forgets himself. 2 Inattentive.
a^^SfF^r /. (s) Unsettled
state (of mind). 2 (Laxly). Dis-
order of outward ali'airs ; a
plight, fickle. '6 Indefiniteness.
4 The abstract nature as inde-
pendent of actual existence. 5
pop. Neglected state (as of
children or animals).
3T=T^r>-Frr a. Unsettled. 2
Not abiding.
ST^^oo^^t^/. Unknown — per-
sons or matters. 2 Unknowing
(especially persons).
^R^RF a. That is without
shoes.
W\Wm ^r^rr^r c. a term
for a very adept in knavery ; an
arch rogue ; a barefoot palmer.
^'{^'\ n. s. Fasting or a
fast. V. "^X, '?r^
^^^T^qrr n. An empty belly.
^^^^/. Corr. from^^F^.
^•T^cT n. (s) Unheard : un-
heard of. 2 That has not heard
of.
^'F^^ (7. Imperishable, un-
decayable.
3J^^2r fi_ Untouched, unused
— an article of food. 2 iig.That has
not received his share of some
distribution : that has not car-
nally known (woman or man).
n. The oblations to the manes
of a male defunct in the first
'*^\^^'^ '^'^t:!^ that occurs
after his decease : the day preced-
ing the day of the annual
=^l^ after a person's decease,
^^[^cT 71. (s) Disadvantage,
injiirv, loss.
ST^!<Tr a. Unlettered, un-
learned.
^•TRcT a. Unarrived, future.
ST^FFfl^F'^cTF /. (s) Providing
or caring for the future;
thought for the morrow, v. ^XT.
^RFJI^T^'^cIF a. (A name of
^^T.) App. to a provident or
forecasting person.
^•TFn^ a. s. Wanting date of
commencement ; being from
time immemorial — estates, privi-
leges, &c.
^^r^T^^a.Unapproachable. 2
Unobtainable.
^'FF'TFcft a. (From the name
of a town, of which, as the legend
runs, the king used to call himself
■^R*"^. and divert himself
with entering the revenues of
the whole earth on the credit
side of his ledger, expending
them off agam on the debit
side). App. variously, as ^o
&c. Disorderly business or pro-
ceedings; vast and foolish ex-
penditures, lavish presents, &c. 2
^^TJIT^I^ T.l3«} w, A term
for any very confused and dis-
orderly business ^o Ti^T^.
A term for a soft fellow ready
to give whatever is asked from
him.
'^^\'^K (s) Lax,
conduct; deviation
])opular course.
^^\^\l\ a. Lax,
licentious.
sT^TF^F^Tf ad. In
place, or out of place; misap]:)lied,
given to the wards : Sf3fi^[ 3}^
clumsv'.
^'FF^T a. (s) Forlorn, des-
titute.
^^F2Tq"cr n. s In law. An
unclaimed corpse(by any relative,
&c).
^^F^ (s) Disrespect, slight,
disregard.
^•^F^T'T V. c. To despise; to
treat contemptuously.
^T^F^T^ff^/. (s) Unconcern-
edness, indifference.
devious,
from the
libertine,
a wronp"
a. (h) Inexpert,
^HFF? a. (s) That is without
beginning ; from all eternity.
3T=Fir^f^q^ a. Of eternal
duration.
ST^ir^im/. Descent from
time immemorial, v. ^T, ^^>
arrrR
22
srr^r
arTrf^%5" a. Established or
existing; from all eternity,
sT^nrlre'RTr Poet. The
kinsman (of every person) from
time immemorial. A designation
of God.
^=fr?J^cT a. s That is from
everlasting to everlasting.
5T=TH^ (II) See ^^^^.
^^TTiT a. (s) Poet. Name-
less. Used of God.
^ij^m^f. (a) a deposit; any
tiling committed to the charge
of another. 2 fig. An article
merelv noted down in the ledger,
not brought to regular account.
In conip. ^To x:^fl-^«Tr. 3 ad.
(As an article lying in «lcposit).
\Vithoiit being brought into use;
as unimpaired by use; as it was;
in statu quo. 4 Just as it is;
steadily.
^^frJfrTffr/. Ledger-book.
^iT=nFT^ n. (s) Unworthy to
be named. See ^ffHcif. 2
Anonymous.
aj^rfFRn"/. The ring-finger.
^HPT^ n. s Anarchy, a. That
is without a ruler.
^T^I^ffT (s) Exemption from
difficulty or pains.
Sl^rr 7j. m. (ll) The pome-
granate tree. 2 7i. The fruit. 3
A grenade.
a?=T[r?[% a. Marked or
spotted as with seeds of the
pomegranate — cloth. 2 Of the
colour of the pomegranate or
pul|) or juice.
^HR^ <ee ^PTT^r.
^H(^ a. s. Unwortliy.
^=THT/. Dishke.
^^TT^ a. Ungovernable. 2
Unrestrained.
^^[frT a. (s) Uncurbed. 2
Unenclosed : fig. unprotected.
SJ^fTff? /. Want of rain,
drought.
ar^ir^^ a. s That is without
asylum, s. Absence of support,
refuge.
^^m a. 8. Indifferent,
careless.
^^'Tf^^r f. Unconcern, want
of attention to, and care of.
^^r^IT s Abstinence from
food, fasting.
'^^mi[ a. s That fasts.
^•Tl^cf a. (s) Uninvited.
^f^^r or -^r Neolect or
want of care. t\ tfiK.
Sjf^^iJ a. s That is without
desire ; indifferent.
^I'l'^r/. (s) Freedom from
desire.
^R^^PTR^vT ». s Fate tak-
ing its course where there is no
desire in the subject of its
operation.
^I'iW a. s Not enduring
always ; fugitive. 2 Occasional,
incidental.
'^ji'i'^ a. R Irreproachable,
unimpeachable.
^R^T a. s That closes not
or twinkles not — the eye. Used
of a god, a fish, &c.
^rPTcf a. (s) Unsettled, un-
decided.
^R^IT (s) Unsettledness. a.
Also ^f»r5jffl?l. Unfixed.
^1^*^ a. S Unfixed, un-
determined.
^n'^T^ s Undetermined or
unsettledness. a. s Unsettled.
^r^f^q" or ^=r^f-^ «. s
Insusceptible of description. 2
Improper to be mentioned.
^f-^^k" (s) The state of
being distressed; the being iioti-
phtsaM.
^r^W a. s Difficult to be
managed, conducted, or carried
forward througli.
■^TH^IT o. Excessive. 2 Ir-
restrainable, refractory — a ciiild,
&c. 3 Inavertible — a calamity.
^r-i^nf rt. (s) Inavertible.
^Rl^rT n. Undetermined.
^'f^ a. Disliked : disagree-
able- 2 Unfavourable. 3 n. Dis-
advantage, damage.
^f^fT^^ a. Prognostic of
i evil, ominous.
^f^PTR s An evil occur-
rence, misfortune.
^Pm^ a. s Unfinished. 2
Unproduced.
^%T^ /. (s) Immorality,
injustice, 2 Impoliteness.
^% /. (a) The reins of a
birdie.
^fr^^^r^ (s) Holding the
sentiment of atheism ; such
sentiment.
^%^^^(^ Maintenance of
atheism.
^%^^?[^ (s) A maintainer
of atheism.
^5 *''^- s A preposition
and prefix, implying After. 2
Like. 3 Under. 4 With.
^JWr / (s) Tenderness.
HJ^'^^/'. s Compassionated,
])itiable'
^5^'^^ a. s Pitiable.
m^Vn n. (s) ImitHting. 2
An imitative sound : such written
word as xj^iq^, tj^T^T.
sg^?:oT'-Tr^w.s A verb form-
ed in imitation of a sound ; as
^3^Tq^5^ "(s) An imita-
tive word.
^H?!^ m. (s) Deferred per-
formance of a duty ; performance
of a period posterior to that for
which it is prescribed.
^R^?7 m. (s) A secondary
injunction.
^^K (s) Imitating. 2 Re-
sendjlance.
^•T^ftr a. s That imitates.
2 Resembling.
^j*^ a. (s) Favourable. 2
Agreeing with ; conformable
unto. 3 Ready at hand — money,
&c. A Used s. n. Suitableness of
circumstances.
^5^^ (s) Order or suc-
cession ; methodical disposition.
5iH^riTr^r /. (s) A table of
contents, an index ; any orderly
list.
^R^IFT V. c. Poet. To
enter upon ; to take up to per-
frora (a work gen.)
ar^i
23
3T^
^5^^ P' 8 Attached or de-
voted to; following after; ap-
pended,
SHJIcpiTH s An essential pro-
perty, an inherent quality.
SH^R" s The comprehen-
sion mentally of all the properties
and relations of a subject. 2 Know-
ledge of a subject through consi-
deration of all its branches and
particulars.
^'{^*[^ n. (s) Going after.
'Z The self-immolation by a widow
of the ^i'^'^ or other inferior
class, upon a pile separate from
the funeral pyre of her husband,
having with her a cloth, &c. tliat
had belonged to him ; also the
burning of a widow with an effigy
of her departed lord. '6 Applied
also to concremation upon the
funeral pyre.
^^^\^\ a. Following, lit. fig.
a follower.
^53*^ «. (s) Congenial with ;
suitable unto.
^^n?^|cT p. s Graciously or
favourably treated.
'^^^"?" (s) Favour, grace.
2 Instructing in the mystical
verses of the Vedas. 3 Holding
with.
^HWt a. s Instructed by,
in the mystical verses of the
Vedas.
3H=^r or ^=^lfi s A fol-
lower, servant.
^^^T"! n. s Following.
^^^^ 11, s Service or at-
tendance".
■^C^cf a. (s) Improper. 2
Unqualified.
^,5^K'^[|^ a, s Improper to
be littered.
'^cfB" p, s Repentant.
ST^cTPT s Repentance.
S?^cnqot V. i. To repent.
^^cfiqr o. That readily re-
pents. 2 Penitent.
^tTT a. (s) Unable to an-
swer, n. Want of an answer; a
defective, irrelevant answer.
^S?5^^[?" (s) Absence of de-
light or interest in, for, or re-
specting.
^f^'f ad. 8 Every day.
^5*^"^!^ s Abstract medita-
tion ; intent and undiverted con-
templation.
^mn^^ a. 8 In 2;ram. Nasal.
^^T^rfr a. (s) Disobliging,
ungrateful.
^WTPtT /. s pop. ^Rqff Ab-
sence of the means of subsis-
tence ; adversity, penury. 2 In-
conclusive argumentation.
^^^^ a. s Unproved. 2
Indigent.
^3*^^ «. (s) Incomparable.
^H^H^ a. Incomparable.
am^Tir a. Unsuitable to.
2 Useless.
ST^q^^ri s. Uselessness. ^-
■sr-q^lTit «. Useless. 2 Unsuit-
able.
3T5qR5!Tcr a. (s) Sunk into
oblivion — a science, art, &c. 2
Not ready at command — an ac-
quired knowledge.
^»TTR n. (s) In medicine. A
-J .
vehicle. 2 Any article or parti-
cular concomitant upon the
main one of a regimen, v.
^K, ■^To35T,"^'MTZJ. Freely. Any
accompaniment in the character
of Antidote : TTT??ft^ ^^ f^^-
^^^J^ a. (s) Remediless. 2
s. Remedilessness.
STjq"^?! s Poet. Entrance
in succession.
^^^f (s) Experience. 2
Fruition ; possession and use of.
3 Divine knowledge or intelli-
gent fruition of God.
STJiT^^R or -W^ a. Esta-
bhshed upon experiment or ex-
perience.
-^^^r^*^ V. c. To experience.
2 To enjoy.
SHiltl^ a. That has been
experienced. 2 fig. Sharp, pun-
gent— poetry, &c.
^^HcT/i. (s) Approbation of.
2 Assent expressed. 3 Formal
opinion (as of a q"^ or Court).
^TJ^Trcf^. 8 Approbation of;
acquiescence ; permission.
^^Rs Reasoning,inferring.
2 Conclusion. 3 Conjecture. 4
Poet. See ^•r«i«T.
^^JTRJTfq- a. Inferible.
3RiTFri%r^ a. s Inferential.
^^^[^^ n. (s) Expressing
approbation; permitting, v.^r,
■^. 3T^^^f?[:«T a. s Approved;
consented.
^R5Trjfr«,s That follows; a
follower, fig.
^5^Rr a. s Antecedent, ori-
ginal:—opp. to ^f?r§TJri De-
rived. In a^T'fT^ •r^ and ^ItjT-
%' ^5T, ^l^ and qiq are ^fSf ^T-
a^, and «f^ and t^^ are T^frf-
^T3l1.
STJ^tF /. s Affected with
passion. 2 Attached to.
^5^^^ a. (s) That delights,
entertains.
^Rr^*? n. Deli^ihting, pleas-
ing. 2 Diversion, amusement.
^RTPffr a. (s) Fond of;
having desire or passion.
^^*?^M^ a. ad. Agreeing with ;
fitting. 2 Agreeably. 3 Like,
similar.
^^n^ (s) Confining or
Carrying along with, or in con-
formity unto, or in observance
and regardful obedience; drawing
and keeping in the track of ; at
the beck of; under the sway of:
com|)liance : «IT?»t "^^^ ^fiT^
^-5^^ flfZ. Wth regard to ;
noting and minding.
^j«^?T n. Observant con-
duct ; imitative practice.
^H^fJ? a. (s) Produced or
born in due gradation; — app- to
the mixed tribes, as the off-
spring of a Brahman man and
Kshatria woman, and so on.
ad. With the hair or grain, re-
gularly, in the natural order or
line.
3T5^[JTf^^PI a. (s) That is
with and against the grain or na-
-^^:t^
24
'^^^nj
^T^JBTTl,
turalline; that is partly direct
iinil iviitly reverse.
SH^cf'^r y, c. To serve, J^J^ply
to. - To follow in oljediciice.
3f7r^^€i n. See
^^IT (s) r»epeatin<j: ano-
ther's speech or one's own (as in
nsseniblies) ; rehearsiiitj. l^ Re-
citing in assemblies the crime of
uhich a person has been convict-
ed, and prononncing the ])en-
anoe to which he is adjnj^ed. 'A
I)i\nl<:ing another's misdeeds. 4
Tantolojiv. 5 Disconrse. 6 In
law. The takinjr up (of any pojin-
lar cnstom) and formally es-
tablisliinij it.
^5^K^ a. That does ^5^^.
^^fnr /. (s) Referriiiir or
applying to through a series :
ftiWi'^T'?^?! 3Ti^^. 2 Service.
3 Formal ])resence tlirnvi^h :
^o ■3^'T^. -1 Iiiiitatiou.
^3J[;Ffot V. c. To ie<;ulate,
govern. BT^Srj^'JT "• (s) Re-
gulating; binding under laws. 2
The laws prescribed.
oTJ^r^rrr a. s That rules,
governs, &c.
^5^^[?: ». An empty belly.
^^T'T (s) Company, associ.i-
tiuii : commixture i^T'^f^ 3To
^^\f. (s) A measure of
verse, the stanza consisting ol
4 lini!s of 8 svllables each, or i^
lines of 8, 12, and 12. 2 A
stanza of such measure. 'A n.
(jocosely) A little quantity ; a
mere drop.
^^"^1^ n. (s) Performance
of certain ceremonies in propitia-
tion of a god. 2 Such ceremonies
])crfonned. d fig. Any great
undertaking.
^^^"Rr a. That conducts or
otticiatcs at an ^f^^TI observ-
ed by another.
^5H'-JR n. (s) Connecting,
disposing (the facts, arguments,
&c. of a statement or discourse) :
such connection or methodical
disposition. 2 Heed, attention :
^T^. 3 Aiming ; aim, plan, ^T^^^^'R (s) The practice
counsel. I'. ■^t"6T. of eating together.
^5^*>-JRr a. Shrewd of conn- ^^^^Ttf^ /. (s) Di^tributinn-
sel ; of deep contrivance. 2 That , food, feeding the hungry,
dmnts or recites the legends of ^^^^(for „_ g^^ ^'^'jTripcT.
^5^?:"T?2.(s) Following, imi-^^^ n. Distribution of
ff)()d to Brahamans. 2 Tlie
building erected for this purpose.
^T^RJIcT/: The state of beo-
ging from door to door, crying
^^\'^i a. (s) That wants
bread.
^^I^q" s. The stomach.
3?=ifK^ n. (s) Bread and
water.
ST^f^^^'^r^t'-T (s) The
connection of desert ; as contract-
ed in some former birth, and
forming the ground of one's allot-
ment in the present. 2 The con-
nection of obligation ( upon one
jjerson) to afford a maintenance
(to another).
tatmg.
^5^^^ i\c. To follow after. 2
To agree with.
^5^^ a, (s) Like or accord-
ing to.
^^mT\ a. That follows.
^5^^R (s) The nasal cha-
racter as represented by a dot
over any letter preceding i^,
^, ^, o5, "?. 2 A pp. to the
dot before whatsoever letter it
occurs, and w hether it represent
^, ^, ur, «f, or iT.
^JCfT ad. Poet. Unbrokenly
— sound issuing,
^^''^r/. s A command. ^J-
■^T«T Jt' Ordered.
^R5" a. s {^ m. -ST/.) Un- 1 ^'^ «• (*) Another. 2 Other.
married.
^^T^ a. Strange, singular ;
odd, comical ; wonderful.
^cT n. (s) Falsehood.
^•T^ a. (s) IMore than one,
many.
^'RT^^ n. s Gregarious.
^^T^^"^ 11. The plural
number. 2 A word in the plural
number.
^^raiql^r a. With empty
bdly.
^k^m a. Unknown. 2
'^'^^ ad. Elsewhere. 2 conj'
Unless.
^=^'4r ./cZ.Otherwise. 2 Else.
3 Truly : ^ ■> %T^T7TT^ "^TTTf •
4 Wrongly: as Bfo ^t^ That
acts badly : ^o vriNt-^lsfl.
^'^srrm^ (3) change, de-
terioration.
^'^f^ (s) Injustice, iniquity.
2 A fault.
Wm% a. Faulty. 2 Un-
just.
^^JTF^nTfr^cf a. Acquired
wrongly.
T'nknowing.
^T^ n. (s) Victuals or provi- j^'^f'r^/. (^) Disguised or
sion. 2 A preparation of food, | '''I'^l^ speech ; covered insinuation.
-^^T'^f'^ a. Mutual, reciprocal.
a dish
^T^TfJ^ n. See ^=>rg-^.
^T^W^ a. (s) Consistino; in |
or com])osed of food, — used of
animal life. j
^^f^H^T^'^ Life as the pro-
duct and dependent of food.
3T^l>^rr (s) Disorder of
the stomach from indigestion. 2
Loathing of food, nausea. 3
Anv chemical change of food.
W'^^ (s) Holding with ;
linkedncss unto ; amicable or
iiitlueutial connection witli :
oT^^I^ ^T%rr. 2 Grammatical
relation (as of verb with its snl)-
ject or object, of adjective with
noun). 3 Syntactical order. 4
Logical order, or consequence. 5
Drift, tenor, purport.
3rf^^
25
^TTR"
B Connected. 2
^R^ a
Possessed of or possessing ;
as ipT"^'^, «l*^Tf*«IfI.
3r%^ n. 8 Research. 2
Inquiry.
aj^q-oj- „^ j.^ To seek, &c.
^^Srr a. That searches, &c.
^TT^^ (s) Drawine down or
back. 2 fin;. Detraction ; de-
grading : decline.
^^R (s) Injuring. 2 In-
jury, hurt.
^q'^R^ a. That injures ; in-
jurious, pernicious.
3TT^ri%/. (s) Disrepute; in-
famy.
^tIT a. Ejected from caste.
^Tf^ a. (s) Unripe: un-
cooked.
^^ a. Wanting or deform-
ed in some limb.
^W\ V. i. To be crippled
(in fig. senses).
^^^ (s) Any evil acci-
dents occasioning death : death
so occasioned.
=3TWr^ a. Wild, headstrong.
^^nr s Defeat, overthrow.
^rqSiTS'y. A false accusation.
Wl'^ V. c. To strike a-
gainst. 2 fig. To beat (in argu-
ment). 3 To come down ; to fall
into agreement with (some
terms). 4 To fall in great num-
bers or with violence, v. i. To
dash against. 2 To come down ;
to fall into agreement with(sorae
conditions or terms). 3 To fall
in great numbers ; "WT^ ^T^
^m^^m'm vx. To dash and
bang ; to strike and thump and
beat hardly, rudely.
aiqj^liqj f^ Dashing and
banging about violently.
^^M n. (s) Offspring; a
child. 2 A young person assumes
this term in writing to an elder
brother or a cousin.
^^ (s) Heresy,
larity.
^"^^^ a. (s) Unwholesome-
articles of diet. n. Bad diet. 2
Deviation from regimen. 8 fig.
Disagreement (as of means with
an end).
■^^'^TRi Sudden conception
of terror; alarm.
To take fright.
^^'TP^ST (s) A corrupted word,
a corruption.
^WR (s) Disrespect. ^^-
•nn V. c. To treat with dis-
respect.
^^J (s) A minor death.
A term app. to a desperate
sickness, an alarming danger,&c.,
from which, contrary to expec-
tation, the subject recovers. 2
Any evil accident occasioning
death.
^7^5r"(s) Defeat: disgrace:
baffled state.
3T7^5Tpcrf y\^\ A term for an
unfortunate wight made to an-
swer for the faults of others.
3T^5I^T a. s Disgraceful.
^T^T^ a. Unfortunate; wed-
ded to miscarriage and failure :
a luckless wretch.
^T^ a. Other. 2 Farther,
latter : as ^T^^TV The other
or farther half; ^^q^^T^ The
end of the night ; \h^K The
first and the latter part.
3?^^^5" (s) A various read-
ing.
^rrt^ir a. (s) Endless.
^rqn^/.See^T^.
BTTT^ A complimentary
title to a Brahman of command-
ing genius.
^^r^ (s) A fault ; an offence;
an omission.
^W^r a. Faulty ; an offend-
2 Irregu-
-^TTTF^ m. n. s The afternoon.
^Ri^cT a. (s) Unknown.
^T^kPR? a. Immense, un-
limited.
^^r^Cr^f a. s Inavertible,
incurable.
^mtKTcf a. s Unexamined,
untried.
^^l^q or -^ a. Strange, sin-
gular. 2 Precious.
3jq^qff y; Rarity. 2 Doting
affection. 3 High estimation on
account of rarity.
^[^ a. (s) Not invisible.
Present. 3 Absent, ad. or prep.
In the absence of.
ajq^r^flH n. s Knowledge
of visible things. 2 Knowledge of
self, or of God (as the all-per-
vading soul).
^TqiT(s) Unjust imputation.
2 An exception.
^qi^'^a. s Impure, ceremo-
nially defiled. 2 Unholy.
arqf^ or ^qF^^5^ s A son
rejected by his j)arents and
adopted by a stranger.
ajqsieq" ^g) Extravagance.
^M^-M^r a. Extravagant.
a{q^I^ (s) An ill omen.
^^^^ A bad word. 2 A
barbarism.
^q^s^T a. Right, not left. 2
Contrary action ; as putting the
sacrificial thread over the right
shoulder ; writing from the
right hand towards the left, &c.
^q^m"q^r /. Variance, con-
test, altercation.
m^^ See mTE4.
Sjq^r^l Self-interest. ^N^r^fr
a. Selfish.
^q^<^ n. (s) Seizing away
from ; robbing.
3?q?TT (s) Seizing or taking
away from. 2 Loss through rob-
bery. 3TT:r^Ke(> That robs, &c.
^qr A term of respectful
compellation for an elder; as
iflfqr^ 3TqT.
^i^ a. Ejected from caste :
unfit for commensality.
^TqixTiq^ n. A writ of exci-
sion (from the table and com-
panionship).
^qr^ a. (s) Unworthy as a
recipient.
^rqr^R n. a gift impro-
perly bestowed.
^rqRqra" (s) The anus;
the air seated in the anus. 2
Yentris crepitus.
3T«nT
26
3Tg?y
^mr^ (s) Evil, ill. 2 Loss,
damage.
^qR fl. (s) Endless. 2 fig.
Much, many.
^5^ a. (s) That is without
male offspring.
^^mrTT /. (s) Final beati-
tude ; exemption of the soul
from further transmigration.
sjqpTs^^iq" a. s Irrecoverable.
^jrrfT, Wr a. Unfinished.
'J Deficient. 3 Incompetent.
^^T^ a. (s) Not to be wor-
shiped.
^^ (s) A sort of bread.
^'TTy. Deficiency.
^^ a. (s) Not filled, defi-
oient ; imperfect.
^mi^ (s) A fraction.
<^ a. (s) That has not
(taken place, been done, been)
before ; first, primary. 2 Strange,
singular : unexcelled. 3 7i, Moral
quality; ment or demerit.
^fTTH „. (s) The first
sight of. 2 The seeing of some-
thing wonderful.
^=^^1^ /. Strangeness ; ra-
rity, excellence.
^^ See "^^^^r.
m^\^ ^m 71. The weight
of the dishonour and shame (of
some evil deed), as cast or falling
upon or incurred by. Used
with -^T. il^T?^. V. ^JVT,
^^r/. A troublous and dis-
tressful condition ; plight.
^'T^'^ftq' a. s To be expected,
hopeful.
^*^^r /. (s) Looking for,
ex|)ectation. 2 Desire. 3 Want,
need.
^T^^TRl^y. s Interestedness.
2 Expectation, v. "^K, H^, ^X.
^■^'^r^^;7.(s) Looked for, &c.
^^^Z (s) Unpublished. 2
< )l)srure.
^STi^W a. B Unequaled.
^^^r^^f. Ill-tame; disgrace,
^^^f^ a, 6 Unexperienced.
^^^5" a. Of tender under-
standing. 2 Dull. 3 Unknowing.
W^\^ a. That is without
proof.
3T^R[te a. Unproved. 2
Unfit to be trusted.
^^^ a. s Immeasurable,
illimitable.
^^^r^f^ a. (s) Unnecessary,
useless.
^^T^^cT a. Narrow, not
roomy. 2 Inelegant.
^f^tl-sH a. Displeased, unpro-
pitious.
^^^RTa. Not extant. 2 Not
current. 3 Obscure, mean.
^PT^^^ a. Unseasonable, ir-
relevant.
^Me"^rf=T a. s (-^ -^ m.f.)
Unadult.
srqTB^JTW^R a. s In law. A
lad under his fifteenth year.
3f3TriTri%^ See ^JT^rFT^-
^^^R^ a. s Unseasonable.
^fftr^ a. (s) Disagreeable,
unliked.
^'■^r /. (s) A courtesan of
^ir, In (Ira's heaven.
sPFrlT^^ a. (p) Lyins un-
occupied— ground, a tenement.
^TRrcFT:^ or-H/. Confusion
(as of a country) ; tumultuous
dispersion (as of people) : dis-
order (of articles); disorderly
state (of affairs).
^M^<M'-h<r ad. In a slovenly
manner : shufliinglv.
^'+c^K/. (a) Descendants of
the female branch. 2 App. also
to the descendants of an adopted
son ; to offspring through a kept
mistress, or female slave, or
woman in her second marriage.
^rqr^r /. (a) Fame, report,
rumour.
^^\^ a. Immoderately spa-
cious— a place, &c. 2 Vast — a
building. 3 Used in the sense
of Miglity, astounding ; as ^fo
:^fZ"n^ n. A beast grazing
wildly or at large. Hence fig.
An untutored and unpolished man
or woman ; a lout, hoiden, &c.
^?^qT//. Addicted to opium.
^>^,^TftiT(^rr%=T s Foam
of a snake), ^^f. (i') Opium.
^^^ a. Sour or acid.
W^rrc^ a. Rather damp.
^fjf^^J a. Sour, harsh,
unsavory.
^^Z^^ a. Exceedingly
sour.
ST^r^C a. Sourish.
^^Z\X f. Sourness.
^^Jl^./: A sour smell.
^^m^ V. i. To be turned
or vitiated from eating sour
substances — teeth or palate.
^T^^lf^ut I', c. To make
sour (sprinkled flour, &c.) by
exposure to the air.
^^7ry. A dish — gram-flour
boiled up with tamarinds, some
split-pulse, &c.
^^^■^^T a. Clumsy, mis-
shapen.
^^^ c. i. To become sour —
articles of food. 2 To be
turned ; to be set on edge —
palate or teeth from eating sour
things; — the body from bruises
or blows, or from fatigue. To
become tender. 4 To be sated or
wearied with. 5 To become well
versed in.
3T5r?T See ^rq?T.
a^qf^ffip^r a.That carries the
^^^%T / (p) An orna-
mented umbrella borne over
Rajas, &c. in their procession.
^^^^ See ^^^•
^^^ri.(s)Unbound.2 fig.Un-
connected, rhapsodical — speech.
3 Lax, licentious — conduct.
^^'^ (s) Ambergris. 2 n.
Clothes. 3 In comp. Clothed; as
^"1?!t^^. 4 n. The sky.
^^^^f. (ii)A mango-grove,
a park.
^^^^ a, (a) Variegated,
pyebald,
^^r
27
STfJTRr
^^55T f. (s A weak one) A
woman or female.
aj^f^ ?j. c. To make sour
(sprinkled flour, &c. by expo-
sure to the air). 2 fig. To bang
soundly. '6 To detain under ex-
pectation.
^^r The mano;o tree and
fruit./", (s) A mother. 2 A name
of Durga.
^^r^r Hog-plum. 2 A mode
among women of confining the
hair. 3 A plant ; its fibrous in-
tegument.
^^rfr/.A plant. 2 The seed
of it. 3 The fibrous integuments
of it. 4 The leaves of it.
ar^f^ a. s ST^rf^^ (s) Un-
blamed. 2 Laxly. That cannot
be opposed.
^m^ (a) An item of reve-
nue books. Grain falling to
Government from the mass
remaining after the deduction
of the portion of the several
shares. 2 Estimate of the mango
crop.
^^RF/. (a) a canopied seat
upon an elephant.
ST^rar y. Neglect, want of
care. 2 Adverse circumstances;
exigency. Absence of neatness,
order, &c.
^^K (h) a fragrant powder
composed of sandal, zedoary, &c.
^^fc^/. A sort of flummery.
App. fig, to turbid water.
^5 n. s Water.
^f^ s A cloud.
^^^ a. s Unknown.
^JTs s The ocean : the sea.
^^^ a. Sourish, sub-acid.
^^fJlTC A sweet-smelling
kind of rice.
^^^ n. A mango-grove.
^^?a5T /. Turmeric-colour-
ed zedoary, or its plant.
^^ n. A mash of grain,
&c. laid before cows to engage
and quiet them during milking.
artM^T a. s Difficult to be
told or taught.
ar^r?^, ^^f?^ a. Taciturn.
Bfi'i^T Reserve or coolness.
"^ssf 7j. s A Thousand mil-
lions.
^1®'=!" s The ocean.
3Ji^ or -®^r Interjection of
admiration. /. Ejaculation of
one's admiration, v. "^X, 1W.
^^ /. (p) Honor, reputation.
^T^^^T. ^^ ^T^ «• Honorable,
respectable.
"^T^ (s) A particular metri-
cal composition, a. Unbroken.
^^^ a. Slanderous. 2 Im-
moderate : BT" TTI^¥. 3 Wild,
unruly, n. A weight thrown into
one scale to counterbalance the
receiving vessel placed in the
other. 2 Making the counterba-
lance in this way. v. W^'
^^^ a. (s) Evil, boding —
speech : obscene — speech. 2 111
graced ; of evil sight, n. Ca-
lamitousness : ominousness.
^^"T (s) An assurance of
security. 2 An encouraging
countenance, a. Fearless.
^TiTirf^r^TT A proclamation of
re- assurance ; a promise of safety
and security, — as made on
taking possession of an enemy's
country. 2 A war-drum.
^^T^^R n. Granting assu-
rance of security or impunity.
^iPf^^-T 7J. An assurance
of impunity. 2 A word of con-
solation.
aTiT^n^cT The hand stretched
forth (as of an idol or a Raja)
in re-assurance or in token of
favour.
^^^ a. Used with ^°t, To
glut with money or things
desired. Used with '^Ifff, To
become glutted : r?IT'^^T^
Satedness.
^HH*r f. s A widow.
^iT^tnr^ a. s Inedible.
^^^ a.{9,)pop.^^m Luck-
less.
^^Wf^ (s) Negation, nonen-
tity.
^^Prrft^ a. s Unbelieving in
(the Deity). 2 Uuthought of.
^Wrs- 7j. The sky. 2 Cloudi-
"f.^^- ^•- ^' [tion.
^*^R n. s A name. 2 Men-
^^■5^r^T^ a. That specifies.
^W^^r n. 8 Gratulating,
greeting.
^[^ a. 8 Not different,
identical. 2 Become one with
^iq' ; having lost personality
and individuality.
^^■!TR (s) Intent, meaning.
2 Import. 3 An official report.
aifiq-q-q-of y, c. Poet. To de-
feat.
^M^t^w. 8 Inviting. 2 Con-
secrating or charming ; making
sacred by reciting over it mystic
formulas or prayers. 2 Inviting ;
calling unto. \^c.
^mm V. c. To consecrate,
^TiT^TR (s) Pride, conceit.
V. •^To37r, ^IJT, ^T^. 2 Con-
scious feeling towards, v. "^^,
■^To3JT. 3 Claim laid to. 4
Honour, noble feeling.
a#ipTR^ V. c. To lay claim
to ; to set up pretensions. 2 To
espouse. 3 To own.
3?riFrr% a. Proud. 2 That
glories in or prides himself upon.
^M"5^ a. s Fronting,facing.
2 fig. Bent upon. 3 Favourable.
^Y^^ a. 8 Accused of. 2
Venerated as sacred.
^fi-irnr a. s Pleasing, de-
lightful.
^rir^r% / s Relish for; de-
light in.
ajfif^fq" (j^) Covetousness.
2 Embezzlement.
srfiT^r^^ V. c. To covet.
^pTc=5Trq"cr p. Coveted. ^fiT-
^T^ a. Covetous.
^W^^'I «. s A promise.
^^^\^ (s) Unjust impu-
tation. 2 Curse.
^fiTr^TrR' p. s Inaugurated,
installed.
STWr^ (s) Dropping drop
by ilrop (holj' water, &c.) over
an idol, a king, a priest, &c. by
way of ceremonial ablution, royal
inunction or inauguration. 2
Sprinkling.
sjfimot, ajf^-q^ot y. c. To
Inaugurate or solemnly install.
^iVt^^^ n. s a vessel for
tlie purpose of ^rf^^^.
^m'^R^ 71. 8 Kunniiig
abroarl. 2 Dispersionfas of winds
in the bowels). 3 Going towards.
3T['imrr, ^^Rt^ n. B Spil-
ling ; dispersing.
^Wfcf p, H Subdued, hum-
bled. 2 Smitten, hit, slain,
^itrt'cf p. s Spoken or said.
^^■jr a. s Skilful in, know-
ing thoroughly.
^Ym\^ p. Thoroughly
known.
^^rS" p. (s) Desired. 2 Pro-
pitious. 3 n. "Welfare.
^^rS-f^^^ a. That widies
one's weal.
^iTI^f^^^ n. Wishing of
one's prosperity.
^Tlf?F a. s Unenjoyed. 2 That
has not dined, impransus.
^^ a. (s) Undivided : indi-
visible, s. Want of difference.
Oneness ; unity of views. 2 or
3T%^HTW i^antheisni.
^^T^ a. s Indivisible, im-
penetrable.
^^f^^ a. s Unfit for fruition.
'^^TT^^' a. s Inesculent.
^^^ m. ^^q"^ 71. H In-
iiuftion previous to ablution.
^^'nf^TR „. (s) Ablution
after inunction.
^*^^n.(s)The inner part. 2
Mind or heart. 3 Included space.
^'1^ p. (s) Practised, vers-
ed. 2 That has been studied.
^i^Rfl (s) A guest, a person
coining uninvited, but entitled to
the rights of hospitality.
^*^W (s) Practice, study. 2
Skill acquired by practice.
28
^i^\m V. c. To study ; to
do habitually.
^T'^^r^f a. Practised, versed
in. 2 Assiduous, studious.
^g^^R 71. (s) Rising to
receive a visitor, v. ^, ^.
^*J^^ s Rising (esp. of the
heavenly bodies), fig. Flourish-
ing period ; rising of one's
fortunes.
^^^■Kcr ;,. Risen, &c.
^*^ 71. s A Cloud. 2 The
skv. 3 Cloudiness.
^P^ tn. n. s Talc.
^^r a. A certain person,
some one. 2 Certain, some (per-
son or tiling).
^H^rfiT^r a. Some, certain.
^WT?5- a. (s) pop. ^13" Of
unfavourable aspect. 2 Defiling,
vile.
^JT^r^ /. (p) The products
of the earth, or articles of mer-
chandise, as arriving at market
at their jjai ticular and set period.
2 That season. 3 Revenue aris-
ing from import. 4 The body
of jiassengers upon a new road
or bridge, or at a ferry. 5 Perqui-
sites, (i Flourishing period.
^JHt=r «. (a) Profuse,
copious. 2 /. Profusion. 3 ad.
Securely and happily.
^T^nTr/. (s) Immortal. 2 s. A
god, an immortal. ['ity-
^f^^^^rr A writ of immorfa-
^^n? /. See ^^T\t
^^^\^ n. s That trans«resses
due bounds ; libertine ; irregular ;
immoderate.
^^■^RT f. Trans2;ression ;
disregardful forwardness.
^TTcT (a) Huie, reign. 2 An
office or post. 3 A right of share
in the revenue of a village, (n)
Into.xication. 2 Iiito.xicating
quality in substances.
SRr^TJT^FT n. A pledge in
the custody of the person
lending the cash.
^^f^^r^ A person holding
an ofhce. 2 In the army. A
commissioned officer.
^Rc^^lfr/. The office or
business of ^jt^^t^.
^^
^iPT^^JRcr a. Disdainful from
holding a post of rule.
^^Twf a. Pertaining or sub-
ject to the government of iTR,
^^^T, ti^JiTJiT, &c. (h) Addict-
ed to the use of into.\icating
drugs, &c.
^T^c^RK/. A revenue term.
The department of intoxicating
liquors and drugs. It includes
TT¥t, -^^^H, &c. "'
3TJT^^ or -^rrc=5"«.Dried rind
of the fruit of 'CTrlt'Cf.
^ITS-, ^^^m ad. A little ;
in a small degree.
^^ Poet. The mother's
breast. 2 /. (Port.) A nurse ; a
wetnurse.
^^TTfr^ (s) A minister, one of
the ^TSSJ'^T'I attendant upon a
king. 2 A minister or counsellor
gen.
^T^TRrfy. and ad. A deposit.
A])p. to any item not brought
to any regular account. See
^*WRr a. Acting or officiat-
ing.
^ITR^ a. s Superhuman.
2 Inhuman.
^Tilpq" a. (s) Unacceptable
unto. 2 Unapproving.
^m^^ff/. The day of the
new moon.
^f*^^ a. Unmeasured. 2
Immeasurable.
^Wr / (A) The business
or office of 3T»^«T.
^Mr/. (p) The display of
a nobleman ; nobility. 2 The
rank of a nobleman.
^^R (a) An umpire. 2 An
inspector. 3 The otlieer presid-
ing in a district civil-court, now
called g«T^'Tr.
^R (a) a nobleman.
aiHRTim? pi. Nobles,
grandees.
^^ See ^^^.
^5^^5^ ^' ^ome, certain.
2 n. Something. 3 Speech in
p.xrnse of. [able.
^^ a. (Vulgar) Immeasur-
aro/T
29
sir^ft
^IT^ a. 8 Wanting form —
used of air, time, space, spirit, &c.
<^ir?^ a. s Invaluable.
^^TcT a. (s) Immortal, w.
Nectar. 2 A preparation of milk
with sugar and spices. 3 s Ex-
emjjtion from death ; final beati-
tude.
^^cT^^r/. \)l. The almonds
of the tongue, tonsils.
5?ITR" a. s Availing, eflica-
cious — medicines, charms, wea-
pons, &c. 2 Productive.
W^'^ See ^^^.
^^^ a. s Sour.
3Tr55FTTT a. 8 Acidity of
stomach.
^^•T r<. s The sun's journey
(north or south). 2 A half-year.
3 In comp. Going, coming. A.
A road.
SfiT^^rT n. s The circle of
the sun's passage, the ecliptic.
^^^r(p)A mirror. 2yl Spec-
tacles.
^T'lT^ (A) A flaw. 2 A fault.
^T^rr'T V. (p) A wilderness
or desert.
'^^r A compellation of res-
pect amongst the ftjfJII?;?!
people.
ST^ff^^ a. (s) One that begs
not, although he lives upon
eleemosynary contributions. 2
Unasked. 3 ad. Without being
asked ; readily acquired.
^^rr%cT5^^ Manslaughter.
^?iri%cr|rfT /. (s) Subsis-
tence upon eleemosynary aid
that may be obtained without
begging.
3nTR7 or -3" (a) a term of
address for a widow : as ^ToJ
A horse's mane.
^TlTa. s Unjoined. 2 Unfit.
^5^ n. s A myriad.
^^\^'^ a. (s) Improper. 2
Unworthy, unfit.
3I^rH#iTf a. s Un produced
from the womb or in any of the
orders of geueratioQ. App. only
to Go<l.
fra-
ihe
the
by
^T?i^(p) A saw. 2 A saw-
yer. BTT^^^i r. C To saw.
^<4>Hr c. A sawyer.
^^^\ (h) a certain
grant powder.
^^nf\ f. A variety of
grain ^t^c3T sown in
beginning of the year.
ar^^qr^r or sj^riirqRitr /.
Reciprocal action (as the ))ass-
ing to and fro of full and empty
I)askets, receiving and ])assing
on of bricks, tiles, &c.) 2 Turns
or bouts ; alternation.
^^ f. The operation of
parching and boiling seeds of
castor, &c. to obtain the oil. v.
5. 2 A loud bawling.
^^3^^ V. i. To cry out, to
bawl (whether in calling to or
in expression of pain).
^^r A loud bawling.
3T?^^f3TR"^ /. A combined or
a vehement bawling and bellow-
in<^
^^c7 n. Oil obtained
the process 3T^^.
^TFT (s) A tree of which
the wood is used for kindling
the sacrificial fire. Premna
spinosa.
^mr^ n. (s) The board or
piece of wood rubbed in kindling
sacred fire.
^•^^ n. (s) A wild desert :
— whether with or without trees.
2 An order among Gosavies.
^IT^W^cf A country sa-
vant or doctor.
SR'JJr^^^f or -Tl^^ n. s A
term for unregarded complaint
or supplication.
^CO?T^r^ Dwelling in a
forest.
3P72T^ n. Adoption of
Wilderness-residence.
^?:cTofq7:cTot y. c. To turn
over and about ; to be constant-
ly turning and stirring (cakes,
&c. on the baking pan).
^TTcrr ad. On this side. 2
Hither. .3 fig. Near to the heart.
^T^cTrtl^cfr ad. On both sides.
2 Thereabouts ; more or less, a.
Minor : 3T^^^t«f1 f«o3*«T By
gains ; extra profits : V\ ^^^
^T^ ad. (^^ s) Here. 2 n.
This ])resent world.
sir^PT^^ ad. Nor here nor
there.
^^^ See ^'-i
•=1?^^ (a) An Arabian.
^?:^^c^ or ^^2:^c^2: n.
Weak, unsavory food. 2 Tattle,
idle talk. ad. Nonsensically —
talking.
^^^Ja. Coarse, rough — food .
2 Rude, barbarous — persons,
speech, manners. App. also in
tliis sense, to such words as
iiJH, ^^, ^ISf, 3fiTTTT.
5T?:^2TrHf (p) a. Relating to
Arabia.
^^^r (a) The fire or fighting
of the Arabs, v. ■g'T^ with ^'i:
of 0. 2 A volley of abuse ; an
outburst of passion ; any highly
brisk and animated action : as
-^^^f a. (p) Relating to Ara-
^^tfcTJIKf 71. Dunning by
Ariib soldiers; any rigorous
pressure and enforcement.
^?:lT!Ef[c7 n. A Mahomedan
^^^- [uncouth.
^^^ or -^ a. Rude, savage,
^iT^^^rcT y, A designation for
a people whose manners, cos-
tume, &c. are viewed as foreign
and barbarous.
^RJT?: -JTR n. (Port.) A fleet
of ships of war. 2 A ship of war.
arnrfr or sr^^rtr a. Relating
to BT^T^.
^^ Interjection of dismay
or sudden grief.
^r^IT or -^ a. Light, rich,
and soft, crumbling — cakes. 2
LightjSoft — mangoes, &c. 3 Poet.
Soft and delicate : g*T^t xf^
3^0 II 4 Mischievous, roving
— a child.
^l\k^ n. s A lotus.
^^ftr^r/. Hemicrany.
31^^ or -€r/. (h) A small
looking-glass, 2 Spectacles.
arr^
80
'^
^^^ a. 8 Wanting juice,
insipid.
^R^T^af/. Around or about.
^^Bl (h) a mirror or look-
ina;-glass.
^r^^ a. (s) Ignorant of or
insensible to the beauties and
charms of; destitute of taste. 2
Tasteless.
^H^TTPr jn. (ii & A) A room
hung around with mirrors and
j)ictures ; mirror-saloon, draw-
ing room.
8R55-, ^TTHTcT?^ a. Loose
and slovenly — a bundle or any
j)ackage ; not right — a stone,
post : vague — speech : disorderly
— proceedings, ad. Loosely, dis-
orderly : untruly — planting, fi.x-
ing : vaguely — speaking, acting.
^TTRTcf a. (s) Unprotected.
^Tl^E (p) A sawyer.
^^(^^r A rough draught
or delineation ; outlines. p.
gy^. 2 fig. Circumscribing,
limiting. 3 A scratch, v. "^l^,
^m^r^f a. (s) That is with-
out a prince — a country, n. (s)
Interregnum.
WVn^^ /. Poet. Rest,
])eace, ease.
^n^lPT f. A female wor-
shiper, esp. of ■^ft.
«^T^r^r (p) Wordly equipa<je
or establishment ; family, lands,
affairs, v.xc^, fi^^, »Ti^, ^^T:,
^■^^, ^T^■q. 2. rompous
display, r. 'QT^-
sm^ or -?T/. (p) The state of
being splendidly fitted up (as a
hall, a room).
^rr s An enemy.
5?friT^^ a. Enemy killer.
^K?" 71. (s) Calamity, evil.
2 Marauders, locusts, or such
natural jjhenomena as comets,
earthrpiakes, a cause or oc-
casion considered as calami-
tous or portentous. 3 Miseliicv-
ous tricks, 1 Ill-fortune. 5 Injuri-
ous excess or vehemence (as of
raining, blowing, crying, or of
action gen.) v. v\^.
^mBm^\ a. s Rejoicing
in the calamity (of others).
^^TTT f. A cobbler's awl. 2
An iron spike (as of a playing
to|), of a large hand mill, a
goad, &c.)
s^fr^r^ See ^hm.
^WP^ f. s Losr, of taste. 2
Dislike, disgust.
^^f^ a. s Disagreeable.
•^*>^\ s The charioteer of
Surya ; hence the dawn. a. Red.
^=^iT^ The rising of the
dawn ; the ghatika before sun-
rise. 2 That period of time.
^^^ f' l^ight, place, pro-
vince. 2 Indispcnsableness :
■^ 3TT?ft ir^'r ^-gifT xjtti ^t-
^T^. V. y^x, %=r. ff. of 0.
^^^ a. Narrow, strait.
^^^cfr f, s A small star in
UrsH major ; the wife of ^f>l^-
^^W^a. Poet. Dull, heavy.
^^ a. 8 Poet. Void of
figure or form.
^ ind. (s) A contemptuous
or familiar particle of addressing
(a male); corresponding with Oh
vou ! You sir! You fellow !
~^^IT J. Saucy flouting,
tlingiiig off, back, away. v.
^X^ Wf\JT, V\^, "^1^.
^^^f. n. Thouing and thee-
ing a person, v. %I^, ^x:.
^^^f^ A braggadocio,
boaster ; a Hector.
^r^^r /. Boasting, brag-
ging.
^>T See 3T?T. 2 An eja-
culation upon sudden recollection
of some important omission or
mistake.
^^r^r A loud call. 2 A loud
bawling. V. ^jx, Z}W.
^"^ (s) Spirit or essence. 2
The sun. .'^ Sublinintiou. In a bad
sense : ^j "iy?:!^! 3T<». Also
^^•^T^. 4 Gigantic swallow-
wort. .'> (Port.) An arch.
^^2:T m. (s) Deadly hatred.
^^fj^ n. The name of the
mark denoting the half ^ ; or
written over the short vowels
X,^ to lengthen them in to X,^'
m^ /.A bar (as of a door).
2 A fetter. 3 fig. Curb, restraint.
^^ n. s An oblation to
gods or venerable men, of rice
and flowers with water in the
palm of the hand. 2 Venerable,
worshipful.
^^t f. The vessel in which
3^^ is offered.
^"^* a. (s) That worships,
adores.
ST^ot or ^R"ot V. c. To wor-
ship ; to render homage.
^T^ V. (s) Worship, ho-
mage paid to gods or superiors.
^"^r /. Worship, homage. 2
An idohimage. 3 Also ^f^T-
l^f^f- The ceremony of puri-
fying an image from the hands
of the maker, and of summoning
the divinity to reside in it : renew-
ed purification of an idol from
any detilement contracted.
^#tf^ a. s Venerable.
^^ (a) a petition ; a hum-
ble representation. 2 In land
measuring. Breadth.
^^<irr c. A petitioner.
^Sf^l^cTy. (p) A written peti-
tion.
^f^^/. (a) In land mea-
suring. Breadth. r i
^l^cfj^. (s) Acquired, gain-
^^r/. (ii) A petition, v. ^,
"^^ s The ocean ; a sea.
^^ V. i. To be anxiously
eager.
^H s Meaning, sense. 2
Intent, aim. .< Substance, wealth.
4 A thing to be attained ; an ob-
ject. 5 A rate ; the four grand
objects of the human affec-
tions and faculties. 6 A created
thing ; any object of the exer-
cise of the mental faculties. 7
Fruit, product. 8 Desire, seeking.
Substance, strength, virtue :
3t4t
31
ar^sfr
In comp. For the sake of;
til^I^. Indicaterl or implied
sense. 11 In conip. For the
purpose of: ^TIT^. 12 Laxl>'.
fs^^^lf?^ Since yon ask for
it, so we must give it to you.
'^Iwi<?TTff 3fo ^ gfl^ J^Tt.
In some way or other. 13 In
law. An action. 14 3To an-
swers closely to the word Mat-
ter as bearing the wide sense of
Thing to be done or uttered or
understoofl, believed, thought,
&c. : -gi^T 3TT=5T^T ^frf^«T II
^vi ^m ^«f ^^ ^im II
Also as per the common 3T^T-
^^ •TT^'^ This is not the
thing— the »«a/^er. 1") Regard
for : ^tt^ ^IHt ^^ 3^^1^l.
16 In modern Manithi gram-
mar. Mood. [meaning.
^4^^ n. Knowledge oftlie
^"^^f n. s Weight or so-
lidity of meaning or substance.
^4?TC s Apprehension of
meaning.
^^■T" V. c. To beg or petition.
^M^^: ad. s According to
the meaning or sense. 2 By
consequence ; of course.
"^T^^^ s A seeker of riches.
51? W^ (s) Hyperbolical
praise or dispraise. 2 Poetical
embellishment.
^'45Tr^ n. s The science of
accomplishing the true interest
of this present life. 2 The
science of political and civil
government.
^^rTg-^ a. (s) Implied, in-
volved.
^^f^^r ad. In no wise ; in
no sense : rpT^T ^^W\ ^^^T
^^r^ ad. In consequence
of; of course. 2 Virtually.
W5^*'=TRn. (s) Keeping the
thread or connection of; main-
taining the context, v. 3^,
Tl^ g. of s.
^P?N^ s The connection
of the sense ; conte.\t.
^^RnT f. 8 Inference not
expressed but tacitly inculcated.
2 Reasoning : deduction; the-
orizing.
^mm^ 8 Semblance of
meaning ; plausibility ; pseudo
reasoning.
^^M4iK s A general term
for tropes and figures.
>^1^'?5T a Wanting, needmg.
^PTF s A petitioner. 2 In
comp. That wants, desires : f^-
^T'-l n (s) A half. 2 In comp.
Half. . B^-q-^^T. a. Half-ripe,
ready, &c.
^'^V Half-moon. 2 The
hand curved semi-circnlarly, as
for the purpose of cliitcliing. 3
A clutch by the neck and push.
V. ■^. 4 A semi-circular ob-
j^?'' ^^°- [phrodite.
•^'^fr /. A female hertna-
^'-l^fRR?^?: (s) A name of
Shiva as he is drawn, half in his
own person, half in the person of
his wife Parvati.
3T^q:j or -3T a. Half-done-
made-spoken, &c. ; half per-
formed.
mVl'^l a. Half ripe.
^^ffr ad. Upon or with a
belly but half filled, v. ^^,
^3, SIT, 3T^, TT^.
m^\^ a. Half-bruised-
pounded-cooked-ripened, &c.
2 fig. A half — scholar, a dabbler.
'6 Half fallen from caste, i, e.
lax in the observance of rites and
forms. 4 Whose father is of one
caste and mother of another. 'S
ad. By half, i. e. imperfectly or
defectively.
3TVl^R:q(a[ jf^rj „^ A medley
(of languages, articles, doings) ; a
lingua franca, hotchpotch ;
a wild conduct.
^'^T^R^r a. Coarsely pound-
ed pepper, &c. ; imperfectly solv-
ed in boiling — rice, &c. 2 fig.
Roughly done — a work.
^'^t^^r a. Half-dead.
^^^l^f. Midnight.
m^ See ^^'
^^^^ a. Half-done.
^■^f^^" ad. By half; superfi-
cially, vaguely. 2 Half; in the
middle degree.
^'4^5c7 fi. A semi-circle.
^t:?r a. Half-mad ; silly.
mf^^\ f. Hemiciany.
"^"■Tf a. Half, ^'-^^f^ a.
Half and more; above half.
^mn. (s) A side or half
of the body. 2 fig. A wife, mis-
tress, or friend, '.i Ilemiplegy.
^^ffr^R (s) Half-assent;
qualified acknowledgment.
ai^M or -Wr a. About
[and half.
half.
^'-^MaJ. By halve's; half
^^'rr^^la. Half: ^o ^RI.
^^to n. (s) A half seat. 2
Great honour conferred or fami-
liar intimacy enjoyed.
^'^l^fr a. That enjoys the
honour or intimacy of sharing
the seat of.
^'^^fT /. An eighth of a
cake of bread.
^'^Jn^^ll^R^cTT A tenure in
which a land owner gives his
land to another to cultivate,
and receives from him half the
produce ; each party paying half
of the Government revenvie.
^W^ /: A buffalo that
has borne four or five times.
The number of calves from a
good buffalo is about eight.
^f5> A moiety.
^'^ /. A half share in an
agricultural or commercial en-
gagement. 2 The practice of
two persons thus joining them-
selves. 3 A tenure of land
wherein the cultivator is to pay
half the produce. 4 The state of
being reduced to half (of money,
&c.) -^T SJTT^KT'T^ ^ilT^
^0 "S"!^- Used with refer-
ence to loss, consumption, &c.
^T^ ^larT ^m^ rEIT"^ ^f"^^
^%c?r or -^ a. One that un-
dertakes, jointly with another,
some agricultural or mercantile
32
%T5?N^
concern. 2 A cultivator who
holds land upon the tenures
termed 3^^^.
m^^ n. (A half-word.)
Ready influence or prevalence ;
promptly admitted authority.
^orj •^T'Tin To be obse(][ui-
o\islv obedient unto.
^fm^ ad. By halves ; half
and half.
^tNt Interest at rate of
half per cent, per mensem.
ar^^fc^a. s Poet. Half
opened — the eyes, buds, &c.
^^■^ri'5[^=-:ir a. Used of one
exhausted (by sickness, an.\icty,
toil).
^^ n. s Offering. 2 Giving.
^^rq" a. s To be offered.
^m or ^1^^ V. c. To ofler.
2 To bestow.
"m^p. Offered. 2 Given.
^JT 11. s A hundred niil-
*"i"^' [A simpleton.
^^^ m. n. (s) A child. 2
^^ 7?. s A thousand millions.
^^RT^ a. s Modern, recent.
^^T^ a. (s) Low, rude,
obscene. 2 Wild, mischievous.
r
^^ a. s Fit, proper. In
comp. -^^sr-JT^- [corating.
^"^*<'-'l n. .s Adorning, de-
^'^^r^/.(A)The complimen-
tary introduction of epistles.
^^K (s) Ornament (of
dress); jewels (of language),
figures, trojies. &c. 2 Ornament
gen. ; ajirtue. [decorate.
^iirr^ V. c. To embellish i
^^if r a. (s) Elegant, or-
nate— speech, style. 2 That
treats of the ornaments of
stvle — a iSliastra. r.>,r.„f« i
. Lmented.
^"^^"T p. Adorned, orna-
^^^ or ^^^M^ A
name of Hrahma. A word vocifer-
ated by (losavies when thev beg.
^^^Z^l^T^Zf. A posture
— sitting with the legs crossed
and doubled (in the manner of
tailors).
^^^ ad. (h) Separately, a-
part. 2 Without catching by
the way ; freely — a bullet. 3
Danglingly. a. Separate.
^^'^ f. Any long building,
such as a barrack ; a long row of
sitting salesmen in a market.
3I?nFT" V. i. To hang from ;
— esp. of the heavy hanging of
ripe fruit. 2 To hang around,
clustering thickly — fruits. 3 To
hang from gen. 4 c To be over-
ripe and rotting — fruit.
Sfc^^KsiT (i^ (a) Slack, remiss
— a person, business. 2 Decayed,
rotten. «(/.Slackly,loosely — hold-
ing, !kc. V. "^Xi.
^cTJiT n. (a) a sort of pipe.
2 Tlie bands of tape connecting,
over the horse's back, the two
sides composing a 'iijfl^.
^^"^ a. s That is not to be
crossed, exceeded. [euced.
^•^^ a. Inexpert, inexperi-
^^^ a. (a) a thousand.
^c^^cT or ^^^tTI ad. (p)
Certainly, positively. 2 At the
least ; at the lowest.
aTc^^^qriT^^^irr I\Ir. Some-
body, or Any-body.
^^^ nd. R In a place of in-
sure footing; — as at the extre-
mity of a branch.
3Tc^^?rr a, (ii) Airy, easy —
dress, &c. of a fop. 2 Slack, loose
— a loail or bundle tied : slight,
flimsy — a building, &c. ; vague,
indecisive — speech : f?3T^T ^^-
^tirvr ^^ ir,^!. ^^^^^^^
^^^^ a. (s) Unattainable. 2
3Tc=^^cJ5TiT (s) A rare acqui-
sition.
^^^ or ^^^^m\f. (n) The
world ; the public : mankind,
3{c^c^c55" Interjection of dis-
may or amazement.
^^^ a. (s) Wanting salt.
^•^^ n. s Inattention, a.
!S Inapprehensible.
^^lt??nf /. (II) All pain,
trouble, and affliction. A term
used by women whilst waving
platters with lamps, &e. aroun«l
a person's head to avert all evil.
^^\^ ad. Hither, hither-
wards.
3T5?ItJR^ or ai?5T??2T7j^ c- A
term for a roving, runabout
fellow, utterly without care.
^^K ad. (A) Without hitch-
ing by the way, freely, clean —
a bullet, &c. proceeding in its
course.
^^'\^ or -T: Tuning the
voice previously to singing ;
running over the notes to catch
the key. 2 Humming a tune. 3
Singing the praises of the dead
or absent.
^^[m V. c. To perform
^^i^^ (s) Want, non-pos-
session.
^c^f ^r^rr^IRr ( a & p) a term
for an extensive establishment,
any wide display.
^^f^^ or ^^rc=vr Interjec-
tions of surprise.
^c^r^riC^I^A running ac-
count. 2 ad. In the way of such
account ; on account. 3 A rough
estimate.
^^^r (P) The fire which
is kindled in a pit and around
which jMuhammadans dance in
the festival of Muharrara.
3T?^[f|-^ a. ind. (A) Sepa-
rate. 2 ad. Separately.
^r^fl^RTirr / Revenue
(from any of the sources save
the land) extra to the estimate j
miscellaneous items of revenue.
arf^^^r a. Of this or the
near side. 2 Of later times,
recent.
^Tf^^rrf or ^^Rirf See
^^^ A dye of lac lodhra,
&c. used as red ink, or by wo-
men to stain their feet. 2 The
cotton impregnated with it. 3 A
sort of cloth.
^r^H" a. (s)Uncontaminated.
2 fig. Not united with.
STc^T^^^ a. Of this side. 2
Modern.
^c^r^^=f ad. Hence; from
this side. 2 From (a given past
date) up to the present time.
aT55^^
33
3T!3"3"
STr^f^? ad. On this side.
^T^cTf or -^^r A term for
certain village officers secondai}
to the "^t^fT.
[Green ginger.
^^ 71. Ginger plant. 2
^p5^r^ Preserved ginger.
^c^r^R^HF*^ n. s Waking
throughout the night without
closino' tiie eve.
^^\Z a. Poet. That changes
not: that cannot be averted, irre-
versible, s. (s) Conversancy with ;
cleverness from practice.
^Tc^fJ"^ V. c. To perform.
^FRJ^ a. (s) Singular,
strange — persons, actions, quali-
ties, s. (s) Disrepute, dishonour.
^^ a. (s) Little, of small
qviantity.
^PW^ or ^?7^^r a. Cre-
dulous, esp. in accepting scandal.
'2 That cannot keep a secret.
^?^3Tr'-^r u. Irritable, prompt
to anger.
^7f^ a. Of little ambition.
^^^^TS" a. Of narrow mind ;
short sighted. 2 Close and careful.
'^^^^^f'^ 8 A common term
for the facile movements of the
breath in ])ronunciation : an
unasperated letter ; as ^, 3T,
^, '^, &c.
^FWrT a. (s) Taciturn.
^?q^f?^ a. A little ; rather
little.
^?qRr^ Small exertion.
^?^^ a. s Shorthved.
^^^CR (s) A light meal. a.
Temperate in eating.
ST?2Tr^r ^rtr/. a clove of a
.«prig of ginger.
a|?Zfr^ ad. On this side.
^feT^ See ^^^.
3jE^;g- oj. 3T^c;g- a. Raw,
inexperienced.
^Mr^r rnq"/. (a) a term for a
meek, inoffensive man.
^F5TR?f a. (h) Preserved
by God ; — used of persons or
matters of which there is no ade-
quate preserver apparent.
5
^^K^ or ^TFTR#r a.
Slack, careless — a wrok : remiss
— a person.
^^I" f. Fame, report.
^^^^ f. Impoverishment,
decline.
^sT^^^'T' V. i. To decline in
bfe. [Ungovernable.
^^^o5" a. Unrestrained. 2
S^q^r^f (ffr n. Untimely rain.
^^'^'^\ f. Decline, waning.
^q^RT (s) Leisure. 2 Space.
3 Interval ; time yet wanting.
^^?ir^ ad. Now a days.
S^qf^fST a. Untimely, ad. In-
opportunely, mal apropos.
-^^^ir"^ a. s Overciist, over-
spread. In conip. ^'SiT^sR^oi,
^^^^\ f. (s) Displeasure.
^^i[[ijax ,;_ f. Xo treat scorn-
fully ; to slight. [ment.
^^TOH n. (s) Scornful treat-
^^r^cTp. Disregarded.
^^^^ J), (^s) Known, per-
ceived.
^^C^/. (s) Descent (to hell
or to an inferior station). 2 De-
scent gen.
^^^^ An evil quality ; a
vice. 2 An evil effect (as of a
medicine, measure, act).
^^% a. Vicious. 2 Of evil
projierties.
^^ET^ «, Difficult; arduous,
improbable. 2 Confined — a
place. 3 Severe — sickness. 4
Bad— an action. 5 Awkward, in-
convenient— place, circumstances.
6 Hard, strange — doing; griev-
ous— events. 7 n. A difficulty.
^W^^ V. i. To be in diffi-
culties. 2 To be awkwardly
situated ; confounded. 3 To be
fettered. 4 To be inconvenienced.
5 To be restrained.
3Tqq-^f2T A term for a log-
gish, lumpish, round-bellied,
short- legged person (A very
Master of awkwardness). 2 One
who makes difficulties.
3TW^^^ An order of religi-
ous mendicants.
^^^r a. All, the whole:
every one. ^^^^^
3Tt^^q'^r Poet. Fair deal-
3T^^2r n. An unlocked for
mishap, ad. or 3{wf^?i or -iTT
Unexpectedly.
^^i'^cflTS" ri. An observance
among women to obtain off-
spring. Dropping secretly a co-
coanut in the house of a Brahman
on the day of iT^^ ^"^ifff J
the cocoanut so used.
^^^?:[^ A term for a
Foundling (when risen into great-
ness) : for an inheritor of the
property of his foster-father.
^^f^'^^r a. Wild, prankish
— a child.
^^1%^ or 3Tff%r^ n. An
omen. 2 a. Ominous. 3 Wild —
a child.
^^r^'? n. 8 A bad sign.
^I'^*^ ad. Inadvertently.
2 Unexpectedly gen. [cepted.
^^htJ^r p, s Cut off": ex-
^^^^ (s) Cutting off. 2
The state of being divided. 3
A dividing sign; a cut; the
mark -i or || separating parts of
compounds or lines of stanzas.
4 Exception. 5 Pervasion (as of
scent in earth, of heat in fire).
6 A boundary.
^^^^ a. Enormous, huge.
^f^TcH' n. Careless treat-
ment ; neglect.
^f^?;" n. (a) The main sail.
2 A sail gen.
^f J^y. The office or busi-
ness of ^^^z^,
^^Z^ V. c. To gather off the
produce of a field ; to haul or
carry.
^W^^ V. c. To contract,
shorten, v. i. To shrink. 2 To get
a painful stiffness — neck, loins,
&c. 3 fig. To take huff or be in
the mumps.
3{^5Jq or ^f frHTot V. i. To
have a crick in the neck.
^TfTST Painful stiffness (in
the neck, &c.) r. M^, ^, «I^,
ar^TT
34
ar^r
ar^Jr^of ^, c. To embrace.
2 fig. To include, li To amass.
4 To put off: to postpone guile-
full V.
^^ /. A goldsmith's
stamp (to impress figures, &c.)
2 A notch made upon a ])iece of
wood which is to be chopped,
pared, barked, &c. v. i, ^^^,
^?2"r The officer of a town
who has charge of the standard
measures. 2 The measurer and
receiver in great establishments.
^^^l A fit of sulky anger, a
sullen humour, r. "Sfx:, ^f^, ^.
^^^ f. Likino; or fondness.
^^^ill"? a. Sweet because
liked : acceptable,
=^^^r a. Clever only in
the thing that is hked.
3T??I^^¥ /. Confusedly
mashing, crushing, &c. ; a man-
gled and messed mass.
^T^'T 7\ i. To be pleasing.
'=^TT3"crr j)^ a. Pleasing, de-
lightful.
^f^^RRT^r s. A term for
the second wife of a deutero-
gamist.
o{f?^r5Tr^ n. An interpre-
tation of a passage (in a Shastra,
&c.) less in conformity with
truth than with one's views. 2
The law of one's liking.
3??^;Tr?T or ^^^f^^^ f.
Liking and disliking; discrimi-
nating regard.
^^'k^l See ^r?^r.
^^r A gulp or mouthful
of spittle, r. artof, ^, ^T,
^T^, -^ W^ f5loJ^? 2 See
ajfiSq-Rrq^r^ The name of
one of the twelve Jyotilingam of
Mahadcva.
^^(jyrqf^r a,i After the
manner of beating down ; hag-
glingly. V. ^^, ■^, f^^.
^RcT'^Tor-^ 11. (Vulgar) An
invitation. ?', %, '^\X[,^^^^v^.^'.
c. To iuvite,
^TfcRiiT n. s. Annotations,
exposition. 2 Descending.
^^cf?:FI^ /. s A commen-
tarv.
STf cT^^ r. i. To become incar-
nate. 2 Poet. To descend. 3 fig.
To rant or rave.
•^^R" s. A descent upon
earth of some deity under a
human, or other form. 2 fig. A
term for a [)ious person ; for an
atrocious villain ; for a refractory
child. 3 s Descending, descent,
&c.
^^cTI^^q" n. (s) The busi-
ness or object of taking an in-
carnation.
ar^cTRot r. i. To run mad ;
to become wild.
^=fcfrU a. That has assumed
some earthly form. 2 A pp. fig.
to a person distinguished by l;is
piety or attainments : to a wild,
daring child or man.
^WAl^ n. The falling off of
an infant from its being put
away from its mother's breast, or
from the deterioration of her
milk on her conceiving again.
-*r^?}T^^^. a. That is so put
away — an infant.
3T^5Tr s pop. -^r Ill-luck
personified. 2 Adversity. 3 A
term for a vixen.
ST^^f^C 71. A sign of ap-
proaoliing misfortune.
^^^€tr ^/. The rounds of
Miss-Fortune.
3?^?-^t ^rs- n. A term for
an unlucky person.
^^^f ad. During the pre-
sent year.
^^R ,K (s) A handful of
the materials prepared for ol)la-
tion cast into the fire. 2 fig.
Swallow ing a bribe ; embezzle-
"'^""*' [a common day.
^^K^^ An unlucky day:
^^s^R 71. (s) Attention, heed.
2 Bent of the mind ; aim.
^^■'^Rr a. Capable of at-
tending to many things at once;
of |)ciforniing long and intricate
mental operations, kc.
^^^R^ n. 8 Determining
surely : stating 'with ])ositive-
ncss. 2 Presence of mind : fM-
^T%' 3T o ^iffj ^^^. 3 Bear-
ing in mind.
^^m^ V. c. To determine
positively : to state with assu-
rance. 2 To remember.
^^^ w./.(s) A limit ; a point
of time at which begins or ends
any work ; or a point or line of
space marking a thing. 2 Inter-
mediate time or space. 3 The
standard of a comparison. 4
The starting post or the goal.
6 Root, seat. 6 prep. In comp.
Until, up to : xj^^^i^^fV-
^^^(s)A termforan indivi-
dual of an order of f^-C^i^f-
?fur or ifl^T^, who roam
about in nudity, reciting the
^^■ETrfif^fTT, a metrical piece
in the MjJI^ff g^m.
■^^-^a. s Not to be sacrificed
or put to death.
^^^ a. s Profitable, pro-
ductive : f^^¥ 3T° ^^T*)T,
^^^ y. c Pine-apple-plant,
7».^K its fruit. [-gi^be.
^^R /", s The terraqueous
^C-TJir-qr /. Careless treat-
ment ; neglect.
^T^^ n. An error in diet.
^^cT, ^^irrRcT p, s Dis-
ref^arded, slighted.
^f^2R M. s Treading, tram-
pling.
^T^^kr /. Exceeding of
boiuuls, lit. fig.
m^H (s) Disregard, dis-
respect.
^^RR^ r. c. To slight, to
treat lightly.
^^^^ (s) A limb : an ap-
pendage. 2 fig. A bubb)', and
pL a woman's breast, v. V-
g?^sn ^^^^ ^^%.
^^^^'^ : ad. 8 Member by
member ; part by part ; severally.
^T^JT^r^f s The exact verbal
sense.
^^^ ad. On this side.
ar^lTT^F^ a. (p) Relating
to the city Aurungabad. Hence,
allusively, a sharper rogue.
3J^^^a<i. Expressly, direct-
ly-
^?^Jr a. Unmarried ;— used
of one yet unmarried though
advanced beyond the marriage-
able age.
^^r^ See ^K^.
SI^^^PRT^ nd. Around,
about. 2 Length-wise.
S?^^^ /. The last watch of
the night.
^^^ p. 8 Obstructed, im-
peded. 2 Kept— a mistress.
3?^n^ (s) Obstruction. In
comp. as IT^T^TIV. 2 Impuri-
ty contracted from hearing of a
death amongst one's relations.
^T^d^ot V. c. To obstruct;
stop.
STTrf?"'^' n. s Descending,
passing (down, from, over, or
along). 2 Descending through
the notes of the gamut.
^^^^ n. (s) Drought.
^^^ ad. (a) At first, a.
First, chief, greatest. /. The
earlier part: thi^^I^ ^o ^T-
ajfc^^^r /. In law. The
complaint or plaint.
^^^y^fj^rr ad. (a & p)
From first to last. 2 Through-
out, utterly.
^I^^ ?\ f,'. Poet, io row.
<iT?«^ s Kefuge, asylum. 2
A perpendicular. 3 Colatitude
of « plnce.
^^C^^OJ ^^ g ^Q giasp ; to
flee to ; to have recourse to. 2
To assume, adopt.
^fcT^'T n. s Holding on by.
^T^c^f^cT p. Supported, pro-
tected. 2 Clung to (for sui)port).
3 Hanging, pendant.
ST^c^^r?7 n. The early part
of the year. 2 The first year of a
series. 3 The first year of the
year of account.
a?^^^"^ n. (s) An unlucky
mark, trick, doing ; — as a sixth
35
finger, particular spots, &c. ;
gnashing the teeth in sleep, &c.
2 An evil omen.
^f^^^OTl «. Ill-graced ; hav-
ing ill-betokening marks, ways.
^^c^S;^/. Misfortune.
^^c^T An oar.
STf?5T^ f\ (a) Lineage, race.
^^r^H" p. (s) Impurely im-
plicated or accessary.
^^r?^^ (a) a holy person;
a sage; one absorbed in contem-
plation.
3T^r^3T or ar^^f ad.
Poet. Easily, readily,
^f c^ /• (A-) Anticipation :
surpassing, excelling, v. ¥!"«*.
^f^ n. An oar. ^^^^fl,
^^^r. A rower: fig. a
dii-ector.
'^^^'^, 3Tq"^q n. s Smear-
ing, plastering, anointing.
'^J^^^ s Medicine to be
taken bv licking ; a lambative.
^^^M^ V. c. To look, to see.
^^tTf^ n. (s) Looking, be-
holding : seeing. [viewed.
^^?5"(f^cr p. Contemplated,
^^^ a. Independent, un-
tamed, [over.
^fl^TS" p. s Remaining, left
^^3T^ s Remnant, residue.
^"Wf a. s Intractable — also
^■^3?J^ fid- (misused for
^T^'S^) Certainly, of course.
^^5^5^/. (s) Interested-
ness, earnestness.
3?^5^i{^ ad. s Certainly,
most positively.
^W^ s Obstruction. 2 A
prop, a post. 3 Support : fig.
patronage, countenance.
■^=r^ /'. The day of new
moon. 2 The early night ; the
hour bt^'tore dawn.
^^^^[g'S: /: Earlv night
and early morning. 2 The graz-
ing (of herds) in the early part
of the night and in the morning
before dawn, r, ^^. ad. In
the early iiicjht ?.nd at early
morn.
^^^'T (s) Leisure; fit time?
occasion. 2 The time of : a^
^I«I«ri^^^. 3 An afflatus of
a god or devil, v. fi.
^^m^l /. Words falling
from yieople conversing on
their own affairs, and fancifully
wrested Vjy a person overhear-
ing them, into connection with
some subject which he is him-
self meditating, and interpreted
as affording solution of the
doubts that oppress him. 2
Popular rumor, v. ^]'S, f%^.
^^m\ or -"^r a. That is the
subject of an ^T^^'C-
ar^mcT ad. Poet. Sud-
denly.
^WR 71. (s) End. 2 fig.
Death. 3 A stop ; suspension. 4
fig. A stop (in music). 5 Limit.
6 Courage, ardor, spirit, v.
'^K, ^'^, ■^^j i«r, ^^. 7 A
stretch of strength ; a strain :
T(^ ^o 'R"l'<:^T. 8 A critical
moment, v. -^T"*?, "^^loS. 9
A conjuncture. 10 The very
height of the heat of an animal.
^^m^T^fcl^r a. That fails at
the hour of need.
^f'B'f^ a. Prompt under
emergencies.
^^ifR s Ceasing. 2 End.
^^(5!^/. (s) State or condi-
tion.
^W^fl'^T ?i. s. The two
periods of human life — the ris-
ing into maturity and the de-
clining into old age. 2 The two
states of life — waking and sleep-
ing. 3 The two conditions of life
— happiness and misery.
^^'4filT pi. s or R^r%
^T^^gji^T'^ The variations of
the soul — waking, dreaming,
sound sleep.
^^f^E'^cT p, s Remaining,
abiding.
ST^M'c[/.s Staying : abode,
station.
3T^?c7=r n. s pop. ^rfar"^!.
/. Treating scornfully.
^^S-^f'r or -^\ /. Dried
I royrobalans,
'^^RTsr
36
arsirg-
^^aS^ V. i. To shrink. 2
To consolidate : to be constring-
ed. V. c. To tighten. 3 To clasp
fast. 4 To shampoo (the limbs).
5 To clench (the fist). 6 To seize :
3T^3"r Emblic niyrobalan. 2
fig. The knob of the pillar of
a ^t^TTrf^WT ; an ornamental
knob gen.
3T^5Jr^fsr /. A general
tying, binding (as of travellers,
of an army, &c.)
^cfff /■, s A tree.
^^aJfiTf^n ji. Dining, upon
a day of the month Kdrtik, un-
■ der an ^T^oJI.
3I^65ZTr^r Rf?: /. a term for
a gang of fellows united by some
present and common, but evan-
escent interest.
^^^^ 71. See ^^r^TT.
-\
^^^T s Casting downwards.
2 fig. Irony.
^Wr/. (s) Disrespect.
^^r (h) A potter's kiln. 2 The
pile of pots (as burned or to be
burned)./. See ^T^T^.
^^t f. A report or rumor.
^^[^"T V. i. To consider; to
hesitate. 2 To comj)ute. 3 To
design, mean : 3?Tfaft^XT ^'2'
Sim^r Ability,lit.fig. 2 Pow-
or,grasp : m ^T^T ^^l^f«T
ffx: ^^ ^. 3 Mental grasp ;
reach of the mind (in consider-
ing, reasoning, &c.} 4 lSuj)posi-
tion, notion.
^T^RT ad. c In a vital part
of the body. v. vlTJI, v^^, iTT^.
^^[TJTS" a. s Hanging the
head ; abashed, dejected, r^
ai^r^r /. s The south quar-
^T^I"^"M a. s Improper to be
uttered. 2 Insusceptible of des-
cription or enumeration. 3 That
is not to be spoken against.
S?fr^ f, A term of courtesy
in addressing a Shudra woman.
^^J^ZT a. Huge, vast.
Used of buildings, the body,
forests ; of objects dispropor-
tionately bulky.
^T^tcfr a. (s) The others; the
rest. 2 Other, minor.
3T^r^ q"(Rr /". Minor profits.
^o ^T^ An extra Avork ; ^o
^xf Extra-expenses.
^^iffT / s Obtainment.
^^\T ad. (Vulgar) Un this
side. 2 See ^i^i^.
^^m^\ or ^^r^^fr nd.
Immoderately — talking, eating,
spending. 2 See BT^T'S^^SEf.
^^r^ n. A fleshy excres-
cence.
^^r^T^ 7?. A blunder in read-
ing, speaking, or writing. 2 A
single word or syllable ; — as
opp. to perfect muteness : jgf
A reproachful or abusive word.
3Tr^^Kra.(s) Unchangeable;
2 Indeclincible.
-STl^^R (s) Inconsideration ;
non-advertence.
^'t^R^r^ a. Indiscreet,
thoughtless.
^f^f^S'^ ad. Uninterrupted-
ly. 2 Exactly, just. a. s Is'ot
divided.
^ft^^TR/. Pudendum mu-
liebre intactum. ftinct
^f^^Rf^ a. Unexisting, ex-
^f^^r f. Erroneous appre-
hension through the lilusiveness
of the material world ; admissicm
of these unrealities as real ;
ignorance as opp. to knowledge.
^ff^l^HRr An expanse of
ignorance.
arff^'mCcf^cRT n. s Poet.
Life enshrouded in ignorance.
^lt%fl'^T 8 Poet. Ignor-
ance as a cover or concealing
cause.
^n'-T a. Unbored — ear,
pearl. 2 A term for a Musal-
mau, because his ears arc un-
bored.
^i^'"Tfr f. A woman whose
husband is living.
^Wl''^ a. (s) Irregular ; done
without observance of ])rescribed
rites, s. y, Absence of law ; breach
of rule.
^ItT^" s Sauciness. 2 a.
Sauev, haughty.
srf^^r^Tr «. (s) imperishable,
jiermnnent.
STlt^r^cT a. Uncontem-
jilated, unintended,
^r^^rrlrcr a. Unmarried.
^fft^ a. Want of consi-
deration.
^r^^r a. Inconsiderate.
3Tft^-TR a. Untiring.
^f^^^^^T a. That is not to
be confided in.
BTf^^r^ a. Want of confi-
deuce, distrust.
^f^^f^r or -^fl. Distrust-
ful or suspicious : unbelieving.
2 Not trustworthy.
^rtlCcT a. s Uncommanded,
not prescribed.
^tfHT a. Unfading — a color :
never wearying: undecaying :
immoderate : exuberant. 2 Un-
failing, an epithet of God.
^"froT See ^^^- r •
[nious.
^^"^ a. Sparing, parsimo-
3f^^ The side of a cooking
stove. [sonable time.
-^^oS" f. Lateness. 2 Unsea-
if^o£"^fo5" /*. Time consider-
ed as bad or good .(with respect
to a work contemplated).
^'f^'T ??, s Search, quest.
^sq"^ fi^ (g) Indistinct ; not
j)lain, invisible — the Deity, the
soul. 2 Unknown — an algebraic
ipinntity. 3 Inarticulate— a
sound.
^s^T a. (s) Defective in no
limb ; entire. 2 fig. Faultless.
^^^^ a. Undiscoinposed ;
quiet, serene.
ajszffq-^rff a. s Not com-
mon ; proper, ajipropriate.
^^^^ 71. (s) An indeclin-
able word ; an adverb, conjunc-
tion, &c. a. s Incorruptible.
^sij-q-p^r f. Disorder, con-
fusion.
^5zr^^2j- f,^ n Disordered,
ars^T^
37
3T^r»f)f
deranged, confusedly lying —
things : irregular — persons.
BT55iT^fftcf a. 8 Disused,
obsolete.
3T°^r^r a, 8 Unpervading.
^°KT Disrespect, slight.
^°^<"1 V. c. To treat slight-
ingly. 2 To neglect, v. i. To lie
disused.
^[^ (s) A part, portion. 2
Remnant of. 3 A degree. 4 In
arith. A fraction. 5 Shoulder-
blade, [petent.
^^tF a. (s) Weak : incom-
^Rr=f^ a. Impossible.
^^cT: ad. By degrees ; bit
by bit.
^^ 11. s Enting. 2 Food.
3T5T=fRT or ^W a. s Proper
or possible or purposed to be
divided.
3T^r a. (A) Ten. ^^fR a.
Twenty ; — used of the Arabic
year.
Bj^lTfcirr (s) An incarna-
tion of an emanation from the
divine essence ; — as distinguish-
ed from ^uiT^clT^.
^5T[?T A share of a share ;
a sub-division. [tive.
^^jr^cT a. Transient, lugi-
3T5IR<? a. Unscriptural, in-
formal, uncanonical. r ^j
^r^T^r a. Imperfectly boil-
^fSTcI a. s Divided.
^f^l^^fl. (s) Uninstructed,
untrained.
"^Mt a. A partner, co-heir.
3T5jr^,^^?cnf^rt. 8 Impure,
^jt- fig. [rays.
^T^nfT^ w. s A pencil of
^T5T2T3" a. An epithet of
reproach to a Sleepy and sloven-
ly fellow, and to disorderly
speech or doings.
^*J'& a. (s) Incorrect. 2
Impure. 3 An error (in writing
or speaking), n. Poet. Blood.
^T^pr n. Inauspicious —
conjunctions, actions, signs, n.
Unluckiness. 2 EUiptically for
3T?]iT^if -^f^ n. An inaus-
picious or hateful rite, — esp.
funeral solemnities. 2 A sinful
action.
^^T a. All, the whole.
^5Tir^cr^rj s Unpurified
metal ; an ore.
^^T^F"^ V. fs) Impurity, &c.
See 3TT^T'^.
^5^lt/. s Strangury. 2 The
stone or gravel.
^?^r s A stone. In burning
a corpse, the stone over which
they drop water is not called by
any common name, but by ^o
^^?:r/. (s) Want of faith
in. 2 Dislike. [belief.
-^^^^ n. s Unwortliy of
^»^Toq" fi g Improper to be
heard. 2 Inaudible.
^^ m. n. (s) A tear. ^^ a.
Unheard. 2 That has not heard.
3 Unlearned in the Vedas. 4
Contrary to the Vedas. 5 That
has not bound hnnself by any
oath.
^T^'^Tirr/. A stream of tears.
SJ^Tfcf A flowing of tears ;
weeping.
^T^fT^ A lachrymal iiland.
^^F^ a. (s) Not praise-
worthy,
^^ (s) A horse. ^^nRf/. A
pace of the liorse.
^^l%fe'Fr^ A horse-doc-
tor. 3f^f^f^f^T/. Medical
treatment of horses.
^W-^ Holy fig tree. ^^^^-
•IT^i^'JT The tree 3f^Rl view-
ed as a divinity.
^^^rrr Forces consisting in
cavalry. 2 A host of horses.
5J^qTT'!jf The sacrifice of a
^^^?T A veterinary sur-
Sl^q^fc^r /. A stable. 2 A
riding house. [-,^0^^^^
3T^r?iRT^ (s) A breaker of
^''^RT^r /. Horse training.
^^^r^^ n, 8 Charioteer-
i'^S- [from ^^.
^(^^ The seventh month
^f^% /. A mare. 2 The
first of the twenty-seven •TJ^^.
^m1f ffi^ or ^f^^rq^ pi.
The twin sons of the nymph
Ashwini, and physicians of
Swarga- Hence, applied to skil-
ful physicians, or to a handsome
person. 2 A particular medicinal
preparation.
^S" a. (s) Eight. ^T?^«. An
aggregate of eight. 2 The eight
sections collectively of Panini's
grammar. 3 in. A common terra
fortheeightportionsof a Sanhita
or collection of the formula? of
the Rig Veda. a. Eight : eighth.
^^^F"^ n. An octagon, a.
pop. 3T2€T*f1 Octangular.
^STc^ n. A figure of eight
petals, u. Octopetalous.
^TS^KWr^ !>/. The guardian
deities of tiie eight regions of
the heavens.
^S"i^F f. pi The eight re-
gions ; the eight main divisions
of the compass.
^?^F^^r/. pL 3 The eight
chief mistresses of the 16,U00
kept by Krishna.
^Sr^^r f. An octavo volume.
^S^Tfr /: A piece of poetry
consisting of eight t?^.
^S"7F^ 8 A spider.
^S"5^F/. A woman that has
eight sons; — used as a word of
benediction to a married woman.
^8^^a. Eight sided. 2 A pp.
to a clever, variously-gifted
fellow.
^8'^'^R pi (s) The eight
ministers of state.
^S"^F /. The eighth lunar
(lay of each fortnight.
^'S:^^\ /. a maiden arrived
at the eighth year.
^2-^F^^ a. Capable of at-
tending to many matters at once.
^T2"RFTrcr Prostration in pro-
found reverence.
aJS-fJTf In the whole body
or person : ^ T*T^T ^xi^?l
*^r, ti-rg r??T^ 3To SW^.
ST^TT
38
^mr^r
5TS"[^5r a. Eighteen.
^STfSr or ^2"^^ c. A term
for any person or article of great
deformity.
^8T^:[r4r a. See 3T?^r^'=T.
^S-RT^m The spell of
eight syllables supposed to be
uttered by ])ersons in great per-
plexity : ^T^ ^^ *^ ^^■
STgTq-?T a. Throughout the
eight watches ; unceasingly.
^^^r a. All ; the whole.
^^^ a. (s) Innumerable.
^^^s^TTcT a. s Uncounted.
^^^ a.(s)SoUtary. 2 That is
not to be associated with. s. Ab-
sence of comj)aiiionship.
^T^^cT r/. Incoherent-speech
or thoughts ; inconsistent — con-
"*^*^;^ [impropriety.
ST^JIfcry. Unconnectedness:
^^^ a. Thin, dihite.
^m^^ V. c. To pull with a
jerk ; to catch up ( a whip, &c.)
suddenly and smartly. 2 fig. To
pluck from knavishly. 3 To cast
lavishly (curses). 4 To cast
(down, against, at) forcibly.
'^^^r Sudden and smart
jjull or jerk (of a limb): the paiu
following it. V. %, "^fj. 2 A
convulsive throe(asof a drowning,
hanging, or dying jierson): the
rising u\) and issuing forth of the
last l)realh of such, .'i A blow ;
a loss (in trade, kc.) a. Unhusk-
cd — rice, &c. 2 fig. Undiscip-
lined.
^^^fy. The spawn of flies
settling upon a sore producing
mairgots in it.
^^^ /'. i. To be. 2 To re-
main. [2 \Vroug.
^^\ a. (s) Untrue ; not just.
^^'^ J), pr. Having property
or substance. 2 Comjictent ;
liavmg something. ^^^.jf^.^
^^^r /: (s) An unchaste
^^^2" „. Displea.sed. 2 Not
content.
^m^^ n. E.xistence.
^^^IT (s) Displeasure: dis-
coutcut.
^^crr^r a. Of a discontented
dis])osition.
^^"■^K Disrespect, dis-
graceful treatment.
^W^^ a. Untrue.
il^^^RfersT a. Faithless ;
false to promise. [diture.
^^T°5T?T Improper expen-
^^^C a. Incoherent —
speech, writing, &c. ; la.\ — con-
duct. 2 Absurd.
^^^'■^ Absence of congruity.
^^^R /: (a) Articles of
])roperty ; goods and chattels. 2
Munitions of war.
^^*iTf (s) Incon-jruity. 2
Improbability or impossibility.
^^irfr a. s Absurd. 2 Im-
])()ssibk'.
^^tirr^^r /: (s) want of
congruity. 2 Impossibility.
ST^m^^q" a. s Inconsis-
tent. 2 Not [irobable.
^^irr^rT „. (s) Not congru-
ous. 2 Light, low, disreputable.
^W^^T a. s Not possible
or probable.
^^iTcT a. (s) That does not
consist rationally and really.
-^^*^ a. Unpolished, vuli:ar.
^^ff^ Absence of under-
standing fa matter). «. Tiiat
does not understand.
5iT?TJtsr^ a. (s) Dull of ap-
])rehensiou. 2 Indiscreet.
^^JTf^r a. DilHcult to be
IK'rsuaded or ])aeified. fini''.
^{^IT^^ /: Misiinderstancr-
^T^WcT a, (s) Void of appro-
b.'ition ; disallowed.
^^^4" a. Pi.werless, feeble.
^T^H^rtr Accidental; not
inherent and inseparal)le.
iT^Tirr^TR n. Displeasure, 2
Slight disturbance of healthy
fcclni.r.
^'THR a. Unequal.
-^^^ (I. (a) Ori;:inal — opp.
to co))ied or derived : superior,
excellent — opp. to secondary or
inferior : legitimate ; well-born ;
noble : exactly copied — a picture,
^' ^ [complaint.
^^T?5'^5rr /. In law. The
^^^'^cRT n. Genuine. 2 App.
to pure or neat spirits, and
to essences and extracts gen.
^^c7^r^ /. Original tax ;
an original item. 2 An obligation
on the Ryots to furnish, at a
reduced rate, articles for the use
of the garrisons of forts.
■^^^r a. Of this kind ; such.
=iT^^^ n. A bear.
^^FfT V. c. To season (a
new earthen vessel). 2 fig. To
deflower (a maiden) ; to hold il-
licit sexual congress with (a
woman). .'J (3TT^) To strike (a
top) within the ring.
^^^^cT a. s That has not
undergone any particular ^-
5T^1T=T n. (s) Inability to
bear. 2 Impatience of another's
prosperity, a. Unable to bear.
^^?'[^«. Solitary; wanting
a friend.
^^^ a. Intolerable.
^^ a. Sucli. 2 ad. So, thus.
'6 It often occurs finally with the
elision of 3T; ^T ^T*TI^T f^^HT.
^m^ or V^ft A j)hrase
answering to " As follows."
^'FTR^r a. So so, common.
2 ad. Someway or other ; by hook
or by crook.
"^m^TR'^r r/.(s)Not common ;
peculiar. 2 Respectable, distin-
guished.
^^I^r*^^ a. s Inij)racticable.
2 Incurable.
ST?T[^r _/■ m. (a) a person.
2 A tenant, renter, client, &c. .'i
A name upon a muster roll. 4
?/). .\ public service ; an assign-
ment for a maintenance.
^mm^rr ad. (h) Singly,
^<'i"»;;i»t^'lv. [nai roll.
^q-Ri^rrq^ „. a nomi-
^^ir (I. (s) Unsolid, unreal.
"iT^rf'-^r a. Unheeding. 2
Heedless.
^^rmrfrr^r Panting, puff-
ing, r. ^T^; % % ^T^-
^^nr a. Single, solitary.
W%^r /. Poet. Place of
abiding.
Srfeq^^^ n. s a fabled
forest, where the wicked are
tormented with leaves pointed
find rigid like swords.
B?f^^crr /. 8 The flashing of
swords. 2 The zig-zag corusca-
tions of lightning. 3 A sword.
^^ST55" a. Blear-eyed—
a horse, m. f. A disease of
horses. 2 fig. One ever weep-
ing.
^^r or srgrr^ a. (?)
Fresh, lively ; — used of horses.
2 Fresh (after work). 3 Free,
exempt. 4 Unpractised in.
^5^ (s) A demon.
^3"^ a. Relating to ^^ or
•^^q^ T^^■[■^ A harsh and
■J
violent remedy, n. Any darmg,
mad act. [spirit,
^^^r f- (s) A female evil
^§fr??[^ /?. A pp. to flesh-
meat, spirituous liquor, &c.
^rgfrf^^ir /. The black art,
magic, sorcery, &c. [Unwise.
^^5r (I. (s) Unknowmg. 2
^^^ The lono- whip of a
cartman or ploughman.
^^3TI[5 f. The common
slip-kno with one loop.
^^cf or -ST n. The repercus-
sion, during eating or drinking,
of a particle in its passage over
the epiglottis, v. 5ii: «f '^'^^
■il^T, ^vlT^o^Ti^-
^T^J^^T^ ad. At intervals ;
by fits and remissions.
BT^r/. (s) Envy. 2 Ca-
lumny.
^^m? s. A slipkont, &c.
^^^^cTt cd. At this rate
on^vards. [peeled.
^T^lc^r a. Unhusked, un-
argi^r or -^Tf. Greedy ea-
gerness, insatiableness. a. Insati-
able.
Sl^f^f^ a. Impatient, hasty.
^^Hc^cT n. (s) Firm, steady;
unstumbling.
39
^^cT m. n. (s) Setting (of a
heavenly body). 2 Obscuration
of a planet. 3 fig. Ruin. 4 fig.
Exhaustion : emptiness.
^^cPTcT a. Set — a heavenly
body.
^^cT%/. (p) A sleeve.
^T1 A domestic or perfidious
foe. Terras for a traitor or an
ingrate.
^T^cTiTI^f fl.(s) Set— a heaven-
ly body. n. The setting (of a
heavenly body).
^^cT^ n. (p) Lining (of a
garment, &c.)
^^^r=^^ (s) The western
mountain behind which the
heavenly bodies are supposed to
set.
^^clIoii^cT a. Disordered —
things, affairs, ad. Higgledy-
p^sgledy, in a litter. ^t^y.^^.
^Rcl^^ n. 8 Being or exis-
^RcRFI^cf ind. s Yes or no.
V. ^ys\. Also yes — no, with
hesitation, v. ^i:.
■^•E^ ind. (s) Be it so ; amen.
2 The sign of the third case,
answering to ^: "FW^ 3To
By him.
^T^^r/, A woman.
^cT^^T Having some wealth
or )iroiierty ; substantial. r,^
^\^^m pi See =Te?^, sig.
^^^ 11. s Refraining from
theft.
^t^ 71. (s) A weapon charm-
ed by the recitation over it of
some mystic formula : the for-
mula. 2 A weapon.
^^m^r a. (s) Transitory.
^^ f. n. (s) A bone.
^m^^ a. s Seated in the
hones — fever, &c.
^ll^TJTcTq-R a. That is on
the point of death.
^iW^^^r /. s The perios-
teum.
^l1'4^5l^ The skeleton or
compages of bones; the osseous
I system.
^f^'44^(s) Fracture of bones.
^R^)T?r Breaking of bones,
or brokenness of bones.
^ft^r?5T/. s The osseous
system.
^R^^ a. (s) Unsettled.
^R^^"^ Ulcer in the bone.
^fere'^nr s Gathering the
bones after the burning of a
corpse.
ST^tr^ s A joint. 2 Unit-
ing of a broken bone.
aif^ST^irq'^n.Committing the
bones of a burned body to some
sacred stream.
^f^41^'^'l n. The ceremony
of sprinkling the bones of a
burned corpse to cleanse them
from the ashes.
Sl^q" n. (s) Instability.
^THfcr a. Unbathed.
^^^, ^^54" a. s Not to be
touched.
^^TS" a. Obscure, indistinct.
^^?r^ITs Inarticulateness.
^^ItT f. s Non-remem-
brance, oldivion. 2 Non-occur-
rence to mind.
3T^crq^r (p) a term of res-
pect in letters, in addressing or
mentioning females.
SJ^cT j)>'on. We. In comp.
as ^W^^ Our house.
^^il?'r^ pron. s Our.
■^JTlK^^jron.We ourselves :
^mi'^T ^^JI^T 'l^^T. It is
a term of grandiloquence.
5?^JTR n. (p) The sky or
heavens.
^T^Rrnfr/. (p) An awning.
^iTR^q^r (ii) A blow from
heaven ; any lieavy calamity. 2 A
galloper up into the clouds. A
term of ironical praise for a sorry
jade of a horse.
^^Rmn (h) a star. 2 A
meteor. v.i\'Z. 3 A term of
praise for a very fine horse,
rider, writer, &c.
ST^Tnft
40
srfiraT
^W% a. (p) Sky-colored,
light blue. 2 Heavenly. Aj)]).
to calamitous visitations froui
above ; as drought, rains, light-
ning, &c./.Any calamitous visita-
tion from the heavens.
^Wr% g-^cTF^ a. (p) Hea-
venly and regal.
^T^Fn a. (s) Immemorial.
2 Illegal. ,3 Not belonging to
the Hindu institutes.
^T^q^Fc^ s In law. A period
beyond memory or note ; time
immemorial ;». e. the period of
one hundred years.
^TWrcf or ^Wfcf ^ifc^^a. That
has been enjoyed above one
hundred years — a property.
SI^^^ )i^ s In law. Absence
of title to property.
^^<^i;t. /. m. A bear,
^^^^a. (s) Uncomfortable,
unquiet.
^T^'?R a. Independent of.
^^^f^?J a. That is without
a ])rince, master, or owner.
S?^r^?;[^^rq- s in law. Sale
without ownership.
^l^^^ In L;.w. Non-pos-
session of legal right to property.
^T^fTT a. (p) Mounted (upon
a horse, &c.) s. A trooper.
^^[^^ }i. 8 Indisposition ;
discomfort: penury.
^^^ a. (a) See ^^^.
^? pro)K s I.
^^ i«c/. Interjection express-
ing dissent, &c.
^t^^) Egotism.
^^rt^FT s Pride, conceit. 2
Consciovis feeling ; apprehension
of self as an existence distinct
from the Deity or from the
world without ; assertion of per-
sonality.
^^^n^^ Seat of the soul
or sense ; the body.
^^^f a. s Proud.
air^FrT /. s Pride ; display
of self. r^,
. . Itheeing.
^r^=^^/. sThouing and
^^^ r. c. To mash (as with
a spoon). 2 fig. To worry or
harass.
^^TC^F f. s Conceit, egotism.
^^2r?^F^ /". s Consciousness
of personal existence ; i. e. (as
the Hindus philosophize) arro-
gance, ignorant egotism.
S?t^(2f s In Hindu mela-
physic. Affirmation of selfness.
-^^iTF^ s Conscious feeling
or regard. 2 Supposition,surmise.
^giTHcTF/. 8 Assertion of
personality. 2 Love of self and
of one's own.
^f^^Fnl a. That recognises
self; that has apprehension of
self as an existence distinct from
the Deity or from the outward
creation.
^T?l% ad. 8 pop. ^KH€\
Day and night,
^^'e^fi hid. A word shouted
by Gosavis when they beg.
^^TCF or ^^TCF^F Interjections
of joy and admiration ; of pity
and sorrow ; or of disgust.
^^■Fi^F^ Utterance of the
interjection ^T^T. v. ^X. 2
Crying out; loud com])laining.
^T^FJ^ V. c. To bruise. 2
fig. To torment. 3 To mix up
with.
^Wlim p. Bruised, &c.
^rFT^iqi'FT^T ad. Tauntingly
— speaking.
^Wl^l A proverb. 2 A
riddle. 3 Verses recited at
weddings, &c.
:^jlTq-aTCF^ int. Alas ! alas !
V. mx.
^€l< A serpent of the Boa
kind. 2 Embers. 3 Starching
and ironing, v. '^.
~*F^C"T' r, i. To lie torpidly
from over-eating. 2 To give way
— a l)uilding.
^^^^\ See ^CT.
^^TCF^'CT jj, 2. Xo undergo
burning by hot blasts. 2 fig. To
be sorely afflicted.
^f^ (s) A snake.
^ftf^^ n. (s) Injury, harm. a.
Detrimental. 2 Hostile.
^ftl^ or ^\kX^ /. A cow-
herdess.
^\kT\ or ^i"n A disease of
eye. 2 A stone, hard and red-
dish : a natural spot upon this
stone.
3Tl1:n /. The daubed pit-
chers of which, at the ceremonies
of marriage and thread investi-
ture, piles are raised to enclose
an area for the idol.
^Fl:Mr See ^CR^.
^Ft^^ a. (s) That destroys
not life.
^Ff m /. Non-destruction of
life. 2 Innocence of bloodshed-
^g- [Glare.
^Tfr /. The glow of fire. 2
^^f^ A cowherd. 2 A river-
fish. 3 A caste of Shiidras.
•\
^f^ Presents from friends
and relations to one in whose
family there is a marriage, &c.
V. ^'C.
^CU3:, arcfr a. Suitable to
be given in 3Tf ^.
■^f?^^ f. An unwidowed
woman.
•\ .
^C^cTcT Tlie marriage string;
a string, with a bit of gold strung
on it, cast by the bridegroom
around the neck of the bride,
and which she wears until widow-
ed.
^TC^ttrr The TI3r^fr of an
unwidowed female. 2 fig. Any
ahhlincj office, estate, &c.
^rW^t^ n. Unwidowed
•l^''^*^'- [woman.
^^^^mf. An unwidowed
arl^f^ ad. Whilst yet
unwidowed— dying.
^TfF A respectful particle
of calling to man or woman. 2
After a name or a word ^T ia
dropped ; as ^T^%T. 3 An
interjection of admiration or de-
light.
^^^FO hid. To address
by the respectful vocative parti-
cles. V. ?jtT, ^1^.
^rrR
41
^^w
^iut^^ ad. During the
wliole clay.
^TCf^f a. Greedy, covetous.
•\
^T1"W^ »?. n. (s) The period
from sunrise to sunrise, ad. Day
and night. 2 Duriug the whole
night.
^fr? See ^T^'-T^r-
3Tc^,«To5"ir f. A maggot which
infests grain and fruit.
^^T^T'^r See 3T^?:oT-
^oJ^T ti. Sauce. 2 Flour or
other matter used as thickening
stuff to dishes.
^STorSTa. Undersalted.
ST^% a. Wanting salt. 2 fig.
"Wanting pith, nerve, vigor.
^T^'T i\ c. To inspissate (a
liquor), v. i. To become inspissate
— milk, &c. 2 fig. To dry up ;
to become lank and meagre. 3 To
attain puberty.
SJ^'cTT A dye of lac, Sec. used
as red ink, or by women to stain
their feet. 2 The cotton imbued
with it.
SJS"^-^" n^ Mushroom.
^^^Z^^-Z\^^ n. /. Dilly-
dallying. 2 Shuffling, putting
off. 3 Doubtfulness. 4 Vague-
ness, ad. In a dull manner ;
vaguely.
^T^JT^cTaf/. Vague — speech ;
careless — action.
^^J[r^?:tqRr a term for
anything transitory.
'^^\^'y\ ??. c. To conciliate
(a god, king, lover, &c.): to
soothe and lull (an infant) by soft
accents, coaxing speech, &c. 2
To implore by tender appeals.
3 To sing with tremulous modu-
lations and touching movements
. and gestures : to warble (notes)
melodiously — birds. 4 See
Sf o3uf. 5 To thicken ; i. e.
to f/alhcr up and deliver (the
notes and the voice) in the
whole power of the notes and
with the whole jiower of the
voice.
S^STiq^r Turning and twist-
ing. V. t.. 2 See ^T^'HI^.
^^ /. A lane. 2 The mark
6
))lnced in jiapers of accounts be-
fore any fractional item (of mo-
ney, measures, &c.) indicating
the absence of the integral
sum. 3 A '^avity made around
the foot of trees. 4 A maggot
which infests grain and fruit.
'iWm]^^l^\ a. That is nei-
tlier of one's street nor of one's
neighbourhood, i. e. utterly un-
known.
^S?i^ p. Thickened or in-
si)issated — a juice or li-
quor. 2 Settled down into adult
age — a person or his bodily
frame. [A vegetable.
^o5" A tree and its fruits. 2
^tZr J), See ^tST sig. 2, 3.
iT^rr^S" pj. Turning and
twisting of the body.
^S'^S" ad. By force or with
free will ; by hook or crook. 2
By force or ijy great effort.
^^ (s) Die for playing with.
2 Axis. 3 A seed used for ro-
saries.
5T5T^r^r/. Gambling.
3T^cr/;(s) Rice as consecrated
through the recitation over it of
mystic formulje. 2 The seeta-
rial circlet on the forehead in the
centre of the stripe, and of a
color different from it. 3 The
pigment used for this purpose.
a. s Uninjured ; sound, good. 4
Unknown by her husband.
^iiT^=^[T^ /. s A virgin.
^^^r/. See ^^^ sig. 2,3,
and,/. pL, 1.
^^cfRlfTf^ n. (g) At wed-
dings. The casting by the bride
and bridegroom upon each other
of tdTSTfT.
^^^ a. (s) Impatient, in-
tolerant. 2 Unforgiving.
ST^T^rc^ST /. (s) A rosary.
^^^, ^^^q"^^. (s) Imperish-
able. 2 Inexhaustible. 3 (Laxly)
Permanent, not temporary.
^¥r#f ad. Always. 2 Alto-
gether.
^^^^Wr^r / (s) The third
lunar day of the first half of
■^jTI'sT. The fruits of merito-
rious actions performed on this
day are permanent.
^^"C n. A letter of the al-
phabet. 2 Syllable. 3 fig. Learn-
ing, a. s Undecaying.
Si"<^^STfcS"g" f. Knowledge
of the letters.
ST5;T?:=Jrf^ s Orthography.
il^^q^fcT f. (s) Orthogra-
phy. ^gT^qf<:^I'^T. /. Style
of writing.
^^T^r^'r/. The alphabet.
^^rC^r^r/.Distinet i)ronun-
ciatiou.
^T^^^: ad. s Letter by
letter.
^^^2T^ a. An irrnorant
person ; a person averse to
study.
^^T^ftiT (s) The ceremony
of setting down a child to learn
the alphabet from the sand-
board.
^5Tft a. Relatino; to letters.
2 Written in letters — a number,
&c. [Envy.
^^ifcT f. 8 Impatience. 2
'^T^R^W s Such food as
may be eaten during a season
of mourning, religious obser-
vance, &c. as cow's milk, ghee,
rice, &c.
^^r5T s A degree of latitude.
"^t*^ n. s An eye. In com p.
BlfajfrT^^. [eye.
^rWr^T The socket of the
^f^cTRT /. The pupil of the
eye. [eye.
3T(%^2:5^ n. A coat of ""the
*r^r ad. (Vulgar) Always. 2
Altogether; utterly; and, with
gen con., None at all.
'mV^ a. s Not to be excit-
ed, ruffled — a mild temper, deep
water, &c.
^^fC^Tr /. s A hundred
trUlions. 2 An army having its
comjdemeut of foot, horse,
chariots, and elephants.
^5r a. s Unlearned or un-
knowing.
^5rf<T n. s Unknown, [ance.
iT^ffcI^icf^ n. A sin of ignor-
^^TfcT'T^ a. s Unknown be-
fore ; novel, strange.
'^Wl^
42
3ir^r?r
^iirr^jrf^^'f /. s a giii not
yet ficfjiiaintfd with the feelings
and s\ iui)toms proper to piibLTty.
STsrrcf^r^ s Leaving in con-
cealment.
^5fR n. s Ignorance. 2 Spiri-
tual ignorance, '-i Want of
understanding. 4 Stupidity. ".
Ignorant : stujjid.
SI^TRkThR^^^:^ n. S De-
stroyer of the darkness of ignor-
ance, [of an idiot or minor.
<!T^T'T'iT*T 7/. in law. Property
^jItTRT?^ 71. 6 The film of
ignorance.
^sTRffl: /. (» Ignorant
conception. 2 Foolishness. 3
Foolish : a mere child.
ST5fRiJ^"'t or-ijr^ n. The
spell of Ignorance, i. e. of ignor-
ance of self as one vnth Deity.
^fTRl'Fr^ a. s Grounded on
ignorance. 2 Necessarily resulting
from ignorance. 3 Established
and asserted even amongst the
ignorant.
^^HF a. Ignorant.
■^^^ a. 8 Incomprehensible.
^ The second letter of the
alphabet,
^f A particle of inquiry;
— used when an observation, &c.
made is but indistinctly heard ;
eh V
^r Opening the mouth
Avidely. v. ^^, -q^K, ^T^.
^TrC% /: Poet. Desire ; crav-
ing after.
^f^^^fC Sunday.
^rC /: A mother. 2 A term
of fondness for an infant.
^[tq[^?;r a. Orphan on the
mother's side.
^rt^rt/. A term ofende:ir-
ment for a kind, motherly old
\yomau. 2 j)L as ^I'qi'gT^r Old
women; mothers and matrons.
^nt-TfT pi. Parents.
^rl^ft f. A molh r com-
prehensively.
3Trf^^r<€ 11. Ciijolery,
coaxing;, r. ^X ; dat. ofo.
Srr^-^, Vl3r?I n, Con. tVom
^^^ f. Dame, good woman.
^r-3ry. Imit. Moaning. 2
Objecting. 3 Utterance [i\S of
one under a beating).
^r^^cT u. A tool. 2 As much
ground as can be tilled by two
ijuUocks. 3 m. n. The bill used
by the Bhandari caste.
^1^ A figure or number.
^raar, ^^JT^rk ad. (.s) Up
^to the throat. f-^.^,^^
^r^S'T" V. c. Poet. To over-
^i^^r See under ^'
^l^'T 71. Ears of corn which
have been trodden out once.
SIF^<iT^?f , ^i^^^^? n. The
introductory .and recurring stan-
za of a song ; burden, chorus.
^ra^ (s) A mine, lit. fig. :
K^mx, UUTT^^. [-,,,,t tome.
3Tr??:q"2T s A huge book ; u
^r^^^ V. c. To bind tight-
ly. 2 V. i. To draw up, contract.
^r^'^ ad. To the ears ; back
to the ears : tl "ir^ 3TI^t^^T^«T
^lin" €t^- 2 Extending to the
ears ; — used of long eyes, and
aflrib. of the person : ^tt"
^r^^"^ v.c. Poet. To hear,
^^WF ad. Poet. As far
as the cars.
'<^\m^ (I. (s) That attracts.
^^X^1tl^ n. (s) Attracting, lit.
fig. 2 Contraction.
^[^^ r. c. To attract. 2
To draw u}), in ; to contract.
^r^f^^ y. s Drawn. 2 Con-
tracted.
"ifr^^oj ,,, f.^ 'Yq confine. 2
To comprehend, contain.
srr^oT^ V. (s) Binding, con-
fining. 2 Coniprclu-nding, includ-
ing : comprehending mentally,
conceiving.
^r^?^ ad. (s) To the end of
a day of Brahma; to a di:*tant
1 period.
^r^R^ a. s Sudden, unex-
pected.
-^r^cJ^T V. c. To bind, regu-
late, lit. fig. 2 To include. .3 fig.
To confine upon a narrow scale
(one's afi'airs).
^rarr (s) Form. 2 Appear-
ance. 3 An image impressed
upon the mind : an idea. 4 De-
finitcness (as of a work ap-
])roaching to completion \ 5 A
roughly framed statement (of ex-
penses, profits, &c.)<)Sign, sem-
blance. 7 An affection of the
body considered as indicative of
mental sentiment, as trembling,
smiling. &c. 8 This word is much
and neatly used in comp. as
«f^^I^l^. 9 Manner, way,
style. 10 (In geom.) Figure.
^r^R^RF/. The estimated
revenue.
^F^FTt^ f^ Taking the num-
ber of; surveying. 2 A rough
estimate.
^TF^F^ V. c. To call. 2 To
survey. 3 To bring on to fulness
and definite form (a malady, &e.)
4 To estimate.
^f^^-f^ A written estimate
(of the revenue, lands, &c.)
framed at the making of the
annual settlement. 2 An esti-
mate-sheet.
arr^F^JT?- a. (s) Of well pro-
portioned form.
^TF^irr^TF'^ /. Symmetry,
shajieliness.
^FfiFl^^'fj a. s Untimely.
^F^f^T w. m. The sky. 2
The atmosphere. 3 The empty
si)ace. 4 Tlie fifth element con-
sidered as a subtile fiuid pervad-
ing space, and forming the vehi-
cle of sound and life.
^TF^FTF^^F /. The visible
horizon. [-„.jjj._
^TF^F^^F /. (s) The mdky-
^^F^F^F 5^F^ or -^^ /.
Terms for any disaster from
heaven.
3TFf;F5Tl'^5F (s) A lamp hung
upon a pole from the full moon^
of ^if^^i to the full moon of
^Tf^^. 2 Any light hung
aloft.
^f^rw
43
mmi
^TF^r^'T^^ ri. A visionary
to^n in the clouds. Fata Moi-
;j;anit.
^[^5Iit3"^ n. a The celes-
tial si)hcre. [-pj^jn,.!
^f^r^5% A term for a
3T[^[^^PTt/. A divine utter-
ance or voice from the heavens.
^\^m, ^\^\^^^ a. (s) Re-
hiting to the heavens or air.
^r^it^ofiq" a. (s) To be de-
sired.
^m^\ f. Desire. 2 Want. |
.'i (Vulgar) Suspicion. 4 An ob-
jection or reply.
^F^fRT a. Desirous.
^f^fT a. Crowded ; covered
with : as Sl^T^i^.
^rj^=[ n. Contracting :
shrinking.
^TI5"f^crp.Contracted,closed.
^rjc^J'ft, Filled with ; over-
whelmed. In comp. ^rafT^^.
^r^ A sprout or shoot.
^TT^I^ /. (s) Figure, form.
^\W p. s Pulled, attracted.
^I^^'T V. i. To cry loudly ;
to bawl.
^1^7*? 71. (s) Loud crying.
^13r*T s Ascending, ascent
beyond; superiority.
^r^fl'^ 71. (s) Passing over;
pervading; surpassing.
^Tlpf^ifO]- ^, I '['^^ pervade,
overspread. [pass.
3Tf^tT3Tl% /. Grasp, com-
^rSi^a[ i.^ i^ 7o contract;
to shrink.
<^\^\^ J), (s) Past over; per-
vaded, overcome : as (S^lsBtW-
2 Surpassed, s. s Immoderate
bellowing.
^Tf^rf^ V. i. To be pain-
fully affeeteil with hunger. 2
lu con. as ^^I H^^^TT^t^T^-
3fr^rsr a. Violent crying.
^T^ITT (s) Loud crying.
^RmtlWr ad. With loud-
ness and wild vehemeuee —
cryuig.
^f'^r A number ; a figure.
2 A temple of the head. 3 Axis.
^f'^J'T' v. c. To rule rough-
ly (lines on a paper) ; to sketch.
^raS"^ V. c. 'lo contract;
to draw up.
^m^, ^re% See under
^^rr^l" Village-extremities or
])recincts.
^t^r A netting in which
cocnanutSj&c.are earrieil or kept,
^rar a. Whole. 2 The
\^hole (mass or number).
^i^r^ See ^rqrs-.
Sjr^ir^^^/. I'he long con-
tinned showers of the month
3TT'3T^. '-tig. A prosing nar-
ration.
ari^r^tTimssT /: The min
that falls from the eaves in the
month BTT'sIT^.
^r^r^^l^r /: The sweet-
meats, playthings, &c. which a
man sends in a t?T^1 or tray
to his son-in-law and his father
in the first month ^T^^T^
that occurs after the marriage.
^^r^tr A term for a
scamp or cheat. 2 /. Fraudu-
lent practices ; religious hypo-
crisy.
^r^r^?cTr?:oTr /. The sheep-
shearing of the month 3niT^.
^r^rtr/. The day of full
moon in A'khad. 2 The heavy rain
of tliat month, v. ^^, ^TJT. 3
The ])eriod of it. 4 App. to the
eleventh lunar day of the light
half of A'khad. 5 A disorder at-
tacking cattle in this month, u.
Belonging to the nio4ith o!
^n^rcT ,1. Bay or gulf.
^r^^of V. i. To contract,
shrivel, v. c. To draw up or in.
Wmj a. Short.
^r^ n. A half of a bidlock
or horse load ; also of the bag,
sack, &c. containing or confin-
ing it.
^mT See ^^'^^
^\^m /: (s) Itenowi); fuine.
2 lluuaour.
^r^i^lcf j;. a Rumoured. 2
Inflected.
5Tr?5^r'T n. 8 A tale, story.
^M //. The body. a. s Relat-
ing to the body; corporeal.
^m/. Fire. 2 fig. Ardor,
heat.
^msUf^rt 71. c Land with a
wet bottom. This is cultivated
in the dry weather without ir-
rigation.
^m"^ n. The small pox. v.
^. 2 The stirring and awaking*
within a man of the demon that
haunts him. v. ^. 3 The de-
scending bowel in Prolapsus
ani, V. ^,^tlX..
^mm^m a. Exceedingly
tierce ; a Hotspur. App. also to
mischievous persons : to speech
and deeds considered as sharp,
bitter.
^^?r/. A heap of sticks
and straw kindled. 2 A Gold-
smith's fire-pot ; a cruset. '6 A
hole dug in the ground to hold
fuel au(l file.
^f^^ 71. c A yard or court.
^RrRfRcr;,.^a) Welcoming ;
hospitality.
^Tm5^a.(s) Accidental. 2 A
sojourner, passenger, stranger, .'"i
One that drops ni uninvited. 4
Sudden.
^IiI^^cTflT An unexpected
profit; a windfall.
3Tr%^|rTr/. Subsisting by
dropping in at feasts or meai-
hours ; the business of a sponger
or smell-feast.
^in^l^'/. A conflagration.
2 fig. A tyrant ; a mischievous
child.
^IW'^ f. A stream of milk
obtained (from a milch animal)
by dint of squeezing and forc-
ing.
^RTT n<l. c Cefore-hand.
^r^7^^ 71. Gonorrhoea.
r
^IWC/. c Hastiness, preci-
pitancy. 2 Anticipating, o.
^fntTPTr II. A recent forma-
tion to express Nitric acid. 2
Spirituous liquer.
^^nm
44
arf^rr
^FT^rJ" /". A recent coinage
for Steam-boat.
^Wi^ (s) A general name for
a Shastra or work on science and
of divine orisin- 2 Rise, ovi<2;in. 3
Beuinning, out-set, approacli. 4
A title-deed. 5 A grammatical
augment. 6 .\ class of Shastras,
containing spells and incanta-
tions. 7 Approach, coming to.
^[^^"T ji. Arriving, com-
ing to.
^IJTH H^qe^T a. s That needs
no title-deed — an estate.
^RTfTRTiq" (s) The Begin-
ning and the end ; the whole
business.
^RTiTrr?'?r or sinr^r^fl"^ a.
a Devoid of a written title or
voucher.
^r^R Trace, vestige.
^^T^T^ m. n. A plantation (of
Cocoanut, &c.) 2 A tract on the
sea-shore on which salterns are
established. '6 An enclosure a-
I'ound a house sown or ])lanted.
4 lig. A ])li>.ce of abundance, as
fc»^"^T 3?To The seat of
science. TiirefT'^I ^Jo The
land of song.
^1^^ n. Poet. Point, tip.
^f'TT<^r The outer garment
of a m.ile.
STl^JTf^ 7??. n. A village
having a plantation of fi-uit-trees.
^[^<:^ffr /. An enclosed
])laptation around a dwelling-
house,
^ri^r a. Relating to an
A'gar. s. A caste of Shudras.
^r^TT or -^r /. The driver's
seat of a ploughing team, gene-
rally behind the two front j)airs
of oxen, and before the two
liinder.
^R^r or -^\ See ^PT^r
am! ^TiTSJT.
^iW^^V-'^l a. An incendiary,
make-bate.
"^^r^B" a. Early ripe or ready
-opp. to i?Tn^ Late,
^m^^ V. i. To be early ripe
-grain, fruit.
■^^wST^y/frespassing upon ;
injurious aggression upon the
person or property of, t\ ^K-
ajfiiij^i^r See ^rqj^ff^-
^FRf^r A heating of a
metal vessel,&e. (in order to puri-
fy it). V. ■^. 2 Ik'sinoking (tim-
bers, &c.) to harden them.
3im[,BtiTr/ The long gar-
ment of children, 2 A loose gar-
ment.
3T[3](^rjc^[f A Hotspur,
^Rr^[e^73"-?:Effs' A volume
of lire. 2 lig. A formidable war-
rior.
STfrfrcT crr^q^fg-^^r «. Ate rm
for a person or thing well tested
and proved,
SiniK^f /. The crimes and
otfences, faults and follies (of
others); with implication of
tattling or oflficiousinterineddling
or censorious observation, and
gen. -with iieg. con. v. ^TS,
■qi^T, ^<, ^\^ : i?t %T»TT'^1
^fJIfiT^JTf^ /. A venomous
''"^'''- .. [ing fly.
^m^]'5J\ f, Akindofsting-
ajiJjS" n. A measure of ei^ht
barley corns joined side by side.
2 The measure of a linger's
brendtli.
3T[^JTf?T ad. About a particu-
lar time or place ; a little sooner
or later ; a little before or be-
h^'J^'^- ^ [for himself.
^TimqcTf ad. Severally ; each
3?N^cR" 71. A cloth worn
loosely over the shoulders.
^r^^ /. s The south-east
quarter, n. Relating to hire or
to the deity Agni.
^f^^ A idncl of Xettle. a.
That occasions a burning heat
on biting or stinging — certain
serpents, bees, &e. 2 Hot and
fiery — a person or temper,
^F^l^t^^ A variety of the
^rr5T[%?ry: pi. a fierce form
of small ])o.\.
^Fq-RrTf^S- A Demon. 2 A
fiery fellow.
^FqJTfrrs- n. The nest of
the stinging tiy ^TtJili^Tl^-
^rq-?- (s) Inflexibility. r.«^^.
2 Importunity, v. m^.
^mi\ a. Persistent, obsti-
nate. 2 Importunate. 3 Urgent.
STr^,^I^,&c. See under ^.
^f^^f or ^n^r a. All; the
whole mass,
^r^^ m. f. A bar (as of a
door, &c.)
■^ra"fcr (s) A blow, stroke,
^nt^srr See under ^imf.
STtfoT or ^Tiqts"/: Ablution
of the body.
STT^/. (h) The glow of fire.
2 An applic.ition of fire unto.
V. ■^. 3 fig. Care or concern
about. 4 fig. A shock or sudden
terror. 5 fig. Scalding one's
fingers ; sustaining of loss (in an
adventure, &c.) v. ^^^.
'^r^^'^ v.c. To pull suddenly.
2 To ])luck, pill.
^r^^^r A sudden and smart
pull ; a cpiick jerk. v. %. 2
A shock ; a blow. v. g^.
^f^oTr /: See ^F^.
3Tr^?[^ ad.{^) As long as the
sun and moon endure.
'^\'^m V. i. To be struck
with astonisliment.
^r^fl'T 71. (s) Sipping water
before or after religious ceremo-
nies or meals, from the palm of
the hand, whether to be swallow-
ed after reciting a mantra or
to l)c ejected after rinsing the
moutii.
^f^^'T;i.(s)Conduct or man-
agement of; transaction of a
ceremony or business. 2 Deport-
ment, liehaviour.
^f^roTF^ a. s To be con-
ducted — a ceremony or business.
2 To be observed, acted out,
*rr^^"^ V. c. To conduct;
to do. v.i. To behave. 3ii'=^f^or
p. s Performed, done.
^f^f'^,'^rr%sr^ See under ^.
^r''TR(s) Conduct conform-
able tothe^frr& '^frf (re-
m^ir
45
3Tr¥R"
ligious and legal institutes). 2
Conduct.
3Tf^n:^[cf/. General con-
duct, coufse, deportment.
STRRirraX a. Customary.
-^r^lT^Sr n. Lawless, licen-
tious; neglectful of prescribed
rules and practices.
^r'^[Tr^^['r a general term
for ceremonies and observances,
])ractices and usages described
or establislied : the rites, forms,
laws, &c. of ordinary life.
STr^R5:ff?5' a. Delighting in
the observance of religious olj-
servances.
^r'^m A cook — esp. a Brah-
man cook.
^^I^f^TR^^r A term for
any dnll or vulgar fellow.
^"^R (s) A spiritual guide.
2 A conqluctor of religious cere-
monies. '3 A founder of a religi-
ous sect. 4 It is affixed, as the
word Doctor is prefixed, to the
names of learned men ; as ^t-
^r^^ or 3?i^^ c A teat.
^f^iJl^ a. s Tliat covers :
that conceals.
_ *^*
-^(■^^JrcT'T V. c. To cover over
(as a cloth, &c.) ; to conceal.
5TI^U1^ n. (s) Covering
over. 2 Concealed state. 3 A
covering.
^f^ ad. To-day. [day to day.
^I3f3'gi n. Putting off from
^rr^'^Ic^ ad. Now a days ;
at the time present. ftime
^R^f^r ad. At the present
^F^^r/. c. A sty on the
eye-!id.
^f^cff ad. Up to to-day.
^5[K=r ad. Up to tlie pre-
sent day.
5T[5PIT or STfSf'JTcf: „d. (s)
From birth. 2 Until death.
3T[5Tc7JT ad. Until to-day.
^r5r«r ad. For to-day. 2 By
t"-flay- [therto-
^il^^< ad. TiUto-day; hi-
^TfSR^r f. The anniversary
of to-day.
Bjfif^ar •//. R The house of a
mat. grand-father,
■^r^r A grand-father.
STf^TRSrrf a. (s) Whose
hands,whilst standing erect.reach
unto his knees ; lovf/ijiianus.
^RF^r See ^r^[^.
■^r^rr (p) Disease, sickness.
^Rlfj a. Sick, ill.
^r^ry. a grand-mother pat.
or mat. 2 A polite particle used
in accosting a male or female.
r-- r
^Ri^rC/. A term ot res-
pectful conipellation or mention
for a grand-mother or an old
woman ; yranvy or goody.
'^\^m^ ad. Around, about,
^[if^r^n The fatlier of
one's father-in-law or of one's
mother-in-law.
^r^l^r A respectful term of
mention for a grand-father or
an old man ; 'jaffer.
^r?r /. Obstinacy. See ^27.
^rS"^ Grasp, compass. 2
Comi)utation, estimate of the
amount of.
^(^r^ p Denrth, scarcity.
^TlJ^mr, aifjqr, ^\\Z^ See
under ^. Rj^^^
^\ZmZ f. Teasing, torment-
^\Z^]7:'j\ A play of children.
V. %B?, ^. 2 Preciseness.
^rST A ring; any circular
binding. 2 A turn with a rope.
^r^FTf^r n. (h) Provision or
livelihood.
^]Zm\Z or ^\ZmZ See
^riF^I^r See under ^.
^IS" a. Eight.
^FJ^F a. Consisting of eight
— as a candy of eight maunds.
~^FJ^F f. An aggregate of
eight ; as a beam or load requir-
ing eight ])orters. 2 Remission
of one bullock out of eight by
the Custom farmer. 3 A term
in the girls' play of toss and
catch, — a throw of eight. '
^F5^ See under ^•
^FSTq V. i. To shrink. 2
fig. To draw up in displeasure.
^fJ^y. A seed-stone.
^\Z^, ^\Z^m\ See under ^•
^F5^r f. A maiden arrived
at the eighth year.
*\
^FJf J f. Personal service
for one d-ay in eight, exacted
by the #T?I from the common
ryots.
■^[J^ /. The seed-stone of
the jack, tlie date, the wild
plum, &c.
^\Z\^\ a. Brought forth in
the eighth month of gestation —
a child. App. also to the mother
delivered at this period.
^\^ The common round
well without steps.
^\-^ f. An obstinate resist-
ing.^2 R A glen. [dining.
•^F^C y. Lying down or re-
^^37^ -prep. Behind, ad. In
some hole or recess.
^TfS-q^FJr /. An obstacle. 2
Restraint, v. '^xi.
3TF^5^F^F a. Situate on one
side ; not of the direct way.
aTF^f^Ti^ or ^F^^^F ad.
On one side.
^f^f^^f /. A cross-bar (as
of a door).
^\^^^ f. c A litter.
^F^JTf^HF A stripling.
^rS"=^F a. Situate in the
shelter of. ftive.
^F^^F^J a. Tediously talka-
^TF^^Tcf f, A term for a
cross-grained fidlovv.
^f^cTf^F A cross-examina-
tion (as of an account), v. if,
^F^^^F Secret liatred.
sTf^-^^^r, sjr^fr^ a day
upou which no particular ob-
servance is commanded : a blank
day. 2 An odd day. 3 A wrong
day.
^IT
46
^r>rl?r
3T[^q^?T A screen. 2 fig.
Concealment ; reserve (of tle-
liciicv, (lecoruni ) ; nioile&ty.
^r^T?^ A film (cner the
eve). 2 Cover ; fig. the closeness
of modesty.
Sfr^q^ /: A by-chink : a by-
comer; a retired spot.
^r^TTJT A captious objec-
tion, a quibble./". 9, ^l^, eRT^-
2 An obstacle, .'i Demoniac visi-
tation— when considered as the
cause of an illness.
^[S^fZqTcr/rhat isconstantly
starting objections and making
dilHcnlties. 2 Perverse.
^(^■^^ V. (s) AiTogation and
ostentatious display (as of sanc-
tity, learning, &c.); imposing
plans, pre|)aratioiis ; &c.; empty
noise, v. 'EI!^, ^\^.
^\mis[^\ a. ^^ituated on one
side of the direct line ; out of
the way.
^f^^R^ ar/. On one side:
out of Its proper place, as mis-
'**'"• ^ [ing upon.
ari^qsJOTrj^t^TrSJurr/, Fawn-
^rTJTKT a. That is not in
the front or direct way of. 'J
In the line or way of obstructing-
]y. r. \i, 3T^/%T, T?T, m«.
^rTTFT n. Desert tracts ;
devious p.iths. 2 tig. Discur-
sive speech.
3Tr??:f%a. Of the country (not
of cities) — a manufacture, per-
^<"'' ^c. [cross beam.
^FTf?: n. Tlie woof. 2 A
«mTW^ n. c The .s;pace be-
tween the base and the summit
of a mountain. -? The woof.
anT^^.tr / Populated state,
or a spot in a recess or recluse
region ; residence in such region.
^nW!^^ 71. A retired spot.
^[TJ^^ia. Lying out of way.
^l^^^f. A by-road. 2 The
sidi- of a road.
^\^^K A cross bar. 2 c A
cocoanut of the middle stage.
SJfT^fSr An oH" stuck or
stoic.
^r^^r^ n. A year occurring
odd with another. 2 A crop cul-
tivated in rotation with another
every other year.
^¥icro5T ^T^ A term for an
obscure person who knows little
of the great world.
^f^i0 ad. In a tender,
vital part. ^^^^ ^f
^r^c7 a. Situate in the ^hel-
^f^^f^ pf. A comprehen-
sive term for impotent, or low
and worthless persons.
^[■^ n. c A ridge |)ole.
2 A saw worked by two men. 3
A keel.
^f^ 71. c An eoo.
^rS"f /'. c Framework to
confine a vicious cow during
milking.
^rSiT a. (s) Wealthy ; as '^-
^[SJTcTr/. Arrogance. 2 Re-
pute— usually in a bad sense,
notoriety.
^fg^rr^^fcf A double saw.
^\^f. An oath. v. ^F^, ^F?,
^r^ conj. And.
^■Jlflr^Tr f. A term for
oaths and solemn engagements.
ail'^'^rfS' /. The price of
bringing.
3TOT V. c. To bring. 2 This
verb conveys the sense and
j)ower of Almost and nearly :
^R% /: Reiterated and fruit-
less bringing and removing ;
the fuss and bother attendant.
3TliT3TJTroT /.An oath care-
lessly. 2 See ^TTi^fl^^r.
^•^m^-T/. An engagement
confirmed with an oath.
^mm'^f. See ^("^^R.
^[•^r The sixteentii part of
a rupee. 2 A laiul measure con-
taining 7'<")'>--> stjuare yards.
'<^m'^m j: llurried bring-
ing (to any spot); gathering
and collecting from all (juartcrs.
^n'^T couj. And.
^'^nr /: Adjuring (in the
name of some authority) ; binding-
under soleniu obligation, v.
^1^, ^X, ^\^, ^l^. 2 Inter-
diction gen.
^FcT/. A fiuiier's sister. 2 if.
(h) A custard-apple.
^^ ad. df prej). In or witii-
in. 2 Within a given date ;
before. 3 Amongst, in, in con-
nection with : ^Tflt'J-"^I^<T-
"iTfcT'^r a. Interior.
^\^j ^icri 71. f. An entrail.
^cTcTF^ c. (s) A felon, /. c.
a murderer, a poisoner, a robber,
&c. 2 fig. A furious fellow.
^fcT^f r Exchange deducted ;
exchange from a currency of the
same numerical amount with
the standard, but of inferior
value. 2 tig. A term for loss
where profit was expected.
'^rcfc^r a. Of the inner side.
^fcToTRr^ /: The inner con-
volutions of the ear.
^rcT^qr^rcT W. in the inside.
2 Privately. 3 Amongst one a-
nother.
I""'"''- ^ [siiie.
^fcT??Tr?i^^ a. On the inner
5TrcT?^fJTr3T=^r «. Closp, re-
served : deep ; of profound con-
trivance or counsel.
^Hrre^ltr /: (p) Diversion
with fireworks.
^fcTfrt. ]Now.
^TcTfTff a. At the present
moment ; just now.
^rrr^q" n. (s) llospitaliiy,
guest-rites, a. Pertaining to
guest-rites.
^f^f^y n. Interior : intestine.
^l^r^iTf^IThe private mark
(on their goods) of tradesmen.
3?ifrc=^^?:K^Rr a sub-bond.
3Ti%^3niq=[^r /: The oltice
3Tr^rc^3fnJT^^R a private
security granted to the person
^*r?ft?7
47
arrR'^PT
who is become the official or
ojien seciu'it}'.
^f%?5Tfr?; n. Blemish; a
liidden riuw. |-((jf jj vvritiui^).
^f^r^JTsI^ The contents
^fj^a. (s)HtnTied, excited.
In com p. f'^rfTITT^.
^r^H^qTT (s) ^=^W taken
by 'lying Brahmans.
^tjfr /. Poet. A Woman
or a female.
^f^ /. A respectful term of
compellation for a paternal
«;int- [inside of.
^f^ prep. & od. From the
^fcT^rr A son of the pater-
nal aunt of one's husband.
^FcfiTr^r A son of one's pater-
nal aunt.
^r^RTcf ad. Exceedingly.
3?RT^r4 ad. On private ac-
count.
^^IT?TC (s) Knowledo-e of
the Deity, or of spirit. 2 Calling
as one's own.
^FT^fcT Suicide.
^FIT^rrT^ or -^Fclfr a. A self-
murderer. 3TTf3?^ s A son.
^T<3?5IT/. A daughter.
^FT*^^ 71. (s) One's own
wealth. 2 One's own soul. 3 iig.
A son.
^Rr%rr /. Self-reproach.
3Tr^R%^^ n. Offerin'i up of
one's self as a living sacrifice (to
the Deity) ; consecration of body
and soul.
^rr^R^ n. Intent in con-
templation upon the Deity or
one's own soul. 2 Seated in the
soul ; cordial.
3jniT3T^I(cr f, s Discovery or
knowledge of through personal
experience. 2 Self-knowledge.
BTFiTirrr^ /: (s) Self-acquisi-
tion intelligent apprehension of
the Deity, of spirit, audof self as
one ; real tinding of God or of
one's own soul.
^Frr^f One's own kins-
man, — a first cousin or father's
sistei*'s son, mother's brother's
son, mother's sister's son.
BJf^q^fq" s Knowledge of self,
of spirit, and of God as one ;
true self-knowledge.
^r^iT^r a. Selfishly vo-
racious.
^FT3Tr% a. Self-respecting.
3T(^fo^^ n. (s) The lingum
of ^flT^ ; the embodied
essence of fjjW.
^rr^lTWcT «(/. As one's self,
^r^iT^5<r s Self-subjugation.
3TRiTR?Tr /. (s) Self-know-
ledge. 2 Spiritual knowledge.
^FiTf^f^ s The law of spirit.
^r^^cfrqr^, ^r^^^r^ ad.
Voluntarily ; with consent of will.
srr^^q"!? s Self-restraint.
^Tr^tn':T=T 7?. Working out
Life. 2 The means through
which Life may be wrought out.
3 One's own interest.
^[^^^[^?Jf?: Internal or
spiritual manifestation of the
Deity.
arr^JT^R f. (s) Self-praising.
^[^ft^TcT /. s The soul as
possessing an absolute standing
or being — a being distinct from
the body and all things.
^[^RCc^rr /: (s) Suicide, [self.
^FTrWRF «. That kills him-
^r^f|-cl n. Profit of the
soul — considered as consisting
in the fruition of God.
^r^JT^T a. That knows self or
spirit or God. r^
^[^^[•Tw. Knowledge of self,
^r^^r (s) The animal soul
or life. 2 The soul of the uni-
verse. 3 The self. 4 Natural
temperament. 5 The intellect.
W^mn^ s The joy of ab-
straction from sensuous object,
and contemplation of one's own
spirit or the Deity : the pleasure
of consciousness of being.
3II^R[^JTf^^fr s The dis-
criminating betwi.xt the pure
and divine essence wit':jn us
and the grosser constituents of
our compound person.
^i^iTRiT^ Self-knowledge.
^frHlW'^R 71. Attention to
spiritual truth, /. e. knowledge
of deity and of self. 2 Humor-
ously. Selfishness.
3?T^iTTUir a. Dead to the ob-
jects of sense, and delighting in
the contemplation of one's own
soul or the Deity, s. The soul.
2 An epithet of God.
^nRTq'JT n. Self-consecration
(to God, &c.) [self.
^RHf^ a. Own, relating to
aiRrcri^^ f. s Divine or
religious service in spirit, i. e.
through tgTT or abstract
contemplation,
•^r^^r A respectful term of
adni-ess for a paternal aunt.
^tl'T^a. Passed by,omitted.
2 s Relating to the bowels.
W-^^ See under ^.
^f[^ Poet. Is, there is.
^R"cl f. (a) a bad halnt. v.
"«^^, ^I3T, T?:sr. 2 A habit,
^r^ (s) Respect, homage. 2
Accepting (of a bill).
^ r Comprehen-
^f^r^f^^ n. I si^'e terms for
<( the courtesies
^^T^TqlT m. I due to visitors
1^ at meals.
^1^"^ V. s Honoring. ^r?T,
vf\^ a. Venerable.
^TT^Tot V. c. To honour. 2
To admit, to accept. 3 To take
up or in hand (a business).
^K^'f ad. Determinedly,
expressly. [mentary.
^^^ (s) A mirror. 2 A coni-
^K^r a. Foremost (of a
number).
^TR^r^^r a. Of a former
husband — offspring.
^Kar^ftTJ See under ^.
^Kfq" Profits, gains.
^Kf, ^r^TT^cT See under ^.
^IK (s) Source, root. 2 First
part. 3 The first terms of a series.
^rf? a. First. 2 Et cetera ;
as t^Tf^^W. (-,^,t^
^rf^^cl The first and the
STTf?^
48
3TFT(^
":iTl'f^^^^ ad. That and the
rest ; that, &c. ^^^^^^^
^rrfr^r?:^ ?^ a primary
^\\'i'^n sThe sun. 2 A deity
of a class ; a form of Siirya. i^
A (li'ity <jeu.
BTKcJT^R (s) pop. ^rr?"^^R:
Suinlay.
^rf^q^fcT a. A little before
or Ijeliiml ; thereabout; here-
about. 2 Sooner or later. i5
Confusedly, higgledy-piggledy.
•1 UevLTsely.
s^TiKqre: See iTojqrar.
^^rr?]^^ s A name of Shiva;
the iJiiuicval male.
^(f^fl^^JTFcrarC^ a. Wantino-
beginning, middle, and end ;
— used of God.
^rkiTiq-r-^T^/. Nfiture ; n
goddess united to the primeval
male, and genitressof the material
world. Names of xjT'^ffTas the
Avife of 3TTf^5^^.
^Kl^4 a. s Existing at
the beginning, eternal.
^f^f ad. First or in time
previous, prep. Before or pre-
ceding.
^r?f^i1fr, ^r?Kfr ad.
First of all. 2 "W ell before ; in
good time before.
^fj^rffij STrfR-*ti[ ^ c. To
swing. V. i. To oscillate. 2 To
rock or toss about — a ship.
^[^5T (s) An order : a direc-
tion. 2 -Mistaken for 3i[fr{i3.r.
ii The word used by Gosavis of
the KanphatyJi order, in making
obeisance among themselves. 4
In gram. Substitution (of letters
f(n- h'tters of the root).
^li^isq See ^J^^.
«iTr?"T'^'T n. s. Swingins:. 2
Hocking.
^I^r ad. (s) First, before,
^f^ a. First, initial. 2
thief.
^f^4*^ Tl)c first term of
the Kule of three.
^?TcT The beginning- and
the cud. 2 ad. Throughout.
srr^T^rar w. The seat of
one's ancestors : the spot at
which any divinity at first mani-
fested himself: any ancient and
holy city.
^r^5fR«. s First knowledge;
instinctive knowledge; any ori-
ginal device. ftice.
^r?Tra"R: (s) Original prac-
^Tf-TfT or -^ n. A term for a
desperate sickness, an awful
accident, v. xi, 5lT, '^^j 353,
^NK(i^) Support, lit. fig. 2
That which sui)port9 ; sanction,
authority.
^rs-JK^^T 71. s In riindt.
anatomy. The hypogastric and
l)ui)ie region.
^r'-^rrrr^m Line or chain of
reasoning towards some cou-
clnsion.
^11^ m. f. s Mental pain;
the pain of fear, grief, &c.
^Um^ n. s Excess.
^inq'tr^^ a. s Relating to
the divinities or principles of
percejjtion supposed to reside in
the organs of sense. 2 Relating
to a presiding deity.
m^W:^ n. Lordship, rule.
STir^ififcr^ a Relating to
entities. 2 Relating to the
primitive elements.
'^PJl'T^ a. s Recent, modern.
^r'"T'^r A small coj)per coin.
2 or 3T^% n. c A serpent of
a large but unvenomous species.
^r'^-^rrRlT^ a. s Relating to
the senses, organs, or faculties,
by which the ol)jeets of human
cognisance are apprehended and
conveyed to the 3{f^"^^rT. 2
Relating to the Supreme spirit,
or to one's own spirit as presid-
ing and ruling.
^R a. S: ad. Poet. More,
else, besides : »ix:"^^ f^B"5T
^t f^qf% II MK\ H^l '^qj
Tf-5rf'r '^\^fh ii "jt^ji t'^t
^T'iT ^\i1: See Vs. iv. 6. and
Ixiii. 3 ; ilab. iii. 17, 18.
^f=[?3r%^ ad. s From the
nails of the toes to the tuft of
the crown ; from head to foot.
"^H^ (s)Joy,happi lies?, plea-
sure. 2 An order among Gosavis
and Siinyasis.
^R^^? Poet. Root of
happiness or joy ; a name for the
Deity.
^R^^=r a. s Poet. Of full
and perfect joy; an epithet of
^?T or the Deity.
^f^^ V. i. To be glad ; to
rejoice.
^R^Hq- a. Filled with joy.
^R^fRT /. A joyful dis-
])osition.
-4r4^r^ s A tear of joy.
^'Rf^cT p. Delighted. SJl^^
«. Gay, lively. ['phe face,
^f^ n. (s) The mouth. 2
^m^ n. s Nonsense. 2
Unproiitableness. [concern.
^[•Tf^RF f. Negligence, un-
•^R^^^ n. s Propitiousness,
favourableness, suitableness.
^rjJJ"^^ 71. Congeniality.
^RR"^^ 71. Impropriety.
ajRqfq" j2, Unicpieuess.
^RiTR^ a. That has been
experienced. 2 That has expe-
'■'^'"^^:;- [dnccd.
STRJrrR^ a. Inferred, de-
^R^'^^ 71. Conformity or
correspondence with.
•^R^R^ a. Accompanying,
concomitant. 2 Consequential, '.i
Proportionate.
^f'^l^^ a. Orderly, conse-
cutively : successional.
^r^ p7-o. Own, related to
self. 2 One's own. 3 n. Self.
^m n. (s) Water.
^r^^r^ ad. Spontaneously.
^ffT^r^r a. Each his own.
^WK f. A present (of fruits,
clothes, &c,) sent to a friend at a
distance.
l^rq^C^ ad. Voluntarily.
arrTJT
49
mww
STRI^ r. c. To bring up
near one's person ; to foster. 2
To adopt.
^FT^^rr a. Concerned about
one's own ; selfish.
^m^ (H) Wilful pranks.
BTPT^^r a. Wild, wanton.
arrW pro. One's self.
sr(q'JT€r3H ad. Voluntarily,
personally. [nected.
^FTcT a. Related or con-
3TnTcTf%q^f A relation or
connection. ['n'*^}'-
^r^cT f. s Misfortune, cala-
^r^^fS" Adverse times.
^TnTfTT/.(s)Distress,vvretched-
ness. 2 lu corap. Obtainment :
arnr^J^f^r /. Making the
most of a bad argument.
^rT?T /. (s) A Misfortune.
2 Distress.
arr^TPS" a. Selfish.
^FT^5T One's native country.
^T^ ]). s Reduced to want;
afflicted. 2 Obtained : ^^m-^.
^177^ a. Own and others.
arrtT^cTc^f r a. Self-interested.
snq'5'icrr?: or -5^*^^n:«. Ab-
solute, independent of control.
^iqtfcff or ^R^r%/. & ^-
?i^ur n. A natural death.
S^fq^qf ,j Resembling in
features neither his father nor
his mother. Used of a child.
^[T^€t /. Ownness. 2 Ego-
t'^"'-. " .fSelfi^sh.
STFT^r fn'o. One's own. 2
It often occurs expletively as
a mere pillow-word for the list-
less speaker: ?ft 3TT<» ^WtT
3T[T?Jr^^r a. Mine and
thine ; appropriated ; viewed as
property.
^i#5T[g!iT or ^^^^rr^fT'^
ad. Of itself ; of one's own accord.
3irq??Tnr?:^[^R-?:r5[r Terms
7
for a self-willed and headstronj;
person ; a cock of his own walk.
^rWf , ^^Trq^icT (id. Amongst
(our-your-tlieir-) selves ; one
with imother.
^Re"<^R 3"^ ad. With
one's own consent.
^^TPT^Rffa. Selfish, nd. With
free and full gratification of heart
and will. 2 Freely and fearlessly.
^PT^^r^ One's own interest.
STPT?^^, ^r'rr^H ad. With
one's own hand or means ; by
one's own power : JI^I'^T^
^nr A term ^f respectful
compellation for an elder. 2
It is often affixed to the name :
^FT[^cTc^lT^cr^,S[rqr?JT{cr5: (s)
ad. From head to foot.
^rq"iqr^(3Tn^7ifTr«. a [)hrase
formed to express the po[)ular
sentiment that Property acquired
easily is consumed lavishly.
^rqriR^rHrr?:^! ./. (s) Com-
mon to all.
^[qnTT^P-TfTOTlirT /. ^m m.
Impartiality.
m^'^l pro. Poet. Own.
BTrq^TR or ^nrr^FT ad.
Spontaneously ; of itself.
^rqra=T 72. (s) Si|)pini; of
water from the palm of the
hand at the beginning and end
of a meal : the water so sipped.
^IR" n. is) Related. 2 Con-
fidential. 3 s Got, aptus.
^\H^\^^ v. a speech or
saying demanding credence ; an
authorised (word, use, «S:c.)
^R"f^q"^ a. Related. 2 m.f.
A relation.
STTH-fRlfr See ^^^Plff.
^Int f. Distress arising
from failure of crops.
^nr:^"^, ^rj^^ u. c. c To
touch.
^rq^cT f, (a) a calamity.
^(qTcT^RRf /. (p) A cala-
mitous visitation fiom heaven.
^r^ Credit, reputation. 2
Creditableness, respectableness.
^^ f. An acid obtained by
spreading, in the evening, a clotii
over flowering plants of Cicer
arietinuni. 2 A species of the
mango-tree. 3 The pnnciple of
fermentation or souring (as
inherent in heat and air).
•^i^^rs: See i'5Tcr^r3:.
m^W: (P) A distiller.
^r^^^r /. (p) Tax on spiri-
tuous liquor. 2 The business of
a distiller. 3 This term includes
four branches of the Into.xicating
trade : — the distillation of
spirits ; the extraction of opium ;
the preparation of 3lt«IT ; and
the making of ^ISTT or beer.
^r^?"R n. Weight or influ-
ence; fame for virtue, wealth,
and learning : authority on ac-
count of this repute. V. X\^,
■g-vfis, ^Tir, 31^1^, ^^^.
^f^TTliRr, ^[^?[57R: See
mifler ^f.
srr^^ (p) Ebony.
m^^ f. (p)Honour: reputa-
tion. ^T^^^T-^T^ a. Hoiior-
^l^'^- [tree and fruit,
^i^c^ y. The tamarind-
STi^^cT or ^Tf^fTr?^ V. c
Dried peelings of the fruits of
•^r^r A term of respectful
mention for a male.
^t^r The mango-tree and
fruit. [thriving.
^RFT a. (p) Well-peopled,
^r^f^R a. Populous and
thriving. 2 Secure, safe, and
sound.
■^Rf^^r f. Populousness
and prosperous state (of a coun-
try or city). 2 Plentifulness (of
things esteemed or desired).,
^^r^f S" ad. All ; the whole
population.
^RRTl^ See under ^.
^R^R f. (h) Come sirrah,
go sirrah. Contemptuous address.
^f^f^r Dried plums from
the Persian Gulf; prunes.
^flT n. c The sky. 2 Clouds.
^\A^ a. Quarrelsome, slan-
derous.
mwr
50
anr«T
3?!^'^ n. s An ornament.
2 Decoration.
^rrmr The weight of a fa-
vour received, obligation.
sinTKf a. Obliged, giatef.il.
^r^"!^ s Supposition, sur-
luisc.
^m\^ (s) Semblance. 2 A
fancv, a tliought, a slij;ht belief.
3 In logic. A fallacy, sophism.
aiTiTt^r a. s Internal.
^W a. s Uncooked. 2 Un-
ripe. 5. Affection of the bowels.
^m^ a. Sub-acid, acidu-
lous.
^l^^\ pro. Our.
^iH^'^ 71. (s) Calling. 2 An
invitation, v. ^K, ^.
<i]{^^^ r. c. (Poet.) To call.
2 '\\) invite.
ajfH^aqf rt, A servant whose
otiiee it is to summon to the
readv meal the persons that have
been invited. 2 That calls.
^Rl'W^ p. s Called. 2
Invited. ^ [m^j^Xy.
^m^^\^'i<id. (n) Controut-
^[rT=C^, ^[JR^r^ ^/r/.(s) Un-
til death. [ripe mangoes.
-^TR^^ Expressed juice of
'<HmUX f. (ii) A grove of
iTiaiiiro-tiees.
^[JT^rcT (s) Chronic rheuma-
tism proceeding from affection
of the l)()wels. [bowels.
^RP^^T Affection of the
^PT^^ The flatulent colic.
^m\ A breast or hubby.
Used in nursery language. 1.'
Poet. A nurse.
^RlRrerr s Dysentery.
^Ri^ fs) Undigested food
remaining in the stomach. :.'
Allectuin of the bowels in con-
sequence. 3 The crude matter
voided. ^^ ,,j^H . ^ i,rii,t..
^?TW^ n. (s) Tlesh-ineat. 2
^rgH Poet. To us.
^mi'^ a. s Relating to
thejjther world. [.lelight.
^^TPTR" s Fragrance. 2 Jov,
^f=fra" s The Vedas.
^r*^ a. (s) Sour. r , ,
r., ^ ^ [stomach.
^tfc^r^Trf 71. Acidity on the
^r>f f pro. We.
^r^ (s) Gain, income, or
receipt. /. A mother.
^Rcf^ n. s Place or seat ;
ill comp. as ^taiT^rf^.
^RTcTF A sort of hasty pud-
ding, fld. Without effort; without
care or search : ready made. 2
(Arriving, happening, being)
without our agency or thought.
The person, thing desired. 3
Arrived, come ; — used of time :
^rq"^rJTf5- „,. n. A child
brought to one by his marriage
with a wido'.v.
^r^T^tr, ^R?ri]5|; Terms
for a fellow who aUva\s manages
to ])op in at pudding-time : for
one who, holding off during the
toll of preparation, comes for-
ward at the completion to parti-
ci|)ate in the fruits.
^[^•rr p A mirror or look-
ing glass. BTI^'^Tfir V. i. To
be affected with 3TT^^^*.
^rW" 71. The fallinix off of
an infant fi'om its being ])ut
away from its mother's breast or
from tlie deterioration of her
milk on her conceiving again.
^^■f^oifq' g Receipt and ex-
pendiUire. [-,^f ^^^ j,^ ^^^^^
^^r^Tl^r 71. f. Exclamations
5?[q"frT|^ncT /: (s) Imports
and exports: custom levied on
them.
'^mW\m f. pi. A term of
contempt for a feeble, ])uny,
worthless jjerson or thing.
^r'^[?T (s) Lal)ours, pains. 2
Fatigue, wearinci^s. v. ^\.
'^]^m^^\^ pL Labours
and pains; efforts and endea-
v"»>'s- [A tool.
■^rji-T n. (s) A weapon. 2
■^l^^rrnrq" m. s Exemption
from sickness through life.
^rjm^ Representation by
gesture and action.
^(^3^^^ s The name of n
treatise on medicine and on
the ])robabilities of life.
"iirj^^HR a. s Long-hved.
^fg"-^ n. (s) Life, life-time,
'the thread of life. rij^^
^r^'^^^kr /. The limit of
■^1^ Interjection of pain,
grief, surprise, &c. Oh !
^mV'^'^ n. s Poet. Battle.
^TF^/. An iron spike (as of a
top or hand-mill) ; a goad, &c.
2 Urgency, v. f^\^, ^t^T. .'i A
spoke of a wheel. 4 A ring of
hair on the body. 5 A term in the
play of T,s1«^t^ , — the nnniber
six. G m. A large serpent of the
Boa-kind. 7 fig. A sluggish
fellow. 8 A pointed end of a
stick, rope, &c.
STR^ a. (s) Red.
^1^^ See under ^.
^\l^ V. i. To utter its cry,
to crow — the cock. 2 To lie
sluggishly and torpidly (like
an A'r or Boa). 3 r To be im-
paricntly eager for.
^^TR^^r, '^K'^^^ a. (s) Relat-
ing to the desert, wild.
"^TRcT-cir f. The ceremony of
waving (around an idol, &c.) a
platter containing a burning
kn:p. 2 The platter and lamp
waved. 3 The piece of poetry
chaunted on the occasion. 4 The
lotus-leaf described on the
})latter.
^[?:^ffTttr /. The waving
by women of Arti around the
beads of the people assembled at
niarriiigcs, &c.
^rT5:r /. The sixth of the
twenty-seven «ig?^.
^\mi< ((fl. Through and
through : across, over.
3j[t^^^ r. ?:. Poet. To talk
wildly (as in sleep or delirium).
2 To roar ; to bawl. 3 To doze.
^[t^ (s) Beginning. ^{^^^
a. s That begins. ^rrcHiJf v. i.
To begin.
STR^T^TT n. (s) Bold only
at the outset ; short-couraged.
^K'^^ a. s To be begun.
sgrn-T
STPTTTJTM p. pr. 9 That is
under bef^inning.
^TR^'^r /. c Cockcrowing.
^m^ See ^r?:at, sig. 1 .
^lTl5T5Tr/. (Vulgar) Heiui-
crany.
3iW^^ a. s That worships,
serves, seeks to propitiate.
^[Tl'^'f^^/. Worshiping, &c.
STRf^^ r. c. lo worship.
praise.
^^TfU'^'T V. (s) Praising ; wor-
sliip. 2 Accomplisliment.
^rrr'^^r /•. (s) See ^rTr>-4=T.
^Rrri^cT -p. Worshiped;
sousjlit by acts of propitiation.
^rn*^^ a. s To be worshiped ;
to be served, n. (s) The tutelar
deity of a family.
^Kf^ (p) Rest, repose. 2
Ease, relief, o a. That is at
ease.
^Rr^T^rn: «. ReCresliing—
sleep, medicines ; easy — a road :
disi)osed to rest.
^r^^ p. (s) Mounted. 2
In conip. ^-^^^T^^ Expe-
lieiK d ■ ; I'-Sf^T^^ Perceived.
^1^5"^ V. i. To ascend,
mount. 2 fig. To become the
subject of j)opular talk. [in"-.
^r^5^ a. Dull or unheed
^?Iot r. c. To control,
confine within prescribed bounds.
and^^ 7?. Poet. Making
a meal ; eating.
^^ITfJ^ n. (s) Freedom from
sickness; health.
^im /rt.(s)^lT("FT H. s Plant-
ing, fixing, lit. fig. 2 Applying,
ascribing: ^j^I^Tti, gtoTTriq.
2 An accusation. 3 A metaphor.
4 False sn[)p()sition.
^lim V. c. To plant, set,
fix, lit. fig. To ascribe. 2 To com
niit unto or repose upon (an
office, a charge).
SIlfiiqcT ;,. Planted, kc. 2
Ascribed, &c. 3 Accused. 4
Counterfeit, forged. 5 Expressed
by a metaphor. 6 Mistaken.
^rn^rqrfr^r^r ad. whilst
51
yet unpurified by the daily ab-
lution— a person, clothes, ves-
sels ; as stale, &c.
^[Ur w.^lfl?:^ n. s Ascend-
ina : rise, advance, lit. fig.
^RT^r /. A loud call. 2
A loud roaring. [praising.
^fstf «.(s)Flattery ; fawning^
^Rh°t V. c. To flatter, kc
STF^ft a. That basely flat-
ters and praises. 2 Relating to
flattery.
STR' p. (fi) Afflicted. 2 n.
f. Poet. Anxious desire after.
'^\^^ a. AfFeeted with
painful craving.
^?r^ a. (s) Wet, moist.
^rST? /. (s) The sixth of the
twenty-seven rf^^ .
r *
^r^ a. (s) Of a good family ;
noble, respectable. 2 Proper,
suitable.
^r^r f. (s) A kind of metre.
^RF^tT s The country ex-
tending from the eastern to the
western sea, and bounded on
the north and south by the Hi-
inalava and Windhya mountains.
^r^ 7?. Shifting tlie sail. v.
^T^ a. (s) Saintly. 2 Sacred,
having authority — writings, &c.
3 fig. Dull, foolish, silly- — speech,
&c.
^(qf^^I^ s A form of mar-
riage. The father of the bride
receives one or two jiair of kiue
from the bridegroom.
Srr^^^lf?:^ a. («) Ele2ant,
elaborate. 2 That treats of the
ornaments of style-a ¥JT^,&c.
3Tr^iTJi7q"r /. (aSzf) The
world ; the people : mankind,
^r^^ 71. s A house, a rece[)-
tade.
^^W 77. s Sloth, indolence.
^r^lJT^r A term for a jiuest.
2 The coming and going (of
visitors, &c.) a. That pa^sses by.
^r?^lT^^^ ad. Daily.
^JJ^m s Conversation. 2
See B^^TT?.
^Fc^prr^r simple food ; mere
greens and roots.
«llc^l^F The Muharram-flre.
STlPoTTIiJr V. c. To embrace,
SIlfc^JH 77. (s) An embrace.
^rl^^rr^'f «. (p) Grand, im-
posing— an establishment, an
equipage.
^li^^t, STlF^^^F^ a. Of
exalted dignity; — used in letters
and petitions.
^F^r^l^r /. Profit and loss ;
success and failure .v. ^,^T^. 2
Any accidental matter, good or
bad : g^ft 3TTT;!#r f^^I^, 3?T»
^f^ s An esculent root.
^TF^r^^Iir p Prunes from
Bokliara; Persian prunes.
♦\
^fc^?9^ 7?. s Describing fi-
gures : writing.
STF^^r^^TS^ (s) The call of
the Chobdars to the Raja as he
rides in procession or sits in
assembly to reuard and receive
the obeisances of his subjects.
SffoTf^iT w_ (s) Versedness.
SJ^ZfTq?^!^ ^r 77. A term for
a house ever tilled with guests
and strangers.
'^r^ Great show; imposing
display, v. ^m. 2 Neatness
of shape. 3 Courage, r. tf^.
4 Grasp, hold.
^F^ /; Afl'ection of the
bowels. 2 The mucus voided. 3
Crudities ou the stomach.
c
^\W^ f. Fame, report.
^UnWi a. (n) Come, arrived,
inward; — used of letters and
otficial documents. Price
^F^Sfoj j,^ c. To transplant
^RTm^^/. IMutual inter-
change of work or things.
^f^r^ Grasp, clutches.
^I^^y. Fondness,
^W\ n. c The first or the
growing field of rice. 2 The
field into which rice-plants are
transplanted, 3 Ground into
which the corn or vegetables are
transplanted.
^rra'^fl'
52
ari^TT
^f^f f. Transplanting. See
3Tr^W. sig. 2. i^rice. &-C.
^r?^ y, c. c To transplant
^r^cTfT n. An invitation. ?'.
^X. V. c. To invite. ^n-^\^or.
^^^ a. The rest. 2 Other,
^r^^ s Contractino; ; wind-
ino; up. 2 Coiitiol, rule. 3 Man-
asemcnt. ftbility.
^RTrfT n. Dysentery.
^f^sfr p A distinct head
in the ledger or abstracted from it.
^f^K^-i ad. Expressly, di-
rectly.
^r?^^ n. (s) Inclosing,
covering ; that which encircles — a
railinir, fence, case, &c.: the state
iiulnred. 2 Control.
oTR^^y.c.T'o gather together,
in, up ; to wind up, lit. fig.
2 To manage, transact. 3 To
en\vra]i. 4 To control. 5 To draw-
to (Mie's self. () To protect.
^RT?T p An import.
^^rST^nrr /; Revenue from
ini|)nrts.
STf^TT^^^r^ pi Imports and
c'xi)orts : duties on them.
5TffTm-7r /: A general ga-
thering up; tying; a packing
up.
s^ir-^rf^r^n See ^rfTr^f^?T.
^i^t! (s) a whirlpool. 2
Kevolving.
^f?Ti^ ;j_ g Turninof. 2
Reailing through (of a hookj ;
repetition. 3 Studying. 4 Tarn-
ins; towards. r ,
• .c Lend.
^^Tl^ ad. Unto the year's
^f^^ n. An oar.
^r^S" a. Of regular form.
^Wi^ n. s Necessity.
^^5^ a. (s) Certain, neces-
SHry ; absolutely sure to hapjjeu
or l)e done.
^^e- n. The flesh of a
bullock, &c. killed by a tiger and
left by liiiii (to he devoured on
the following day).
3TN7Tf^r^r^[^(Atiger!eav-
ing his Jirey. and rushing upon
some object that has appeared
and interrupted him). A term
for a furious, ferocious fellow.
^r^C a. s That brings, con-
veys, confers. In comp,
^f^Sfl^^ST a. Twin.
^r^I^(p) Sound, noise, voice.
^Tfir 7?. w. c An enclosure ;
a compond or yard. [invoke.
^T^r^'^ V. c. To summon oi
^f^f?^ n. s Invoking (a di-
vinity to occupy an image just
prepared to receive him). 3 Cal-
ling.
^r?ir={r^^^^ V. (s) Sum-
moning and dismissing (a divi-
nity, &c.) 2 Invoking and dis-
cliarging (the nunien of a ^'^).
^T^fTfcT p. Invoked, kc.
^r?rc^?i. A large, fleshy ex-
crpsr<-u(;e. [become manifest.
"^[RiT^^ V. i. Poet, 'io
^rifiTf^ n. s Appearing
openly.
^nfwk s Manifestation.
2 Indication (of a passion or
sentiment) by gesture and action.
^flf^JcT p, s Become open-
ly apparent.
^\\^'^ p. (s) Possessed, occu-
pied (by any sentiment or feel-
ing) : #TVTf^S, ^TVTTRS.
'^r^'Tf p, (s) Enclosed ; en-
cased. 2 Revolved.
^F^ItT f. (s) Going over or
through (a work). 2 Returning.
.S Revolving.
^\^^ s Force. 2 The force
(of a pain). 3 Haste.
^R^ (s) Occupation by
any sentiment or feeling : ^i-
«TTti!:. 3 Ardency.
'^\^W\ r. i. To be excited
2 To enter i fliff BTT^SIrT ^-
j:?Tii
'M'f^^r a. Ardent, vehement.
^r^V^ V. L To doubt; to
have a fear or misgiving,
MrW/.(s) Fear; a doubt:
a scruple : want of assurance.
2 An objection, v. i, mx, ^,
^^- ^ [doubt.
^r7R;ri=rfi=FT/. Solution of a
^r^f^cT j>. Feared or appre-
hended : distrusted. 2 That has
fear, doubts, or scruples regard-
'"!?• [Place, seat,
^ra^ (s) Purpose, object. 2
^f^r /. (s) Hope. 2 Long-
ing after. 3 Attachment to.
arfSTrTTf^r/. (s) Hope and
expectation; hope altogether,
good or bad ; hope and fear.
^r^rnrr^ The snare of lust.
2 A term for the world.
^r^f^^ a. Entangled in
the snare of desire ; enfettered by
wordly hopes aud desires. 2
Hopeful.
^rar^Fr Disappointment.
'^r^TWrr n. A reproachful
term for one immoderately
greedy.
^f^r^^f V. i. To hope.
^I^T?R a. (s) Hopeful,
^f^if^cii y, c. To cause to
hope.
^rsrrS" «. Greedy.
^f^r«. s That eats. In comp.
^m^ a. Fond of. r 1 *
r^ ^. [about,
^TRTi^rar ad. Around or
^r^Rf?" (s) Bestowing a
blessing; a blessing cx[)ressed.
Benedictory.
^RTf^ n. (s) Impm-ity con*
tracted in consecpienee ol a death
or birth in one's family or tribe,
or from having carried a corpse,
or during an eclipse, &c. 2 fig.
Filthiness, disorderliness of
person.
^r#^r a. That has contract-
ed 3TT«I^.
^r^4 n. (s) Surprise. 2 A
wonder; a tiiarvel.
^[''•^^ (s) A religious order.
2 A hermitage. 3 Au order among
Gosayis.
arr^^
53
^RT
^r^T^ (s) An asylum ; a re-
fuge. 2 Shelter, defence, lit. fig. 'A
Supjjort, lit. fig. authority ; that
wliich supports. 4 Having re-
course to. 5 Vicinity.
^r^^\ a. That has sought
the protection of.
^r^r See ^r^^.
^iP^'cT p. s Protected. 2
Tliat has been resorted to for
protection, .'i Following, observ-
ing. 4 Eni])lo\ing, using.
^i!^r^]T[^ 11, I A blanch of
the Kig Veda ; a Brahman fol-
lowing it. 2 The name of a
^r^f^"^ V. c. To encourage
or reassure. f&c.
■^r^^ 11. (s) Encourgiiig,
srrT-^^ (s) The name of ^he
seventh month from ^^^,
September-October.
^r^rS" (s) The name of the
fourth month, June-July.
^ITF^r / A term for the ^^l-
■^5^1 of the month ^T'TT^.
^W, ^i^ An axle.
^f^ /. Hope. V. ^r,
fl, wtiff. 2 The hitting of a top
w'itliin the rifig.
m^rF p. (s) Intent, bent;
devotedly attached to.
^F^tF f. Intentness upon.
^\^Z a. Thin, dilate.
^m^ A dui!, teat.
^r'ET-T n. s A seat; a stool,
a chair, carpet, &c. ; a means of
conveyance ; a horse or bullock,
bird, rat, &e. 2 Continuing in
some posture. 3 A division or
column of a page. 4 A seat on
horseback.
^r€=iTrifr / a posture.
3T[^^ a. s jNear or nigh.
^r^^r^r^,"^f€'fiTTq a. That
is on the point of death.
Sir'FrTT^flf/.(H)Around;about.
5q[^[^=qTa. Neighbouring,
^f^^r^ Sign, appearance,
^r^ll'crfcTorf.(s) On all sides.
^l^^m ad. Until the end.
^imi See ^r^^T.
^W^ s Spirit distilled from
sugar, &c. 2 A bolus prepared
from various medicaments.
^FtT^o?" m.n.f. A bear.
^15^^ a. s Relating to an
asuia. 2 fig. Fiery : horrible.
^rarfl?!?- (s) A form of
marriage ; in which the bride-
groom gives what he can afford
to the bride, her father, and pa-
ternal kinsmen.
^r^^f a. Belon,<j;ing to the
Axnrn or demons. /. (.s) Surgery.
^I^7r3-gr^ Desperate re-
medv ; a violent remedy.
^rml-Rcrr/. (s) Heavy and
stupid sleep.
5TrFffiT[JTr /. (s) Sorcery;
the mighty feats of the demons.
^rgfrnfrT /. Prodigious
and violently acquired wealth.
2 Prodigal, mad revelling. 'A
Worldly- wealth.
'■^\\ n. A tear. ^^^,:,^„ ,p,g^,|
^R^rrq n. (s) Spreading. 2 A
^R^Si V. c. To spread.
^11%^ a. (s) That believes
in God and a future state; theist
— in opp. to iTlf^^. 2 This
word is uttered at night on
lying down to sleep as a safe-
guard against snakes, &c.
^fRcT^ n. s Theism.
^n'lcT^^R' (s) Maintenance
of the doctrine of theism.
^r^fl^t p. s Spread out. 2
Over-spread or covered with.
^I^^r/. A woman.
^H^l f. (s) Care or concern
about ; zeal. 2 Hope. v. ^x^.
'i Faith or belief.
^R^^ a. Careful; zealous.
^W^T 71. s A place. In
comp. ^af'^^KT^^. r^ slap.
^RTJR" s A sounding blow,
^\^^ n. m. f. A bear. 2
fig. A huge, hairy, caterpillar.
^ICJ^ ^miZ^ V. c. To
bruise or mash as with the
ladle or spoon. 2 To oppress.
^\KZm p. Bruised, &c.
^\^^\, ^rrRr a saying, pro-
verb. 2 A piece of metrical com-
position, jocular and humorous,
recited by women at marriages,
&c. ."^ A riddle.
^rCcf p. s Struck, hit.
^[i:rr, ^rfin a ring of
grass (placed under a pitcher,
&c.)
3T[1^ -^r y. The glow of
fire ; a blast of hot air.
3Tr€'^°r V. i. To burn under
exposure to blast (from fire or
the sun).
^rrr, ^m^J interjections of
surprise, pity, or sorrow.
^l?"K(s) Food, provision. 2
Eating a meal. '6 The wonted
power of eating : the usual
quantity of food. 4 Embers. 5
A species of Boa. 6 Starching
and ironing (of clothes), v."^.
STr^Rot V. i.To lie sluggish-
ly and torpidly like a Boa.
^n'KI' a. That lives or
feeds upon. In comp. 'RiST-
^rf fcT /. (s) A handful (of
rice, ghee, &c.) cast into the
fire, water, upon the ground, &c.
as an offering to the deity.
^?^IC =lff Rlf i" A phrase
expressing indiff"erence or ignor-
ance respecting the being or
the doing of any thing. If it
be, it is ; if not, not.
^rS'^FT n. Being, existence.
'<^lT'K^ rt. s The daily du-
ties of a Brahman.
^r^TK (s) Joy.
^r?^ K^ a. That rejoices.
joice ; to joy.
^?^f^ n. a Rejoicing.
^Tf^^rf^cf p. Delighted.
^r^R n. s Calling, sum-
moning. 2 Naming: a name.
^FgT^Ior ,;. c. To call. 2 To
name.
^\^ 7)1. f. A false accusation.
V. w, ^T^, V. 2 fig. A mere ap-
pearance, shadow of: as S^^T-
'^T^T» 'IT^. 3 Longing after :
srra-Ti^
54
r^rnr
importunate begging, v. g,
^r3"^r-^ /. A plant, flax.
1.' A few "liandfuls of reajied
corn not yet bomul up into a
sheaf, a reap. a. Lazy.
^rSTTT^ JTR^nr A term i'ov
ail exeee(liu<:ly lazy fellow.
^FoJ^ Sloth, indolence. 2
Slackness of pursuit or coolness
of desire after; remissness.
BTr3"gWT r. i. To become
la /.v.
^(oST A binding or tie. 2
Confinement, restraint : restric-
tion. r.Hi^, ^^. [slackness.
^rs-RTra^T /. Inditi'erence,
^\c&\i\^ Grasp, compass.
^rST^f*^ Restraint, cohibi-
tion ; tiovernance (of persons) :
limitation, management under
order (of aii'airs) . f. igj^.
■^^ f. Poet. Unreason-
able lon<rings (of a child).
a?R?|qr3-R ad. Alternately.
^foS" n. A cavity made
round the root of trees, &c.
^^ (s) Drawing (up, to-
wards, after, with) ; attracting,
alluring. 'J Hanging back. v.
^, t^?;, 3 Carrying along with ;
imi)lie(l: iTI'g ^ui irl^'T "ff "^ ;
^T ql^jfl ^ITTl-ii- 5!JT5IT'=^T ^\ o
%mT. 4 Objecting to. .") A fi-
gure in rhetoric. Irony ; a fling,
sneer.
^]]m^ V. c. To draw up. 2
To dispute, r. i. To make ob-
jection : ^iT*il3Tt iT^?lt 3TI^-
^T^- ^ [rectly.
^I'iT'H ad. Expressly, di-
«?r5Try,^(8) An order, coni-
nian<l.
arrsTl^r.vTR^ a. Obedient.
^mi^^^ f. Disobedience.
^fsTR^ a. That commands.
^ran^, ^kTisirrq^t v. c. To
rointnand.
^TJiTiq^ n. A term for a
letter from Government to any
of its officers ; a written order ;
an edict. ^\„„^ instructing.
^(tffqFT n. s Oidering-, direcl-
^rriTFI^ra" a. s (Worthy) To
be (u-dered, &c.
^Tm7[?5r^ a. (s) That re-
gards orders; obedient.
^MRr^^ /*. Ubedience.
-^Fsfll^^;). Ordered, enjoined.
^r5r|lT^ Breakino- an order.
^ The third vowel.
I^rS"^r-^I a. Relating to this
place, way.
f?j^^[icr^T^r a. Of this
jdacc, quarter, sort, and of that,
i. e. of various places, &c.
^•^ ad. Hence: from this
1)1 ace.
C^J^IcT^^ ad. Hence and
thence ; from the vicinity.
f?;^ or -^^ ad. Hither. 2
Here.
^^VTcT^V ad. Hither and
thither. 2 f. Equivocation, shuf-
fling, r. q\^, W^, ^t^.
?^^i^ (A) A confession. 2 A
depositi(ni. [gagement.
?^fr=lWr (p) A written en-
i^, i^^ (ii) An English-
man.
t^^J, ?^^/. The English
language, 'i The rule of the
15ritish. «. Euijlisli.
^sfRT^ f A term for an
irritalile ])erson : for a smart,
clever fellow. ^j^ ,^^„^. ^^^^
t^^ or -"^ A live coal. 2
t^^l f. A kind of scorpion.
fir A currier's instrument
for smoothing leather.
^N^ n. s A hint or sign. 2
Aim, design. 3 Covert speech.
T^\ '])ro. Fler ; belonging to
ill's t'emnle, or to this word in
the feminine gender.
?-?jr /. (s) A desire. 2
That term in the Rule of three
which involves the question.
^'^ST^ Tlie third term in
the Rule of three.
r^n'^ra-^^^r \^A^\ a. «
Poet. Governor of the whole
system of Maya ; a term for the
Ilin.lnjeity." [of one's desires.
r^r^rT/. Full gratification
T^^\%^ n. The fourth term
in Rule of three.
f^?JfiT[^=r n. Dining to
heart's content. 2 Such a dinner.
'6 Giving (a Brahman) to eat
wh.itever he asks for.
f-^'JR^t^ n. De.th at will.
T'^Tfl^w't ". That can sum-
mon death whenever disposed
to die.
^fjr^H a. Having desire.
I'-Ulf^r^ Mortification of
desire ; self-denial.
^■^^ri^cJJW Past-ti me, sport-
ing a^ will. [^^,i^ij_
Cf'^-CJ'T" V. c To desire or
^F-hJcT p. Wished, desired.
C^^ r/.That wishes. In comp.
as f^C '^.
'J .
^sIcT /■. (a) Honor, dignity.
2 The conii)limentary introduc-
tion of epistles. T^'fl'^T
a. Honorable, resi)ectable.
C^cT^^^ Persian phrase in
notes; — used before the name of a
])erson designating him as ho-
norable.
f sfcr?^[3r a. That destroys
one's reputation. 2 Used of
works in the sense of befooling,
nou-])lusing.
T^^ a. Honorable.
fSfRf^T^r a. Slight, weak—
a building, &c. superficially
(done). 2 Temporary ; — used
with f5^T^, and relerring to
the vilhige-account.
l^r/. (a) Trouble, torment.
^5IPT:;T/. (A)?'^(7rcTJTf^». m.
A village held in permanent farm
by an Inamdiir. So called from
its having been added to the
Vatan or Inani. 2 That depart-
ment in wliicli presents, &c. to
and from lUijas or foreign states
are brought to account. 3 m. /.
Addition, morcness.
r^lT^ei^iir/. (ii) Any mo-
nies realised by Government
from loans, the sale of presents.
r^rnr
55
r=rnr
&c., and from any extraordinary
source. 2 Monies received into
the treasury of one Sublia or
Mahal, &c. belonging to or car-
ried to the credit of some other
Subha or Mahal. 3 The revenues
of any village under sequestra-
tion. j-gj^T.
r^r'^cTr a. Relating to C^fT^cT-
Several
^srrr^^rrfcr^Tr ad.
times, frequently.
T^ii f. (p) Tiowsers.
lirr^^R (p)The holder of
i:;5Ti'^r, a contractor.
^^RTT? A schedule of the
farms (of a village). 2 The ac-
count of the dues, balances, &c.
of the revenue furnished to the
head Patel at the annual settle-
ment : also JlH^T 3T1^ ^T^^
I^Kf A privilege or an
income of variable amount sold
for a fixed sum ; a contract.
T^^^ or ^15 /. A brick-
bat. 2 Brickdust'.
f3rro5" n. A brick mould. 2
The ground-portion of a door-
frame.
X^\ f. The stick which is
struck in the game of ^^^t>^.
r^R-ri;, f^fl A play
amongst boys.
^ilmtl f. Poet. Earth
taken up and waved (over a child,
&c.) to avert the influence of an
evil eye or of evil spirits.
f^^T s A certain tubular
vessel, one of the channels of
the vital spirit.
^■^n'^^r /. All pains, trouble,
and affliction. A term used by
women whilst waving lamps
around a person's head to re-
move or avert all evd.
fcTT'TT ad. tlenceforwards.
I^^^Fa. So many. 2 So much,
great.
I'rTSFI^r a. Of this degree.
^cT^r^ a. A little, just so
much. [degree.
^^'^cT a. So much ; to this
f ^:"TT od. s See C^TTq^.
5^K (a) Confidence, trust.
^cT^lTf a. Trustworthy.
Tr{^\^ (a) Retinue: the
public or the domestic establish-
ment.
f cTRTHF a. Having retinue.
f ^ a. (s) Other.
?^cr^^ ad. s Elsewhere.
?cl?r[^ a. (a) Displeased.
fcRRl f. Disfavour.
fcT^fr^ /. (a) Any fixed
payment from the public trea-
sury, granary, or store.
CclcTr?^ or ~^^ a. Separate,
free. App. to troops kept for the
public service by chieftains, and
paid from the treasury.
?cf§5"r (a) Concern, business,
or connection with ; interest in.
2 Information (esj). as furnished
to Government), v. ^^,^,^tT,
^^^'V^^ n. A written re-
port from public emissaries ; a
letter of advices.
?"fcT ind. s A particle im-
plying likeness (as, so, thus) or
sameness of manner (thus), or
conclusion (finis).
iftT^/. s A word written
at the end of a book or chapter
denoting conclusion, and corres-
ponding with Finis. Hence,
Completion.
fP^^r^ (s) History. 2 A
detailed account of an affair.
^^^^^ af/. s As it ha|)pened
— telling, narrating.
r
I"^^^ s The sum and sub-
stance ; the whole matter.
X^mk a. Et cetera.
«^ s The moon.
beautiful
%^^^^\ f. A
woman or maiden.
%^ (s) The name of the
deity presiding over Svvarga and
the secondary divinities. He
is also regent of the south-east
quarter, and the deity of the
atmosphere. 2 A king or chief.
In comp. f^qSt. '^'TS. 3 An
order among Gosavis and
Sanyasis.
t^.'^n n. The rain-bow.
fJT^r^ n. (s) Jugglery.
^^^^ The Jlf\ erected
on new-year's day.
?"5'*ir?5" s A sapphire.
CJ^^^'T n. (s) Indra's world
or court. 2 fig. A magnificent
edifice.
t^m^ n. Bitter gourd.
t'lT^T 71. s A sense, an or^an,
or a member. 2 Membrura Virile
vel pudendum muliebre.
tr^q^f^ a. Sensible, per-
ceptible.
tT^T^T^c^r^ A diuretic. 2 In-
creased excretion of urine.
V^ n. (s) Firewood.
T'-^^Rf'-^r /. n. (H) Irrelevant,
evasive — speech, v. ^^, Tt^
vlTW. ad. Irrelevantly.
l^^r'Tr(A) Justice : equitable
adjudgment.
f'T^F'Trr a. Righteous ; — used
of person's only. 2 Skilful and
just in determining differences.
f^nr n. (a) a grant in per-
petuity without conditions. Now
ai)p. loosely to a grant gen.
^^fiT^5[r':i7^ n^ Advance of
a grant, r. ■^.
f^R'Nrf'^rf 55- /. A ^ff or
cess in general made by the
Sirkfir upon an X'fT^.
^FTFUr A schedule or roll
of the several Inams. 2 A deed
of Inam.
f=ifJT#i^# See i^riTqr?:%
f^PT^t^rf /. One-fourth of
the produce of an Inam (as paid
into the Government, &c.)
^^IRfrrf^li /. One-third of
the produce of an Inam.
i:^PT?:rr a holder of an
Inam.
fHWTjr f. An impost upon
the holders of Inam. It was
laid every third year, and to the
extent of the whole produce of
that year. [an Inam.
f^FPT^ n. The title-deed of
f^TRqyinTr inam taken by
the Inamdar direct from the land,
act received from the Sirkar.
rrriT
56
h^
%mW[\B]fl f. A term for
the niinor grants of land (to the
villafre-officers).
§:={mqr?"t^ /. inspection of
the Iiiams granted.
?^R%sn?r /. An annual
payment by Inanidars of a third
of tile Government-share ot their
lands.
f'TFTf a. Relating to Inam.
VJ^^ a. (Vuloar) Wicked,
wild — a child.
^^^\ (a) a building.
f^?5r^ (a) a Miihamuiadan
name of the devil ; app. to a
wild child.
f^TR n. (a) Honesty, vera-
city. 2 (,^<)nscience.
f^R^cT^I?: Trust, credit.
?'rTH3TJT['JT n. Integrity. 2
Swearing and obtesting; making
oath or vow.
^\'\\ (I. Sincere, fair.
?iTFR"i^JTr A term for a rude,
brntal fellow — a bnrly bnlly.
^^l^^ f. An edifice; a pa-
lace or mnnsion. 'J Constructing,
or a construction in gen. of
stones, bricks, and mortar.
5"^'^, ^^^'^ f. The roaniinu
about of cows, kc. in the morn-
ing, to eat up tl\e excrement at
that season deposited, v. ^x: ;
tlie actual eating. /•. ^r. 2 fig.
Sponging: adulterous practices.
3 11. Grain sown amongst other
grain. 4 A head-load from the
jungle (of wood or grass).
^^ /*. c A sort of screen
used in rainy weather.
?T^rc^a. (a) or the richest
flavour or finest (pndity ; used
of fruits, -fig. .Arrftnt — a rogue,
.'i .V remittance to tlie treasury.
?Tm^=irJT[ A roll of remit-
tance to the treasury.
^Tm^^r^J^ Revenue for-
warded to the treasury. [Urine.
?Tr^^ J. Mailing water. 2
Trm -% a. (p) Persian.
^T\Z\ (a) Purpose, design :
will, accord.
?^^ (A Science) TUmedy,
fflort. -' Conjuring tncks : magic.
lo^JT^rSf a. Knowing in
charms and conjuring devices ;
a sorcerer.
X^\^\ A claim, right. 2
Connection with. 3 A village
under a township. 4 A term for
the tassel attached to the pole
of a native m^^. .') An as-
signment iijion the revenue.
?:^r^r, ^c^i^fr/. h carda-
moms. 2 A Cardamom,
^^f^ (a) a remedy ; re-
source.
^-f^^r, %^^ a. (Low) A
small quantity : small, petty.
^^^, ^^nm^ «. (a)' See
Cf c^r^ a. Little, very small.
I"^ or ^^^ Literjection of
disgust, — foil ! fugli !
TSJir^ f. ?^RT w. (a) a
sign or signal. 2 A hint.
%^^ (a) Love ; the passion
betwixt the sexes. 2 A taste,
liking; — esp. towards woman,
dress.
^q"^^!^ (P) That has lewd
propensities ; a lecher. Qijjnpg^
fT^^f^f /. Amorous dal-
^ (s) A friend. 2 n. f.
Any essential ceremony, as
ablution, &c. 3 a. Wished, de-
sired : loved, cherished. 4 I'a-
vourable— an aspect. 5 In arith.
Assumed. [piciousncss.
?^?^f /I. Friendship. 2 Aus-
T^^^^ f. A tutelar deity or
patron-saint. [aesired end.
^^Wt] f. Obtaiimient of a
^^ int. Fob ! fugh !
C^^ a. (a) Two ; used of
the Arabic year.
^W[ or -^ An itch which at-
tacks tlie wrists, &c.
^^qiTTT^, ^^^iw (p) The
seed of flea wort or plantain.
^^R, ^H FT n.f. (a) A proper
name. 2 In accounts. An arti-
cle or item ; the name of an item :
a heading name : TTlo^t X"
"^I^X laisr. 3 Sense of dig-
nity.
I'^W^rTc=^r A changed name
(upon the muster-roll, &c.) ;
a substituted name. 2 A subs-
titute.
^^THfir ad. (u) Regularly
by the names. 2 Name byname.
3 In detailed heads of account.
^^^ a. (a) Christian. 2/
The Christian era.
?"Hrr-^r Earnest-money.
l"^f^r A sign or signal. 2
A hint.
?^cT^qrpy prpp. (a) From (a
certain past event or date in-
clusive) onwards, [chattels.
^^^^ /. (A) Goods and
f^cTlU/. A platter of leaves.
^^^RF The practice of in-
creasing annually the tax upon
ground let out to be improved
or brought under cultivation.
*^l /. (h) a smoothing
iron. 2 Ironing. j-^j^^j^
^^-st'flT ad. In the present
C?''Tf^ ad. Nor here nor
there.
WK^\^ (s) This world;—
as disting. from q^^^T^.
^r?T a. (a) One; — used of
the Arabic year.
^^i A curved instrument
for cutting grass.
^^rf^ST A term for the
movables of a house.
^^ /'. A blade set in a
stock, used in slitting up vege-
tables, &c.
^^ (s) Sugarcane.
r"^^ Sugarcane-juice.
^ The fourth vowel.
i^f. A brick.
R^/. (s) The lime-tree. 2
n. al30«r^ f^^f n. A lime.
?^/. (a) Any iM uhammadan
festival.
'i'^^ a. s Such, similar.
^^IJ^r^f^RTcfR A phrase sig-
nifying great paucity.
f^ /, Strength, vigor.
i^f. Emulation, v. ^^, ^•
f^"frr A daring fellow.
^<^r^ /. Disheartening.
f^r/. s Impatience of an-
other's prosperity ; emulation, v.
k'^^l^ a. Emulous, envious.
1"^ s A ruler, master.
t^F^, t^TRF /. The north-
east quarter.
t^^ (s) The Supreme Be-
ing. 2 A name of Shiva. 3 A
Lord, ruler. 4 Used in comp.
Hugeness, vastness ; iTTTt"^^,
^t^^^- [gency.
1"^?:^?^? n. Divine a-
t^^?^ a. Of Divine be-
stowal; God-giveu. [God.
^^^i^^TFT^ a. Ordained by
f^^3T^^ Divine compla-
cency.
l-^Tirr^rr /. The wonderful-
ness or the wonderous workings
of God (in creation or in provi-
dence), [vine providence.
f *<jT^Trr, f^fr^^r /. Di-
i^Tm^F^K A Divine ma-
nifestation. Fdence.
|-^^?T5, l:^ff?T5 Provi-
i^^r^rqr^A living crea-
ture of God. A term esp. of
pity or tenderness.
f ^^?T[^r ^\^ A term for a
person much beloved or esteem-
ed as highly precious by God.
f^rm n. Dedicating to
God.
t'^Tf^'TR An incarnation of
God. 2 fig. A pious, benevolent
or excellent person.
t^n a. Relating to l'^ ;
divine./. A general name for the
^f^ or female energies of the
deities.
f ^TfT^Cffcf ^\ prodigy, or any
ordinary phenomenon (as light-
ning, &c.) considered as such.
f^te'iTr=T^*tT The Divine
decrees or predestination.
8
57
l:^?R:^'^/.The Divine do-
inffs or procedure.
i^<l^^\f. The Divine skill.
^^•^n'=t)r3'^ ?i. The sportmgs
of God. App. both to His work-
ings in creation and His govern-
ment and ordering in Providence.
l^^fcT^, t^^t^ n. Provi-
dence.
l:^?Rf5T n. The glory held
to rest over or around a great or
good man. 2 Jocosely. Clarified
butter : gold.
t^ffT^'in A term of pan-
theism for Creation.
f ^R^^ A term for a sage.
i^flirrf^r/. Godly-minded-
ness. [jesty.
f ^Iiffl^ The Divine ma-
f ^^f^^ A term for any crea-
ture of God; esp. for any animal
or plant.
f ^?r#^r /. See f ^rtf5^.
f^[^^r/. The voice of
God (as in the air, or in visions, or
through a prophet). fnose
f ^?r^^?7 The Divine pur-
f^fr^M, i^WriT The
wratli of God. p^^.^n ^f g„,|
i^^-j5r, f^r-'^r /. The
t'^ Interjection of disgust,
Fob! Fngh! 2 n.f. \o ^UTuf.
To express disgust. 1-2 ^jj gyg
t'H^^ n. s Seeing or sight.
Seen.
^^^
V'
3- The fifth vowel.
"^ f. A louse.
"S^Z^ V. c. To chisel or to
renew the incisions by chiselling
(a mill or grinding stone). 2 fig.
To i)it (or be pitted) with the
small-pox.
3"^2T^ /. The cost of facing
or refacing a grinding stone.
1 ^^^ ad. A squat, v, ^^.
♦%•
3'^^'T" V. c. To dress by
boiling. 2 To be hot — weather ;
to feel close and confined — a
room or place ; to swelter.
3'^^qrf a. Squat, cowering,
sitting close.
^■^^r a. Merely boiled —
greens, &c.; boiled without salt
and pepper. 2 Squatting.
^^^r c See 3-^r^r.
3'^i'R;;. Dressed by boiling.
2 Scalded.
^T^^cfr^^S" pi. Rice husked
and cleaned after having been
scalded.
-i+< See ^31fi[^' [heap.
"J^^^r A duno;hill or rubbish-
^TqR^T'Jr V. c. To scratch — as
rats, &c. from the ground. 2
To scratch with incisions. 3 fig.
To elicit secrets by artful in-
terrogatories ; to pump : to force
or draw on (a quarrel) by insult
and provocation. r^^
3"^kp. of ^OT Scratched,
3'^^Disentanglement,lit.fig.
3'^^'T ?'. c. To disentangle.
2 To split. 3 fig. To expound.
V. i. To expand — a bud, fruit, &c.
2 To become clear, disentangled.
T^c?!^IT^c^ f\ Reiterated and
idle tying and untying, doing
and undomg. [tangled, &c.
7^^h p. of ^^^"^ Disen-
T^qS* f. Boiling, bubbling up.
Z^^^l V. i. 'l"o boil. V. c.
To boil. 2 To gather in (sums
due, victuals, &c. as alms). 3 To
decoct (herbs, drugs, &c.)
^■^^r Gatherings (of dues
of money, &c.) from the pea-
sants by the Hakkddrs.
31T^r /. Ebullition. y.^J,^.
2 tig. A sudden ardor, v. ^.
3 Swelling over (of affection,
anger, &c.) v. ?J.
-i4)a5|cf f. Gathering in (of
sums due) ; collecting (of vic-
tuals) by begging from door to
door. 2 Sums or alms so col-
lected. 3 The fees in kind exact-
ed by the '^^^IT, &c. from
garden stuff, &c. brought to mar-
ket. 4 The collections by vil-
lage-officers of dues from the
7f:r5T
58
T^R
ryots, o The memoranduin, sent
round to the ."t^T^oRxrl an-
nouncing the amount of eacli
instahnent due.
31f;f^r Sultriness. 2 The
practice of taking in regularly
a certain quantity (milk, &c.);
making periorlical jiaymcnts :
such quantity regularly taken, o
A decoction of tamarinds, &c.
used in scouring blackened sil-
ver : the application of such
decoction, r. "5, ^K.
3-tefr, 7J?f r a. Squatting,
^■f^^^r See ^^^\.
3"^K A heap of earth
scratched up. 2 Mucus of the eyes.
^■^ p. (s) Spoken.
^i'tET ore?. In the lump; by
wholesale. 2 By the great ; by
the quantity of ^vork accom-
plished; by contract-labour paid.
^i^ f. s Speech or speaking.
3'TTrr f. Tenure of laml at
some stipulated sum (lower than
the assessment).
3-^r5r%^/. Land held in
the gross instead of at a rate per
biffha.
3"^ ad. In the lump or gross.
3"TfriTPT 71. Conjectural mea-
surement ; roughly guessing.
3"^^/. The first ploughing
of a field, m. «. A stone-mortar.
3'^s:<%y. Turning up the
ground ; breaking uj), taking to
pieces.
ZT^^^ 17, c. To j)lon;4h a
field the first time. 'J To un-
screw, break uji. 3 fig. To uproot.
r. i. To become loose or to fall
to |)icces — any machine.
gr^cili^clai ■ /; General or
hurried breaking up and pulling
to pieces (of a machine, i^c.)
3"?^o(f| f. A small wooden or
stone-mortar. 2 A whirlpool.
^^m A riddle. 2 A pro-
verbial saying of covert signifi-
rancc. ' ^f.^,
^^^ (s) Source, origin, lit.
^■q^rf?^ ,.. c. R To point, or
liold menacingly (a stick, &c.)
^■JT^T/. Gathering in (of mo-
nies due). 2 Unravelling (of
entangled thread), .'i Monies
gathered in. n. c Eruption (of
measles, &c.) [wards the east.
3"iT^cT /. The east. ad. To-
^JT^cTRT^SJcTr A name for
t^ie sun. [rise to sunset.
^n^efWr^SfcTr ad. From siin-
^IT^ See 3^^^, sig. 1, 3.
^Tr^^T V. c. To disentangle —
hair, thread, &c. 2 To gather in
monies due.
3-iT^afr .y_ f. To levigate. 2
To spit out. 3 To divulge (a se-
cret). 4 To bring up (the cud)
under rumination. 5 To yield
under levigation. v. i. To vomit.
3-Jir,3^r ad. Without speak-
ing, moving, doing ; without a
profession ; without a ])urpose
or motive : without cause : \3-
3IT w-^ tl^rl^ f?^ ; ^ITT ^^,
^Wl ^iff ; ^1 5^1- ^Jft "S"!-
3"^r^ ad. Without occasion,
idly.
37Tr^"r V. c. See ^-JRIK^. 9
To throw. 3 To gather in mo-
nies due.
3-fIRqr/. Gathering in (of
monies due). 2 Monies gathered.
ZmoS^ V. c. To levigate. 2
To waste away (one's body) as
in service. 3 fig. To hold under
a course of discipline. 4 To
reiterate (an intimation, &e.)
Tffr^, ^n^ ad. See ^^\^
-3"JTRr a. Strong — a smell.
3^ a. (s) Fierce, rough —
speech ; atrocious — an act. 2
Strong — a smell.
^W^ a. Strong — a smell.
Allrlb. Strong smelling.
3-q-?['7T, Zn^\^ f, A strong
smell.
-^TTR Beginning. 2 The force,
brunt (of a disease, of periodical
rains).
3"^% /. See ^w:m'
-3^^ a. Open, clear : free
from disguise : public, popular.
f. Holding up (of rain) ; fairness
(of weather). 2 Notoriety (of
a fact).
H-q-^irrsR, 3-q-T^tT/. Opening
and shutting with reiteration
(of a door or box, of the eyes,
&c.) ; clearing and lowering (as
of clouds) ; unveiling and veil-
ing gen.
^^^ V. c. To open. 2 fig.
To disclose, divulge, v. i. To
open. 3 To hold up — rain. 4
To become favourable — fortune.
^^^J a. Open. 2 Clear. 3
Exposed. 4 Public. 5 Fair —
weather. 6 Naked — from the
waist upwards. 7 Bare, bald,
offensively plain.
TET^Rrry^r a. Wholly un-
clothed.
jq"^rfr^^r a. Having the
u])per parts of the body uncover-
ed. 2 fig. Destitute.
S'SfS'Frr^r Au unre pressed,
unblushing front or mien. 2 fig.
Vindication. 3 Exemption from
censure.
3^r^ or "^r f. Temporary
fairness (of tl)e weather).
3-'^ a. High. 2 Exalted, lit.
fig. 3 Very steep. 4 High — a
note. ad. Aloft, high in the air.
T^^iT ,.. c. To snaj) up and
jioeket; to pick pockets, v. i.
To take up money on loan or
goods on credit, but ever with
the implication of fraudulent
intention.
3"q"^r Swindling, shop-lift-
ing. 2 An impressicm upon the
mind so vivid as to produce a
dream. 3 An earnest looking for.
3^$r /. Hiccough. V. ^.
3"^^?Tr a. One addicted to
sharper-tricks, a ijickjiocket. 2
An extensive Ijorrower of monies,
&c. iqion tick.
T^^aSTOj y_ I Xo spill; to
rise on agitation, and flow over.
2 To swell and over flow — tanks,
&c. 3 To work — the bile.
^■^oyy. An assault, v. ^T. 2
]{eviving. /•, ?§[. 3 Inciting.
^ llaibing, restoring (a bank-
vdHt*'
59
^Ft
rupt, &c.) 5 Raising by a com-
bined effort.
Zrl^^U f. Raising, &c.
S'^^T'T V. i. To rise — boils
upon the body. 2 To advance in
height ; to shoot up— animals or
plants. V. c. To raise. '6 fig. To
undertake. 4 To incite. 5 To
catch up and pocket.
3^c^^RiT /. Carrying a
person by seizing and holding
his arms and legs. Hence, fig.
A general rising against and
turning out (as of a public of-
ficer).
3"=q'^^r p. of 3-^^ot Lift-
ed up ; i. e. appointed, ordered,
allowed, &c. at the will and
pleasure of: ^o T^3IT^-^T*r.
^iTc^^c^r ^^l A term for
the business of a poor man (of
one livins; from hand to mouth).
3'^75T3"^?5"y. A general and
hurried, or a frequently-repeated,
lifting up and carrying off (as of
baggage, traps, &c.) 2 Tossing
and tumbling about.
3"^?^r a. That stays only a
few days; a sojourner. Used
reproachfully. 2 See ^xf^T,
S'^^f A rising ground ; a
mound ; a bump upon the body
or a thing. [costly.
^■^r a. Superior or more
3"^ Id m. n. Impatience
under ; weariness of, state of
urgedness (to quit a place).
3"^2:^ V. i. To be sick or
weary of.
^^r^ a. Tall, high.
3'^rq^/. Taking (of goods)
upon credit. 2 Goods so pur-
chased.
3"^rqr?Tr n. That sells upon
or that lives upon ^'^iqrT-
5f=q"R^ V. i. To grow tall. 2
To form or swell out — the
breast of a female. 3 To rise ;
^^\m^ V. c. To erect— a
3'1'^cV a. (s) Proper, suit-
^' . ^better.
^"^1 f. Height, a. Superior,
<r^ITr A rising ground; a
mouad.
3"^ a. s High. [expression.
T^IT (s) Pronunciation,
^^rT%r a. s (Proper) to
be pronounced. ^^^ ^^^^^^
"^^K^ V. c. To pronounce,
^■wrKcr p. (s) Expressed,
uttered.
^-3TT See ^:^\^.
^rr^tJS" p. (s) Left, rejected ;
leavings. 2 fig. Enjoyed, occu-
[tasting.
To defile by
rooting out ;
pied.
3"=^0"? s Utter
destruction. ^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^
-3^^?^ a. That roots out ;
^^^^ y. c. To root out : to
demolish.
<J'^j3^r^ (s) Breathing; esp.
used of deep respiration. 2 An
air-hole (of water-conduit). 3
A receptacle constructed at in-
tervals along the course of a
water-conduit.
T^tJirrT /. (s) Sustaining
life upon the corn picked up
around barns and thrashing-
floors. 2 That so gleans corn
and subsists.
ST^tJrf A festival or holiday.
^TSf^OT V. i. To recover : to
return to pristine spirit, strength,
correct conduct— an animal, a
child. 2 To become somewhat
knowing — a dull scholar, [left.
3"5rfr a. Right, — ojiposed to
^SfS" a. Bright, glittering.
2 Fair, of light complexion. 3
Glossy.
3"5fc3'(^r /. Burnishing, fur-
bishing. 2 fig. Among school-
boys. Refreshening of the hand-
writing by occasional writing oft'
of the letters acquired. 3 fig.
Scolding or abusing roughly, v.
v-i^ai'Ji ^j, c. To burnish. 2
To kindle. 3 To light up. v. i.
To take fire, kindle. 4 To be
brightened — heavens on the ap-
proach of day ; to become
blooming — flushed eyes.
TST^^f^rar a. Bright, shining.
^■^rrT^ ad. Openly, s. or
'goTUr^T Wakefulness, v. t?^,
%T, ^s. 2 Fearlessness.
3"5n"^ a. Desolate, depopu-
lated.
3"irr^ot See 3-^^07.
^■^^■r f. Desolateness, de-
populated state.
^\f- Respect, deference, v.
%^, ^T'^r, "^^. a. Straight. 2
fig. Just, right. 3 Plain, simple
— a composition, ad. Straight
on : in the right direction.
*\
Z^^ Light. 2 Something
to cast light.
35r:?(T y. ^\ To dawn. 2 fig.
To become fortunate or favour-
able— circumstances, &c.
^^^cTf ad. At dawn, r ,
[camel.
^^ m. n. A dromedary or
^^^ n. A composition of
fragrant ingredients to rub on
the body. 2 The application of
this composition.
^■^r /. Smearing the body
with a composition of sandal and
other fragrant ingredients.
^^1"^/. A female dromedary.
3"?^ V. i. To rise. 2 To rise
figuratively, corresponding with
the English word through the
most of its acceptations. 3 To get
up, i. e. to ache — the head. 4 To
become fresh, blooming — a per-
son, plant, colour. 5 To stand
up against maliciously. 6 To
rise — as a bite, stripe, stroke.
3"Jcrf^rf ad. Haltingly—
comin?, going, &c. [continually.
3r5cTf^^cTr ofZ. Every instant,
3-J^^r, ^E^^\ f. Fidgeti-
ness ; restless agitation : idle
and busy meddling.
3-J?^r fT^?^f ad. At all sea-
sons ; in season and out of sea-
son.
3-J^t^ /. The state of ex-
haustion (of a bullock, &c.)
when it cannot rise, but must
be raised, from the ground, v.
i, or^awun^^of. 2 fig. Utter
destitution,
Tjpf^ V. c. To raise. 2 fig.
To arouse. 3 To excite. 4 To
make to ache (the head).
T^TT
60
"^rHT
S'JT^'Jr ad. Smartly, prompt-
ly-
arjrJW f. Close, curious ex-
amination of subjects with
■wliich we have no business. 2
Officious and malignant bearinp:
to and fro of tales. 3 Bother and
fuss.
ZZ\¥l\ f. Rising and set-
tin<; to la fight, a business, &c.)
•nith ardor and vehemence. -
Kaising (a pauper, &c.) from
poverty and difficulties. 'A In-
citing ; encouraging : abetting.
3^^ V. i. To sally forth
or start up vehemently. 2 To
rise in arms against — robbers,
rebels, petty chieftains.
^■jr^r Rising to go ; de-
campment. 2 Rising (as in arms
against, as from sickness or
from obscurity).
3-1^ V. i. To fly. 2 To caper.
3 To jump over. 4 To hop. 5
To spring upon. 6 To elapse.
To disappear suddenly. 8 To
fade — a color; to be expended —
money, &c. ; to fail — courage,
riclies, &c. 9 To rise from ; to
be disgusted with — affections. Id
To become dry ; to cease to give
milk — a milch animal. 11 To be
fired — a gun. 12 To arise and
prevail — in fighting. 13 To pro-
ceed or act upon confidently
(wealth, power, a promise, &c.)
14 To leap upon — the male of
beasts in covering.
3'?cr3'3cT ad. By hops and
jumps. 2 fig. Skippingly. 3
Ligbtlv, loosely — a report heard.
3-?Fr?m#r/. Flying reports.
3-jp^-Tf ,. c. To scatter. 2
To squander. 3 To turn off; to
evade. 4 To reject contemptu-
ously. 5 Active form of ^^uf.
3-?^f3T^ or -ft /. Scatter-
ing, &c. 2 Profuse expenditure,
squandering. 3 Evading.
3"?tT /. c A stack of un-
thraslied bundles (of rice, &c.,
also of grass).
3"^^*Tr a. A spend-thrift, a
squanderer. 2 That evades.
3r3T A lump of kneaded
dough, [-^-^^^^-^^^^g^-,-^
3"IITTf ad. Scramblingly :
S'TfST a. Prodigal, profuse.
T^'^?:'^ , ^■^rsrj'^T a. That
stays but a short time (in one
place, em])loyment, mind) ; va-
grant. 2 App. to business, &c.
of unenduring character.
^fl f. A leap. V. ^\^, ^^,
V\X- 2 fig. Stretch or reach
(of desire, purpose, &c.) 3 Grain
or money in compensation for
the loan of a bullock upon agri-
cultural employment.
^^r n. The fruit of oil nut-
tree. /. A mouthful of boiled
rice. 2 Oilnut-tree.
^■f r?" A pulse. 2 fig. The fly
or sight of a musket.
«*\
3"vTc=7 n. Oil obtained from
the oilnut-tree. [ing.
3^r*T n. 8 Flying. 2 Jump-
^■'^r a. Deficient. 2 Defec-
tive. 3 Wanting or absent. 4
Inferior. 5 Low or mean.
3"qr?I a. That is of low
price-cloth, &c. ^^^^^^
^qr^irr V. i. To abate : to
3"^ n. A fault, failing.
3rtJ[3'^^ ?z. Scornful speech.
Zr{^^ y. j. To burst through
excessive expansion. 2 To be
stretched. 3 To open, burst.
v.
3'cT<T V. i. To boil up and
flow over. 2 To run with mucus
— eves. 3 To break forth into
erujjtions about the lips, &c. —
a fever : to cause eruptions — a
rough razor. 4 To rise — a blister.
5 To effervesce. (5 To ferment —
milk. 7 To grow rank — corn, &c.
H To become exceeding plenti-
ful— things, &c. 9 To effloresce.
10 To be inflated with pride.
^^^ f. A declivity. 2 De-
clivousness. 3 The north-wind. 4
Decline (as of age). 5/. n. A ford.
(') An inclined plane.
^^cT^^ r. c. To set down. 2
To unload. .3 To bring down. 4
To reduce in height. 5 To carry
across. 6 To transcribe ; to
sketch — a landscape ; to mimic.
7 To reduce (rates). 8 To reduce
in rank : to lower one's pride. 9
To assuage the ardor (of poison,
&c.) 10 To wave (a cocoanut,
&c.) around the head in exor-
cising. 11 To cut off (nose,
tongue, &c.) 12 To cross — a
river. 13 To take off (clothes,
&c.) 14 To throw over ; to l)ring
over and adown slopingly (a
^^^, ^TtiT, w^<:). 15 To
shave clean off (whiskers, &e.)
3"crcq V. i. To descend. 2
To tally, agree with — accounts,
measures, events, with predic-
tions. 3 To alight, stop. 4 To
fall, fail, sink — courage, anger,
fever, prices. 5 To fade, decline.
6 To overripen and rot — a fruit;
to ripen — mangoes in ^'€^. 7
To turn out : '^T ^JT "^^'SJT^^
ap^T ^rf^^ ^T m^T^T. H To get
well, over (as through a disease
or difficulty or a trial). !' To
turn to go. 10 To sink down
into (the mind). 11 To please
(JT^^-iTlT^) . 12 To run in
the bore — a pearl, a trinket.
3'cI^'cTr a. Declivous, sloping :
declining, lit. fig.
3-cT?:cTrTrqT Declining foot-
ing ; tendency dow nwards.
3-cRtq^iTr^ or -=1 /. Declin-
ing state.
TcT^fr^as- -fsrr /. The after-
noon and evening. 2 fig. Ad-
verse times, [half of life.
3-cT^^ri" /. The declining
^■cTTf^ a. Discharge from the
obligation (of a favour, &c.)
^cRfOT/. The north-wind.
3'cTff'T V. c. To boil up —
water.
^^M a. Supine. 2 That (lies,
stands, is) with its face or mouth
upwards.
3-cTRnTrcTRr a. (Turning)
ov(r and over, from back to
belly, from belly to back. v.
3"cTIT Fordableness : a ford.
2 Ferriage. 3 A medicine given
to aiTcst the too potent opera-
tion of a medicine before given ;
a charm or any measure to over-
come (a venomous bite or sting).
4 Th(! subsiding (of the waters
of a flood). 5 Alleviation (as of
a disease) : decline (of wealth,
&c.) () Descent.
3"crfr a. Tbat is on the de-
cline. 2 Inferior. 3 Sinking,
failing.
7rTTr
61
Trmw
S'rlT^^^ror -^^A passenger.
3-cTr?:^r^tr /. An alighting
house (in a village) for travel-
^"^^'rv rv [waters.
3'crrTF'^r f. a pass over
S'criT^J /. A commercial
city. 2 The quarter (of a town)
where travellers alight.
^'crR"^??? n. Port of debar-
cation. 2 Port of touching at
by the way. [ried over.
3cTrT5Tro5- Goods to be fer-
3'cfr^^ 71. The declining
period of life.
^cTKr Product. 2 Agree-
ment, tallying (as of different
measures). 3 A waving around
a person possessed (of a fowl,
&c.) in order to eject the demon.
4 Key to an enigma. 5 A trans-
cript ; a copy. 6 Ferriage. 7
A ferry. S Disgracing. 9 Cast-
ing off clothes. 10 The book in
which copies of hundis are
taken.
g'cff^ c. A person alighted
for a time upon a journey : a
passenger on board a ship.
^Tcfp^^r a. A ferryman.
3-crrf 55- or -S'r /. (h) Haste.
S'cirfST a. Hasty, impatient.
3"^jr f. (s) Eagerness
after ; anxious desire. rgjj.^
3'^rJcr J), Excited by de-
3"^^ (s)ExcelIence;flourish-
ing condition. 2 Abundance.
^3^9" a. Excellent, best.
^^IfcT^^jy. (s) A cow given
to Brahmans by a dying person,
that he may die easily and v\ith
his sins forgiven.
^tT^T a. (s) Excellent. 2
Chief, principal.
^tTITTTI'cT f. Emancipation
from personal existence, and ab-
sorption into the divine essence.
2 A happy death ; death at a holy
place, or upon a good day, or at a
lucky juncture. 3 Fair progress
in (a science).
•3x1^ J. (s) The north, n. (s)
An answer. 2 In law. A defence.
3 Used in the sense of mere
speech: fll^i^ ^o f\ tl^^T
■^T^lf. 4 The common differ. I^T^^'PT^ a. s That raises, sets
ence in arith. progression, a.
In comp. Exceeding or greater ;
farther : ■cf=ilTi^^fr. prep. Af-
ter : ^iT-TiT ^t %Trr ^T=^l?r.
S'tT^^H n. Funeral rites, v.
^TJT.
3-Tl^^r5^ Futurity. 2 The
time of death. 3 After time.
3x1^45? The way to ^^'f. 2
fig. A course of austerities, &c.
in preparation for death.
3=TT^q?:Tf f. See 3cl^qrrf.
3^^q¥r (s) The defendant or
his cause. 2 The respondent or
his replies and solutions. 3 The
minor proposition in a syllogism.
4 The fortnight of the waning
moon. 5 A rejoinder.
3=^T'T5r/. (s) Worship and
dismissal, at the close of a cere-
mony, of the divinities summon-
ed and set up at the commence-
ment of it. [of hfe.
3tTT^ The declining years
^Tfr^rfr In law. The de-
fendant.
3TT^°^^^r /. Arrangement
for the future. 2 Testamentary
disposition. 3 Funeral obsequies.
^tTT^^ s An evidence on
the defence.
[making an answer.
StT^^R a, (s) Incapable of
3Tfr['^/. The north-wind.
3^Ur^rfr s In law. The
defendant.
^TTn^"^ n. (s) The northing
of the sun ; progress northwards
from the tropic of Capricorn.
3-Trrrt n. (s) The latter half.
3=^nTT?: ad. (s) More and
more onwards ; gradually.
^TfF'T" p. (s) Descended ;
gone over, lit. fig. 2 Released
from the obligation of (a promise,
kindness, vow).
"\
S'tT^^ a. s That incites.
3tT^'T n. (s) Instigation : an
incentive.
^TTr^fcT J). Incited.
^■r^TS" a. Shallow.
3?-TR ji. (s) Rising, standing.
up.
3^2Trq^ „. (s) Setting up, lit.
fig. 2 fig. Removing (from an
""^Z^- [ed. 2 Removed.
3"r§f[fTrr p. Raised, establish-
3T^'^cf p. Risen, got up.
^n^rcT/. Rising. 2 Risen
state. r,- • r 1
^ [tion; commg forth.
^'^\t^ f. (s) Birth or produc-
3^^ n. Produce, profit, p.
Produced, born.
3rg5riT^r a. That lives from
hand to mouth.
3?T^lfpFFr That lives upon
a patrimony. 2 See ^tq-'^vi^.
39T^'?^RTr a. That perishes
as soon as produced ; ephemeral.
T^Tr^TfT V. c. To eradicate.
3^qrcr (s) A portent: any
natural phenomenon. 2 fig.
Ravage, havock : mischievous
pranks (as of children).
3rTfcrr a. Mischievous — a
child. 2 Adventurous, bold.
3^7IT^ a. 8 That creates
or produces.
3^!Tr?"''T V. c. To create.
3':Hi<^'1 n. s Creation or
production. j-^j^^^^^^
3^7fr^cr p. Created or pro-
3c3:f^0T n. s Illustrating or
com])aring.
3iq-5T^ V, c. To illustrate.
3tXr^r /. s A figure in
rhetoric. Comparison or illustra-
tion. 2 A simile, v. q.
3cq-ra'cr p. Illustrated, &c.
^^'T (s) Abandonment. 2
A precept, rule. 3 Giving up
(of a temple) to the idol ; de-
dication.
3r^T^'T n. (s) Giving up.
3^^^ See 3cgT^.
3^^rrC (s) Ardor, alacrity. 2
Joy. 3 Rejoicing or merry-mak-
ing ; a festival ; a jubilee.
3^m?;ff^ /. Fervor of
mind; earnestness.
TrmW
62
3"qTT
S^^TTf'iT^ DesJroyinf;^ of
zeal : ilispirited state. 'J Distur-
bance of festivities. [wards.
^^9^ «• Eager ; excited to-
^^^5" p. s. Abandoned,
?i^'^'^ "P- [away.
3"h$fH" p. s Thrown up, out,
^^^^T w?. 7^^m n. s Throw-
in? u)!, out, away.
3'^^T^ V. c. To throw up.
3^T5r a. Shallow. 2 fig.
GuHeless. [foot of a post.
3^5rr/, The socket of the
-3T^ or -^/. p A white ant.
3"?'l'^ ad. (s) To-morrow.
3"^ n. (s) Water.
^^a. (s) Many, much.
3^*^ s The ocean : a sea.
3"?TT^cT a. Pufted up and in-
solent; proudly disregardful.
3T^r A trader.
"3T^ (s)Risinoj. 2 Emersion
(of Venus or Mercury). ',i Pro-
ceeding, springing from (as of
flowers, &c. froin trees) : rising
on or in (as of hairs, &c. on the
body, or passions in the mind) :
5^qT^?J, ^T«l^^. 4 fig.
Rising into eminence; emerging
from poverty or obscurity.
-3Tr n. (s) The abdomen:
the stomach. 2 Womb, .'i Ascites,
or enlargement of the abdomen
from dropsy or tlatulence.
3'^R?r?" Sustentation or
supporting of life : a subsistence.
■S'^^r /. A disease of the
head in which the hairs fall off.
•3"^ An exclamation used
by the worsliipers of Devi when
begging; corresponding to A-
rise ! Awake !
3?R(s) One of the five vi-
tal airs, — that which rises up the
throat and passes to the head.
3Tfr a. (s) Generous. 2 Bold,
ample, free, — opp. to mean, piti-
ful, contracted.
^TTT^"^ All appellative for a
generous man. 'J An ironical term
^rrrrft (fr^ n. A term for
one liberal upon the property of
another.
3"^^ a. (s) Sad, sorrowful.
2 Regardless. 3 lig. Gloomy — a
P^'"'^^- [of Gosavis.
3"2rr^r a stoic. 2 An order
3-5THR a. A neutral. 2 Re-
gardless. .'5 Inditferent — an ac-
tion. 4 Sad. [an instance.
3"^I?T'T n. (s) An example:
3?f /'. Ashes of frankincense,
fi. Brown, [crops of one's field.
^^\^ Traffic. 2 App.to the
3"?R A rat : a mouse, r^.^.^^
33"^^ (s) Glomerous fig-
-3T^ n. Oil of frankincense.
3"friT(s)Spring,source, lit, fig.
-3TR" (s) An ejaculation; an
interjection, utterance expres-
sive of sentiment. 2 A sudden
exclamation. 3 Utterance.
^^m V. c. To utter.
^■ffq^T n. (s) Kindling. 2
fig. Exciting. 3 Any thing that
kindles.
•\
3"C5T (s) Purpose: mean-
ing, mind. 2 Pointing out.
3W^ V. c. To intend. 2 To
purpose. ^ [contemplated.
^^^ a. To be purposed or
^■^JrCy. Rudeness.
3^rr (1^ (s) pop. -J'^J Rude,
im])udcnt.
^'^^'T i\ c. To rescue, save,
deliver : to emancipate from a
low form of existence. rUrers
3-^^?, 3-^R^ a. s That dc-
3"^rr Rescuing. 2 Deliver-
ance ; final salvation.
3"g:f^ a. (s) That suddenly
springs »ip or appears ; — used of
ants, locusts, gnats, &c. n. A
swarm (as of ants, &c.) suddenly
appearing. [o Manifestation.
^T.^ (s) Birth, ])rodiiction.
3Tf^ V. i. To be born. 2
To be manifested.
^-Rr^sf, ^r^^ a. s That
bursts forth, that sprouts — a
plant or vegetable.
3"^^ (s) Business. ^y^^^^^^
3"?IHT a. Ever eno-a^ed, di-
3^t ad. To-morrow, [-^bout.
3"^tF a. s Enoajjed in or
^ BO
3"?7fiT (s) Business. 2 An
occupation. 3 Strenuous exer-
tion.
^^m\ a. Diligent, assiduous.
2 That follows some profession.
^r^^ a. s Disturbed. 2
Affected with fear, anxiety, &c.
^^ (s) Disturbance (from
grief, &c.) [^^T.
^^^ ad. In the lump. See
Tq'^DT ^1. c. To rip open ; to
open the seam. 2 To strip; to
tear off roughly (bark).
3"^^frrT n. Conjectural mea-
surement.
3'5:K'Jr r. i. c To vomit.
^T'^/. Prodigality. ^^^j„^,^
3-'^?frr, 3-HTSrqZJTf a, A pro-
3-i-:Tarq or ■•%/. Dusting,
throwing about.
*^
Tq^tT ^5. c. To throw about
(dust, &c.) 2 To winnow. 3 fig.
To disperse : to expend lavishly.
V. i. To flee in every direction
— a routed army : to run from
home — a child : to start up and
set to (abusing, beating, &c.)
3-!-:rH^fr /. Prodigality. 2
Scolding vehemently, v. ^TS.
T^S^r -^qr a. Prodigal, la-
vish, [about, spending, &c.
TtToTITq'^y. Great throwing
^^^l^ 11. c Spring tide. 2
The extraordinary flow at the
equinoxes. 3 The desire of copu-
lation ; — csp. in the brute crea-
tion. 4 fig. Flower of youth.
^'■^flT Buying and selling
ujion trust, or ni)on borrowed
money, v. ^^. 2 The money
owed u])on goods so jnirehased
or sold : such goods. 3 Debt not
bearing interest ; a loan : goods
lent or borrowed.
^•iK a. Roving, run-about—
a child. 2 "Wild — a plant, ad-
At large — cattle, children. 3
Wildly — growing.
^wrs"
63
^TTTT
3^Tr§"^r /. Wild roving;
scampish vagabondism. [hot.
3^ «. Very hot; burning
3^cT a. s High. n. Altitude
(of a heavenly body).
S^JTtT a. (s) Haughty, ar-
rogant. 2 Intoxicated, lit. fig.
3^Tf^r3" s Delirium.
3"^^ a. Poet. Escaped from
consciousness of personality, and
swallowed in the deity or in
divine contemplation.
3^fr /. s The fifth of the
five states of human existence —
that of emancipation from the
thraldom of Maya, and absorp-
tion in the contemplation of
truth (the divine essence).
3'^o5'0T y. c. &: i. To uproot.
V. imp. Poet. To work and
heave (in the stomach).
3"=3TR" (s) Arrogance. 2 In-
toxicating influence (of spirits,
&c.) [or infuriates, lit. fig.
<i'*ir^ a. s That intoxicates
3"(^ITo5'^ V. i. To open or
expand.
^■^r^^ n. s Opening (of
eyes, a flower, &c.): openin
(of an eclipse). 2 Twinkling.
3"'q"{rc7cT p. s Opened or
blown — eyes, &c.
■^'5^ «• s Having the face
set towards, about (to go or do) :
^■^T s Twinkling of eye-
lids. 2 Opening (of eyes, &c.)
3 fig. Opening of the mind.
^'gr^r^S" The height of the
Sim's heat. [of the day.
S-^gTcTT^CI^r a(L In the heat
3'^r35T The liot season. 2
The dry season. 3 pi. The hot
dysury. 4 Orphan-state.
3r^r^ry. Heat of weather;
the heat of the hot season. 2
The hot dysury. v, ^TIT, =?!•
^'^fcS" n. c A hot spring.
3'tT^^'T" ??,. (s) An instrument;
a means. 2 An element. 3 ??.
A common term for the articles
used in ^^^5TT.
3^K (s) A favour ; a kind-
ness. 2 Benefit, good.
3-q^R:^^rcf /. Thankful ac-
knowledgment of benefits or
kindnesses.
3q^rn«. Gracious. 2 Grate-
ful. 3 That assists, [tial sta^e.
Tq'^lT (^-) Beginning. 2 Ini-
3^^^ A monitor.
^■TIT?" s A satellite : an as-
teriod. 2 The ascending or the
descending node.
^■(T^fr (s) An application (of
means) to efl'ect ; trial of reme-
dies : any one of the applications
made, used, or employed. 2 A
common term for the particulars
and points of idol-worship. 3 A
term for the particulars and
points of medicine. 4 Treat-
ment— esp. medical. 5 Attention
and courtesies (to guests, &c.)
3-q^rR:^=f[^ n. A familiar
name. [source.
3"<T5r Produce. 2 Birth,
g-qifoy ^^ j^ "Yo spring ; to be
'^oi'ii- [nature.
^■qilcf ad. From birth ; by
3-q^f^sr Birth and growth,
rise and progress. ^^^, ^^^^^
^TT^rrf^ a. s That lives by
S'q^rf'T n. s Living, sid^sist-
ing. 2 Means of subsistence. 3
Support.
-3^^- /. Exuberance (esp. of
rich dishes at a feast). 2 Satiety.
i'. a. 3 c A blow with a stick
held ill both hands, v. ^1^.
TqZ'^r f. Plucking up or out.
^q?:^ V. c. To pluck out. 2
fig. To draw from (money, &c.)
by fraudulent aits ; to pluck. 3
To catch up furtively, v. i. To
come up and fall out — a nail,
peg, tree.
^qnr^^r or -^r See^'^r'^rr^q.
-i4d^^ A term for an offici-
ously intermeddling and quarrel-
some fellow. [pocket-
3'qZ5Tr a. A sharper, a pick-
3"q^^ V. c. To pluck up or
out. V. i. To come up and fall
out — a peg, tree.
"^^l a. Upside down, on
the belly or mouth ; prone.
3"q^5T (s) Lues Venerea.
^q^^a. Afflicted with ^-q-
3^f?5Tr /. pi. s The minor
points of the compass.
^■qr^^ p. s Instructed,
taught. 2 Advised. 3 Com-
municated— knowledge of a
mantra, &c.
^■q?^ s A demi-god.
^■q^^ (s) Instruction, teach-
ing. 2 Advice, counsel. 3 Ira-
partation of, or initiation in, a
mantra.
3"q?"?M a. That instructs or
teaches. 2 That advises. 3 That
imparts a mantra.
^'q^'^ot V. c. To teach : to
instruct. 2 To exhort,
^q?'^ a. Instructed, &c.
3"q5:f (s) Trouble. 2 Demo-
niac possession.
^-qsefr, 3-qjrff^ a. Produced
by demons — some disease. 2
Unwholesome — an article of
food. 3 Troublesome.
3^frq n. (s) An island. 2
An insular portion of the earth.
^■q'^FJ (s) A term for the se-
condaiy metals. 2 A mineral
body.
3qv:C=rsEcho. [,;,,,,.
^'q-fnr n. Suburbs or pre-
^q^^T^^^.s Investiture with
a thread to be worn over the left
shoulder and under the right.
3"q^r^ n, (s) Family name or
surname.
3'q'l^ n. Spectacles.
3-qqr^/. (s) Establishing,
evincing. 2 Theory. 3 Demons-
trated conclusion. 4 In arith. or
geoni. Proving or proof. 5
i\Ieans, expedients.
3^Hr/. s A concubine.
^m^^ a. s That states ;
that establishes.
TqqiT'^ V, c. To state, repre-
sent. 2 To prove.
TtpTT
64
^mf^
^m^^ n. s Stating, propos-^H<|c6 a. p Surplus, spare.
in^. 2 Proving, establisliing. 3TR"f3^ y. i. To run over—
3MMr r^cfyj. s Stated, kc. 2 a vessel, a river.
I'rovccl, &c. [posed, &c. ^qi:\^{ Surplus stock, o'oods.
^■qqr^ a. To be stated, pro
3^^!^ 7j.(s)A minor Puran.
Tq^rr^r a. s That enjoys ;
that is in tlie fniitiuu of. 2 That
experiences.
STTiTR (s) Fruition, use. 2
Experience. 3 Cohabitation.
3Wfll^ V. c. To enjoy, &c.
See the noun.
3"qJr^ (s) Rubbing (the
limbs). 2 Treading, squeezing :
harassing.
3^r /. (s) A simile. 2
Rescniblance. 3 A resemblance
(as a ])iet"ire, an image, &c.)
3'q3Tr^r/. (s) a wet-nurse. 2
A foster-mother.
3TTHH w. (s) An illustration.
2 One of the fo\ir kinds of evi-
dence ;— tliat of analogy.
3-qqRiM a. Knowable by
or money. - Preponderance. 3
A false charge. 4 A ]n-ovoking
act. 5 Recompence of evil. v.
mK, 0 The weight put into
the scale with the article under
weighing. 7 Advantage over. H
Backing, helping. S* Excess upon
certain articles (oil, ghee, &c.)
given by the vender. 10 Any tri-
iiing addition fas a bundle, a few
sticks, &c.) thrown over the load
A weight
<iMtiel< (s) Drawing: in or
together; winding up; sum-
mi"? lip- [producing.
^^^^rq^l n. s Occasioning,
^■q^^rq^ p. Occasioned, &c.
3"qr^2TcT p. (s) Approached,
arrived. 2 Known, extant.
3'qR2rfcr / The presence,
freshness, state of being at hand
and at command (of a science).
2 The state of being present. 3
The arising into the mind :
TTJT ^^^T ^^^ ^^T'Cl ^°
upon a beast, to produce equili-
brium of the two sides.
^■qTf prep, s Over or above ;
at or towards the upper side of.
2 On or upon. 3 Upon this;
upon that ; besides.
^■qfr (s) A sojourner ; a
lodger. 2 A tenant having no
right of occupancy : as opp. to
«Jt?l^<1. [further.
3"qrr ad. (In notes.) After,
ance.
Illustrated or zq^^^^ p. s Gained, got.
upon a beast. 11 ,, ,
placed upon one side of the load I S'q^IT s (corr. from 3"qH"K)
3qilT^ p.
compared.
3"qpTFT f. Analogical know-
Ifdu'c. 2 llescmblance.
3"qH^r n. The subject of
an illustration.
S^J^T rt, (s) Useful; con-
venient for any end.
3-q^[^ (s) Use. 2 Need of.
^qT ad. After. 2 Up the
coast ; towards the north, prpp.
r.evond, besides. 2 After, s. Supe-
riority. /•. 3"^. [proach.
jqr^q^r Unmerited re-
3^^'"-qr or -^W^^ a. Emp-
tv, shallow — s])eech, &;c.
3-qr?^?r Demand (as of
service) over and above. 2 As-
sertion of mastery over. 'A An
ovcr-recompencc (esp. for an ill
ofHce). r, ^t:.
Z^T^w: f, Tlie outer rind:
as opp. to ^t?l^ ^T^.
3-q?!rr5(:I /•. (s) Gain. 2
Knowledge.
Z^W^^^ 3-q?^iqTTR p. That is
under jiresent apprehension;
extant. 2 Arising as proilt, ac-
cruing, flowing in.
^■qqR n. (s) A giirden ; an or-
chard, [age — esy). a girl.
^■q^^ a. Of marriageable
3'qq^^ v. A cloth worn loose-
ly over the shoulders. 2 A cant
term for a kept mistress.
3-q^[^ (s) A fast. ^^^ a.
Easting. 2 Impransus.
^■qr^^Eir /' Profane science.
^^l^ST ;;. s Seated or sitting
near. 2 Seated gen.
^■q^^ A minor Veda,
3"q5T^^ A synonymous word.
3"q^5T Assuagement , abatc-
niiiit (as of anger, fever, &c.)
3^f^ «(/. Afterwards. ;>rr/;. 1 3"^^^ n. (.s) Abating. 2
After. , Any thing that allays.
A slight refreshment.
3-qcr^ (s) Deriding, laugh-
i».^' 'I*-., [jeer.
3"qi"[^crT v. i. To Deride,
Tq?T?H"RqT n. A laughing-
stock, [laughable, n. Derision.
^qi'Rq' a. s llediculous ;
3"qo5"y. The state of ground
satvn-ated (as after heavy rains),
and burst in numberless places
bv gushing rillets.
3-qsr5[q^r^ /. Saturated
ground.
S^qs^ V. i. To dissolve
(through saturation) in rillets
and streams — the ground in
rainy weather. 2 To emit blood
at every j)ore — the gums, &c. 3
To fall out — trees from looseness
of the ground.
^"qcJ^T a. Saturated with
moisture — the ground.
^qiT 7). A minor branch,
portion, apiH-ndant ceremony
(of a religious observance, Sec);
any supplementary act or article.
3"qfcT s Margin, a. (s) Near,
proximate.
7qi^q" n. s Penultimate. 2
The one coming before the last.
^qr*^ Z'. A mischievous, an-
noying (person, &c.) ; a trouble.
3'qn'^ s An occasion. 2 A
discriminative property. 3 A
nickname. 4 A cause. 5 In the
Vedanta ^o is app. to cer-
tain natiu-al forms or properties,
considered as coverings ot s|)irit.
() /. A troublesome (person.
aflairj &c.)
^crr^ir
65
^«T
3"C[rfJJT 'flip priest that con-
ducts all the saciifices and cere-
monies (of a family, village, &c.)
3"qr'--3TR s A spiritual pre-
cc))toi-. [scheme, expedient.
S'TR (s) A remedy: a
3'W^cr p. (s) Acquired,
srained.
^^\^ See s^nr.
^■qr^r See 3-qrf r.
^Tf^ Fasting or a fast, esp.
religiously. [worships.
3^W^ a. (s) That serves,
3"Tr^''JT V. c. To worship.
a'fTr^cTR/. Attending to and
supplying; the common wants and
nccf ssities of. v. xit"?. 2 Going
thiougli wants and privations.
3-q-refrigrg a term [for aus-
terities and penriuces. v. gj^.
^■fTrff^r /, (s) Religious ser-
vice. 2 Observing (a rite, &c.)
^■qre'JT^ /. Dying with hun-
ger. 2 Pinching the belly ; stint-
edness.
^nr^'frt. Fasting. 2 Hungry.
^m, ^m\ ^\z\ ad. with
empty belly.
^'TqT^ a. s That delays.
S^^T^rq-, 3-q^q- a. Worthy to | g-'q^j^t
be overlooked, slij^hted.
•3'TiT'T" c. c. To view with un-
concern : to disregard.
^q^r/. (t^) Indolent putting
off; delaying. 2 Overlooking
[glected.
(an ofl'encc).
3"Tl<rr^ /. Overloolkecl, ne-
■3'gr?5T^s Introduction.
^"q'rq-q- n. (s) See 3rqr^.
3"%to a. Fasting. 2 That is
keeping a fast.
^■qT'^tT" y. ?;. To grow rapidly
— plants, &c. 2 To rise in blis-
ters— the lips, &c. 3 To ferment
and rot — fruits, &e. 4 To swell
and puff from conceit.
'3"'lT?'f'J'^ V. I. To turn over.
2 To turn up the eyes (in death,
&c.) V. c. To turn upou the con-
trary face or side or into the
contrary direction.
9
3-qj?:R:§7^n3: «. Upside
down ; inside out ; hinder end-
foremost.
^■qR^f^rr a. Reverse, inverse.
TiT^nfiTH^Tr /. General mis-
rule or disonler. ^^j^i^^^j ^^^
^^'^[Z\^W^\ /. A near-
v.. r~.
<jq;rr2:^TcSTSf /^ A term for a
desperate dare-devil fellow : a
madcap.
3rqT?:r2riTf^'T n. Quarreling in
return for love or kmdness.
3^RR:5Jn:qq'^ n. Contrary
cleverness, i. e. folly.
TqTo5"ot V. i. To open— a bud,
&c. 2 fig. To expand, dilate —
the heart. 3 To become favour-
jible-ground. [-^y the plough.
-^qrS'tT y. 2, Xo be turned up
^■fHRqT^r a. Of rapid growth.
^■"TrRqT^ ^r^ n. A growing
and enlarging bone.
^Tim\ See 3-qhn3:r.
^"^2" a. Musty and mouldy
— fruits, grain, &c., or the smell
of them : foul, foetid — the air of
damp and confined places. 2
leather hot — water, &c. 3
Spoiled through forced ripening-
frnit.
r. i. To become
musty, &c. 2 To spoil through
too rapid ripening.
Z^Z\^ f. Tile smell of musty
and mouldy fruits, flowers, &c.
^"^"^ V. i. To swelter. 2 To
spoil through Iieat and moisture ;
to ferment and rot — fruit, Ike. ; to
become fusty — corn, the cellar :
to work towards suppuration — a
boil. V. imp. To be close and
sultry.
■^^^ Glomerous fig-tree. 2
n. The fruit of it.
S'^Wrnr A term for one's
own threshhold when we are
about to cross it and proceed on
a long journey.
3^?:jr Threshhold, the
ground under the door.
^^T^^^ f. House-tax.
'3''^n The under, and, some-
times, the upper cross piece of
a door-frame. 2 Housing or
housen.
^^Ut^??- n. Used of a
person of whom we are but sel-
dom favoured with the sight ; an
angel-visitor,
3"^^?? -5^ a. Countless. 2 ad.
Without specification. 3 Unde-
cidedly.
3-^f^ot y. c. To make to
swelter. 2 To mellow (mangoes,
&c.) : to quicken through ap-
plication of heat (eggs) : to sup-
purate (a boil).
^^r^Heat; sultriness. 2 fig.
Substance, property. 3 Heat-
ing. V. ■^.
3'sjr^ n, A rising on the
body ; a blind tumor,
^^f^ a. Rather high.
^^^ or -^r Gushing out
(water, &c.) 2 fig. A sudden
bursting forth (of grief, &c.)
^iT^T pron. (s) Both.
TJTir^'^ n. The two families
of a wedded pair.
Tq-q-JTI^r «. That goes to, on,
in, &c. the two (directions, sides).
'^^^'^ a. Amphibious.
^^^cT: ad. (s) On both sides.
'^^^\ a. Both, twain, the
two.
^iT'^T^rj^ «.s Double-faced.
^■iT^crrf fi:f a. Flowing in two
courses.
3"iT5T^ ad. s On both sides.
S-lT^R^r a. (s) That regards
the two sides.
3"lT?T?"ft n. pi The two pri-
vate vents of the body, [parties.
'^^^W'^ pi. The two sides or
^^^^m ^WRa. AUke in both
points of view. 2 Unbiassed, im-
jiartial.
3-iT?TF?^'^r a. s That con-
nects Ijoth sides. 2 In gram. A
copulative or conjunction.
3'lTr a. Erect. 2 Lying along
(not across): long. 3 That is ou
foot— a business. 4 Standing in
the field — unreaped crops. 5
Standing up (come forward) to
^[in^
66
T^rjr
act : ^T^f^ ^IW^TH ^HT "i:!-
6 Determined, umelcutiivi; :
^•??"RT. 7 Whole or complete:
^ ^^^. 8 Standiiigr.perpctual :
^HT qi^^. 9 Coining against
(t. e. being ahead or in the
teeth of) — wind at sea.
^m^Jad. Smartly, quick-
ly. [clifiF.
Tirf^^r A precipice or
S-^TRfCn Strict sentinel-
sbi|). Hence fig. Close and severe
nttendanoc (as npon the sick).
^irr^lsTir The whole bazar
from end to end; the bazar up
find down.
zmmA A highway. 2 The
whole road. 3 fig. A fair proce-
dure.
S-m^TR^ Crops still standing.
3inT% /. Raising or erect-
ing, lit. fig.
^^R^ V. c. To raise, pitch,
plant. 2 To set on foot. 3 To
establish in trade. 4 To incite. 6
To make higher. 6 To bnild up
(reasonings, &c.) P. i. To rise. 7
To bristle up— the hair. ["noon.
3-;?fTqiT /. The height of
TiTRfH f. The produce of
a field collected and stacked ; not
vet divided among the sharers.
^iTTiqr See ^-in^r.
S'iTJ?!^ n. A slight indis-
poMMon. ^[-^-ith hurry to flee.
Tiifft ^Z^ To be fdlcd
^Tiq^R <id. In the upright
attitude. [present year.
Ti^mTr^ ad. Through 'the
3ITJT The coming to liglitj 3TJT .s A snake,
(of a lost thing or hidden matter).
V. xi^ g. of 8., ^T^ g. of 0.
'^^W[ V. c. To discover or
find by inquiry or consideration.
V. i. To become known ; to
transpire.
3^HJi|r A tracer out.
^W^ An understanding of.
2 I nderstanding.
^^Z^ V. i. To appear or
come forth. 2 To be articu-
late : to be clear — a st.unp.
3'fl?T a. (a) Noble, illustri-
ous— person or thing.
3"^^/. (a) Age ; period of
life attained.
^^n^ (A) A nobleman.
TlTo^OT r. i. To open — a bud.
2 To slack — quicklime. ^ fig.
To expand — the mind.
^Ha^ f. Qualmishness, v. 5^.
See 'gxia.
3TT5J0T V. i. To be soft and
oozy from rain — ground : to be-
come loose from moisture — a
tree. 2 To become soft aud rotten
through heat — fruit. 3 See
^^vi^, sig. 1, 2. V. imp. To
be qualmish.
^Hm a. Many, much.
3-JTr^r, 3^^ Qualmishness.
V. ^. 2 The rising aud swel-
ling (of any strong emotion).
Tgo ^iJ^of. To take breath.
33TrS"r Boiling up. 2 Qual-
mishness. [Puberty.
3-R?- /. (P) Confidence. 2
3^?"^^ a. Hopeful, confi-
dent— a candidate. 2 Of mature
age.
3^^rft /. Hopefulness, ex-
pectancy. 2 Maturity (esp. of
animals and plants).
3T^ f. Power of manage-
ment or despatch ; competency.
<J<4>"^ 7'. i. To be over — a
business : to be no more ; to be
dead. r. c. To despatch, e.\ecnte.
2 To do. [patching (of works).
3T^r3T^/. A hurried des-
[left.
3"^*^ V. i. To remain, to be
zvm^ See s-q^rrjot.
'ZX^Z or -5 a. Rude, over-
bcRrin<r.
^T^Z^ r. i. To become
riuie. ^^«3Tr /■ Rudeness.
3'rn'^ V. c. To make to re-
[stand. ,ii;,i,) over; to reserve, save
^JT^ i;. c. ^- i. To under- ^^^^ ^^ ^ That goes upon
3^?"^^ a. Sharp, intelligent. ! the breast— a serpent, &c.
3T^'Tn^ /. Vehement endea-
vour ; i)ainfnl exertion at ex-
plaining aud enforcing a subject.
2 Poet. Urgent and importu-
nate entreaty.
3-^r^r fJiq or -M^ /. The
pit of the stomach, scrobiculus
cordis.
3"^^ ji. A high, projecting
breast. 2 A contemptuous term
for the brea.st.
3"^^^ (a) Offerings at the
shrine of a Mnhanimadan saint.
2 11. A marriage-feast (among
Muhammadans).
3nnnHr a. » That goes upon
the breast or belly ; creeping.
3"^ /. s The earth.
3'c^n^oT ^, f, rpo unravel,
open out. 2 To take to pieces.
3 To brake up (a pile, &c.) 4
To dispose of (a business), v. i.
To get unravelledjclear. 5 To pass
away — a season.
3p5"ii;5T Disentanglement. 2
Settlement (of affairs).
S'^n'^r V. c. To clear (a field
of its produce, money-bag). 2
To conchule (a business, See.) v.
i. To cease and pass away — a
season.
3"^^^ 7W. /. Return (as the
rebounding of a ball) ; reflux (of
the sea) ; 'itecovery (of a be.iten
foe) ; return (of a fever) ; retrac-
tion (of a promise) ; turning
back. t'. Tirr. 2 Kequital (as
of favours). .3 /. A vomit. 4 In
comp. Uetuni:g« ^T"^^. 5
Re])ctition. ad. Contrariwise.
3o^2:r[rg' /. A return-word
(m recrimination, retort, or inso-
lence).
V,.
Tc^J^ V, c. To turn over. 2
To turn; to bring the inside out
(of a garment). 3 To do over
again. 4 To dispose of. r. ». To
upset. 5 To turn biick. (5 To
recover strength — a half-sub-
dued fever. 7 To pass over ; to
be tinned off (a stage of life).
Zr^Z^^ f, A grant con-
firmed I)y another grant,
T^^^^J? A repeated order. ,
2 A reverse-order.
'^^Z\ a. Inverse, upside
down. ad. Contrariwi«e.
Z^E\^\^Z f. Tossing and
tumbling about; disordering. 2
fi». Cross-questioning. 3 or
■^f^^^l^o Worldly planning
and scheming ; commercial spe-
culating, ad. Topsy-turvy.
3r?5TfC[r?^ a. Upside-down.
g-c^IFTc^r 3-iTr ^\^^. To
stand one (or some) facing this
way, the other (or others) that
way.
S'^TJt /. Vomiting or a
vomit. 2 Turning over. r. ^,
g, ff}^, ^'\. 3 fig. Recession
(from an engagement) : denial
(of an affirmation).
3'55'T" V. i. To crack or open.
3"c75:T'T V, c. To turn over or
upon. 2 To bring the inside out.
3 To do ; to despatch or dispose
of. V. i. To turn over. 4 To turn
upon. 5 fig. To drop down dead.
n. A sort of ladle for taking up
fried things, &c.
^■c^r a. Supine.
^-^STPTTc?^^ See ^c^ilMl^J.
3"c^^ s An owl.
S'c^STw /, Busy speculatnig
and scheming ; the trouble and
turmoil of life.
^■cTgT?^ a. Wildly specu-
lative and enterprising; busy,
bustling.
3"?^r f. s Fire falling from
heaven ; a meteor. 2 A fire-
brand.
3"?TfTf^ (s) A meteor-shoot.
2 fig.The ravages of invaders, &c.
^■^^Jr V. c. To cross. 2 To
transgress. [Transgressing.
5eT^ (s) Passing over. 2
^R"^ p. Passed over. 2
Transgressed. [lighting in.
3"eTW (s) Delight, joy ; de-
^^\Wi V. i. To delight. ^^U
^t u. Ever joyful and gay,
3"^(h An owl) App. to a per-
son heavy and stupid(from drink-
ing, &c.) ; a block-head. rjj
^^^ s Utterance; express-
T??T3iT^ n. Poet. A piece
of ordnance.
3^Cr^ See ^e5T^.
67
— — ^ — f
^i^IlT Mitigation of a curse.
^■f^Tn a. Late, with delay.
T^r, ^rsft /, A j)illow.
3"3tK Lateness. 2 Delay. 3
Time yet wanting.
3-^nT See ^:^FT.
3"^r^ Deep breathing.
3"^:^r^ (s) The period con-
sisting of two ghatika before
breaking of the dawn.
3'^:Tf'T A/, s The drinking of
water medicinally during ^^:-
3-5"?:^RT (s) The place
where camels are tied up ; the
camel dejmrtment.
3-g-^fJT or 3-grRq „^ y; ^j^^
giving of solid food for the first
time to an infant.
3"9"ra.Left or rejected — food,
leavings, 2 Foul, i. e. with un-
washed mouth and hands after
a meal ; such mouth and hands.
3 fig. Used and left. 4 fig. Ut-
tered before and by another.
3-gTl^DT r. c. To defile by
tasting or using.
Tg'nr^rf 3" or -5?r /. a com-
nrion strumpet. ^^^^^^^ ^f ^^^^^^
^^ n. Stale food ; a stale
^^'^ a. (s) Hot or warm. 2
Heating. 3 fig. Ardent, fiery, n.
Heat. 2 Also ^'Wlrrr/. Mor-
bid heat in the system.
T^q^r^ The hot season.
Z'W^ 7». s A Thermometer.
^■^r (s) Heat (of the sun or
weather or from fire).
•s.
T^ET^'^f V. c. To disturb and
discompose an arrangement 5 to
take to i)ieces (a machine).
<r^^Jr3-e^3: /. General
tumbling and tossing about ;
disordeiing, &c. See the verb.
'S^^ f. Sharp, shooting pain
in the trunk of the body. v.
^^mK See 3-^=i^rr.
^^'ir (1. Borrowed-;— money
without interest, or articles to
be returned. 2 fig. Used of a
slack, lukewarm servant (seem-
ing to conceive of himself as be-
longing elsewhere, and as lent
for a season) : used also of his
service ; of cold and unconcern-
ed speech.
3-g^t^ / Baling, lading,
basketing, &c. out : the material
so taken out.
3"^ot V. c. To bale out
(water from a boat or pool) : to
ladle out (milk, &c. from its
vessel) : empty out. 2 To un-
sheath (a sword, &c.) : to draw
out of its sheath, case, &c. (a
thing gen.)
^^^^ V. i. To open in the
seam.
3-5B"fW-^r An air-hole (of
an aqueduct). 2 A collecting
and raising cistern of water —
conduit.
^m^^ V. c. To open the
seams or a seam 5 to rip open.
S'^^tTff j Spurting up, &c.
^■^arof ^^ I To fly up with
a quick stream ; to splash up. 2
To spring up or out. 3 To turn
upon hastily and angrily. 4 To
shoot up rapidly — a child, corn,
&c. 5 To bathe hurriedly and
scantily.
3:5Er^, 3-gT^r /. Splashing
up. V. M\X, '31. 2 A spring
up or out (as of a fish from the
water), v. ^T, *TK. 3 fig. A
dashing away from restraint : a
burst of anger ; a flying out vehe-
mently. V. 'ST.
^^r^ See 3^5r^.
3"^r^r A sigh, a deep drawn
breath, v. \, "Z"^,
3^ n. The head of a bed. 2
Any thing taken by way of a pil-
low. 3 App. to the head with
reference to its reclining upon
something.
3^n3td< f. Repairing, re-
storing (ruined houses). 2 Keep-
ing in good condition.
^l^ V. c. To take off
(old tiles, &c.) from a roof ; to
strip (a roof) of its old tiles, &c. :
to rip open (a couch, a garment) :
to rummage ; to discompose an
arrangement gen. : ^"[XH ^1^
7??rrr
68
q-^^
<i^ci<[3'^cR" f. General strip- ^^ The breast./. Deficiency
pinjr of a roof, nntapinjr, umlo- l Residue, [-pjigst o fi<?. Envy
iii'j. u|) tcaiiuir, &c. "^
3^Tr^ -vrr See 3-jj^g-.
3"§' Interjection of negiition
or])roltilntion ; No ! Not ! Dont !
3-Sr^?r^r or ^-STqR^ay y_ c. To
liaug so as to make to dangle. 2
To liaivj; daiijcliii^ly. '6 To be
alFected with conjestiou tlirougli
loiiGj suspension — feet, ueek.
3^4T^c^r fTr?r/. a sort of
safr, — a basket sus;)ended fi'Oin
t!ie roof.
^~E^m. 3"^?r^r Dangling,
Laiigiug, i.<c.
^ The sixth vowel.
^ /. A louse.
<^ int. What' How ? Eh?
t: Pshaw ! Pish ! Tut !
^^ A camel. 2 fig. A jack ol
straw, or Gaffer long legs.
'^<Z^\'^ ad. Ever on foot.
"3^cf Boiling over. 2 fig. Infla-
tion. V. ^, V31X, f^K^. 3 fig
fTI^tfaT^^T "SW The efferves-
cence of youtli ; ^^'rfl^T "^rf
Tlie tluih of prosperity.
■3^^ (a) Frankincense.
3:T^r"?r f. a i)a.stii. .
•' 1 [cense.
^>T'^^ n. Soot of fraukiii-
•3^^ or ■^'^ n. Heat (of the
sun'>< rays) ; suM^bine. a. Hot.
3r^3T^ ov'^rW^'^ a. Burning
liot ; scalding liot. 2 fig. Hot
anil fresh ; brand new.
with ni'g. con. To make no ob-
jection on the ground of the
i'arcbing heat, &c.,i. e. to mani-
fest alncnty or readiness to go
out and do. [shme.
^'^m'^^ Rain during sun-
3:-T /". Sultriness. 2 Heat. 3
Animal heat. 4 Heated air. 5
lig. The i)ride and intoxication
(of learning or riches).
^TZm f. Affection 'of th'e
^^'^1^ See ^^t^-
3r<iTr f^ Coming breast to
breast, i. e. meeting and em-
bnicing. ^j^^.^irg or days.
3^|s[cr n. (s) Prosperous
3r^'^ Oil. (s) Above, on high,
in the heavens. rhi"-!!
^T'^'^^rcT J. Ascending on
3r^-tfr2" a. Of heavenward
vision. 2 Of higli views. /.
Looking up into tiie heavens. 3
tig. Conceit, ambition.
3r^#72T The way to Swarga
or into the heavens.
^'^ ad. (a) Alias.
■^^ or 3r^ Sugarcane. 2 A
sugarcane jilantation.
^t" int. No! Not! Dont!
^ The seventh vowel.
^^^ (s) The first of the
four Vedas.
^"^^<"r a. A ?j rah man
following the ifcJ^^.
Ht:3 «• Straight or direct. 2
tig. Upright : guileless.
^^ n. (s) Debt. 2 In arith.
The suljtrahend. 3 In alg. Minns.
^t^^tT A creditor. 2 A
del)tor.
^'^IMtcf a. Involved in debt.
^'^'"T'f n. Loan-money.
^"T^^ u. Bound under debt.
^WtF a. lielcased from
debt.
r
^'^?"'rfr (That releases from
debt) A name of God. See Luke,
v. 21.
^t^rt^ Sec ^"^^r.
^TTR^'^T The connection of
indebtedness : as contracted in
some i)receding birth and form-
ing the ground of certain suf-
ferings or enjoyments in the
present. 2 Friendly relation.
^% a. Indebted. 2 Relating
to debt.
^tj s A season. 2 Tiie mens-
trual flux. '6 iig. The periodical
conception or bringing forth of
female animals : the flowering
aiid bearing of trees and plants.
^rf^^^ n. The first ajijiear-
ing of the menses.
^K?'^s A Brahman aj) point-
ed to conduct a particular por-
tion of a sacrifice.
^^^^j (P) A bribe.
'FtR" (s) A saint. 2 A sanc-
tified personage.
^V^^r^ ^rOTF^ A tei-m
for any dilatory, dawdling busi-
ness.
T The eighth vowel.
T^ a. (s) One. 2 Single. 3
Some one. 4 One particrdarly or
pre-eminently : w;^ -g^tf^.^i^-i^f.
^-'tl'^T. ") Iflt-uticnl. (j One,
noting excess : ij^s qi'3i*j. ij^
T^ One unremitting riiin, v^c.
7 About, near : ^a«T '^i^ ^^
«?; JTf^ ^T%. 8 Ever one :
«irn4(' g^^ ^^ 3T^T?. 9 Other,
di:>tinct : ^ 3SI^N ^« H ^.^ ;
^^ ^^ BTTfur ^T^ ^^.
U**^* or T^ii a. I'.ach one ;
one bv one.
^€Q:^?r, q^rr^^r see ^t^.
2 Alone.
^^^^r or ^^^?fr a. Obsti-
natcly adherent to one set of
opinions ; bigoted.
^^^RF a. Having but one
touch-hole {eye) — a musket.
^^r^^ a. Of (fit for) but one
work.
T^^rr Tumultuous crowded-
ncss or confessed mixture.
(s)
Coeval.
T^^
69
^^^\
^^fMZ\ ad. All together; in
one mass.
^^iTf ad. Altooetlier. 2
Unitedly.
T^^^^ a. Sole ; one singly.
T?)^^ ((. (s) Segregarioiis.
tr^cT^C iTR Average price.
fT^T?: f^fr /. Sale in the
gross.
q:^^r/. Total, sum.
^^r (s) n:-^Tf «'/. At the
same time. '2 Once. [once.
(I^f^^ «. (s) Unanimous. 2 ^^^^F ad. Once; if but
Attentive.
^^f^'?" n. A term for a
wondeifnl person. In dispraise.
^^3"^! a. Subject to one
kiuj^ or lord — a country.
CT^'^flT^fT^r /. Agreempnt
(of a number of individuals) ;
full unanimity. 2 ad. With one
consent.
^^^'H\ a. That lasts a
whole life ; very durable. 2 That
is done but once in a life, .'i
That demands a whole life for
the })erformance of it. [class
"T^^ffR a. (s) Of one kind,
'T^'^r a. Alone.
T^IT^ST a. Almost alone.
^^^r^ ad. In the lump. 2
By whole sale.
^^"ST The flfj;ure one. r
= [son.
'T^^r^r A term for an only
T^^^ ad. Continuously —
of time, space, or action.
^^^"^ ad. At once.
^?;cr^r a. That with one
string (or instrument or means)
performs two or more works.
cr^cr?:qTr a. Partial— a state-
ment, ad. On one side.
^.mm a. Relating
q:^?rfST^ a. Fony-one.
'T-^crr^H" a. Thirty-one.
^^"^T ad. (s) Together.
T^^rST Uniform arrangement
or disposition (as of soldiers in
array, trees in rows).
^'^'^^ ad. Without stopping.
2 At one time ; at once.
•T^^^ ad. Together. 2 In
one amount. '6 In concert. 4
In the lump. 5 Once for all. /.
n. Adding together, summing
up.
[side.
to one
Q:^J:?a§^ a. (s) Having fel-
lowship of pains and pleasures.
^^^r a. (s) Of one or the
same country. 2 Partial — a si-
mile. 3 Confined to one place.
'T^^Kf /. One line ; one rule.
^^'Tf^T a. One-edged.
C^^^^T ad, la unintei'rupted
succession ; — used of chihlren
of either se.K born witiiout the in-
tervention of a child of the other
sex. 2 Also ^«!TSfT53l a. Of
one navel string, i. e. twin.
T^i'T-^^ A firm resolution.
^^m a. (s) Of mind in-
tently fixed upon one object. 2
T^f'T'^'r f. Single minded-
T^T^r a. s Having but one
w ife ; continent — a male. 2 That
has been married but once.
T^^tr See ^^^r^ff.
'n^^'^T ad. In one respect.
^^T^r a. Partial.
^^TlJr a. That can recite
after reading but once. 2 Con-
secutive.
'T-^qr'^r ^T^^m Used where
there is but one son, and he a
scamp.
^^^g"c^r a. That yields but
one annual crop — ground.
^^ff5 Promiscuous assem-
blage, ad. Promiscuously.
^^rfr «. That explodes but
once — a squib, musket. 2 That
bears but once annually — a fruit-
tree.
^^^l^\ f. The first enter-
ing upon the books of sums
disbursed or received; single
entry. 2 Grand total of several
amounts.
q^%^tr srqr^^ n. An office
for the arrangement, registry,
and deposit of all accounts from
the otlier departments ; and
from them were framed abs-
tracts of the total receipts, &c.
for the year : the abstracts
called ^ffKuft.
^^T^, I^^TtR" ;/. (s) Subsist-
ing upon one meal daily.
^^^rrf Oneness of mind.
T^^^Tc^r or -^r a. Of one
story — a house.
^^'^ a. (s) One all-pervad-
ing. 2 All of cue (kind) ; as
T^^r^' a. Obstinately ad-
herent to one set of opinions,
ha!)its, ways ; bigoted, &c.
CT^JTr^q;^?:!^ n. Of one flesh
and bone (blood) ; connatural.
T^T^rcr a. Of one month.
^^"^ a. Mutual.
^^^^,^5F;^^r^r «cZ. Amongst
(ourselves, &c.) ; one with auo-
tlier.
^^c^^T ad. Standing alone
or apart — a house, tree.
T^^?:?! a. Of which the
bite occasions but one tremor,
and then death — a snake.
T^^^T a. Alone, solitary.
T^f^^ n. (s) The singular
number. Also Tigi?^«n «• Of
one word or promise.
"T^^^ ad. Together.
T^^?^^ V. c. To assemble,
to gather together.
T^^ir Collected state. 2
Combination, concert.
^^fcT n. Subsisting upon
one meal daily (according to a
^""_L [castes, a. Of one colour.
^^'^^ (s) Conlusion of
cr^^^f^^"T n. Equation
where there is but one unknown
quantity, [place ; a retired spot.
^^^^r An off or a detached
T^^o3T Combination, con-
federacy.
^^^\^^^\f. (s) Agreement
of meaning (of different books,
passages, &c.) 2 Collating (of
different copies, &c.) : reconcil-
7^f^
70
^T^T^r
ing (doctrines apparently con-
tratlictory).
CJlfr^'-Tf ad. In one way.
CT^r^'^^Mf^ /. (s) Acknow-
ledfrment anil worship of one
deity only.
CT^'^^ a. Twenty-one.
^^fS" ad. At one time ; at
once. 2 Once. 3/. A term for
tlie two divisions of the day.
T^^TTT a. (s) Solid ungulous.
^^^^mj. (s) Close friend-
bhi^p. [-ro„..
^5T3f a,j_ Ta one line or
CT^^^ or fT^fr? <i. Sixty-one.
T^^RT^^rrt. liesemblinij; (one
another^ ad. In a nniform man-
ner, without remission. fvpar
T^^r^r a. Kelating to one
T^^'Hr ad. In an uniform
manner.
^^?TT n. One line, course.
T^?1T a. Monotonous.
^T^^or-^T^r^/.That is(done,
used) by the hand of one person.
cr^rcr# ad. Suddenly, all
at once.
T^r^ir (s) Confused crowd-
edness (of various sorts of
tilings) ; tumultuous jumhle. 2
Oneness of form : oneness of
caste and grade, a. Of one lieiit
—the mind. 2 Of the like shape,
."i Intent, fixed — the mind.
qi?r^f^T^?"rT^r /. a term
for a family maintained by one
sole-snrviviiig male.
T^f^ a. Of one side only.
'2 Of but one qualification.
^^r?T rt. (s) Fi.\ed upon one
object — the mind.
^^^\^\ ad. At one effort;
at one spurt, sweep.
"T^irrT (s) A private place. 2
A ])rivate consultation.
CT^i^^jir /. A solitary cell
(as in a prison). 2 Solitary con-
finement.
cr^^ntf^f qrrfr n. pi. a
term app. to any couple of
(vdlainsj equally expert.
^\^ ^^m ad. In private
and in public.
^t^ or -^n ad. Occurring
on alternate days — a fever, ad.
On alternate days.
^^R^ a. (s) Eleven.
q:^^^r/. The eleventh day
of tlie waxing or of the waning
moon.
Cr^r^rr See ^^Kf.
q^r^H^rr^ See Q^%-
T^f^^f ad. In one respect.
^n^^ n. s Universal deluoe.
CT^f^^ or -^rt. Fifty-one.
l^r^TlT" a. Seventy-one.
cr^rf^?Tfr ad. Under one
view of the case.
T^r^ a. s One-eyed.
^^r^T a. s Monosyllabic.
n. A monosyllable.
T^r /. Union, amity. 2 One-
ness (of sentiments, interests).
3 An odd number. 4 Used by
boys at school in asking permis-
sion to go out to perforin wfx^.
^r^3^r a. Of one side,
fac^ quarter. [^2 A.n\^.
•^•^^ ad. From one side,
fr*r^3" ad. On one side. 2
Aside ; off from the main road.
^^rf*r /. A |)lay among
children ; odd anil even.
Tf ^^^r or %€r a. Seventy-
nine.
^f f^^r^t^ a. Thirty-nine.
^.m^\^ n. Twenty-nine.
^f^R^?^ a. Eighty-nine.
q:j'^qvrr^ ,,. Forty-nine.
^W^ or ^M^^ a. Nine-
teen.
^f^^r? a. Fifty-nine.
fT^iW^r a. Sixiy-nine.
TJRn;^ or ^m^ ad. One
and the same. 1 Every one; the
wliole multitude.
Tfurrfrar ^[^ (The figure
■od;) A term forniutual rivalry
or opjjosition. fsinf^le.
^TfcTcTr or Tf c^frr^ a. Only*
^5'^ or -=T ad. Well, then,
Biuce it is 60 ; in brief. 2 Used in
summing up and drawing the
total : HJI^ \\-i{ ta^rfiT TT^
"^T^ \'> ^^\'^\. Hence used in
the sense of Arrant, arch :
If' ^^T^. [aagregate.
Q'5rT^iTr /. Total amount,
cr%^r^ -=qT^[^ a. Forty-one.
^IWWR?r^r a. (Single-rib-
bed). Thin, lean.
^T\ or Q:%fr a. Single, not
doubled. 2 fig. Weak ; — used
of roice with reference to sing-
ing. 3 Of the singular number —
language of address or mention :
cr%fl?"gr?:mr /. m in arith.
Single position.
Wr^r^lT^: f. In book-keep-
ing. Single entry.
cri^fr^?"^rT/. In airth. Single
fellowship.
»\
^r^^f Interest at one per
cent per mensem.
'T^l^ n. The product (as
set down in tables) of a number
mjultiplied by itself. [concert.
T^nr or -^r Agreement,
^^qTQ:^,cr^^5T2ara. Eighty-
one.
^^F't^? a. Ninety-one.
q:^W3^H'^r ^l. (Beads
of one string). Birds of a feather .
^^IT a. Some one, any one.
^^^r A ram.
crS"?5J-, QT^rs- ad. This while ;
this (long) time. s. A long time.
^Z\aS\ ad. Within this time.
^^IJT ad. By these means ;
'ly ^'""1; [this.
crqqTrrot ad. According to
TcTcT or Tcf?^ pro. s This. In
conip. as <?ri^«< Besides this ;
^fl^«ifT< After this.
^fTr^cfT ad. (s) From so
much; from that; still, yet.;
^4^f a. Relating to thii
place.
q>i<T
71
^w
'H^VA^ or ^fT[^cTr ad. Up j ^
to this ; as far as (thi» place or j H
time) ; hitherto.
^^ ad. Hence. ^^ ad. '^ xhe ninth vowel.
Here. 2 At one's house : as ^ ^
jg-f^T f At his house. ,^^^ v. c. To hear. 2
^^^\ or -^r ad. Poet. Now. | ten. 3 To attend, obey.
To
^ a. The others or rest;
that or the other. 2 Poet.
Other or different.
T^^i^ /. Fruitless coming
and going. [-plant.
^3" m. f. (s) Castor-oil-
^i^H^^ n. (s) Oneness of
opinions, views, tastes.
QJ'^fll'^ a. s Of one day, re-
qtvirino; one day — a work. 2 To
he observed for one day — a fast,
&c. S Ephemeral. 4 Remitting
— a fever.
^tl\ f The Seed of ^^^- 2 - rS' '"'*'"• [hearing.
The tree. ^^t« n. Castor-oil. \^^^^ P- Heard ; known by
^T'C^Foi-^^'f ad. On the fourth
day that preceded, or that is to
succeed, the present day.
^:^fr or '°i\ ad. Idly, merely.
2 Spontaneously, simply. 3 Or,
otherwise: *ft ^irt ^i^, 'J*
SfTUlTK ^iTf • 4 Else : W^ "ST-
TOrr a. Light, trifling,
worthless — person or thing.
CTc^r or ^^l^l f. Carda-
moms. 2 A cardamom.
T^^r^r A cardamom.
^t conj. s Thus, so.
^^ ad. s See^% sig. 1.
Q^^ST «. So great, so much :
so many. ^ [g^.
^T^r^oS" or -^oT ao?. See "T2"-
^r^fr ad. Whether iij this
way or in that ; at any rate ;
whether or no.
T^Ct ad. Now, presently.
^r°?t^r ad. Just now.
^^^r Seet^^.
^rrfr? The word shouted
out by the worshipers of ^-
^I^^I when they lift up the
Hoft before the idol, or when
they beg. Hence, a combined and
vehement effort ; a long pull.
^\iSm or ^^^r A medical
preparation of the juice of aloes,
&c.
^rsrqrJroS' Aloes.
^^ 2^3:^ a. That knows
from having heard : known unto
through hearsay.
^■^q' n. (s) Identity. 2 Unity
(of interests, desires, &c.) 3 or
v^«?T Pantheism.
^^^ pL Some fellows,—
Jack, Dick, and Tom, Tag, rag,
and bobtail.
^r^C5"^ a. (s) Wished or de-
sired. 2 Free, optional. 3 Licen-
tious, wanton. 4 Arbitrar)', fanci-
fid. 5 Designed.
Q:rrfr^ Sunday.
^Rr?r n. s Tradition.
^15"^^ a. s Perceptible by
tlie senses or mind ; sensible.
1^ ind. (a) a particle of em-
phatic power. It implies exact-
ness, completeness, &c. : ^•T
tiTW^IoJT The very height of
the rains ; v^sf ^T'T v[^x: Exact
noon. 2 Original, principal :
^^f^TfT Prime cost.
^^T^t /. Land-tax. r„yg
^=f?§"c?r /. The nett reve-
'T'T^f^y. The exact season
of seed-sowing. \^pl. Spectacles.
^•rr (p) A mirror. 2 or 'I'T
'^^ f. (a) Means, funds:
ability.
^^ (a) a fault, flaw, defect.
^^>m^% See'^'fl^
^^3K a. Faulty, &c.
^TTiT or -°ir/. An anvil.
Q:n^ n. (p) A desert. 2 fig.
Lonesomeness.
T^R^ (s) The name of
Indra's elephant. ['^X.
^ ad. On this side as, ^^"
(T^T^ a. Various, sundry —
^things, &c. [-j,.jg^^ . ,„ndrie5.
CT^qc^qrg /. pi Trash ;
^^-^ (a) Property, wealth;
cash or goods. 2 Solidity (opp.
to rottenness) : spirit, rigor :
worth. 3 Revenue, cash-receipts.
^^5f2ri^ a. Strong, service-
able— articles, animals.
CT^W^r^c^r An article of
the property of one man in pos-
session of another, in lieu of
an article similarly transposed.
2 Bartering. r. ^^. 3 Borrow-
ing money upon a deposit, v.
cr^swff r^?^[t mw^ n. a
department of accounts ; keeping
the account of monies borrowed
and deposits made ; of partial
repayments, partial redemption ;
keeping the account of revenue
payments in kind.
^^f ad. Instead of.
1^2" a. Solid, massive —
trinkets,&c.: enormous — houses,
posts, trees, &c. ; stout — cloth.
2 Dull, heavy.
•\
T^^RR Pleasure and ease :
voluptuous enjoyment.
^^ int. Bravo ! Noble !
Well-done !
\^\ a. Eighty.
^"^A n. (s) Supremacy. 2
Power, majesty. 3 Opulence. 4
The divine perfections and at-
tributes.
Q:^^^r=T a. Great, noble. 2
Opulent, flourishing.
^[^^^riT See '^[^[rsTrnir.
^^W a. Spacious, roomy.
ad. Loosely, at large — people sit-
ting, things placed. 2 Around,
about,
^ a. k, ad. See ^T^.
crr^rr
72
^rrrrrl'
^r?!f|^^ a. s Mundane,
t!'ni])oral.
^1%^ a. Uehithio; to lliis.
^7
^r The tenth vowel.
^r f. Answer to a cull. r. v.
2 Vomiting, v. $.
^\^ f. Vomit.
Wl^^l a. Bad. ro a i •
^\^^ 71. Poet. A trouble.
^r^i'^ r. i. To vomit, v. c.
lig. To utter vehemently (curses,
ike.) 3 To disgorge (ualawful
g.amsK [continued vomiting.
^Rir-^r^ f. Excessive and
^[^Z Poet. See ^f^F-
^^Zl a. Vile, hateful —
si^lit or smell. r i ^^
^F'f?!^ n. Medicine or a
^r^ ?/. Grease or oil for
the axle of carts. ffilthv
^m^ a. Bad, foul, nasty,
^Wfl^-WT^^Tr a. Badish.
^f? (s) Stream. 2 A divi-
sion of a river ; a stream: jjii^
^ifT ^T^ ^rr^rf. 3 fig. A
course.
^^1W<^ A streamlet: an ooz-
ing, -f. A ravine ; the bed of a
nioiiiitain torrent : a fiurow as
made by water. ^I^^/I r. c.
'I'o slip off froju a wreath, v. i.
To ooze. 2 To l)e enlarged in the
hnre — a pearl, ikv. .'iTo he omit-
ted. -4 To fall oti" — strung pearls.
^F'^^r /. A rillet.
^\^ A loose gatheiinii' up
(of a cloth) ; a bagging fold.
'^{^ A running, trickling.
2 Stream, flow, or fall of water
more largely.
'^mv^ r. i. To exude. 2 To
snl)sid( — a swelling, v. c. To
urazc, rub o'f.
^^^iTsT^crr p. a. (ira/iuuly. '"•
"^m^ ..r ^F^f^ /. m. Scot-
tice, gownen.
"4r#^, ^"F^F^ a. That carries
well ; that sustains heavv burdens.
"^F?T n. A load or burden,
lit. iig.
^r?F?<CF A carrier or porter.
^I-F A raised mass of earth
serving as a seat. 2 The para-
pet or raised edge along a ter-
■ ^. [angrily ; to glare at.
^r^Fr^T V. i. To stare at
^Fcf f, riie veranda in front
of tlie ittst^t:. 2 Or ^n^l
Tlie lai) of a ^t?iT:or ^3[^. 2
' •J
The rice, S:c. vised in the rite
of aiTz'tvr^tJT. 3 Udder. 4 The
lower jtortion of the abdomen.
^FiF^T^^ n. Throwing of rice,
&e. into the lap of a jjregnant
woman.
^\Z, ^fj A lip.
^]\E^^ /i. A thing to lean
against ; a prop. 2 llg. A support.
<^F5'^'T V. i. To lean against.
2 fig. To depend u])on. 'A To be
manageable : '^T ■qi^ iT^[ 'ifl^-
m'^ (I. c Deep — water.
^\'S\ A smooth log for fuel.
2 A block ; a piece of a trunk of
a tree.
^F?" /. Pulling; a pull, r.?"
2 Strain, v. 'Eir^, tf^, ■^¥. 3
Drag-rojje.. 4 The matter to
be dragged along. .5 Drawing
force. (> Pressure of want. 7 The
feeling of stiffness after fatigu-
ing exertion. 8 Force (as of a
stream), f) Tendency. 10 The
influence of the attractions and
allurements (of the world, &c.):
yearnings of tenderness ; sympa-
thetic atfectioii. 11 Hanging
back ; resisting stubbornly.
'^\^m^ or -^?F a. That is in
distressed circumstances, pinch-
>''■ ,-, rv [P.V. want.
^^rrr^^cTF or -m^ f. Exigen-
^FS^'T n.f. f balance of a closed
accoiuit brought forward. 2
'I'raditional custom or usage. .S
Hanging back. v. %. 4 n, A
rope for pulling ; a drag-rope. 5
Laborious drawing : TTT'S^I^T-
■^Tif^t ^^-fo^lTil^. 3 A shield.
^FF?*^r. c. To pull. 2 To draw
(lines). 3 To reduce (the body) —
from sickness, want ; to dravv
(a smoking pipe, &c.);to suck
(the breast) ; to take (snuff). 4
To force or strain (language
beyond its strict signification).
'^l^'^^ V. i. To hold back. 2
To draw up. .3 To belong : ^T
^T«T fTJl^T'aTsff ^r^WT. 4 To
incline to — the mind.
^FS"^^ V. i. To tend impul-
sively ; to drive : ^f ^TS^^,
^FFS"!^"^ V. c. To stretch out
(the hand, &e.) upon or towards.
^T5"F See ^\'S\.
^FST A steadying and
strengthening (rope). 2 The
business and jobs of a house-
hold. 3 Gathering (of cocoa-
nuts, betelniUs, &c.) 4 A brook :
the drv bed of such. See 3^1^,
sig. 1,2, 8, ;), 10.
aTFIFcFF'^ /. Pulling about
rudely. 2 tig. Mental agitation.
'A lli^s^ling ehalfering.
^fSTcS" a. That resists con-
finement; that grazes widely
from the herd. 2 iig. Discursive,
roving — the mind : rambUng
— a child.
Sff^^ST^oS" n. Pretence of
aver.Nion towards a thing desired.
v. ^TW. 2 .Affectation of i.m-
portance. v. ^Tiur. 3 Using
tar fetched expressions.
^TFf^cTF'TT^F a,}. By dint of
j)uUing and hauling. 2 Forcing-
ly, lit. fig.
^F'T^ /. Inclination forward
of the body, stoo])ing posture.
^\^i^ V. i. To stoop. 2 To
be bowed with age or infirmity.
^\'^^\ (1. Stooping; bent
forwards.
^F^ V. c. To pour. 2 To
cast ; to form by melting and
pouring into a mould.
^TFcTFSr a. p Cast.
^Fma A founder.
3J|rflN"
^crr^ p. Cast.
^FT/. m. Polish or burnish
as operated, j. '^ for the
operator, v. i, and in. con,
af^, for the subject. 2 Plating.
■A Bleaching. |-,^-,g„t foj. metals.
STTT^ff /. A polishing instru-
5?R^ y. c. To commit to
the conduct or care of ; to present
with: TT^^T-5 ^^T^^ 5^'1
tarifq'-jft 11 V- i- '^0 undergo
bleachinjj:. [shajien.
STR^^r^^ a. Clumsy, mis-
3{Rr /. An ear of wheat. 2
^fT^T /• P^' Green tvheat
parchefl.
^r^5i^^ or ^rr^r^^ v. c.
To scratch. 2 fig. To plough
superficially : to scribble, to
scrawl. V. L To acquire a smatter-
ing of.
^KT'T' V. c.To sip with flur-
ruping noise. 2 To strip off
(leaves of a twig). 3 To scratch
hard and roughly. 4 fig. To
plunder, spod.
^PTfr Dropping of anchor
for a season in some still water.
3Tr55" /. n. (s) Humidity,
wetness. 2 Feasibility. 3 /. A
hostage. [sticks.
m^Z a. Damp. /. Green
^rc^^^t See s^r^^i^^-
S{rc=y^^ V. Any thing to
moisten — as ndlk, &c. /. A ver-
dant pasturage.
3Tlc^^ See ^m^-
^f^[^ V. ('.. To moisten
(wheat, &c.) by sprinkling.
^r^^r a. Damp, moist. /.
Moisture.
STf^r a. Wet. 2 Fresh. 3
Fruitful, profitable : pithy, solid;
having property or substance.
^~r^[r%? or ^^TF^if^^ a.
Very wet, drenched.
^|75T3'^ V. c. To pass over
(whether to travel over or to step
across).
^Fc^RF A rag, knotted with
seven knots, and containing seven
marking nuts, thrown upon the
10
73
public road by a person afflicted
with boils, &c. (with the view
of ridding himself of his afdic-
tion). 2 Disease contracted in
consequence of stepping over
such a rag. 3 A place requiring
to be stej)i)ed over.
3|f?!rrS'^o or "^^F^ Faniine
occasioned by excessive rain.
STfc^TF^F llumiclity. 2 fig.
Lucrativeness ; softness ; as
latent sappiuess ; ^'^l^T ^\o
BTfc^FiTF^ f. A term for wa-
ter (heavy rains, inundations,
&c.) considered as a source of
calamity.
3T[^F^F's"r /*. A term for a
corn croj) or a fiudd of grass yet
young and tender.
Sj[^f^r /; A term for the
womb of a female after recent
delivery. ^^,] food.
STF^rW^TF /. Alms of dress-
3^Fc?FJTJT^F f. Real and ge-
ntdne affection.
^f^afjl n. Used of the per-
son of a newly delivered female.
<iTF^°t V. i. To run down or
flow up— freshes of a river ; to
abate— rain, fever, swelling.
^\m\ f. See ^F?r, sig. 1.
^im^ See ^F^.
^IF^FI^F f. Desolateness.
~^\WZ m.^t^^lf. The ebb
of the ocean.
^\^Z^ V. L To ebb. 2 To
Abate.
»\
sn^73" A streamlet : an ooz-
ing. 2 A rude brook.
3{[C^^f V. i. To ooze. 2 See
^lIJT^ffi. V. c. To up set.
^T^F or ^Fl^ICF Interjection
e>:pressing wonder, admiration.
SjfS" f A row, a rank. 2 A
line of writing, v. ■qT«, ^I'S'.
3 fig. Course.
^[ST^'qq See ^-^t^at-
m'-oT^ f, Acquamtance. 2
Ilfcognition. 3 A token. 4 A
person named and accepted as a
sort of surety for a person bor-
rowingjnoney. ^^o recognise.
^FSrrccf ^,^ ^_ 'Y^j know. 2
^Ff"^ V. c. To thrc-ad or
string ; to stitch.
STI^55T or ^\^^\ a. That i.,
in the common state, neither in
the state of defilement nor in
that of perfect purity. Used of
Rrihmans. ^^ind.
^kF A seed of the Dill
3ifq[fSot r.c.To wave(a platter
containing lighted wicks) around
an idol or the head of a person.
'^\^\ f. A stanza of a parti-
cular measure. 2 A light air
sunf by women whilst grinding,
lulling infants, &c.
B?r^[SrJTcry: Shume.
q^p^TFS-ot ?;. i. To be ashamed.
^TT^jrS'F a. Ashamed, abash-
ed.
STiS" s A lip.
sqF^^ a. Labial.
5ilf^ a. Desolate, forsaken —
a village or land.
I^Fg'n-nF Poet. The lap.
Birsr'iiic;.?^' f. Acquaintance
with ; knowledge.
^TF^^tF a. Known.
^F^ia[^<^F a. Of one's ac-
quaiirtance.
SiJci'^cq- ,,_ (, fQ prove (a
wall, &c.) by applying the
^Tc56?T. V. i. To dangle. 2 To
hang upon as to bend down (a
bow, &c.)
*\ «
srrST^F A mason's phimmet.
^F The eleventh vowel.
^fl'^^^X n. s Propriety, fitnessL
^F^'S" or ^F^TF^ a. Huge,
])onderous.
^\Z a. Three and a- half.
'^\^^ n.oh or any multiple
of it.
^iTT^q"
74
^^j
^[JEfSr^ ^R^r n. A term
for any post or eiijoyineut re-
iiiiirkubly transitory.
^^T^^^ n. s Impatience,
ea'rerness.
=^ -■
^FTf^ )}. s Generosity.
^^^TlTfRr^r n. s Inditierence,
stoicism.
^^n^^ n. 8 Resemblance.
^PTTri''^^ a. s Repressed and
covered ; dark aud sarcastic
— Hpeech.
^mte a. s Affected by or
j-elaling to ^^^U. ^^^^^^
^^^^ /• (a) a wife or wo-
^K^ s One's own son by
one's own wife.
#K^f(r^ ad. Around, a-
bout. 2 Lengthwise and breadth-
wise, r V ■
s^ ^medicine.
^fT*^ n. (s) A drui;-; any
^rq^rt^ n. Medicine ; me-
(licnl measures, v. ^, ff, ^X.
'^\T^l^^ n. s A drug or
medicament gen.
^iT'-Tr /. A tree, shrub, a.
Mediciiiul.
^mn^lTpL The remedies,
applications, &c. comprehended
under medicine.
^ The twelfth letter, and
first consonant.
^^'T n. m. s A riui;- of co-
loured glass, worn by women. 2
.\ string ticil round the wrist
at sacritices.
Hi^^ Gravel : a single
pci)ble or particle.
^ir^ a. (ii) Poor; j)overtv-
strirken. 2 Burren, wretched —
vdla;;es, soil, &:e.
i^^\^ /. Wretchedness.
^rrr(s) An ornamental cor-
don, groove, &c ; spiral lines.
^^ /. A Strait: pressure.
2 Gnttiats3 (as in bread, &c.) J
Fearful drawing back. v. ts\.
4 m. A dint. 6 A brawl. 6 A
notch. V. m^-
^^^ f. A smart contest, v.
US, ^T. 2 A sharp, shoot-
ing pain : a sudden sprain.
^^^^ or-"^ ad. Cruunch-
ingly chewing certain subs-
tances. V. ■^I^, ^•[.
^^f^^oj ^,^ i^ •Y^^ produce
the sound ^■^^'^. 2 To gnash
the tsoth. r r ^i i i i
, [perfectly boiled.
^^^^1^ a. Hard— rice im-
^^^^r Tortoise-shell.
^^^oj V. i. To give way.
2 To be sprained. 3 To fail in
courage, v. c. r To pull sudden-
ly and smartlv.
^^-^^-f.?:-K#[r ar/. Imit. of
the sound in the snappii>g or
sudden breaking of glass, &c.
"h^^r A sounding stroke
(with a sword). 2 A sudden and
smart pull. '3 Rapid, rough, use
or treatment; an overl)earing
press (as of business). 4 A shock
(of fear, ike) v. ^r, "^^g.
^^^ir^^ t: i. To bind tightly.
2 To ))eat, kick, &c. with vehe-
ment action. 3 To attack (a work)
with might and main. 4 To pull
suddenly and smartly. 5 To ram
or drive hard.
^^W,\^^ k ^^^FT ad. Forms
of the verb ^■^ssifgin'. They
accompany almost every verb
when force, ardor, smartness,
&c. is ^o be expressed ; as
mo g"tcj-ui To draw tightly ;
jfio -q^Qijf^^ To hold firmly ;
^o iTT^crf To beat souiuily ;
^o Qrl^js] To eat a belly full.
^^^qr a. Smart, ])rom])t,
bold and vigorous (at repress-
ing impatience, at despatchin<>-
l)usincss, ice.)
^^Hr/. (n) A dancing girl,
i^^n Riibbisli, dirr, straws,
^fr;igments. 2 An esculent root.
:^^r /;;-o». (Vulgar) Which.
^^^IW^'J .^\ „(/. Imit. of the
j sound in vigorous slashing, hack-
' Mi<.', hewing', &c
I ^ '. y. A brawl,
, ^=^f?^r j squabble.
•fi^l^TA scheme, enterprise; —
as in pursuit of subsistence. 2
.\ perplexing affair; the state
induced by it ; a scrape. 3 Ca-
lumnious machination.
^^'^'^ /• Strait, scrape, v.
^"^I'^lkmZf. A voucher in
the hand w riting of the ojiBS*^-
Pl1, signed by the ■qT2t^, of
the receipts and disbursements.
^^^ (s) A sleeved waist-
coat. 2 The exuvies of a snake.
3 Husk, rind, shell. 4 A coat
of mail.
^"f^f/. A woman's "^l^r. 2
Theealixofatlower. ^^^,-^^^^,^^^
^"^^"^ pi. (ii) Little ones;
wMl f. (ii) a hall of an-
dience ; a town-house ; a court
for the atlministiation of j)ublic
business. Applied to the jjeople
as assembled, aud to the business
])ro('eedini.'.
^"^foiS" n. A little metal ves-
sel to hold rice, iftr, &c. 2 A
ring of people sitting. 3 The
calix or cup of vegetables, grains,
and flowers.
=fi^f a. (ii) Unri|)e, uncook-
ed. 2 tig. l^ude, rough, unfinish-
ed— an account, &c. 3 Crude,
undigested — a plot. 4 Imper-
fectly known or acquired — an
art or a science. 5 Young, ten-
der— understanding. 6 Minor,
less — a measure or weight, a
^•■■'Ji^'- [upon a stipend.
'i^^r^T'T^ An appointment
^^r^??S"f Single payment
(as of a numljcr of public ser-
vants).
^^[iT^tJTr The revenue (in
cash or kindj as delivered by
the ryots.
^^R^^ The revenue in
the unassorted state in Hhich it
was paid in.
^tf^roiMl /. A farmer,
contractor, &c., disqualified by
banl<rn])tcy.
^€lr^J7fi^iar or -*^rff^ /
C'olleetion of the revenue (of a
district) upon a stijJcnd.
^€lj^ /. Washing and
5Fr^ST
75
^■g^
dressing (of clothes) without
putting; them into the boiler.
gj^SfRT /, Sequestration
before judgment.
^^J^'cT /, A term of days
after sight assigned to a lioondi.
2 A term (of a hoondi) as yet
unfilled. [gagement.
^^r^^K f. A drawn en-
^^r^^r f. A hoondi as yet
unaccepted.
^%3f;g" n. A new-laid egg;.
^^f^^c^ n. The revenue
just as it is sent (to the Govern-
ment treasury) from the district.
^W^cTS" n. Untanned lea-
ther.
^tJ (s^ The tuck ofa^^fcT^
or ^3IT. t'. '91^. 2 A turtle ;
a tortoise.
SF^ra" or -^ (h sucker of ear-
wax.) A term for a miser.
^-rsic^ n. (s) Lamp-black.
^^r (a) a quarrel. 2 In
law. A case, ^-^.^j^^ disputes, &c.
^^si"r<3f^5?r A term for quar-
^^sf^^R / c. A quarrelsome
^?^(s)A combination, league.
2 A dense form of array (of
troops, &c.) 3 A decoction of
any kmd of pulse. 4 Pains, toil.
^'^^ w. s An army.
^^ (s) A thorn. 2 A fish-
bone. .'> fig. A pest, a plague. 4 A
savage fellow ; a miserly fellow.
WiZ^E f. Wrangling, squab-
bling. 2 Teasing and wearying
persistence (in begging, chiding).
^Z^'^ V. i. To sound sharp-
ly or hardly; to emit certain
cracking sounds.
mZ^Z\ ind. Poet. An inter-
jection of distress or vexation ;
an outcry upon destiny.
^J^E^TT a. Of a peevish and
wrangling disposition.
^-^=r-^-fT^r nd. Imit. of
the sound in snapping (a stick,
°^^-) [of thorny trees.
^Z'cT^^r^ }?. Interest upon
))roken periods.
^^TR^r/^. (h) a mode ofset-
tlinn; interest upon a loan.
^JIT /: (h) a sort of dagger.
2 fig! Any piercing trouble.
'li'^^Rr A railing.
^3"R (h) An imposing dis-
]ilav ; firm and showy array (of
troops, &c.) 2 fig. Closeness,
nervousness (of a speech, com-
position). 3 Smartness (of gait,
air). 4 A combination.
mZ\^^\ ti. i. To be tired of.
2 To loathe.
'^ZXay^WW a. Disgusting.
WiZi'^l Weariness of. v. ^,
^r. 2 Disgust.
^2rr^(s)A side-glance, a leer.
2 fig. Secret drift ; leaning (of a
speech, &c.) 3 Looks of anger.
4 Hardiness.
^rr/. (s) The loins. 2 The
region above the hip, the flank.
5il^^*^T A girdle. 2 A zone
of the earth. 3 or «fio ^f^fTT.A
Species of metrical composition.
^^ (1- (s) Punoent. 2 Sharp-
ly bitter. .3 fig. Offensive —
sjieech. 4 fig. Fierce.
^Z% f. (s) Christmas flower.
^Z\l\ (ii) A bowl or cup.
^jr A raised place along the
side of the road to help travel-
lers to rest their burdens : a
raised mass (of earth or stones)
for a seat. a. (h) Stout, sturdy.
2 Celver, expert ; — used of
writers, riders, &c. 3 Furious ; —
used of ^^tI;, ^5TT, &c. 4
Bold, daring ; — used of M^-
^rT, &c.
%5 (s) The throGt. 2 The
voice. 3 The larynx. 4 The
neck (of a vessel). 5 Guttural
sound.
^jrFcTJTI'ir a. (Of whom the
life is come up into the throat).
That is in articulo mortis.
^J^r A railing.
^5'^r V. c. To endure; to
toil through (time) : to travel
^Z^\^ Adam's apple. 2
The apple of one's eye. 3 A
jewel worn on the throat.
fe^^^TK ad. Up to the throat.
^jXTf^JiTrt, Sweetness of voice.
^"5^^ Aridness of the
fauces. 2 fig. Wearisome and
fruitless ex])laining, exhorting,
reproving, &c.
^Z^ a. Situate in tlie
throat. 2 Guttural. 3 Being
ready on the tongue.
^■^^R H. Ablution from
the throat downwards. 2 A
covert term for cutting the
throat : for plundering of all. v.
cfi^. [carried across a beast.
^STS" f, A double sack
^ST^^r (7. Fit for carrying
^3"TZS— a beast. 2 fig. A dull
fellow fit for bearing burdens.
^f?^ a. B pop. ^5i^ Hard.
2 fig. Difficult. 3 fig. Cruel. 4
Hard at death's door.
r-. "N
^rJ-TrTTr n. s Poet. A harsh
answer or speech.
^JF f. An ornament for the
neck and breast of men. 2 The
square bieast-piece of an ■^TJT^-
^Z^ ^^ n. (s) A wilderness 1 over (space, a distance).
^JRJT^rr f. Heavy displea-
sure : austereness of disnosition.
^^r^rr a. Having ^6\ — an
^E\T n. fs) Hard. 2 fig.
Cruel, offensive — speech : harsh-
a voice : severe — treatment, &c.
tz^ n. s Guttural.
^^ f. The hollow above the
hi]), the fliuik. 2 Margin. 3 A
quarter, region. 4 w. See W\^.
tS f. The itch. 2 fig. An
itching (for fight, &c.)
^^ a. Brittle — wood, iron.
2 Dry, crisp — bread, &c. .3 Hale
and hearty — man or beast. 4
fig. Fierce, ardent — a person, a
horse ; acrid — medicines, &c. ;
sharp — cold ; shrill — the voice :
angry — language, ad. Smartly,
freelv — men.
■"-*
^S'^^fT /. A good sleep ;
a r/ood-bit of sound sleep.
^n-^
76
^i"
^T^^ or -^f ad. Imit. of the |
sound of drums, &c. ; of the!
souud })rocee(lina; from beiited
oil; of the gnashing and fuming
of anger.
^¥^^^1 V. i. To send forth
the sound ^^^^, e. (/. to be
highly heated, lit. fig.— water,
oil, a man in anger. 2 To storm
at; to crash, crack, peal, &c. 3
Used as s. n. Squabbling.
^J^olS" A loud crashing,
rattling, &c. 2 fig. Severity of
manners.
^?^?f^ n. Crisp. 2 In-
tensely hot — water, &c. 3 Heady, '
fresh — an acquired knowledge.
4 Plain, out right — speech, o '.
lligidly observant of prescribed
rites ; minutely exact and cor-
rect— a person, a conduct. 6
Stiff and crackling — a cloth. 7
Severe, rigorous — a regimen, a
cnurs". &c.
^s"^Ti ad. Ardently — rush-,
lag upon. 2 rinnly — graspmg, '
hugtriug. I
mi¥^ V. i. To dry up. 2 To
crack from intense dryness. 31
To dry stifiiy — cloth. .4 To
craunch. 5 To storm at. 6 To.
pea! — thunder : '^[^ ^^jfi^l.
^^^A Intenseiiess, riiior (as
of heat or coldj; sharj), smarting
pain : sudden pealing (of tlinnd- ,
er): combined sounding^of many ;
musical iustniments) : out-cry
about (rain, corn, &c.) ud.
liriskly, smartly. '
^"f^Fn^ V. c. To storni at, |
to roar at (in scolding, iu forbid- >
ding or iu enjoining).
=i^r^ri^'^r r. c. To Inv on
.smartly ; to give a sounding raj).
2 To speak out.
^TtTTf^, ^1^5 ad. Smartly,
bri>!;ly, boldly, dashingly.
^T^r f. A violent and gene-
ral seizure and shock (as by
iV'vcr, poison, &c. ) v. '^^.
5T^FTr?"'^[':r a term {or a
ra\iti()us (tradesman, specu-
iiitnr. &C.I
^>^'^'^(!(I. Imit. of the crack-
ing and crashing of a falling tree.
^^^.^ or ^^^'^ n. A gene-
ral name for leguminous plants
nud legumes, viz. ^tt, M'Z,
^^1^. '^'^y "gSTIJTT, &C.
^^tTRF A cord or silver
tw ist worn around the loins.
^'•J'T n. (s) Pounding in a
mortar. 2 fig. Killing.
^s^F The cidm or hauni of
<i\\^'cZ\ dried for fudder. 2 fig.
Refuse, rubbish.
^^=rr a. Bitter. 2 Savage,
harsh. 3 fig Callous, harden-
ed ; — used of the body in respect
to disease, and c}s|). to delicate.
^^■^f f, A covert term for
opium.
^^^ n. A portion of a Pra-
krit poem as denned by the
choral stanza.
^^^ ad. Tightly, r. ^fW.
^^e"*JTF /. A cart-rope. 2
Poet. Careful examination.
3 Skilful construction, as '5t^-
C27r--^t -fef^JdlT'^T ^o 4 Ei-
ther side of that region of the
b:)dy which is encircled by the
'^frTTor^^T'lf. 0 The cord along
which a ciu'tain, or the mouth
of a drav.-pursc or the head of
the tent walls runs or is drawn.
*^rf^ V. c. To bind tightly,
^o^r a. Bitterish.
^^F A cliiF. r. ^.
^^F^5" or -^f ad. Imit. of a
cracking, crashing, &c.
^'S\^\ See ^^F'^F.
^"^^toT .f- "^- ^liiiute and
toilsome investigation. 2 Tod,
trould.o. 3 Extravagant copi-
ousness, [densely.
^^\^^ ad. Fully, coj)iously,
^ti^F^l^" Confining on a spot
having a ])reci|)ice or an escarp-
ment on all sides. 2 Making
all (througu locking, bolting,
&c.) fast and secure : 'Sl^tfT
fsT^fii' ffl«i ^o ^^T. 3
Surrounding a spot with some
strong means of ])rotcction :
such surrounded and protected
state ; as tsr'^^^T ««<» Encom-
passing a place with troops.
4 Freely. Overflowing state ; ex-
ceeding extent and j)revalence
(of doings, products. and articles);
as st^ri^T-^T^l"^! -qJ^t^T
^o 5 Usedincomp. or as nrlj.
as^o ^%i^^ Any strong and
secure disposition.
^^r^^ V. i. To crash. 2 To
break, burst with a roar.
^TFi'riir Cliff and cra-r,
rock anil steep, i.e. mountain toil:
^I«T ^T^'^ or ^if^SIT.
* **
^^(^•^F n. A barber's nail-
])arer. 2 A goldsmith's instru-
ment, ["a seat.
^^F^'T n. Any skin used as
^"^F«i'F /". A fiction ; a false
report set in circulation, v.
^fik, ^rj"^^F ad. Poet.
On the hip or tiank.
^3"r f, A ring ; a link of
chain ; a window-hook. 2 A roll
ol'Jine cotton thread. [i\<r.
^'^ See ^^r^. 2 See ^^
^^i^fST Makintj; secure and
strong on all sides a. Thick,
dense ; close. 2 Equipped and
])reparcd.
^€JmZ Laying the beams
and joists of ?, floor.
^^1^5" a. Relating to a
quarter : 3itWT^^c?t.
^^/. 7/7. (s) The itch. 2
The quality of occasioning an
itching, o fig. An itching (for
fight, &c.): mettle, phiysomeness.
^%^ci. Bitter, lit. fig. 2 Bitter
relatively; bitter as a sjiccies or
varict)' amongst other species or
vaiietics. 3 Opp. to Jri'ST
Hard and tender ; — used of
certain timbers. 4 Unkindly.
5 Not sweet — certain oils.
() Hard, saline — a soil. 7 Strong,
biting — certain vegetai)lcs. S
Stern severe — a jjcrsou or dis-
position.
^^ prpp. From, away from.
2 from the direction of.
^^ n. A ring ; a circle of me-
tal : an encircling line : the cir-
cular edge of i^a sieve, &c).
^^ pj-ep. Towards. 2 With.
3 Of, under. 4 To ; noting de-
livery : 'sqi^ 7gt^"i ■^. /)
Unto ; noting dueness : ^STT"^
*^*;
77
^:rr?r
^3t "^^T^^. P In the hands
of : fJIT^^i- ^I'g ^ot' 3TT%.
^'^^'TrST ??. y;/. A comprehen-
sive term for crai^s and cliffs.
^jqr? See ^tmiZ.
^Jc^Fc /7?. y. Precipitation
from a precipice (of a criminal
or of one's self in propitiation of a
god, &c.) 2 fig. A rapid and
great degradation. 3 Huper-
liitive quantity or the intensest
quality (of rain, crops, &c.)
^^wf? a. Of the very lowest
grade — a person, thing.
WitmZ ad. At the least, at
the very lowest.
^S"^T2:^r a. Of the extreme
end. 2 One (stupid, infirm, aged,
&c.) to the uttermost degree. 3
Of tlie very last — a measure. 4
Of the lowest practicable amount,
cost, &c.
m^^ jyrcp. See ^^>
^i\\^^'^{ J.pl Subtle tor-
tuousness and darkness of
speech.
^i'fi^^^^r ^7. Used with
^^^^^ or g"!?^"!. Rhetorical or
oratorical complication ; speech
frauirht with innuendo.
•\ ■
^^^ f. c The hollow above
the hip, the fiank : ^o ^^gaf
To carry (a child, &c.) on the
hip.
^5" Ebullition, v. ^. 2 fiii-.
Boilmg heat in the head. .'3 fig.
A vehement emotion ; ^S'O^l-
^S"5" f. A fryins: vessel : a
scalder for miik, &c.
^S""^ n. Something boiled
down, a decoction.
^5""^ n. i. To undergo scald-
ing or boiling. 2 To be heated
to fusion — a metal. 3 To get in
a passion with ; to yet hot.
^S"cr a. Scalding hot.
W^^\^^ V. c. To scald.
^^f /. A dish,— flour, kc.
boiled in buttermilk.
^STT^TcT f. Lemon-grass.
^^ (s) A particle. 2 A grain
(of corn). /. Painful stiffness;
local cramp, v. *i^.
^'T^^ a. Hard, firm — wood,
stone, &c. : strong — cloth : har-
dy— a person : fierce, j)Otent —
flame from kinds of wood.
^■^^r A cornl)in. 2 An en-
closure for grain. feared,
^^^rr a. Granulous. 2 Full-
Wn^f. Pity.
^^^ See ^oTr^.
^r The s|)ine. 2 fig. Tiie
ridge of a mountain : tlie lines
and figures drawn over a wall or
floor with TRT^.
^■^r /. A broken l)it ; a gra-
nule. 2 The jinpil of the eye.
'i pi. Broken kernels of rice. 4
'J he granulations of rich and
fresh ghee, honey, &c.
m\^ f. Wheaten flour.
?)'T"r^ n. An ear of corn.
^^'^r(A)The writing furnish-
ed to the V^T^w by the
jiarties before it, averring their
declarations to be true, and en-
gMging to admit themselves cri-
minal if they be proved untrue.
2 App. to bonds and recogni-
sances. [ A line (of hills)-
^^Rf. (a) a row, rank. 2
^"^^ /. (a) Slaughter, v.
^^, ^^?. 2 General havock.
^^^ (s) A narrator of le-
gends ; one who recites a story.
^^°t V. c. To relate. 2 To tell
poetice ; to sing.
^^•T Ji. (s) Narrating.
^2T^f^ a. (Proper) to be
narrated.
^^r/. s A patched cloth ; a
quilt of rags and shreds.
'■^^^/- (s) A feigned story;
a tale. 2 A legend of the
exploits of some god, related with
music and singing. 3 "Weight,
improtance : 7m^ ^■e(] m]-q ?
Of what account is he ?
^^R#i£[R n. Connection of
a discourse.
^^mm A section (of a
Puran or other book) narrating
the exploits of kings and heroes.
^^lT?r Dressing up of a ^''^f;
emljeliishing it with the charms
and arts of genius and elocution.
^[%cr p. s Related, told. ^^
a. (Possible, purposed) to be told,
narrated. g\^iTi^ ^;, ^jr. That
is under narration — a tale, &c.
^^^n A narrator of lesends
of the gods. 2 A story-teller.
5>^ (s) A bulbous root. 2
fi;;. in comp. Root, stock : as
^^'T n. Massacre; a general
^^r A writ of agreement.
^^^ (a) A step or pace.
^^o3^ "• A general name
for esculent roots.
^^^/. (a) A constitution of
mind as respects sternness or
mddness, energy or imbecjiity;
anthoritativeness. 2 Disposition
or temper; esp. understood of
a had temper.
^^r/. s A cave.
^^ (s) A name of Kara ad e-
va. 2 An onion.
^?r or/, s When ? at what
time?
^^srr^r^r^r «. of some long
time back. [and away ; rarely.
^5rr^R[, ^^m\^\ ad. Once
^rr^cT cnnj. s Lest, jier-
cl)ance. 2 ad. At some time or
other. r
r^ Lever; never.
^fl'T ad. At no time what-
^'<'r a. Root-colored; whitey-
brown. p,
. .-V [la n terns.
*^r?r (s) A term applied to
%^ s A playball.
^5"r ad. Never at alL
^■•-Tr ad. When. 2 Ever.
^^Hir^''^ ad. At times ; now
and then. r j t , ^ ,.
[and (hstant times.
^I'-^r^rST ad. At some few
^^If^ ad. At some long
time back.
W^r ad. Of some long
time back. 2 Of what day.
^^rcRf ad. At some time or
otiier.
^^^ ?/. s Gold.
^^rfr or -§T /. (a) A tent-
wall.
^rF^
78
^fwfr
^K^ a. (s) Younger. 2
Inferior (in merit, &c.) .'i The
least. 4 Sniiill.
^R^T^ (s; The last and
lowest stage, ad. At the least.
^'CgW /. s The little finger.
^'nrr, ^'^r^r a tribe of
IJlilluillUiS.
^'^r f. s An iinmfiniefl
irirl ; :i -^nrl. 2 The sign Virgo.
^■^T^'T (s) Tiie ])()sition of
,Iii])iter 111 the sign Virgo. 2 n. A
(lowrv.
'fr^I^f'T n. Giving a daughter
in marriage.
5'<Tr^^ n. A term of en-
(lenrmciit for a danghter.
*'^r?T'T n. Carr3Mng ofF a
girl : rape.
^'^oy ,. ,;_ Xo moan or groan.
^-I'^S'uf i> j 'j'^j yearn with
pity.
*^^^r. ^^^^r, ^^rsT The
meltings of tenderness, r. ^.
^"^^T^ a. Pitiful, sympa-
^I't'f''"- [fire /tinder.
^T Cotton used lor kindling
^iT (s) Tremor, shaking.
2 In mnsie. Quaver.
^:t^ /». ^Ttr /. A chip
knocketl oft" a stone, &c. 2 A
seal) ; a peeling off. [-;.| M.ilice.
^T7 n. (s) Fraud. 2 Falsity.
^1Z\^^ f. Disguised praise ;
aflcrted reproach.
^ZW^ n. A disguise ; an
.issnmed character.
mZV^^] /: rJnilo, false and
frafry practice.
•^Jr A slip or piece (of
I'apor, &c.) [Spiteful.
^^i'l a. Deceitful, false. 2
WIF^r (ii) A term for arti-
cles of ajiparel.
^iTTPT ivt. (s What tiling is
fhisTjAnintcrjection of contempt.
^'H r,. s Trembling, j-p^,^^.
^^f? (s) The shaking
^i^ A piece of doth. 2 A
patch, .i A division of a fpnrsc).
4 The till of a bo.\. 5 A large
yml ley-block.
^7fJ w. (s) A door.
^A\^ s pop. *m^ 7?. The
skull. 2 The forf:lu-a.l. 3 Fate ;
the writing declaring one's des-
tinies npparent on the forehead.
This word is uttered as in eja-
cnlation, imjiorting downright
denial of some jiretension or
alHrinatinn.
^^r^^<Jr n. Luckless.
^trr^^ST f. Weari.some and
wasting labour. 2 A teasing,
insisting upon a subject ; inipor-
tntiate liegging.
^^\^■^ T\*\ X stigma.
^TrSTJTi^ The l)ursting of
the sknll of a corpse on tlie pyre ;
the breaking of the skull of a
deceased ^^ijr^l with a 111.
^qrSTqr /. Fate.
^^\7Z-'jU£ or-H^ A wearying,
unceasing headaclie.
^fq" (s) An app.
^Pqcvf a. s pop. ^fq^r Tawny.
^I^^r/. (s) A certain fabu-
lous cow. 2 A cow wholly of
one color. 3 A cow gen. A The
red powder of certain dried
flowers.
^qr/. A patch. 2 A pulley-
block. .'3 A piece cut out of a
melon, &c. to declare its quality.
^'J^(Camp) App. sometime^
to a camp or tented army, but
generally to a corjis.
^7^ (p) A slight dilFerence.
n. More or less.
^qr?r (s) A pigeon. |
^^ (s) Phlegm. 2 Watrryj
froth. .3 See ^^.
^T^'T a. Expectorant.
4)'-h-^ Fever arising from
excess of the watery humor.
^^^ V. (A) A shroud.
^^"^ /. A sort of cloak
worn bv classes of mendicants.
^fr?T^^ (s) Fever as-
cribed to the predominance or
vitiation of the watery and bili-
ous liumors.
^'T^l^^sTFcT^^ Fever as-
cribed to the morbid condition
of the three humors ; humoral
f^^^'"- [tion.
^^^^ Pulnionarv consump-
^TrrrcT/. rn, A f.il^e charge.
V. %, ^jUT. 2 A quarrel. 3
A trouble, a pest. v. ^, 7Tcajt<T
^qrr^ (8) A form of dropsy.
^^^^ See ^^f <^^.
'f'^^ V. (a) a written
receipt. 2 A sequestration to
pay creditors: the property so
seized. 3 Restriction resulting
from the passing of a receipt,
&c. 4 Consti])ation of the
bowels. 5 Catching, lit. fig. (as
a person in ills speech), r. "siT,
^T^- [tomb-
^^^ (a) a Muhammadan
W,^T See ^^T.
^^n a. Gray or dirtv-white.
2 Viniegated. ^^,,^. ,,p_^,,
^ifrWR- s Poet. The liair of
^f^ s A blanket.
^^c^FcT See ^^^\^.
^^r^ ?/. A bullock-or horse-
load (of grass, wood).
^^r-2'^3' y;/. Low drudgery.
^K^r (a) A wife. 2 A family.
^5^ (p) A pioeon.
^J"o5Tcr^ =Kj"?yr^cr /■ An aoree-
nicut, written or oral.
^"^ a. Apreeinir to. 2 A-
greed to. 3 Ajijiroved.
^^ ff. (p) Less, wanting :
^q^T^rT or ^JT^?^?5- a.
.Mean, ignoble. [more.
^^^^ n. 1^' ad. Less or
^^Zf A bow (of bamboo or
horn).
^?^ m. n. (s) The water-
pot used 1)V the ascetic .ind
religious .student.
ii^cfr n. (p) Deficient. ^T-
WTT/. Deficiency. ^??rfT^ffi v.
i. To abate. [Deficient.
^Ti^r^. (p) Deficiency, o.
^nri
'9
^irq"
^JT^J^cTri. (p) Of ill fate.
sfifl^^«f\/. Lucklessness,
^^r/. (p) The loins.
^\RT^i^l A nioney-bao; worn
around the loins ; waist-purse.
^^<Mjr A zone or waist-
cincture (of gold, &c.)
^^'^^ (p) A sash. a. Of
girded loins, ready.
^^13- /. Hard labour.
2 Work demanding hard labour.
^^ n. (s) pop. W^ A
lotus.
^iTr^% /. The lotus plant.
^fc^%^^r % A favourite
simile with poets for Life, riches,
&e., expressive of trausitoriness
and uncertainty.
^^'^^ V. c. (II ) To earn.
^'^\t f. (h) Gain.^. 2 The
various operations (of kneading,
rolling, &c.) in ])reparing dough :
(of treading, &c.) in tempering
mortar: (of mingling ingredients,
levigating, &c.) in uorkmg up
any thing.
^^f^T a/'lhat earn^. 2 Well
trodden, tempered, &e.
^JTr^^cT The earning mem-
ber of a family.
Wi'Tor-^ (p)/. A bow. 2
An arch. 3 T!ie spring (of a
watch, lock, &c.)
^iTR^r?: a. Arched.
^m^ n. (a) The highest reve-
nue (of a village) settled by
measurement, not of its culti-
vation, but of its whole arable,
including fallow, and by estimat-
ing tlie produce if all be culti-
vated up to its full power.
^^f^rrr a. That earns.
^mm V. c. To earn. 2 To
perforin efii^i^.
^\M\ or -^\f. Collection
of the revenues. 2 The collected
revenue. '..\ fig. Tlie gam reahsed
(in an undertaking).
?;iTr?riEr^iTr/.'rhe revenue col-
lected under the head of fines,
forfeits, &c.
^Hrfi^^ir The head collec-
tor of the revenues of a district,
^rrrtf^r^rrr/. The office of
a ^*Tl^^^K. [Deficiency.
^^r a. (p) Deficient. ^Am^\
^^(^(ItaL) A shirt.
^^rff=T a. Dull, pallid.
^^ (s) Royal revenue, tax.
2 A settled allowance to certain
orders in a village — to the
A hand. 4 Attached to the
names of towns : as 5[i?I^^. 5
III comp. Agent : ^^^x:. G
/. An unlucky day ; the day
following an eclipse, &c. 7 ind.
It follows imitative particles :
^l^^^ V. c. To bind tightly.
WiTWi^ f. Any harsh, oratiuL,^
sound. 2 Brawling. 3 Teasing
and worrying jiersisteuce (in
begging, scolding, &c.)
^^^^■^ V. i. To caw — crows :
to grate. «;. c. To caw out; to
utter hoarsely.
^<*<r2^ A combined or loud
cawing, grating, &c.
5iT^acr a. Brand new. 2
Hard and cracklin;]; — cucumbers.
^X^V^l The mark left by a
rope tiglitly drawn. 2 The
hollow notched (around a stick,
&c.) as a channel for the recep-
tion of a rope. 3 Damoiselle
crane.
^ti\TE\ or ^tW£\ f. The
little finger or little toe.
^W?r See ^^^RF.
^^?[cT^fS" A terrible man
(or other object). j,^^jj_
^^T m.n. A fruit. 2 or ^tz A
^'^Z\ or ^m a. Luckless.
2 Poor, barren— a village, &c.
^^?r or ^i^\f. The shell of
a cocoanut. 2 A skull.
^tsq-Rqfs-Rr or ^OTrrr^rr-
'^r a. Luckless.
^^ f- Rice once ground.
2 V.J-. A kind of grass. ^^^^^^
?^5^ or ^i^^ V. c. To
^^^f a. A color of horses. 2
Stern, severe. 3 Half hoary —
hair. 4 Stiff, coarss — hair.
^^r A casket (of metal,
wood, &c.) 2 A covered basket
of bamboo.
^^^r W^^ Rigorous ad-
ministration or rule. 2 Potent
infiuenee (as of particular inebri-
atinf; substances). r
" sure.
^^i'raJTR-R^r /. Displea-
'Fri'l'T^rr f. Severe regard :
habitual severity of regard.
^^i^ or ^^^ n. A kid.
^i^^S'r^ or'^r A kind of crane.
^^^ 11. (s) An instrument of
action. 2 Tlie Instrumental case.
3 In comp. Doing: tif^^'^eR^iTi.
^V^\ (a) The large, brass
trumpet which sounds the bass.
K^l^^^ f. The price of
douig.
^V^\ f, A mason's trowel. 2
An incantation : setting against
of any magical process : a spell.
3 Verbal of ^Kcf : rm"^! ?Ro
^^^[\Z His proceedings are evil ;
'^' ej5 o ^ ^"^ This w as artificial-
ly effected.
^•^r^r a. Artificial. . .
r^ [work.
^^Tl^rC ad. According to
^^^ V. c. To do. 2 V. i. To
work or ferment : JJ^^ ^sSfToS
^^fil. 3 To act or move in
any particular manner, n. An
act.
^T^^^f Bass-trumpeter.
^^cT^ (s) The palm of the
hand.
^5rcr^m"^r /. Begging from
door to door under a vow to eat
upon the si)ot the food placed
by the charitable niion the palm.
'^^^^T^r^ See ^^iTcT^rs-.
"li^^^r y. i. To burn, scorch.
2 To be blasted — crops or a
plant. 3 fig. To wither : to dry
up— the body from disease.
^i^tTeT^ (s) A poetical term
for tlie hand. 2 Beckoning.
^qF5"?riTrqT or ^i^^^i /.
Talking with the fingers. r.^^.
^T^m V. c. To scorch,
singe. 2 To blast (a plant).
^r^rr
80
^R^m
W^IT (s) Tribute, c. ^, '^,
WJ'^ n. (ii) Fate.
^'^^'^ /• Spend i no- (time)
]>le;isantly. 2 A pastime.
^^^^ V. c. To spend (timej
j)Ieasantly. - To pass pleasautly
— time.
^^^^/. A saw. W,m^^ V. c.
To saw. ^^^rfl /■ A small
^"^y- ^ [and its I'ruit.
W>^i^7i.f. <\ Curiadu-tree
^^^c^r A term for the bro-
tlier of the bride, &c. Set;
^'T^T^T f. In marriages. A
term for the sister (or female
otficiating) of the bride or bride-
groom.
^>T^{ jirep. By or through.
^Tiir (uL Imit. of tlie sound
in j:nashing the teeth.
^mT"^ /. s j)0[). ^^f^^r The
little finjj'cr or toe.
^^["s"^ v. c. To gnaw.
^TWcry'.(A)Any machine, en-
gine, instrument, or structure of
intricate and ingenious compli-
cation ; any astonishing and
skilful device. ~ A miracle.
^^r^ (a) a promise, agree-
nuMit. 1.' -V deternunation.
^in^-Tl^f A written agree-
ment.
^n<r a. Adiierent to one's
promise ; faithful and firm, t-j-^j.
^Krff prep. On account of;
^ift^TFcT or < (A) A ^^l^
composed of ten or twelve vil-
lages belonging, some to one
^■^T^, some to another.
^^f An aflix to nouns im-
plying the possessor, master, lord,
or rightful person : tf^iaii^t A
monied man; ^'I^'Cl The mas-
ter of the house ; flfST*^! The
person entitled to honors, li
The inhabitant or the person be-
longing to : Jit^^rt ;} The
dealer in : ^Tq^^'^T, Hii^^.
4 The bearer : ^t'^Tl ; the
mere performer : Hir^^l,
^T"^^^. •"> An adjective form of
^X expressing Kelation : 3^-
^fr (s) An elephant.
^F^'^r/. (s) Pity, mercy.
^^•7 prrp. By or through :
noting means or medium.
^rfr/. (s) The sliell of the
cocoanut. 2 A skull. [Cancer.
^^ (s) A ciab. 2 The sign
^^^ a. (s) Ilarsli, grating.
'J Cross, savage.
?^^r f. (s) A vixen, virago.
2 A female of a shrill voice.
^%^ s A plant and its root,
z(!doary.
^sf n. (a) Debt.
^s[?Tr That borrows money.
2 That lends money.
^i^^ n. A bond. ^^'XPT a.
A debtor. 2 A creditor.
^'=l^f^fn ft. A oenprid deb-
tor. ^o-f^^"! a. Loaded with
''';^i,*- [ledgmcnt of a debt,
^jjn'^r A note of ackiiovv-
^^r^T a. Lent or borrowed
at interest — money, r^iyen, &c.
^^f ad. At interest — money
^"T (s) An ear. 2 The sense
of hearing. .'3 The diagonal of
a quadrangular figure.
m'^l^Z a. Offensive to the
e.nr ; grating. ^^1,^ ^ar.
^■^FRT a. That has passed
^"^il7 Whispering in the
^"/- [ear-gate.
^^T'-J The way of the ear,
^''ifT^r^ 71. A demon capa-
ble of being bound by a nniutra,
and forced to communicate (by
whisi)eriug in tiie ear) the af-
fairs of people. 2 Fortune-tell-
ing.
^'^T-r u. 8 The auricle.
^^^TT /. s A diagonal (line).
^iTf3T?^ n. Ear-ache.
^I'T^^Tr ad. From car to
I ear ; as beard by one aud related
to another ; from mouth to
mouth.
^Tff'TiT^eT s A sentence in
which the verl) agrees with its
subject.
^tITI f. s Scissois.
r_
^rl^iT a. s (Necessary) to
be done. n. Deed, action.
^Tlf A doer, agent : a
maker. 2 The Nominative case.
3 A manager.
?)TTrc"T[r (s The doer and
the undoer). A title of God.
*^kffrqiT5Jcrr «. The Crea-
tor, the Destroyer, the Preserv-
er.
^^^^ n. Making : skill in
making ; handiwork.
^^JT^r or ^ff^T^Tf? a.
Competent, clever.
))hrase used of one of whom we
would describe the vast and
uncontrollable power ; " That
killeth and That maketh alive ;"
used of God, saints, kings.
^^^^ n. Power of doing. 2
Agency, act.
^^^ (s) Mud, mire. 2 fig.
Nastiness.
^^"H" f. The plantain-tree.
^^5 (^) Camphor.
^^ 71. (s) An act; action. 2
Heligious action, as ablution.
&c. 3 A conduct or course,
Used for Destiny. 4 Moral duty.
5 The subject of an action ia
grammar. (! .-V business, func-
tion. 7 Se.\ual copulation.
^v^^'^lT 7). Evil ;i])pointed
bv one's destinv.
^H^Z^Z
^^^ZJ^Z A
term for anv vile, iiestering per-
son or business — as attriliuted to
fate : also for the toil and trou-
ble of one's allotuient.
^*T^F? 71. s The section of
the Vedas which treats of rites.
2 tig. Idle and tedious talk. v.
ITT, ^JT, f T^.
WJlfcT f. Fate.
^SrMr
81
^^^m'V
^^^r^, ^4^i3:r3" A term
for a savage fellow : for a loose,
irrelir/iovs person.
?.H5 fi. s Scrupulously exact
in the discharg'C of all religiously
enjoined works.
^4r°T3Tt[T s A sentence in
wliich the verb agrees with its
ohject.
^i^^^ See ^^2r.
OT^ n. m. Conduct ; one s
acts and deeds,
W^jf^FT The union of
destiny and cue's merit. Hence
spwo vt" By wonderful conjunc-
tions; by rare accident.
^^'f^gr a. See ^J-
^JT'^Tf^ s Giving up of works
or working (towards recompense
in another life). [destiny.
^RiF^ n. The allotment of
^iflTI^ /• '^'he sphere of
works or theatre of action ; the
field of labour (for mortals). A
term for this earth.
^^TiTr^ The experiencing of
the pain and pleasure allotted by
destiny ; fuliiluieut of destiny.
^^^\^ The bw of works;
the road to heaven through obser-
vance of rites and ceremonies and
performance of virtuous deeds.
2 The prescribed way of per-
forming religious works.
Wimr a. One who seeks
God through observance of
works ; a legalist.
^iff^J^,^i?iTR=? a. (s) That
releases from ^^rffTJT.
^H^R Fortune ; chance.
^^f^ The doctrine that
Salvation is by works.
WRi'^ The law resfulating
religious works.
^;^\^^\^ The name of a
treatise upon sins and their
pioducts in after births.
^^k^, ^n)'^m The forceful
pressure or bearing of Fortune.
2 The influence of habit ; of
actions.
^A^\^ See ^^J-
11
Wk^N^rr Consideration
of things right or to be done,
and of things wrong or not to
be done ; weighing moral actions.
^3Tf^r JlfcT/. The course of
Destiny : xiT^T ^ » ^T^'^T llf^T'^T
^^r II See Deut, xxviii., 5G.
^HfcIT n. Funeral rites.
■TJfllcr'qT A light term for
the I'rahman who directs the
performance of funeral rites.
•^^r^FcT o. Passed beyond
the obligation of observing rites
and ordinances.
^m^^^ Judge of actions. A
name of God. Ps. xi. 4.
^i^fcT^ n. An organ of action.
•^ "^
^^^^ 71. pi. Follies, failings,
&c. V. ■^i^.
WTT^nr /. s. Worship by
^■^■^■[^ ; service by works.
-J
^^r^T A tribe of Brahmans.
^^ (s) Inclination, ten-
dency. 2 Turn of decline (of the
day, a malady), v. ^l.
^^ (s) Verdigris. 2 A
spot or mark. 3 fig. A stigma.
^?5"^^ Confused jangling
(of men); twittering (of birds), ac?.
Imit. of the noise of men brawl-
ing, birds angrily chattering, &c.
^^551^6!5^ V, i. To be dis-
quieted and irritated (as by
the noise of people squabbling,
&c.)
^c^^'?5T3" Great jangling.
^c^^iF A name of Vishnu as
the tenth Avatar.
^^^ffTTF /. Calamine.
^c^^fir V. i. To lie over. v. c
To overturn.
^c^^q ^^ c. To make to
lie over. 2 To upset.
^^^ V. L To lie over. 2
fig. To begin to decline. 3 fig.
To have a bent towards.
^cJ^'cTF p.pr. Lying over,
i^^ n. (sBody) The wife of
(one's wife being one's body
or sfiyi^, left side), j-^^ ^^rn.
^i^^^v.c. Sf i. To overturn. 2
^^-R" n. (a) a paragraph : a
distinct head. 2 A graft. 3 Ingraft-
ing. 4 A painter's brush. 6 A
pen. G Chopping (of hands or
feet); — used also of the lopping
and pruning of trees. 7 in. f.
Fainting, v. ^,
^^^^^i A term for a Kar-
koon (auditor or paymaster)when
reviled as making sweeping
retrenchments and reductions. 2
One that ruins people by his pen.
^c^nifirnt /. Fraudulent
omission of some item (as in an
account) : dropping of a letter
here and there (as in hasty
writing). ^^^^ ^^^_
^c^iT^Ffr /. (p) Enrolling, v.
^^JTcnrrJcT or-^ (p) A term
for a clever penman, [standish.
^i^f^l^f. (p) A pen-case, a
^^if^^ /. A writing of dis-
tinct heads and items, [article.
^c^iT^F?: ad. Article by
^c^e^F^/. Caligraphy.
^i^^F (a The grand dogma
of the Muhammadans. There is
no God but God, &c. ; the loud
and fervid utterance of this the
Marathas are pleased to interpret
as, and to accept the word as
singifying) A brawl, squabble, v.
^K, ^T^, TT^^, &C.
^e5"5T (s) A water-vessel.
^^W (s) Strife, dissension.
^^F /. (s) An art. 2 The
art (as of a contrivance). 3 Skill.
4 A digit. 5 A division of time ;
equal to eight seconds. 6 ' tb or
A minute of a degree. 7 A whit,
jot. 8 Freshness, grace, lustre
(of the countenance) : cleanness
(of places). [vTfIT,
^^fr^F^q" n. See ^^If 5T-
^^^^f. Sharp contention.
?F^TTTfl1-fqT a. Coutentious.
^c^R^ (ii) Silken thread
covered with gold or silver.
^^l^ (a) a distiller or
vender of spirituous liquors.
^Q^F^F /. The business of a
^J^^
62
^g^
^^T^. - Assessments on dis-
tilleries anil spirit shops. rjj,,j.
^?=^r^rr a. (s) Knowing some
^^f^rfftT/. A dancing giil.
^^^ (s) The fourth age of
the world ; the iron age. 2 Strife.
^T^%\, ^^ f. s A bud.
^f^^ or r%^f^r ^f^^r a pp.
to a dear friend or other darling
ol)ject.
^l^^'^n „. See W,f^-
^f^^r^W^ W^\ A term for
a person of an inventive genius.
^r^TfC 7t. See ^?5^.
^"^^r, ^-^^ry. The excite-
ment of a horse (towards the
mare) : heat in mares.
^5^T n. 8 Sin. r , .n
^ [man or l)east).
^^^^ n. (s) The body (of
^^r See ^^IT.
^^ (s) A day and ni>:ht of
3f5IT, period of 4,;3'JO,{)OO,U0O
solar-sidereal years, measuring
the duration of the world an(l
the interval betwixt its annihila-
tion and re-creation. 2 A view
(of a subject). 3 Doubt. 4 A re-
solve. 5 Alternative. 6 The name
of a Sinistra, one of the si.\
Vedangas.
^^^ a. Ingenious, inventive.
"f^-^^^^r^ A fabulous tree which
yields whatever may he desired.
App. to a lucrative business, &c.
^^=rr/. (s) A thonoht; a
fancy conceived in the mind. 2 A
plan, device. 3 Sentiment : a tie-
tion. 4 A mere conception. 5 A
purpose. (\ A doubl, misgiving. 7
An assumption. 8 The art of
construction (of words or sen-
tences), irj'hc art, secret (as of
an ingenious contrivance).
^?7=fr^(% /. The faculty of
imai^ination or invention.
*-T4r^ a. (Worthy) to be
imagined, Ikr.
^^Tf^ See ^^qcrr.
*^f^ The end of a ^^^. 2
A|)p. in all the senses of ^-
^'q, sin;. 1, 2. 3 fig. Extre-
ini^y of distress («^iif, cfT^-
■^^, ^c.) g of s. "*
m^imi or ^^'m (ifi.
Never ; not whilst the world
lasts. 2 For ever.
^FT^r V. c. To til ink. 2 To
conceive, &c. See^«TCi«TT.
^f?7cr p. Thought, con-
'':'^^'''' ^!-- " [fiction.
^RcT^r^T^Tr /. A mere
^^^T w. s Sin. 2 fig. Filth.
^^^\^ n. (s) Wellare.
^F^r (ii) A whisker. 2 The
barbs of a cock. 3 Noise.
^§Tr^ (s)pop. ^Fe^r^ or =F??T^
A surge. 2 A volume of tire. 3
A tumultuous noise.
^^i f. (a) The wash of
tin given to culinary utensils. 2
A suiiar-boiler.
^c-CC-^-JR-TR A tinner.
^^ f. An embrace. 2 The
grasp (of the mind, &c.)
ii?^ n. in. (s) Armour. 2
Any natural defensive coating.
3 A piece of bark, inscribed with
mystical verses, carried about the
jjcrson as an amulet or a charm.
2 A fabrication.
^^'^f f.cA small slice (as
bit otF). 2 An egg-shell. 3 The
fore ])art of the skull 5 a half of
a cocoanut-shell.
^^Z See *^.
^^ 11. c An ei;g.
^^^cT or-^ n. Any magical
])rocess or crooked device to
injure. 2 A fabrication.
^^cTr-^qr-^^rr a. One who
uses ^^^^^. 2 Slanderous.
4;^fS-tfff/. Clasping.
W^^ZJS;^] V. c. To clasp. 2
To cling around. 3 To receive
amongst ; to a(hnit into friendly
relation.
^"T^rstq /-. A female prac-
tieer of the black art; a witch,
^^^f f. See ^Mf r.
^^5 Wood-apple. 2 n. c An
^^5r See ^tA\.
^??frr Uays shining in at
the dour, &e. ; shadow of the
himp- vessel, or some other object
ol ihadovv boding aud dire.
^^^r The Francoline par-
tridge. 2 A large sort of cowrie.
3 tig. A dusky film over the
eye — the web. 4 Ragged clouds.
^^^r j. A cowrie. 2 The
cornea of the eye. 3 A white spot
(as on certain snakes, as arising
in the nails, &c.) 4 /;/. llevilingly.
The teeth. 5 fig. Used for money.
() A lump of curds. [what ?
^^■^ proii. Poet. \Vho ?
^^'^T V. c. To compose or
string together (lines).
^^•T n. (s) Composin'i (of
verses, &c.) 2 A composition,
esp. poetical.
^'^ s pop. -«5" A mouthful.
^^c7 See ^\'^- r , • ,•
[machination.
^f^ETTc^ n. A slanderous
^^^oj V. c. To embrace.
^^ (a) Decoction of coffee.
^^Ff^r or -'<t«. Skilful in
military tactics ; used of a deep,
designing fellow.
^^rCcT or-^_/; (.\) iMilifary
mananivres. Used fig. of arts,
])lots, Ike.
^^f^ n. A door.
^f^ (s) A poet.
^ncrTTTrTfr^; Poetical genius.
^r^^f^c^r /. The art of
poetry. 2 The beauty of ])oetry.
3 The grace, glow of poetry (as
beaming in a i)oet's counte-
"=^'J,^'':^-" [licence.
^R-ilfW 71. s Poetical
^ff5- „. A tile. [sort^
^Sjr^rr/. Of what? of what
W>^f^\ ad. Why ? for what?
^l%^r or ^^r^r (i>) Em-
broidery.
Wi^l^ (s) a decoction of
medicinal herbs.
^fiS'(.s)Bodily exertion, toil. 2
The sensation of fatigue. 3 Pain
(mental or bodily).
?i?^Tr A labourer.
^S"^ I'. ;. To be fatigued :
to he ve.\ed : to sufler much
tioidde or pain. 2 To labour.
^?Hr-M" r/. (s) Painful; lo be
executed only through pain.
^'S"r^
83
^■^^
^ST^ a. Industrious, pains-
taking.
^#1" a. Toiling. 2 Distressed,
fatigued.
^"B" Strengtli, substance,
goodness (of a thing) ; the mitri-
inciital principle (as of soils, &c.)
2 The quality of gold or silver
Ks determined by its a})pcarai!ce
on the touch-stone.
^tT A seg-ment of a circle
ns a parenthesis : a bracket of
any form.
^^■^^1 a. or what kind,
form ? how? cid. How ? in what
sense?
m^^l a. Of what ? of which ?
WiB^l f. A tie or drawing-
cord (as of a load or bundle); a
ligature. 2 A long, narrow money
bag. 3 Trying, testing.
^tfot y. c. To bind ti^rhtly.
2 To try (gold, &c.) on the touch-
stone. 3 fig. To e.\amine closely
and rigorously; to cross-question.
V. i. To be hardy and firm — the
body from labour; to be well prac-
tised or exercised in.
^^T^R a. Substantial, pithy.
^^TS" V. A minute particle ;
a straw, a haj'.
^^^ II. (a) a business,
trade : an art, accomplishment.
2 Skill. 3 Harlotry.
^H"^r (a) Tlie chief town of
aiT^T^ or xi^siDTT. 2 The por-
tion of a city tirst settled ; the
old town.
^^^r a. Clever, skilful.
^^tf"^ f. A dancing girl ; a
harlot.
^^T f. (a) Deficiency (in
quantity or measure, in the execu-
tion of any work, in an account,
&c.) 2 In accounts. A sum ad-
ded to or subtracted from either
side to make up a difference. 3
Parsimonious clii)ping and cut-
ting. 4 By-gains or illicit gaius.
5 A moth.
^^ET^cf f, (a) Practice in an
art, in the gymnastic feats. 2
Great exertion.
^^^r a. Obliquely. ^m%
(a) Practised and adroit from
practice.
^^rr fi. Frugal, saving, esp.
with evil implication, answering
to Niggardly or parsimonious.
^^^r a. Of what kind? like
what ?
^^r a. Of what kind, sort?
ud. How? for what reason? by
what cause? 2 Used also in indi-
cation of generalness ; as 5JIT
^^r The string or tie (of an
angrakha, cap, &c.) 2 A long,
narrow money bag. 3 The string
Ijy which the mouth of a bag is
drawn.
^^ft /. (a) a butcher.
^^"^trr a. Like something,
indescribable,
^^r^ (a) a butcher.
^^c^cT f, (a) Hard work. v.
^TS. 2 Great toil and pains, v.
^, ^*x:. 3 To bear the burden
and harass of.
^^r^cTF a. Hard working.
^f^T^r Embroidery.
W,^[Zl f, A touch-stone, v.
^, ■qj'^T. 2 fig. Making trial, v.
T7T'?T.
^^^ Soldering, v. ^^.
^^^fr/. (s) pop. ^K^r Musk-
2 A term for a black fz^^T-
^?^?WT The musk-deer.
^^^ (a) Excess, vehemence.
See 3{»r«j, sig. 2.
^^T\ a. Furious. 2 Exceed-
ingly venomous — a serpent, &c.
3 Fiery, ardent — sunbeams, fe-
ver, &c. 4 Monstrous, exorbit-
antly grievous — a load, an afflic-
tion. 5 AVild and vehement-
crying, scolding.
^CRf/. (ii) A tale- v. ^f^,
vj. 2 Instruction.
^HT (h) Saying, order, v.
^'fjf rf. loc. case. In obedience
unto, under subjection to. v.
3^^, ^11, ^f^.
=Ro5" y. Sharp, lancinating
pain (in the head, &c.) v. '^'E,
■%\. 2 Any little contrivance
wherewith to shut and open. 3
See ^^T. 4 Quarreling.
^3r^ or ^35"^ A bamboo
of a large kind.
^«zr^ f^ A cluster of bamboop.
2 A single stick of this wood. 3
Verdigris.
?i3r^ar w. Verdigris. 2 Filth
or dirt (on clothes, vessels, &e.)
^3-^ot, ^^^^ V. i. To be
slightly affected with verdigris.
W,^W^,^^^ V. i. To be
affected with verdigris.
^^-^.^r-[^2ar ad. Imit. of
the sound in snapping (of
glass, &c.)
^^Wi^ f. Concern, solicitude.
2 The yearnings of pity. 3 Vehe-
ment and vociferous speech (as
of quarrels).
^ar^t5"0T V, 2. To glow, rage.
2 To roll and heave about witk
heat. 3 To be greatly agitated. 4
To be ravenously hungry. 5 To
be clamorous (as in quarreling).
'hcfi^l V. i. To be known to. 2
To tingle. [eiously.
^S"cf ad. Knowingly, cons-
^55-cf =r ^i^cT od. Slightly,
faintlv. 2 Inadvertently.
^3"cTiref a. Knowingly ig-
norant.
^^^ A herd.
cha5"qfcl^^^ n. A term for a
rude, untrained person ; a boor.
=Ro3"fT3" or -oST /. Qualmish-
ness.
^S'lTS'if V. imp. To work in
the stomach. 2 To yearn in pity.
^aS^\om A make-bate.
^ar^cTI'T/. A dancing girl.
^o5"fof07 ^, I To writhe in
agony. 2 To yearn with pity.
^^^oJT J The yearnings of
compassion.
^^^^^^ f. General telling;
telling to all around. 2 Recipro-
cal communication.
^arr^oT V. c. To make
known unto ; to inform.
^(Z"^(s) An ornamental piece
of wood, &c. as fixed on the
spires of temples, &c. : a dome. 2
fig. Vertex, acme : the conclusion
(of abvisiness). 3 fig. The spire of
^ToST
84
g^RTqF:
the neck, j. e. the head. 4 A
water vessel.
^?^r A large bud. 2 See ^^F.
^^[JTT^cTr/. Art and skill.
^ioST^r /. A close and neat
adjunction of two pieces, a dove-
tail, a suture. [puppet.
=RotrnET^ n. The string ot a
^^RJ^r a. Relating to a
pui)pet-show.
^^ f. A bud. 2 A nodule
of burnt limestone.
^|3"^r3" The age called *<^l ;
nil evil time.
^^f'^r •TPT^ An incendiary ;
a make-bate.
^^ (s) The armpit.
?^r /". s Orbit ot" a planet.
^^rqf^ One that holds up
his arms in indication of utter
destitution and beggary.
^■\ hid. An expletive particle
terniinatinj^ a remark of the
interroiiatorv form : ^ fi 'BTIW-
5?S1 ^TTTT^ ^I : 2 conj. Or :
^f ad. Why ? wherefore ?
^r^^HF f. Fixedness, settled-
ne.ss.
^fl^ a. (a) Fixed, settled,
lit fit'. f • e
o Ljuice ot sugarcane.
^\t^ f. A boiler for the
^r^ fs) A crow.
_^ »■»
^^I^T V, i. To contract
(from cold or cramp).
^r^^r or ^f^^r a coarse
wick of cloth. 2 Tiie wick of a
lamp. ',i A little roll of cotton,
clotli, &c. 4 An unripe fruit.
^\^'^{ or ^f^"^r /. A cucum-
ber. 2 Extreme cold. v. »T^.
^^"^ n. Bracelet of women,
and the string described under
^f^^^fgr j\ Sharp eyes :
nttril). sharp eye or sight.
^I^TT «. (s) A caret.
?r^fr or ?:r^fr/. Molasses.
^^>11^ (s) The touch by a
crow of tlie fcf^ ou the
eleventh day after a death.
^r?io^/. Pitiful complain-
ing. 0. ^K' 2 Comniisseration.
V. §. aR^.
?;r?:^cT?r'^T or-^Rr a. Piteous.
^r^r (ii) A paternal uncle.
^f^H^ A cockatoo.
^rCr /. The wife of a pater-
nal uncle.
^r^f or ^r^r conj. Because.
^rjc^^r or ^r5«rfr see ^\^-
.<\ ,
^t ^ ad. In a hesitating
manner. /. Hesitation. 2 Moan-
ing. V. ^X, ?IW.
?r^ or ^t^/. The armpit.
2 A tendril, v. ^JZ. ^j^^ju,^
^r^^i^r/ A tumor in the
^*T?r a. (Low) Shrewd,
sharp, clever.
^\^^ (p) Paper. 2 A letter;
any ])iece of writing. [paijers.
^R^q"^ n. Writings and
qfif^Tf a. Relating to paper.
2 tig. Slight, flimsy. [^ tig. Of
thin, delicate skin — fruits, &c.
^IJr<^3ff=I A term for a
young man of slight and feeble
"^^^^^ ^ [letter. 2 In letters.
^fJI^fT^f ad. By way of
^TTf^r /. Crying acjainst. 2
Telling against, v. ^x:.
^r^ s Glass. 2 Crystal used
as a jewel. [of tree.
^r^=T «. (s) Gold. 2 A kind
?ir^r3" A large, watery
blister.
^^K^ Gutta Serena,
^r^r^^. Unripe. ^^^^^^,,,,_
^f^r^ n. The calix or cup
^[^^r or ^t^^r The tuck of
the ijT<T^ or ^JT?. 2 The
tucking in of this tuck. v.
m-^, iTK. 3 (h) A long
cloth of a span's breadth, used
as girding for the loins.
^liT n. A work./. Glass. 2
(n) A button-hole.
^fsT^f* /, Administration,
rule (of a ruler).
?;f^^/. Chicken-pox.
*|5lKr A caste. They are
sellers of glass-bracelets.
^^r (a) Among Muham-
madans. A judge. Used of the
officer who declares the law (as
in the English courts) ; or of
him who states the precepts of
the Koran concerning cases.
^\^f. (s) Sour gruel. 2 Rice-
gruel. 'A Starch. 4 The clear
serum of rlT*.
^r^ Cashew-nut — the fruit.
^[^[^f Fruitof the Cashew-
nut.
^1^ A deeply laid plot. 2
Economy, order (of a kingdom,
house, &c). 3 Thickly caked
dirt. 4 A composition (of talc,
gum, &c.) 5 n. A decoction of
•IT'^^, &c. to make ink. G
Sauce made of ^53l^.
^\Z^mf.{H Sf A)Parsimoni-
ous clipping and cutting, re-
trenching. V. ^X, *TS, T^I^T.
^r^^H-^rr «. Thrifty, ^^^^jp^
^Fcir^r /. A little stick, or
^r^^F^F or-'^r A mason's
^^^JTIf^TWF /. jd. Little
bits of wood, sticks, &c.
W^'^l f. Reaping of the
ears, esp. of 9)T"«io3r and ■^m-
iT'CT- 2 Cutting down (as of
a forest) ; slaughtering (of an
armv, &c.)
?F2"'T" x\ c. (n) To cut. i\ i.
To be begrimed : "^^oSl^ ^T^^
^T^TSI II.
^iirr or ^r^F a thom. 2 fig.
A pest, a prick in the side. '6 The
tongue of a lialance. 4 A balance
having a tongue. 5 pi. Erection
of the hairs of the body (from
friy:lit, cold, &c.), horripilation.
6 pi. Shivering preceding lever,
rigors. 7 The sting of a scorpion.
S The tongue (of a lock). I' The
back-bone. 10 A disease inci-
dental to parrots, &c. 1 1 A rock
in the sea. 12 App. to anything
resembling a thorn — a fish-bone,
the iiand of a watch, a fork, &c.
13 The congelation (of ^^^T,
&c.) V. 5, ^^^Z, '^^.
^F^F^FT or -^ /. General
clipping, &c. 2 A massacre ; a
cutiiny up.
^rr^
85
^rTT
^2:^, ^^ 71. A little stick.
^fJ^ftoyJIR A bitraouth
'i^'i.'^"'''^"' ^''- [mia. V. ^.
^if^fsy pi. Acute ophthal-
^rJcfl^ a. Of exact weight.
^[J'^fcirr Yellow stramo-
nium.
4i\i^ a. Thorny.
?ii2-?yiTR See ^fs^fr^Ffr.
^FJ or ^tJ Border, side,
verge, brim (of a dish, iiat, &e.) :
sliore, coast. [<rex).
^TJ'T n. Pulse or legumes
'FfS'T V. c. To endure.
^FJf i' f. A wooden bowl
usually with handles
^rJF Coast, border.
[dity.
^IFJ'^ n. s Hardness, soli-
^V6\ f. The stalk of a plant.
'2 A staff, rod, pole, stick gen. ;
a flagstaff, the yard of a ship. 3
A blow with a stick, i;. 5Ri^. 4
A land measure, — five cubits and
live hand breadths : the measur-
ing rod. 5 (or sjx:'!^!^^ ^I31)
The frame of the body : stature.
^FSF'TF^F An allusive term
for a Mahar.
^I5^F^ or '^ a. Relating to
Catty war. 2 fig. Meagre; — used
of horses and men. ri> • r i
^\i\^i\^ or ^tskfj '™<r,'^!
^i^ n. (s) The included
portion betwixt two joints. 2 The
trunk of a tree. 3 A chapter, a
section. 4 An arrow.
^r^ n. f. Thruslied stalks of
leguminous plants. 2/. Straw
(of wheat, &c.)
^t^^^ry. A general term for
the operations of pounding
(of rice, &c.)
m\^^ ft. Pounding (of rice,
&c.) to husk it. 2 'I'he quantity
taken to be pounded. 3 The cost
of pouudiug. 4 Straw of •ii-
^IS^m^f. Price of pound-
. °^ Lraortar.
^[^"T" V. c. To pound in a
^F^fy. A blade (of grass,
&c. Hence a bit of straw. 2
Bordering line (of gold and silk
threads).
^F^'F /. A shoot of the root
(of ginger, &c.) ; a piece of sugar-
cane, &c.
^F-?^ n. See ^17^.
»S^ Ox
^i^ 71. A joint or knot. 2
An internodation. 3 A piece com-
prising three or four knots. 4
The whole trunk of a plant.
5 A young plant fit to be trans-
planted.
^F^?^rr Stick caustic.
^F^fc^ /. Reiterated and
fruitless taking out and putting
in, removing and placing.
^F^'%/. Gathering of the
harvest. 2 A stout rope used for
tying a horse to his picket; a
tent-rope.
WS""^ V. c. To take out. 2
To trace (figures, &c.) 3 To
weave. 4 To invent (a way, a
fashion). 5 To draw, derive :
^r '$rft«T ^m ^^"1 ^1^
^lf%ri(T. 6 To earn. 7 To take
up (money); to borrow. 8 To
bring out or introduce (as a
subject). 9 To detect (faults,
&c.) 10 To drag along (grievous
days) ; fUJ ^^V^t^sj ^i^
f^^¥ ^f«%. 1 1 "^ ^T^^t
To wait upon ; to minister unto
(the sick, &c.) 12 To explore
(a road, &c.) v. i. To abate,
lessen — fever, rain, &c. ; to draw
off.
^F^M ^ c. To bring a
mare to the male. 2 To get out
(offspring) of a mare.
^\^\ A decoction of medi-
cinal herbs. 2 Grain, &c. or
money stipulated by way of
interest or premium upon money
lent : the practice of so borrowing
or lending money, v. ^I^, ^'^,
^S"F^F?r f. Hurried, animat-
ed taking out or away.
^F5"(^ p. Commissioned ;
made to order. 2 App. reproach-
fully to a mischievous child. 3
Produced, got out ; —used of a
breed of horses.
^^f^/. Suppressed talk
about. 2 Murmuring. 3 Shilli-
shallyinj.
^r^ a. (s) Monoculous. 2
Squint-eyed. 3 App. to a country,
town, &c. of uncertain supplies
and alternating cheapness and
dearness ; to a place whither one,
from his crimes, is ashamed to
go. 4 Slanting.
^I'mSf. A term for a town
where, from there not being any
quantity of goods in stock, and
thus in dependence of supplies
from without (i. e. the town
having but one eye), the market
is ever fluctuating betwixt over-
flowing plenty and distressing
scarcity.
^fOOT^yooT^jj A term expres-
sive of insignificance.
^F^/. Lustre. 2 fig. Fresh-
ness (of look). 3 fig. The exuvies
of a snake, m. (s) A husband.
^f^ Catechu.
^FcF?»<T A caste of Shiidras.
?FcF¥Fy. c The skin or hide
(of man or beast). 2 A bit of
skin as rubbed off, as hanging
about, &c. [Leather.
^F^^ 71. The skin or hide. 2
^\^ f. An insect of the
spider family.
^FcFof or ^^^ V. c. To spin.
2 To turn. 3 fig. To contrive
(mischief or evil). 4 To harass.
5 To crimple the edges (of cakes,
&c.) n. An instrument for crim-
])ling the edges of cakes.
^FcT^ f. A disease of the
hair and wool of living creatures.
V. ^TiT, 2 A large scissors. 3
fig. A dilemma. 4 The trian-
gular sjiace included betvveea
particular lines on the palm.
^F ^T corij. Because.
^F^^^ V. c. To cut with
scissors ; to shear. 2 To cut by
gnawing. 3 To shear (sheep).
^FcT^cTF ad. Obliquely. .^.^^
^F<1<=laS' f. Exact evening
^|cF'?Tr ^F^ A cut-purse.
^FcTf^'T" V. i. To weary out.
^Tcf3" A sheet of rock.
^FcfS'?? a. Consisting of
sheet-rock — ground.
^FcTF /. (s) A beloved or
lovely woman, a mistress.
^r?rrr
86
^rr^^
^i^lT n. a A forest. 2 A
l)ii(l road.
^\^\Ti or ^i^rfr A turner.
^f^[^ or ^i^R^ /•. i. To
l!v at siiaiiiiisliiy and in'tulantly.
V. c. 'Jo weaiv out; to wear
beyond endurance — a person.
^fcT/. (s) Beauty, lustre. 2
See ^tff, sig. 3. [beautiful.
^fPTflH a. Ilavinii lustre,
^F'Tf? or ^Hff J). Formed
on the turning lathe. 2 tig.
Slightly but neatly formed.
^i'4r The fibrous integu-
ments of the coeoannt ; coir. 2
Cord made of it. ."5 The ilbres
covering the surface of the
^?:flT^. 4 App. to the fibres
of a stringy mango.
^['4r^5 or ^r^^2^/. Unprofit-
able discussion. [romance,
^f^^^r /. s A fiction, tale,
W,\^l An onion. 2 Any bul-
bous root, .'i fit;. The root of
the tongue. 4 That part of the
honeycomb that contains honey.
^r-T An ear. 2 fig. The
handle of a frying dish, &c. 3
'I'he touch-hole of a gun. 4
Hole bored in the ear (for an
ornament). [(of a horse, &c.)
W.]H^^mor-€\J'. The nii.ke
^[•T^'^ or-'T f. Suf)pressed
talk al)ont ; popular whisperings.
L' MupTtiiuing. 'i Hesitating.
^R^i^TT n. An ear-pick.
^mfk^^l f. c Fulling the
ears.
^r^RTlST n. i:sed wilh ^^T^
To be deafened or stunned (as
by a loud noisej. 2 Used with
^^■?tri To have such a deaf-
n( ss removed. 3 fig. To become
tractable. [Carnatic.
W>R'?\ a. Relating to the
^H'= )}. App. to any strange,
harsh speech, custom, &c.
^RTi3T Overlookino; (an
offence) : conniviu;^ at. 2 Urging
bv a wink. r. ^t;.
^['T'T ». s A forest.
^\^mJ a. c Credulous.
^RTTirr -Z'^J -^ -^r A de-
scriptive term for an order of
mendicants.
^mU a. Deaf.
^^iH^ A matter uliispered
in the ear.
^R^^r Listening, v. k, ^^,
^TRsfr^ n. The hollow of
the outer end of the face alonu
the ear : simply a side of the
face.
^R^/. VI. A file. 2 p A saw,
^\^m V. c. To file, &c.
^\'^\ The eye of a gun. 2 The
down riirht stroke of a letter, a.
One-eyed or squint-eyed.
^Hl^rar Ears and angles;
])rojections and recesses.
^Rr^ ^?3r „, Of unreten-
tive ear; communicative, tattling.
^RF^r 5f:j a. Heavy of
hearing. [hearing, fine-eared.
^RF^r T^^Z a. Quick of
^RF^r T5"?"r The tympanum.
^RT^r ^^^J a. Prone to
blab. 2 Credulous.
^RFiT ad. Back to the ear —
a bowstring dravvn. i". ^JI^.
^Rf^T^ Passing by (of an
offence). 2 Slackness, languid-
ness (on an occasion demanding
fire and energy).
^RfR'Tf ar^ In one's expecta-
tion ; in one's mind or thought
(as likely to occur).
^'Lf' (-'^^ ^ ''"^^' ""egulation.
2 'Ihc right of requiring from
every man exposing thiiifrs for
sale in the market u ]>ortion of
his goods.
^R^^^ Rules and reoula-
lions comprehensively : any rule
indifferently.
^RT Poet. A boy.
^F^r^r A nameoff^-
^IT An ear ornament of
females. 2 Also ^\^Z\ /. c A
slice. V. -^X, MT^, ^^.
^^^ Shivering. [„„;ie.
^^^ n. s Falsity. 2 Fraud,
^W^ 71. Cloth. ^IT^^n A
clothier.
^T^'^FT^' 71, A comprehen-
sive term for cloths and unc-
tuous substances : articles of
clothing and sundries.
^PT^r An individual of a
class of mendicants who itinerate
from one sacred ]dace toanollier
currying a red flag, selling rosa-
ries, holy water, &c.
^FFT or -°Tr /. A light term
for shaving (of the head, &c).
WiWll^^' f. The cost of
cutting ; i. e. of reaping a field,
of hewJug wood, &c.
^iFT% /. Act of cutting ;—
used esp. of reaping.
^rq^ V. c. To cut. 2 fiii. To
reduce wages; to retrench.
Wf V. i. To shake.
^FTT^^, ^l^T^^\ '■'• Cam-
iihor-water. f^^, v^X-
^mi w.-fr/.^ n. Quuking.t?.
^^'^r (a) a caravan.
^FT^r a. c Fat and bloated.
2 Of loose and v. atery substance
^F^F /. The cotton plant.
^qr a. Hard and solid (so
as to be cut and eaten), — used
of fruits.
^(QR p. Fit to be reaped. 2
Reaped, cut, chopped,
^iq^ Camphor.
^[fTT %^^ n. False coral.
iJltJT ^m n. False pearl,
^fq^ Cotton.
^ix a. (a Infidel.) A term
of abuse — a rascal, knave.
^FT^c^F A caravan.
=fiF^ /. A longitudinal divi-
sion (of a bamboo, &c.) : a bar of
iron, iK:c. 2 Also *T^3IZT'^1
gif^ Tlie radius.
^r^^oj „^ (Vulgar.) An
article of apparel.
^^S" f, V A dewlap.
^f^oTF A coarse blanket
composed of two breadths.
^^^
87
^ir^
^fi'^r /. A dewlap. 2 A
woollen and loosely woven stuff.
^r^^ n. A light form of
^^r^ See ^r^-.
^r^rsT a. (a) Seized, sub-
dued— a country, a person.
^^f^ a. (a) Clever, profici-
ent. 2 Strong, stardv.
5W n. An action, an act. 2
A work, a job. 3 Doing. 4 A
matter sjen. 5 Need of; occasion
for. G Use, fitness. 7 m. {s) Lust.
8 the name of tlie Ilinilu cu])id.
y s Desire. 10 s One of the four
grand objects of human affec-
tions and faculties — the pleasures
of sense.
^r^^<rr a common labourer.
^R^TR A servant (as of
Government) ; a public officer.
2 A labouring man gen.
^miW/ Work. 2Execu-
tion of business. 3 Workman-
ship.
^r^^cTr3r a. Passable.
^fJ^^^f?: or -^ a. That
evailes duty ; a skulker.
mmh^{ f. (s) Amorous dal-
liance.
^IW^ f, Inam land granted
lire numeration of service.
^jn^lT See ^imK.
^R'^^ /. (s) A cow fabled
to have the power of gratifying
every wish of her owner. A])p.
to any all-sup])lying or all-serv-
ing thing or jjerson.
^R^r/. s Wish, desire.
^R^fgf%/. (s) Satisfied state
of desu'e ; contentment.
^RiTirfr /. s Interested
worship rendered with regard to
future reward.
^;mm^ n, & Death at the
will of. [-j^t „,iii
^fiT^q ,j_ (g^ ^ f^j-j^^ assumed
^R^7 ov ^m^qr a. Pos-
sessing the power of assuming
any shape at will. 2 Pleasing,
lovely- [his own ends.
^r^^r^ a. One intent upon
^FT^ a. Busy, diligent.
^[JTI^r ^[^r A term for a
hard-working man.
^WUr ^^ a. Lazy, listless.
^f^[3T A caste of Shudras
in the Carnatic. 2 App. to a
servant entertained for the
common work of a house.
W^W a. (s) Excited by
^'^''•^ . [gen.
WmH\ See 5JIcrr. 2 a woman
^\^ a. Useful. 2 Busy,
diligent. 3 s Lustful, amorous.
^I^M f. Obstruction or
excessive secretion of bile pro-
ducing jaundice.
^W^ a. s Pop. & poet, ^(tf^
Lustful. 2 Desirous. In comp.
W>\^^ n. s Desirable. 2 Done
through desire of some good.
^M^jf •//. (s) A work not
obligatory but performed for the
sake of some reward attached to
the ])erformance.
^[^^R n. A pleasing gift.
2 A gift with reference to the
gratification of some desire.
^fzjqrf g Supererogatory
religious service.
^[r^Tiir^ /. Worship with
rt-ferencc to future acknowledg-
ment and recompense.
^[fipcr^crp ^^ (g) Death un-
dergone for the accomplishment
of som^e desire. [can tell?
^mm^ Who knows ? who
^r^T^ISTit, ^r^TsT^ Phrases
importing Burn it! rot it! out
with it !
^R^ A tribe of Hindus.
Their employment is writing.
^RcTf What thing is he?
A contemptuous phrase.
^r^^r (a) a bearing rein : a
grooming bridle. 2 A rule, re-
gulation.
^R^^IT" ad. According to
regulation, u. That is accordant
with regulation. f '1 r ?
^fq-fg-crpT ^^,/, Wherefore?
^r^^r a. Used in intimating
forgetful ness of the particular,
yet a faint remembrance of the
general, nature of the matter
spoken of : f?JT%' «RTo f^TTT^
2 Like what?
^R^f^ a. Like something
indescribable ; like I know not
wliat.
^\^i^ (s) See ^nr^.
^n^^^r a. Relating to the
gRT^ig caste.
^nTp-o«. What? 2 What-
ever : ^T ^T^^i^ Vr ^m. 3
An interjection by way of sur-
prise : ^J #^T ^1^ ! 4 To how
great a degree : ^t ^T^ ^T
Tg^ ! ,5 A particle disjoining
and distinguishing the several
points constituting that of w hich
something is stated : 3?"^ ^]?}
^n%. 0 Reduplicated, it ex-
])resses marvelloiisness (of num-
ber, variety): IT1 ^F^ *T^ 751%
iTtTi ^tif, or the particulaiity
of parts and items : rfT ^tT
SFPJ ^T^^I; if 3BT^ ^\^
^TTUr^^. [answering,
^r^^r A particle used in
^rprrq^f^FT See ^F'^^FT.
^n^r/.(s) The body. 2 Fresh-
ness of appearance (of_ the body
or countenance). [body.
?r^r^^ 71. A term for the
^r^l^r^fiTR^ m. n. Body,
speech, and mind ; body and soul.
?ffZf^ a. s Relating to the
body.
^IR^^ir^^JTRr^r^ a. (s)
Corporeal, oral, and mental.
Used with Mm, t^T, &c.
^1^ s An affix signifying
Maker ; as g^^T^.
^K^ a. (s) That does, pro-
duces. In comp. as TlffrT^T-
K^, JTUT^T^^- n. (s) Ingram.
A case.
^imif. (p) The period of
the sway (of a king, &c.) : the
day of any ordinar)' person.
^Rf ^f^r %OTr /. A term
for scissors.
*K«K
88
^rrf^r^
^r^J'fr /". The business of a
Karkoon. 2 fig. Economizins; ;
thrifty management, fl. Relating
to ^y^T— writing, &c.
^^TTf^f^^ The chicanery
pertaining to the writer-class.
Ili'nce craftiness.
^IT^'T (p A factor) A clerk.
^IT^^R^rr a. (p) A .'^uperin-
teiulent of a ^K^T^T.
^rtlR-Tr^ The officer ap-
pointed to a ^TK^IiTT to
topp the accounts, &c.
^IT'^RT A place in oen. of
extensive work — a manufactory,
&e. 2 Any extensive business.
^t^^ n. A playing fountain.
^\TZ\ II, An epithet aj)p. to
a troublesome child.
^W^ 11. (s) A cause. 2 A
reason; a i)rinciple, a motive. 3
Meed of. 4 Any festive occa-
sion. 5 s A means.
^R'^^? n. s Causality.
^RT^l" s The inner rudi-
meut and causative frame or
principle of the gross body term-
ed ^^H'^, and of the inner
envelopment, termed f^JT^'?.
^R'^ yre-p. For or on ac-
count of.
fifOTnC (ii) An extensive
business as that of a state, of a
mercantile concern, &c.
^friTrrr One that conducts
a ?F1TMK ; a manager. 2 App.
to any respectable person viewed
as a manager ; as a term oi
courtesy to any house-keeper.
^Tf^R 7*. (p) A caravan.
Ajip. to both, to a company of
Arab horse dealers, and to an
individual of the company.
^F?l% a. Relating to the
^IT^T"^ — a horse, &:c.
^\mi or ^r^^r^/. An ad-
vance of money made to the
Ryots to be repaid with gram
at harvest-time. 2 An impost
levied for the service of a fort
from the villages dependent. .'<
Clever, schenung, and contriv-
ing, r. ^Ti, '^Trf^^.
^KkW\ n. Economy. 2 A
plot. 3 Arrangement (of a king-
dom or family).
^R^'4[^r a. Thrifty. 2 Deep-
])lotting, shrewd and j)rofound
"'^'■"""^'^l- [stai.za.
^fl^^r y. s An expcsitory
^nr^r (p) A siood work-
man. 2 Affixed as an honorary
designation to the names of
Barbers, ^<TT^, f^rfl^t, &c.
^VX7m or ^RlfJia/ Work-
manship.
^r<r a, (s) That does, makes.
In comp. as ^titt^j^c;^.
^[^crq- yj_ g Compassion.
^iF^^^ n, s Harshness of
sotind.
^rirf^ (s) The eighth month,
October- November. rc^
?;rf%^^^r^r The deity of wari
^rlrT^r /: The ^^r^ir of the
month ^iffl^. n. Relating to
the month ^ifif ^.
r
^f^'^'T fl. s Stinginess.
r
^nrr^ s The cotton plant.
a. Relating to cotton.
^1^ n. (s) A woik; a mat-
ter. 2 An effect, 3 A festal
occasion.
^R^l?:<JI=^q" s The law (of
the connection) of effect and
^■•^V'^^- [work.
^f^^SJoiy n. (s) Clever at a
^r?f R^r^r^T n. a general term
for festive rites, &c.
^[^irrn A work to be done.
V. ^^, "3^*, ^^i^I, ^T«- 2
A division of a work. fible
^Rf'^^T a. (s) Competent,
^f^kRf^ a. SulHcient for
tlie purj)ose.
^\4\'^\ a. (s) One who steadi-
ly pursues the accomplishment
of his own business : a selHsh
jierson.
?1^ (s) Time. 2 Season. 3
A calamitous period. 4 A name
of ^iT ; app. to any thing
endangering life — as a serpent,
tiger, (Ifcc. ; to death. 5 The will
of the Supreme Being.
^r?5" 7i, ^^ cid^ Yesterday.
^fc^J n. (s) The poison
produced from the ocean vx\ the
churning of ii by the gods and
<leinons. 2 Poison gen. 3 fig.
Malice.
^fw^^oT J. Passing of time.
^rc^iJIcT /'. The lapse of time,
and the influence attributed
to it.
^[?5Tr5rrrr (s & p) Passing of
time under difficulties.
%\^''^^ n. The wheel of for-
tune ; the vicissitudes of life. v.
f^x, ■^^^i '^^h;.
^r^^^ 7/.(s) 'Jhe three times,
the past, present, and future.
^[f^J^T One of Yamu's mi-
nisters. 2 fig. A terrific fellow.
^f'^'^R n. Measurement of
time. 2 A chronometer. 3 Time
as to its characters : ^ITflt ^'
^To %3T33. V. ^K, ■si"^^, ^^S.
?;rc^?T[rRr /. The penal in-
fliction of Yaraa.
^W''^ n.. An oyster. 2 An
oyster-shell.
^|c^^3" n. An heifer.
^[?5^tT 11. Any licjuid sub-
stance to be mixed uj) and eaten
with rice.
^fciiyr^'T" ?7. c. To mix up with ;
to stir about in mingling.
%WA\ A canal.
^rc^=ff?;[^^ /. An intermin-
gling of heterogeneous sub-
stances. 2 fig. Any confused
intermingling (of a subject or
argument) : such intermingled
state. [t'ate.
^"^^"^ n. The course of
Ox
^fc^^^'T n. Passing away
time in amusements and diver-
sions.
•\
%W'W\ Throwing away time.
2 Carrying on of the world ;
providing tor the daily necessi-
ties.
^f^r Bread, rice, &c. squeez-
ed u|) into a mass with butter-
milk or curds. 2 See '^'ft^T^l.
oRfc^R^F?^ n. s Favourable-
ncss of time, seasonablencss.
^rr^^r/. A form of Durga.
^{U^^^ or -^ n. A water-
melon.
^r^^r m. f. (s) Blackness.
2 fig. A stain. 3 The shame and
confusion (as of a convicted
oifendcr). 4 Lividness (as under
sickness), o Darkness of com-
plexion (by exposure to the sun).
^r?5- f See ^\^^. , ,
J^-^ ^ [dark ways.
"=f)|c^f^ 71, Covert practices ;
^FRH^ a. s Imaginary ;
ideal : forged, contrived.
^r^ f. A red earth or ochre.
^r^*r^ /. n. The cawing of
crows. 2 fig. The clamorous de-
mfiuds of beggars, &c.
m\^^ f. A bamboo lath, pro-
vided with slings at each end,
for the conveyance across the
slioulder of pitchers, &c.
^1^3^ a. That carries by
means of a ^t^^-
^[^^r or fT^TRr^r a. That
is in a state of high excitement ;
wild -from fright, rage, &c.
^[^^r A crow.
^r^S'TffcT n. A term app.
to a multitude (as of relatives
and friends) thronging around
one of their number (to espouse
his cause, partake of his good
Inck).
^\^^'^ n. A term for a
On
book (in public offices) of which
all the leaves are cut down close,
leaving roots to receive (by their
being pasted) letters, &c.
^r^ (ii) Ringing and turn-
ing (of a horse) whilst at full
speed ; starting him up and
down. V. ■^. 2 Cunning, v.
'^j^, ^^. 3 A crafty plot. v.
^rr^ 11. Cunning, wihness.
^rtr^ /. A boiler for sugar-
canejuice. ^ [.lesigning, wily.
W,\^mT, W^^R c. Deep,
^r=<T n. (s) A poem,
^^^"^f^ s A jdagiarist.
^f^r/. c A melon-planta-
tion. 2 (s) Benares.
^sfr^r An inhabitant of
epT^fl. 2 One that has perform-
\2
89
ed pilgrimage to SRTT^t- 3
fig. also ^ivft^^ 'r^I An
arrant rogue.
^f5Md A Ptrip of cloth
bearing pictorial representations
of the TTfiT^TT. 2 fig. Any
lengthy and tedious story, peti-
tion, &c.
?;rsrr The tuck of the %^
or ^Ji^. V. gi?R.
^r^^l^r srs^J «. Abstain-
ing from loose women ; conti-
nent, [leannerson.
^3" n. (s) Wood. 2 fig. A
^13^ s A wood-pecker.
^r^^?r Standing aghast ;
petrified with fear, surprise, &c.
^m f. Udder. 2 See ^Fgi.
3 Poet. The loins. 4 m. An allot-
ment of land (of ^TJII^rT and
f^^T^rf) having the assess-
ment laid ujion it as a whole,
not upon, and according to the
quality of, the different parcels
composing it. 5 s Cough.
^f^ See ^1^, sig. 1,2. v.
^r^^^ /. The system of
distributing the lands of a
village into portions. See under
^T^' [wherefore ?
^r^Prr ad. Poet. Why?
^r^^ The Indian cuckoo.
^^n The leins of a bullock,
&c.
^f^'T or ^^^ n. m. A tor-
toise. 2 A watery tumor (in the
foot or hand) occasioned by a
thorn, &c.
^m^'s n. Poet. ^'FT^^rfr
^^^S.f. Tortoise-shell.
^W^RRT Distension and
hardness of the aI)domen, tym-
panitis, &e.
^[fT^f^ (s) Asthma.
^^K s A lake, pond.
^miK or ^\^K A caste.
They are braziers. 2 A maker of
glass bangles.
^f^rf^^r/. Distress, agony.
^r^I^I^" a. Agonized, pant-
ing, and struggling under ex-
treme oppression or pain.
^WK (a) a courier.
^r^ n. Bell metal : queen's
metal.
^\mZ\ See ^2T.
^f^^ & m^^K See ^\^
and ^t^T^'
^11%^'^r /. (ii) Restlessness
in fever, &c. ; oppression and
faintness through exposure to
snn. 2 See ^T\^.
^\€\ a. A few or a little. 2
Some ; a portion. 3 Something
more or less : ^q^ ^xjt^
WI^ •sr^T, ^TTf ''ST. 4 Some-
thing ; some matter : g^Tff
'9SNt^T^T^T^3TI^. ^ad. Of
some indescribable sort : '^^
G Used expletively : ^ ^t^
With neg. con. Not at all :
^T'i'^ ^ ^ ^ ^^f^ ^\^ II-
^r^^r^^ a. Some, some few.
2 Not even one, nothing at all :
^ffr^ a. A few, a little.
^r^rar§?f a. Some ; some
here and there, ad. To an in-
describable extent : ^^^^ '^^'^'
^T-^ Bfifo Ti:^ #^1.
^i^r^^llTf ad. Something
widely inconsistent.
^rfr^ a. (a) Confuted,
posed.
^f^Wr ad. In some degree ;
rather : «Rt^t^T ?RT53T-JtT^,&:c.
2 Something. [gloom,
^r^^r Poet. Darkness,
^r?T n. Darkness, thick
gloom. V. V, ^3". fig. Dark
imputation. ?-. 3TTUr._^ 3 fig.
A dark trouble, v. ^, irST'C,
^\?^^ f. Uproar.
^r«!r See ^l^ 2 A term for a
widely-consuming person or
thing : 'ft ^ri^ W^l'^ ^\oS
'^^ y [great calamitj'.
^r^^T^ A term for any
^FTTSTJ^
90
^r^^r
^rS"5[^^r A pp. to a touph
icllow whom no beating can
art'ect : to one who Hves on
thout^h all are wishing his death.
W,\^^^\ a. Rather bluck— a
complexion.
^r3^i[f^r i'm The heart.
^f^r^R^ a. Foiil-tongucd ;
abusive. 2 A vile curser.
^rS"^ f. Care, concern. 2
An afrection of the belly.
^r3'o-=i< 'i'yphus i'ever.
^l^m /. The hist and
death-like slee]) of a dyinj:;
person. "2 lis. Torpor, trance. 3
Ap|). to that sleep during which
some misfortune happens.
^fS'lcTr^.r (s) The anniversary
of the death of. v. ^, ^^.
^]^^'\l,mn. Ill-starred, luck-
less. 2 Confounded.
W.l^^m a. That has a
black tooth. This is an indication
that the subject was a JTin
in the ])receding birth. 2 lig.
Inauspicious ; — used of persons.
■^ fiL'. Vituperative.
^fSTs-JFT /; Any sudden and
overwhelming invasion of ca-
lamitv.
^f^^TFrT/. Time considered
as iniluencing human atlairs.
^r3-|%r/. See^^TS-^PT.
^r^JSry; Carbuncle on the
back-I)()ne.
Wil^^B^ Times and seasons ;
occasions and opportunities.
W,l^^^ A term lor the
niglit.
wj^^q or ^^-j^qr «. a pp.
to a ferocious fellow.
^^T\n Any mortal malady.
^rST^^a. Blackish. 2 Black;
as ^To siiftiT.
^ir^^'^t or ^r^#?at r. i.
To be darkening — fields of corn.
'J To be getting tanned — a com-
plexion. .S Poet. To become
black.
^hTT^Jr/. Slur, Stain.
^R"^ft f. c The brown
colour of ripening fields. 2 The
ividness 1 uuder sickness.
^rs-frr or W^^NZ a male
antelope.
^rST^S" J^ A term lor ad-
verse times. £ Fit periods. 3 An
evil time gen.
^\^m a. Blackish.
^fST^^Pf r. i. To be darken-
ing or becoming brown — crops.
2 To be getting black — a com-
plexion.
^r^^f^ST a. Approaching
to blackness — a complexion.
^r^T a. Black, s. A covert
term for the marking nut.
?;r^Ff;i^"^-^ifR a. intensely
black; black as soot.
?if3T?I[fTr a. Black as a
shard : dark black.
^r^rmn a. Dark or fair;
false or true ; foul or pure.
^ra3T5|"g"< a. Intensely black,
^rsri^r ad. Never, tl iTfS"
^r^il^rrr Painted. partridge.
^3-i^^3Tr5"^^r A term for
a starveling.
^rST^JT^ Trap-rock.
^ST'-^flcTn Thorn-apple.
^r^rrRST a. Blackish.
^ii^^w^ See ^r^^j^q".
^[ST^r n. Black and ugly ;
— used of features.
^(S'f^rST Socotrine aloes.
^[ariHi^ or -We^ a. Ex-
tremely black ; — used of men and
' animals.
^lS-|il"fW The bhick iiallnut.
j^fSrr^h^r a. Approaching
j to blackness — a com|)lexion.
^far^Tf^T ^^ A term for an
exceedingly beloved object.
^ll^^J See ^iff^Wr.
^osry. The soil with refer-
ence to agriculture. 2 A term
for a female bull'alo. o The ara-
ble regi(ni as contradistinct from
'^ts^ the village region.
^nz"l^r ^^^ Kevenue from
the soil.
^r^riji^r /; c indigo.
^fcST^f n. (h) The liver; the
heart.'
^irs'nWr /. Purple flea-
l^''^"'-- [zon.
^\^^mTf. The visible hori-
^r^lllTcr /. A term for the
line bounding the progress of
man into the regions of the
north.
^[^[Tl^ -^r^iiSTEfm^ / A
term for night. " The solemn
hour of night."
^f^ 71. A slur.
^o6'^^^ ad. In time; shortly.
^f2r^^ pl^ The season of
youth and vigor.
^fS"^f^ n. A term for a
very black person. 2 A disgraced,
defeated person.
^[S'fSjT n. pi. Fennel-flower-
seed. 2 Purple fleabane-seed.
^^5^^^ n. A susnicion.
^fcx-cfr^ n. A term of revi-
ling for a chdd of the tilth
generation.
^W§T?: a. Of the black
layer. Used (with -^Jf^) of
the trap-rock.
^r^^T'^r 71. The ocean. 2
Tv'ell-water administered to plan-
tations to countervail the iu-
juriousness of rain considered as
untimely or excessive.
^Fc^J'^S' n. The black por-
tion (u-is and pupil") of the eye.
^r^lTT or ^rS-^"^ or ^la"-
^^ n. Evil suspicion, v. ^. 2
Trickery.
»\
^rc3"?^r a. Rather black — a
comjdexion : attrib. Of rather
black complexion.
?iri3rr<^ n. Darkness.
^r^fr^nn^^" The fortnight of
the waiuug moon.
^05^15^1 /. The dimness of a
cloudy day. 2 Darkness coming
over the sight (as from bile, &c.)
W fig. A stain.
^l^^K?!?:!^ /. A dark night,
i. e. a night without tlie moon.
^r^qr i\k^ ^J^ 71. a term
for man when extolling his
^rrerr
91
flFrrrl
Tiisdora and might, and exalting
him as Lord of the animate
creation.
^f^r/. s VVisli. 2 An objec-
tion started. 3 A douht. 4 A
fancy ; an empty notion.
^il-iTfTi;. s Wished, desired.
^i^r, ^m^R a. That ca-
vils. 2 P'anciful.
l^ pro7i. s Who ? what ?
m;, m^ f. a shriek, a
shrill cry. v. t^T^, ^I^^.
1^^^ (s) A servant,
r^^t n. A sort of chiseh
fe^of^ rli^r^oj y_ i To ut-
ter his cry — the elephant. 2 To
scream.
T^^^l or r^^^l f. The
scream of the elephant : a
scream gen.
r^^fcT/. A term for the two
inauspicions days following res-
pectively the solstices.
r?;=^fl:^r^^ V. L To chatter—
a monkey. ^^^^ ^^^^^^
1^^^ n. m. (h) Muddiness,
r^'^fJT^ a. Sr ad. Imit.
Scribbled, scrawled. 2 Rudely
executed ; — as a carving, &c. '6
Rough, stony ; teasing or tire-
some ; — used of a road. See
r^^ or \^l^ a. Vile,
vexing — a work. App. to an ille-
gible writing.
r^f^cT ad. (s) Something,
somewhat.
r%r^^?r a. (s) That knows
little; a smatterer.
r^Sff^^ /. The chattering of
birds. f^STf^oTBT. v. i. To
chatter — birds, &c.
RiSif^i'fcT or pR^f^^ a.
Scribbled, scrawled. 2 Rude,
rough — some carved work.
1^2^ V. Caked dirt. 2 Rust-
eaten old iron. .3 Dross of iron
in or after fusion. 4 A spark as
struck from iron. 5 Yitritied ex-
crescence upon bricks, &c. fi
Old rotten dung, and sticks, and
straws.
I^^^'^r V. i. To be begrimed.
2. To become rusty, '.i To be
sated with : *Tf5 ^T^-'^t^
l^r Wood spHt into logs
for fuel. \_(\xo%^.
nFE n. 8 Excrement. 2 Dirt,
r^E^^r a. Worm-eaten.
r^^r*tr^ a. Thin, lean.
ni5^ V. i. To become or
be worm-eaten.
r^^^JTf /. A general term
for vermins, insects, worms, &c.
1^^ A worm : a maggot,
insect, a minute living creature.
f^Jl^FTJ^ n. Pretty trinkets ;
trirting articles.
f^-S" .2. c Any small creature
of the serpent kind.
r^cRT a. See ^^^•
r^cl^Hf a. Of what number ?
to V, hat degree? This is the
ordinal of feprfSfiT How
i^'^^nyth? [or extent.
i^<l7^ ad. To what degree
RR^^ See r^ct^l^.
r^cTR 72. (a) a sort of
hempen cloth. fbook
r^^^ (a) a title. 2 /. A
Rfi^Ficf (a) a history or
story in plain Prakrit prose. 2
'^ f%o occvirs constantly at
the conclusion of notes, imply-
ing This is the matter I had to
mention. 3 A title.
rFcT^€ or f^^^ a. Some.
r^ffT or r^^ or T^tT^ a.
How many, how much.
f^fci^r or r^^ ad. How
many times.
[^ s pop. 1^^ Misgiving
of judgment regarding : a doubt.
r^jrfr (a) a piece of large
and fine writing for scholars to
form their hand by. 2_^fig. An
exemplar,a pattern, r.i g.of o.
r^^r^r a. Of what number.
RF»W^ a. Some few or some.
f^^m^ or -^ (p) Silk work-
ed with gold and silver flowers,
Jjrocade. [instrument.
I^'ltf f. A certain musical
ra^nrr (p) Edge, side.
I^-Tlff f. (II) Fine edging
(of silk, &c.) ; or a narrow and
coloured border (of a garment).
Ri'Hi s A celestial musician.
r*f^W=^ ad. (s) Why ? for
•vliat reasons? [hx\.
\^'^\W^ a. Profitable, gain-
tori^ or-^^/.(p) Profit.
f^^^^r A Sanskrit phrase
answering to In short, to be
brief, nay, quid amplms.
l%lTf? a. Poet. Of what
^substance? ^^^^^^. „ot at all.
I^JTlfJ ad. (s) Not in the
rm^] m.f. (p) Alchemy. 2
fig. Any highly productive busi-
ness, &e. ; a yolden goose.
\^i ad. (s) Why?
\^W\ or f^flf^^ ad. At
the least.
fl^RTcr/. (a) Price. 2 Worth,
lit. fig., significance, moment,
regard, &c.
l^Tl^X f. Any long-conti-
nued, irritating sound; peevish,
complaining, v. ^^\'^, *Tt^, ^^.
f^Ri^^ V. i. To complain,
whine, &c.
[^ri^r-'^rr a. That com-
plains, &c. ; that makes f^^-
r^^f^ or Fl^rS" a. Slim,
slender. 2 By retail — goods
bought or sold. 3 App. to arti-
cles, expenses: faRo ^T^T
jobs, fcRo f^^^. 4 Feeble — a
voice, tone.
r^^^ 71. See nfJ^' ro i •
^ [Sunshme.
r^T^ (s) A ray of light. 2 n.
'^^qfii^foT s A pencil of rays.
f^^TR'^fa. Relating to cochi-
neal./. Porphyritic jasper.
r^^^f^f ji^ Cochineal, r^-
^ r [tian.
r^^fCcT n. A kind of Gen-
f^Mt
92
57^^
nition behind a gun, limber- Hcra[)e upon the f^^UTl.
box
[spices, &c.)
R^TFIT Grocei-y ; (sugar,
l^t\Z rw. 72. s A crest.
HRfW or RH c a mago-ot
or worm (as in fruits, belly, &c.)
r^'^^rm^ n. Convulsions
or delirium occasioned by worms.
f$? /• (P) Bringincr of lands
into cultivation ; cultivated state.
2 An account of receipts and
disbursements.
l^imT a. That is under
Cultivation : that is tit for cultiva-
tion— land.
RR"lfr Produce of cultivation.
f=fiT a. Shrill, piercing — as
the cry of certain l)irds, &c.
App. in the sense of Dense to a
•nond. 2 Wearied out : ^ 3f-
f^c^fl^c^ot p_ I Jq chirp,
chatter — birds, &c.
tef%^, r^^f%c^rr a. Half
opened and half closed — eyes, a
door, kc. V. "f T, ^^.
r^T^^^f^" Clamorous chirp-
inn;— of birds.
r^^f^fR^ V. L c To open a
little ; just to unclose (eyes or
doors, &c.)
f^c^nr^jot See r^^^r^^^ot.
r^f^^T 72. 8 corruptly I^I*^^^
Sin. 2 fig. I'oulness.
r=BE^ (a) a fort.
h^ f. A key. 2 The ex-
j)laniitioii of any difliculty : the
introductory portion of a science,
[of a fort.
r^n^^ /. A bo.\ for aMimu-|fqh?T^'r r. c. To grate. 2 To j^i^^ v. (s) A bad action.
^cR^ a. That docs bad ac-
tions, cvil-doii>g.
H^T s Saffron. 2 See^^-
f J^^^ n. (s) A note of in-
vitation to a marriage, &c. mark-
ed with eh^.
,J^ ?2. A powder rubbed by
married women on the forehead.
^^m /. See f p'T^-
5^2r s The domestic cock. 2
A wild cock.
Jf ^ S A dog. [planet.
J?T?" (s) An unpro])itiuus
J'-TT^ (s) A mean village
sujiplying none of a traveller's
wants ; without a Kiija, an 3T- .
f?T%T^T ^\m^, a physician,
a rich man, or a river.
5^ s A woman's breast.
f^?:r^f^r «. (h) Utterly
useless and worthless.
^"^^^ f. Whispering: a po-
pular rumor.
Ji^^'^'T" V. L To whisper.
^\^ orf^Flfr/. Bring-
ing up one's failings, p. efiT:.
jKiiu and helplessness, li Ilaras-
sing detentinu or delay.
f^m or J^^^i^r V. i. To be
restless in ])ain and helplessness.
2 To be kept under vexatious
detention.
^"^TC a. Insoluble by soak-
ing or boiliiiT — a grain of any
])ulse. 2 fig. Vengeful, sullen.
3 That dishonestly spares his
skill. 4 Vile, teasing, ji. n. Hard
grains (of prdse after boiling or
steeping), o A hard or unsolved
grain.
^^^^Fh"/. Imperfect execu-
tion of a work; dishonest reser-
vation.
^'^r A brush of peacock's
feathers. 2 A broom or brush
J^S- a. JT^rsS"^!^ c. Vile,
hateful, jeering.
f ^foT^r /. Teasing and ii ri-
tatmg speech or acts.
&c.
I -nf i^K" Tlie officer in charge
r^??r a. Deaf.
r?^ cotij. Or.
I^^TR" s A youth or lad.
l^^^^^R\ f, (,i) Regard for;
caro about : "^T Tqi'^I f<fi^JTnT-
?frrT^^T^t- 2 Used Uke ^:-
K^'^ /. An apparatus for
scraping fruits, &c., a grater gen.
2 bcraping.
f^s'^r a. c r^^rar r sickly,
weakly.
f^S"^ f, m. Nausea, disgust.
f^S'^^IIT c. A squeamish
person,
f^^^ V. c. To loathe.
^r ronj. Or. 2 Thnt. 3 ind.
It often emphatically concludes
an interrogation : "^ ^^T^ ^ ?
or an affinuatioii of the in-
terrogative form, implying sur-
prise at the supposition which
has called it forth : ?fl -^^T ^
I am giving it, don't you see?
^ is often coujouied, f^K! : ^TI-
^r? See f^^^. 2 also '^l^:^
(s) A worm ; an insect.
^[T f. Worms, insects, &c. 2
An insect.
^511 a. 8 Like to whom ?
*1T (s) a parrot.
^FtT f. (Vulgar) Fame.
^[tT'T v. c. To celebrate the
praises of; to laud.
^rTi'T n. (s) Celebrating the
praises of a god with music and
singing. 2 Reciting the names
of the Deity. [celebrated.
^Tf^l^ a. (Worthy) to be
^fri^^r Infamous celebrity.
CliTT /. (8) Fame. ^rfriTTH a.
Famous. [Rescript articles.
^\T^T^m\ (ii) A mass of nou-
^T^ or ^r^ f. Piteous com-
plaining. V. ^T, ■i^II^^.
^tf Scrapings.
5 ind. s A particle implying
badness; as^iss^'./.sTlie earth.
5"C f. The cry of a jackal
or of the troop. 2 A sharp cry
(of men), v. 'ElT^. 3 Tlic cry of
a young hare.
f ^ a. Rancid, rank, musty
— oily substance, grain, &c.
^^^ n. The quantity of
thread which is diaun from the
spindle.
^¥i:
93
g7T5:
5^r f. A hooded cloak for
^children. 2 (n or ^'^'^ s) A
brush of hog's bristle ; a lar<re
painter's brush or a white-wash
dauber.
5%S"?s"lT or f^S"?^!^ a.
Given to wild, provoking pranks
and tricks.
^'^ST f. Teasing and tor-
menting of any one (as by i)inch-
iiig, minjicking, &c.) : reviling
and defaming of any one.
^■^r^ n. (s) Revilino-,
^defaming, v. ^T. 2 An evil
thought concerning, v. ^T^. '6
A calumniating disposition :
7^-\^ ■Staff ^<» ^\%'
%'^'ZZ W^'^Z (I. Rather rotten;
rank, musty.
^^^3:(^ or^^^r'^ /. Smell
of rotten substances.
^^^\ a. Rotten.' 2 fig. In-
sincere, guileful. [ten, fig.
JT^f^T or 5T=7i^(f ^^T a. Rot-
^^'^f V. I. To rot.
^5f^ (s) A wicked ]:)erson.
;ti 1^ I » kjcc .^ ^ [bower.
^"sflT^^ n. s An arbour,
^"slT (s) An elephant.
^^T^iTrr Force consisting in
elephants.
^^<r /. s A female elephant.
^Sff^oT V. c. To make to rot.
^^\ -^r The well-known
earthen water-jug.
Ji^^ (t. Rancid, musty.
^^^\ A bit or piece.
^Z^ y. Christmas flower.
-' A little stick.
^Z^ V. fig. A drubbing,
beating soundly, r. ^TS. g- of
o., fiig g. of s.
%Z^ c. A pimp : a procuress.
^J'^^r /. The business of a
^^UT. 2 App. to tale-bearing.
^z"^ V. c. To pound. 2 fig.
To drub.
^ZTJ a. That breaks readily
duriugthe operation of husking—
rice, &c.
WZ\ Powder of pounded
vfi'fjT. 2 Fragments of pow-
der (as of dried fish).
^Z\^Z\, ^Z\^ f. Fighting,
fisty cuffs. [reviling.
^Z\^ u. Vile ; one evei
f^rs^r or S^rr^r /.
Vilifying : jeering.
f fjc^ a. (s) Crooked. 2 fig.
Perverse. 3 Vile : malicious and
mischievous. r.^s qoig^^^.
^Z\ f. (s) A hut. In comp.
^Z\ f. Powder (of dried fish,
&c.) 2 Beating.
f^R a. Seef^^r.
^1"^ n. (s) A family. 2 The
mistress of a family ; a wife gen.
^J^^c^C A family feud.
Ji?"^^!^ One of whose fa-
mily every member is a ))oet.
JiJ^^^^c^ a. Fondly attach-
ed to wife and family. 2 A
family man. ^^ relation.
J^Jtr A householder. 2 c
f 5=^r, 5Jc^r, 55155- «. Be-
longing to what place?
^Z^ V. i. To be stopped,
detained. [far ? how long ?
fjqtcT or J^STl^^f ad. How
^Jn'T' V, c. To stop, hinder.
^ZK s An ax.
5''^^ p. (s) Stopped. 2 fig.
Posed, confounded.
^Z^ or^JR ad. Whence?
jS ad. Where? 2 Any
where : ^ ^l^tjT^,^ fif ir-
^^ n. (s) A pool, a spring
of water, esp. as consecrated to
some holy purpose or person. 2
A hole in the ground, or an en-
closed si)ace on the surface, or
•A metal vessel (for receiving and
preserving consecrated fire). 3
A ])itcher. 4 See if(^^.
^^^^ (id. Imit. of the sound
of a crisp substance inider the
teeth, of the chattering of the
teeth from cold, &c.
J^^^ V. i. To crackle,
chatter. [cold. v. ^^.
^^^S^r c Shivering through
JS'^^fcT a. Crisp.
5^W^ See ^Fc^^.
^■^^ 11. A hedge; a fence. 2
An enclosure.
^^OTl^^/. The cost of sur-
rounding with a fence. 2 R The
work of fencing.
5^'T' V. c. To surround with
a fence. 2 To close np ; to block
up (a road, &c.) 3 To confine.
V
^?^"§07 y^ ^ i^Q j-jjp off With
the nails.
5^crr /. Ji^cf n. A jacket.
J^^cS" }/, Ground lacking
the quantity reported or assigned.
f ;?J^ot y_ ,;_ Xo rattle. 2 fig.
To mutter confusedly.
^-?^^ n. The rattle-box of
the ^l?fl people.
^^c7 n. (s) An ear-ring. 2
A circle.
5^^'f /. (s) A figure divided
into square, triangular sj)aces,
drawn to exhibit the ])osition of
the sun, planets, &c. 2 Lines
drawn to include parentheses,
&c. ; brackets.
5"^r a. False, perfidious.
^^RST^r a. Composed of
^^ and WS ; i. e. Poor,
mean. Used with ^Tq^, "^m-
^, ^x:, &c.
5^r f. A hut. 2 The house
of the soul; the fabric of the
body. 3 A division of a sprig
(as of ginger).
j^r f. (s) A vessel of stone
or earth. 2 A jar; a flower-
pot, &c.
5^ n. A shoot from the root
(of ginger, &c.) 2 An ear-orna-
ment. 3 Evil-mindedness re-
P^nVms. [cunning.
f^^Cf^q"^ n. Malignant
JS'JT (s) Tricks, pranks.
^"TJi'Tjf. Whispering: grum-
bling.' V. ^^, ^T^. 2 A fee-
ble rumor.
^TT^
94
-?rr^
^^^r A Slim of money or
some item of common iiroperty,
supjiressed bv one ottliesliiirers,
and held back from the general
division.
Ji"^^2r A contemptuous form
of the word 'Sitn'Tt.
^'^'^37 (I. Fit unci proper to
the Kunbi, /. e. rustic, rude —
iniinnors, &c.
J^'^^rfr 'llie business of a
^TTT^, husbandry. 2 Lands
luld as perpetual estate nuder
acknowledgment and ])ayment
to (iovernment. 3 Land-tax.
f^fr A cultivator- ^^^ff^/.
A female domestic slave. '2 The
vile of a ^t^^.
^'^^T^^rST Tlie country folk.
^'^trrl~2T^ A term for rude
and nnskUful methods of calcu-
^'^*'"^ ^ [distraction,
f^r^fg- or -^f^./: Distress,
J^qrf /, Hurrying, v. ^T,
«!?R, TT^. - Being in a vche-
Tueut hurry, r. ^^, ^^T.
5^^r See f ^r.
JcTi' (s) An evil device; a
I'oolish fancy.
^^^r A door. 2 A vile, cuilish
])erson. cr^/. A bitch. ^^".
A dog. 2 A sort of grass. 3 A
term for a quarrelsome and
abusive fellow. ^^T'^^'^T^,
^^■^fq /. Watch ful sleep.
■^^T'^ ^St^S/. Fidgetiness,
^^t^ iP'^-^rT n. A term for a
7Tiushrooni. sj'^jj-^ fsfuj' 71. A
term for a miserable life.
^^r^^q" A term for a
had writing. ^^T"^* 'jf^^ ??. A
term for an incorrigdjiy vue
fellow.
J1''R'^ p. (s) Ileproaclied, a-
biiscd. «. Hateful, vile.
j'4'^ V. t. To utter a forced
sound. 2 To make strenuous
ctVorts.
?^^ /. A lioo : the head as
(listing, from the haft. «ff^c3T
A large hoc
lay.
JK'1 (s) An inausj)icious
ffr /. (h) Maniiliii^ of
cloth. 2 Kneading and rubbing
(of clothes in washing). 0 tig. A
sound heating, v. ^TS.
J'llln Z'. s Injustice, inicjuity.
2 Impolicy.
JT 7i. A liedge ; a fence. 2
.\n enclosure.
5^^ s A devious course;
irrtdigion, heresy.
fT^^'w. Bad diet.
JTF A glass bottle of a par-
ticular description.
J^f^/^ (s) An unfit recipient.
§1^^ 7?. Indigestion. 2 Cru-
dities : scybala. 3 fig. A ran-
kling griulge.
^^l /. A sort of phial.
^m^ or -*T /. A cloth-cover-
ing of pudendum virile, v.
51^ (s) A disobedient or
disgracing son. [accusation,
jq^n:?, 5^^roT (A) A false
^T^Tf^Tor-^^r «. Calumnious.
^'^■^ 11. A humpback. J^^^T-
^T n. Humpbacked.
JJl-?" /. (s) Evil-minded-
ness. a. Evil-minded.
5^^ The name of the trea-
surer of the gods ; the Lulian
IMutus. App. to a rich man, a
_Cra>sus. ^^j„^ Aquarius.
5^ (s) A water jar. 2 The
JiT^T The name of a drowsy
Kakshas. App. to a sound sleeper.
A term for a dead sleep.
J^ItE" /. (s) Hypocritical
worsbi]).
J^f?" V. A false accusation.
V. ^T, 3TTnT, flt^, vfl^, "^T^,
Wr^^^'n: c. That lays false
charges agrdnst: that fraudulently
diiiies the triUli.
5^IT A potter. j^TR^.f iTf-
'K\v\ I'. A jtottor's wife.
fiTIT^r /. The business of
the potter.
Jirrrfr^ The potters' ward.
f iTRT-^r \^\ or iTfrrr /. pi.
Inoculated small-pox.
J^ITf a IMade by a potter —
an image of 3ltnxif?f, a -g^,
&c. 3 Relating to a potter.
firr?!"^/. The cell- building
wasp.
§iTI^ (.s) Thinking evil of;
mistrusting. 2 Evil-mindedness.
JM-TT /'. s The terraqueous
.!^i"'^^- [bell,
firrqi^ (s) The name of a
^^'^ f. (p) Succour; a rein-
forcement. 2 Help gen.
5^^^ V. c. To pommel.
|;j^^^ -5 The student's wa-
ter pot.
^^"^ (s) Evil counsel.
f^r See^^f^.
v'
^i^Tc^^T V. c. To beat soundly.
jintcf, ^RcT a. Bay—
a horse.
^^^ (s) A boy under five
years of age. 2 Or ?:T5J^«1^
A prince.
J^TlK^ry. s An unmarried
girl from ten to twelve years
old : a yoiuig virgin. [lily.
JJ?^ n. s The white water
f JTer a. See ^^ftcT.
5^1^ (s) Any inauspicious
conjunction (of i)lanets, &c.)
^TJ^r /. A kind of heron.
^T^\ /. c Slight febrile
symptoms. [wTI?.
f.Tfr /. Grumblincr. v. ^t\
f ?:f?ot V. i. To grumble. 2
To grumble in the belly.
f riT (s) A deer.
J.i:^^^?!^!/. A female having
fawn's eyes — a beauty.
JT^r^T f. The posture of a
man preparing to take another
on his back. 2 The play of Icaj)-
frog.
jrrjr, ^KZ\ a. Sullen, morose,
f^"^ n. A meadow. Ji^'^^F r^
That guards a fi^W.
^TT^
95
<^<3(5 '^
^rj¥^ V. c. To nip.
^rf^fcf or 5^R^ /. (p)
Profound s.ilutation ; obcisauce.
JT^^'^ V. i. To burn without
a flame ; to smoulder. 2 To
funic inwardl}'.
^^^r Parclied rice.
5^^^r f. The waving, a-
rouiid an idol or a person, of
lam{)s : the waving around tlie
bride and hridei^rooni of rice, &c.
to I'emove malignant influences.
Jl?rfr«i"QT i\ c. To pass the
hand over (upon a child, &c.) in
a fondling manner ; to stroke
down.
5^^ a. Curled — hair.
^^l^ or -^ n. The Koran.
^^R^/. (A) A secret foible,
as brought up to provoke, v.
5^f^nr a. Given to exposing
of the faults and foibles of.
^n f. An engagement with
a god or devil to ofi^'er certain
things at appointed times ; such
appointed time ; a thing so
ottered : the act so performed.
2 Stated time gen. : ^(^T^
^€f=^^<1^^ ^TUIT -^T^T. 3 A
land measure, — about half a
^jg^^- [of the eye.
^'t^ Redness of the corner
^t^ A kind of stone. Co-
rundum. 2 A red speck on the
white of the eye.
Jtfr a. Made off^^-
5^7 a. (s) Of a deformed
face. 2 Ugly.
^-^^■^ f. An ax: the head as
disting. from the haft.
5''?rtf / An ax.
^^rtf^r ^^r a term for one
that joins the common enemy,
and assists him in injuring his
own people.
f ^f^R^^R /. Land cleared
by the ax. 2 Land in which
stumps and roots obstruct the
plough.
^^ n. (s) Family, race, tribe.
a. (a) All ; ns ^^^^T.
^w^^^riff^^ J^^^eST or 5^-
efi^T (a) One invested with
fidl powers; a plenipotentiary:
a Major domo. [family.
5^^2:5fr (s) A troubler to his
5'^^5IT Destroyer of one's
family,
Jc^TJTT See f §^1.
5^iJ^ A family priest or
spiritual director.
Jc^IcTcT^ T/ie or an ornament
j)f (Hie's family. ^^ f^^^jj^.^
^^^f7^ The lamp, glory of
5?^^^^r/.The tutelar divinity
of a race.
^c^Tfar (s) The head of a
family, patriarch.
fc^^'qTF /: The .=eries of
generations composing a race :
the order of succession from
family to family
Jc^^^mcT a. Hereditary.
5?5-qr^r3Ty-. A custom de-
scended through a tribe.
Jc^qiWr A shell filled with
])owder, iron, &c. ; a bomb.
§^m^ See ^^l^^'W:-
5'^^'C A woman of good
family.
f ^^R a. Of good family.
5'^f"^ The founder of a
fanulv. r- 1 1
r, • [ignoble.
Jc^CFf fl. Of mean pedigree,
^c^^q" Extinction of a race.
'f>^\ A buttock.
^?5T^R (e;) The established
observances or the practices of a
tribe or caste.
f c^rfiTJTR Pride of birth.
J^lH a. Well-born, of high
descent.
SS^^I^^. Small and thickset—
a dog. 2 fig. Short and stubby —
a ])erson.
f 5^r, ^^{^l See ^l^.
^^ n. (a) a padlock. 2 A
doorlock.
f F5T A buttock.
^^/. (a) Strength.
P?:Seefm^.
^i^R" Perverse disputing ;
caviling, v. t^x:, mx, q.
5 ^r^ See f JTifr-
5^r^r/. (.s) An evil desire.
^r^^l f. The black art;
magic. ■
J^T m. n. (s) Sacrificial grass.
^i^^ n. (s) Well beino-,
happiness, a. Happy. 2 Expert,
clever.
f ^c^iT^, f^T^^^J Greeting;
the 'How d'ye do.' ^^^^^^^
5^c7^iT Health and happi-
^^c^ls Accounts of welfare.
55Tl?Tf fC/. Acumen. 2 attrih.
J^harp.^^ [tions.
^■^3^, jf-^cS" a. Loose, liceu-
^^'SM See f.^f^Tl^.
4^3" n. (s) Leprosy. JiSV a.
Leprous.
^^^^•^ V. c. To squeeze,
knead, crush : to pull to pieces
— flowers, &c.
J^ (s) Bad company.
J^^cTR n. Offspring that
occasions disgrace.
^mz See ^mz, ,
~* V. ^ [murmur.
§^^B^ V. i. To sob. 2 To
f^^r/. Poet. Art, skill. 2
A clever woman. 3 A witch.
fi^^ 71. The bristles of o;rains
and grasses, v. i'T'^, f^X,
^•^^ or -^r Dried flowers of
safflower : the dye prepared from
them, 2 An infusion of hemp-
tops, or of opium, as an intoxicat-
ing potion, [ — the dye, &c.
fS^I" a. Pielating to ^^^^r
^^ n. (s) A flower.
^^ n. A tenon. 2 An en-
closing wall (as around a garden,
village, &c.) 3 c See ^»3oJ.
^^^r /", (p) Wrestling,
JicJ^^" or -^ n. A family
story, esp. a tale of sin or folly.
^3'^^'^r An oflicer of a
village under the qi3^^. His
business is to keep the accounts
??r^^
93
^rf^
of tlie cultivators with Govorn-
nicnt and all the public records.
^cJ^oi FcT A vvorfl of enliaiice-
nieiit attached to ^loSJ.
Ji^sH Galangul root.
^S-^R /: 'ihe wife of a
JiST^ A kind of harrow.
j;3r^r'^r A vulgar term for a
■J
^^mv.c. To level ploughed
land with the 3i"c3^.
^STJlcf n. A fvimily of the
resident Rvots cf a village.
4^1^^ The ^^FRl^ of a
villajrc colloctivelv. -/. ]\Ioneys
duo from the faiiiilies.
f ^RJT or J^Rn?K ad. Per
taniily. Used with ^i^ ^Xvi,
WTfiJ ^uf, &c.
f^K% ^\^ n. m. A village
of which all the lands arc held
by lessees, and manajred I)y village
ortieers with the concurrence of
the villagc-coninuuiity.
^^1 f. Family, lineage.
^^^"^ or -^ or -^ A vetch.
Ji^^FcT V. Moneys due from
the Ryots.
^^■[f'T(s)fl. Ofa good family,
5r% (s) A side of the body. 2
The helly.
^.Vi^mX (I. s Voracious.
f.^n.(if) March (of troops).
■2 tig. Death,
f^^ n. Powdered pe|)pers,&;c.:
the powder or tine fragments
amongst husked rice.
%'^ ».(s) An enigma ; a knotty
jioint. 2 A confederacy, league. 3
\ point connected with the
horoscopes of two ])arties to \w
married. 4 The peak ofa moun-
tain. .5 Fraud.
5F/r3T5'T A puzzling question.
f Tf^-T a. s The head of fa-
niilies now divergent. 2 Uniform ;
perpetually and iniivcrsally the
same ; — the Deity, the soul, &c.
f ? A wall of slight sticks,
&c. i\ -EiT^. 2 .\ IVuce. 3/. The
body.
f T A hedge. 2 (s) A dug
pit. Understood in the sense of
Well.
|^T?fr^5, ^^1^ Terms for a
person brought up in the narrow
circle of home, ignorant of public
life and mankind.
l^r /. s A process of the
bones, — furcation. 2 Also ^W
in. Cartilage.
f ^ (s) A tortoise.
^Jijriq" ft. A term for a chi-
mera, pi(/eon's milk.
^^l^ /. (s) Kind regard.
W;^H\^ n. (s) A fabrication;
a tale to frighten, cheat, injure.
2 /rt. s A })umpion gourd.
t^ n. c A tenon. 2 An
enclosing wall. .'3 The beard of
grains, &c.
^^/. A side of the body. 2
tig. Room (for cheating, &c. ) :
ronm for. 3 After birth (of cattle).
|S-?Tr^ A roll of the con-
tracting farmers (of a village, &e.)
^^ n. A family, a race. 2 A
lessee or tenant with reference
to the ■^^3RT^ ; a debtor
with reference to the Banker;
a j)aticnt with reference to the
Physician ; a client w ith refer-
ence to the Advocate.
^ai^^orr f. The record annu-
ally prepared by the ^^^'i:!!!^
for each SR3, exhibitiu'.; his
account with Government.
^cfi'sl'MF f. The amount of
revenue proceedmg from the
farming families (of a village). 2
The amount of money-loans (as
from a banker) to the farmers.
I^S'Ur^T A roll of the con-
tracting farmers (of a village,
^'^■' [comprehensively.
^^l^ The cultivators
^^■^^^r^ f. Verification,
by in(piiry made with tlie Ryots,
of amounts ])aid into the trea-
sury in their name : contirmation
so obtained, v. ij, ^^, tji^y.
f^ n. See W-mn. 2 p. (s)
Done, made ; as firfiTT^^,
^i^ffTr^ a. Of accomplish-
5,?ff;^ir a. (s) That has dis-
charged the several duties of
human life, and ol)tained the
meritorionsness resulting. 2 n.
A rare deed.
fi^^ (I. Ungrateful.
I^R^^ s A firm resolve.
2 nttrib. That has resolved,
f.^ a. (s) Grateful.
^^rj^ a.Indirterent. 2 Negli-
gently performed.
f ^i^ (s) A name of ^T^T. 2
Fate, ii A demonstrated conclu-
sion.
5^^t^«,That has accomplish-
ed the object of existence, or an
ol)jcct in gen. 2 Answered, satis-
fied— a law.
fr% /. (s) Action. 2 The
way, mode (of any work). 3 A
thing done.
^i^FT^ir s An obligation.
f^^ n. (s) An act, deed. 2
A r-i'oblem.
^^\ f. (s) A vixen, virago.
IJ^^ri^q" 71. B Right and
wrong doing. ^ ^ [Artificial.
fii^H" n. (s) Guile, deceit, a.
ff^^J^ A hoy constituted
Son in order to jjcrform the
obsequies of his adojjting jjarent.
This is one of the twelve heirs.
^r^ffq":^: n. Strategy.
fMr n. False. 2 Artificial.
|;^cf^rsr A term for a very
terrible man. [o Poor, mean.
f>^^ a. (s) Miserly : a miser.
fi^r y, (s) Tenderness, merci-
fulness. 2 Favoiuablenesstowards.
3 Kimlness. 4 In theology.
Divine favour, grace.
|;ir^r^ viewing with fa-
vor.r. 2 The eye of favour.
f^^TF^f^ II. One ujion whom
another confers favours. 2 One
worthy of favours.
f 'Tl^ a. S pop. -^ -^r -^
Compassionate. 2 Kind.
5>l^ s A worm, 2 pi. Intesti-
nal worms. [Slender,
f^ (I. (s) Lean, meagre. 2
fvm n. (s) Husbandry.
2 Ploughing.
^Gor
97
%Tt^
f^ a. (s) Black or dark-
blue; the name of the eighth
incarnation off^tiaT.
f^^m^ The dark Lif of the
month. 2 tig. Wane. 3 Thefaultj-
side.
fCOTi^^^r^ The tricks and
pranks of gf^rJ. 2 iig. Any
extravagant sporting. r^^ -gj^
f^^'f'T n. An absolute gift.
^^ p- s Invented, framed. 2
Proficient.
^IH" f. s A contrivance. 2
A device, resonrce. 3 The art of
an intricate machine.
^fZ^ or ^^^ V. i. To yell.
\'m\, \^m f. A scold.
^^^fiTR57r,%^?Tr /: A Xan-
thippe. 2 A beklatu, hag.
^Rc^r or -S^r /: a form of
metrical cf)m position.
^^^, ^Z\^ A lono; while.
"What a long time!" 2 Used
as aJ. ; as «fr $o ^^•I'^'g^I.
^"T n. An article of traffic.
^.J (s) The drao'on's tail, or
descending node. In mythology.
A demon. 2 A banner.
^5: n. (s) Focus. 2 The
argument of an equation. 3 The
distance of a planet from the
first point of its orbit in the
fourth, seventh, or tenth deirree.
^f-^JfcT /, s In astronomy.
Eccentricity.
J5^rrf J?^ a. s Convergent.
^^-^^r ad. Poet. When ?
%^ Rubbish. 2 Refuse. 3 n.
A minute particle.
^^"^^^r A general term for
rul)bish. &c.
%T^f^r,%r^fqr/. A broom.
2 Used abusively to a female,
answering to Hussy, drab.
*^^r A flower tree.
%^c^ -S- a. (^^^ s) Pure,
mere, simple. 2 Only. 3 ad.
Exacth": %<» fTT'^'t srw^?!'
■^\%\. 4 Altogether : ^^ f^jiO
J3
m^m\^\'^^^ An inteijec-
•n "'"• ^ [countenance, voice,
^f c^^i'^rr-orr a. Poor, mean—
"^^r Stock, fund. 2 Money.
3 Dignity, estimation.
^^r ad. How ? in what
manner ?
%°?f ad. When ? 2 At any
time whatever. 3 Sometime.
4 When? at what time?
^°g"r^ ad. At th;it instant ;
exactly at the moment that ; —
referring to a past act.
^°c"f^r a. Of a long time
back.
^°q7 ^^gF ad. Sometimes ;
now and then.
%5CWr ad. About when ?
^^ (s) A hair. ;?/. The hair.
^^K V. (s) Saffron. 2 A
shrub used in dyeing.
^^n a. Saffron-coloured ;
relating to saffron.
^^^ (s) A name of P^^
or eFWI.
%5IfSRf ;?/. A term for the
animalcules in mouldy sub-
stances or impure waters.
%^R lT3-I^(qcr[fTr or -^M\ a.
That de.stro}s with a show of
kiinlness.
%^, ^^ See %^.
^^^f /". A dishevelled and
dirty lock of hair. 2 Contemp-
tuously. The hair.
%^^5 or \^i\^ n. A sup-
purating tumor; a boil.
^?jq7 or ^^qr 72. A minute
particle, a straw, a hair.
^^^ A filament (of flowers,
&c.) 2 A lion's mane. m. A head
or ear, such as that of rice, &c.;
any compound flower, as of
^^^r (s) A lion.
%^fr-?Tra.Stringy
\^f\ or ^^fr
hair.
^t^ioT, *^r^ n. Having
much hair ou the body ; hairy.
-a mango.
A rope of
1^^ /. The plantain. 2 7*.
Its fruit.
"\ _^^
j^S^^ar 7j. The flowering
I head of the Plantain ; as evolved
I from the ^t^f. r. .
■V . [tain.
j^co^ror-^r A young plan-
^^^^ /. 'i'he bunch of fjuit-
stems of the Plantain.
^^ n. A plantain.
^ ad. Poet. When ?
*^ a. Many a one ; many.
*^Rr A caste. They make
twig-baskets, &c.
^^r a. Which ? 2 Relating
to w!i:-it place?
^.^r or%Cr /. (h) Scissors.
2 An oblique ; a St. Andrew's
cross. 3 A triangle (to weigh
wood, &c.)
j'fi^/. (a) Imprisonment. 2
Restraint. 3 Sway. 4 a. Con-
I fined.
i^.ST^l^r A prison. r ,
=:» r^ r^ ' r- [^ shrew.
^^\^m, ^\h\^f. A vixen,
j^^r «. Imprisoned : a pri-
soner.
■=^1^ /. (a) a wicked device ;
an evil trick, v. "s^X, ^T^, ^^,
.■^ V ^ r~. [maker.
WcTifiir, ^qcrr «. a mischief-
'+)7i (a) Intoxicating quality.
2 An intoxicating drug. 3 In-
toxication.
%tocr or ^q^cT/. (A)State-
nient, an affair, a case.
^iq>r a. That uses intoxicat-
ing drugs. 2 Of intoxicating
qualitv — drugs.
=^' " --
*<r or "tSn a. Of a gray pupil
— an eye. 2 Squint — an eye.
^r f. A young, unripe
Si. '' [bhiva.
*^riT (s) The paradise of
^'^[^^f^r a. Used in notes
of a deceased worshiper of
Sliiva.
=ii^'5"f a, (a) Of capacity.
*t?r!*Ti^" n. A measure of
c.ipacitv. r •,, ,1 T>. -J.
es. I [with the Deity.
^^~^T n. s Becomins: one
%gi;?T
98
^jm
^f?^i% a. (s Giver of the
bliss of Absorption). A title of
tlie Deity.
"%f?^? n. The diijnity or
post of Oneness uiih tlie Deity.
+=iK m. 71. A piiir of com-
passes. 2 \ circle described by
It : II r-ircinnfereiitiiil line.
^^\T, ^^IT l^spou^ing a part.
r.^.^X,^^. ^ pcanse.
square. /. A hundred lakh, ten
millions.
"^i^^f A wooden vessel used
\)Y the ^T^l. 2 A sort of
wooden trough.
^r.cT /; (s) Ten millions, a
crore. 2 A rejoinder ; a reason-
ing in substantiation. 3 A divi-
sion or branch. 4 A term of
high ])raise for a man of learn-
in'^, virtue, valour, &c.
^^\<t a. That espouses a \W.l\Z^: ad. s By crores.
^^r a. Poet, Of what kind? |^|^ n. A bird's nest. 2 The
^d How? cocoon of the silk-vvorra, &c.
^K n. c A humpback. |^[Eq"qT^ A millionaire,
^r^^ or fe^ /. 72. The [^[ElT^i'^, i\Z^mW,\\Z a. To
Jndian fox. [mans. | be reckoned by crores; countless.
^?;oTf^ (s) A tribe of Brah- 1^15^ a. Belongincr to what
fe'^r,^[^^:ir a. Relating I J'l"^^'^ ^
to the Konkan. o fo crow. '^^^^"^1^ /• (n) A room.
^RJ'T V. i. To howl— a dog. |^(J^f^ (p) The officer in
^t^ ISIiingosteen. /. „. | ^cliari^e of a %T3l. ^^
Mnj.gosteen tree. ^>\Z^^^ or ^fSTR^f ad.
^[?i^^ n. Oil ol)tained from \ JIo"' far? how long ?
the seeds of %T^^. .^IJc^^T ad. Belonging to
^^r w.A male lamb. ^\^<\ \ ^'^'-'^ I'^'^^« ?
/. A female lamb, ^i^^ ?z. =Fr7?^r One belonging to
A lamb. j a ^'\'S\ or granary, the keeper
\\^^^^ r. ;. To cry oru hine ; I -"^ "^''"'' l''^''=^'^"- '
to fret inipotentlv.
miringly or fondly. 2 Longing,
craving, v. 13^:^, g^. 3
Airiness, playsomeness. 4 Any
object exciting admiration, ten-
der pleasure. riin»
^fS^R"-^ n. Caressing, fond-
^r^nr a. Shamele>;s, callous,
2 m. A sound beating, r. ■^.
^i^^ f. A fold or pen. .^^
^r^^r/. Shut up state, lit.
^1^'^ V. c. To shut up; to
block up ; to confine. :2 tig. To
pose, silence.
^*riJTf?:-^Rr shutting up in
a confined place and beating :
sutFocating in a close room.
^f^iTTi^^ ?/. The name of a
tre.itise oa the art of love.
^l^r The style or spike which
glioots up froin tiie [)lantaiii.
^ir^?5- pop. -^The black or
Indian Cuckoo.
^l^f^rr a. Ilavino; a high
and prominent '^t^ — a tur
^fJf A lar<:<" granary, ware-
house, &e. 2 The stomach. 3
The chamber of a gun, ot water-
]>ipes, &c. 4 A bird's nest. 5
.'\ cattle shed, (i The chami)er
of a hundi. in which is set down
in figures the amount. fbouse
^Urr n. A granary, a st -re-
^r^r, *i-hf /-. The peak (of a |^'^^ f- ^ granary, factory,
tiiihan. lie.) ' bank, warehouse. 2 The com-
niissariat-su[)j)lie3 : ^^^^iT'^t
^\Z) '^liyf^Jfl, ^rT^^t. See
|.an, ^-c. I Sj^'^ «'^'- ■^' [nary.
m^^^^ V. i. c To be cover- I'^f^'^^^ Tli^e public gra-
ed with black moulds. 2 To be .^Rlc^ See ^iJ-
covered witli snutl— a Hghted L;^rT-r , ^^.,
uiok. i^'" "^^* ^^ hence?
^i^-'^r /. The snutT (d' a ^f^ «'^. Where? 2 Any
liglited Iviek. 2 A Hake of burn- i J^J'^';^;
mg matter. 3 Burnt ashes. 4 c ,^f^ i{i ^,/^ J^ere and there.
Lare, solicitude. ' _:.
^l^ A fort, castle. 2 The ^|"/'^- "• Lep^'^^Y- -/• ^ A
wall of a fort or town. 3 A form : i^^""^'
of array of troops; the solid *^f* n. Poet. Holding ad-
^\^m^ f. n. C
attle.
A pen for
^^r Bran. 2 fig. Scurf. 3
fig. Any efflorescence on the
i'^'y- [pen, fold.
^f-^f /. A confined jduce ; a
^r^r a. Leprous; a leper. ^,
A score (of particular things).
Wi\^ «. Confined.
^r^ n. An earthen receptacle
for the oil and wicks of a
lamp. 2 An enigma ; a knotty
point. 3 A charm.
^r-^ pron. Wlio ? 2 What ?
(s) 3 A corner or angle.
=fJr^T^ pron. Some one.
^yt^^r, ^l"^^! pron. Which ?
2 That which. ^^^„y o„g
^PU pron. Any one? 2
^m^^of, ^["^i?;^^ ad.
Whence?
^if^l^t ad. Whither ?
^Ffr See ^l^l-
^(cf-^fc^ (p) The chief oflicer
of the ])olice of a town, (k)
A led horse. Hence iig. An article
of clothing, &c. reserved for
occasions of going out in s[)leudid
attire.
^r^^Fc^ ^r^r (n) a led horse.
j^lcT-Tfi^^f /. The othce of
I ^irr^T^. - Town duties or
j ^market dues. [smaller,
^^f a, (p) Deficient, scanty ;
^RT?
99
^frr
^rcrrf f. Deficiency. ^
^Riff, WT^^I See ^ll^^K.
^fST^r A lai-op sack. 2 The
cliiinibcr of the stomucli ; any
receiJtacle within the hodw i-i A
case to be stuffed. 4 A pp. to the
belly when hanging ont thioujrii
a gash : to the vagina (of
beasts) falling out on delivery.
€[^^r /. Dim. of ^WST.
^r?2T^fr, €[MrT /: Corian-
der l.lant.^ [of small-pox.
^rr^fl'^rr ^rft /. pi. a form
%K^ n. (s) A bow. 2 f]<r.
An eye-biow. 3 fig. A heavy
oalfunity.
v
^r?"^ ?/. Infixing of gems. 2
The socket of a gem.
^[^^ V. c. To cram in. v. i.
To be stuffed, obstructed ; to be
filled, as a house with smoke.
^f'T A corner, nn angle. 2
Childbirth, delivery : «it %T^
f^PT^L 3 it. A yam. r j^^
^^nirr Comers and an-
^R3"r A niche,
•\
^m^\^^ Tlie ciiangi ng of a
bed-chamber or corner of the
room (of a sick person, or of a
cat with her kittens).
^R-ha5 f. The yam-plant.
2 n. Its root. [To be an^rv.
^i1 (s) Anger. ^R"r v. i
^m or ^^^ The elbow.
•Riq^^^iTr or -i%^r /. a
blow with the elbow, r. siTT,
■^. 2 A hole dug with the
elbow. V. vil^. Toiiol..
^nn or ^I^^T a corner, an
^m or ^m^l /. Swelling
at the elliow.
^.crr^JTR a. (s) Angry. ^ff^5"
a. Irascible, ireful.
»^
^R A sprout. 2 An off-
shoot from the root ; a stole.
^1^? a. Warmish ; — used of
things, but not of the weather.
^l^^r A domestic cock. 2
A lunar halo.
^r^'lr/. A hen.
Cf^i V. A fowl, 2 Pveddish
streaks of clouds as indicative
^'^'i;!*'"- V [crowing.
^ffT^ROj^^/pi^gtij^-jg^^fcock-
^\^^ V. i. To fade.
^i^r c A cock. 2 A shoot. '
^I'^r /. A young shoot. 2
(Port;.) Cabbage.
^r*T f. (a) Used only in
notes after the name of the wife
or willow, and before t.ie name
of the husband : XTfli^i v %T^
^.W^'n V. i. To fade; to
^'mZ See ^i^.Z-
^FT^f V. i. To fade.
tBFH??- a. (s) Soft, tender,
delicate. 2 fig. Mild, gentle. 3
Swe?t. pleasant — a woid. name.
^Rc^^, imf^, ^\^m See
•\
^r^ f. A manoo-stone. 2
A mango-stoiie-kernel. 3 fig. A
testicle.
^4ir A staple. 2 A bolt
which ])asses through and con-
fines. •:i Tilt! clasp or catch (as
of a nose-ring, &c.)
^r^cTF A small wood-bill.
^r^cTf /; A grass-sickle.
W,m^ f. The bhick cuckoo.
2 A sort of tee-t<)-tura. a. Of
which the kernel is formed— a
mango.
^k/. Edge. 2 A fourth of
a cake of bread. 3 A coin. 4
Spite, malice.
^K^rS" ??. c Aloe-tree.
^i^^f. Dryness of llie throat
(as in fever, &c.) v. t[^, ^,
and, with g. of s., ^ToSUf and
B53U1. 2 Dryness gen.
^^^r n. Dry. 2 Dry— as
bread, &c. without any moisten-
ing accompaniment. 3 Mere
bare — wages without board :
4 fig. Formal, ^jharisaical, vapiil,
nnsubstautial, empty.
?<R>?r A horse-whip. r,„ • ^
' [tensions.
^R3T ^mm^ Empiy pre-
^R3T ^r?T5" Urgent but
^mpty invitation. j-^^^^,^ ^^
^K^FTf^ a. Utterly dry— a
^i?:¥ll:qr Malice without
^■^'^'«"; [i)rofit.
^rr^-iq^r Trade without
^'RSTcrrq"!"^ An empty preach-
er or professor.
':Eir?i^^5r(% A hollow pie-
. '^ ■ ^ _ [mere shadow,
^r^^Ti^^i^ Confidence in
^i^^rtT^^ir Formal respect.
€'rrfr^rr[ f. a term for a
^lestroving fire. ^^-^^^
'^irS]i^,Z\^ f. False accusa-
^ir^rr^rrar /. Unreason-
able chilling.
^rrS^RWf -^WSir/. Yawn-
ing from over-fatigue.
^lTfK\^f, lilank cartridge.
^Rsii'iTi^r /. Alms of dry
(undressed) rice, &c.
^Ri"f^^^r% /. An enter-
tainment consisting of dry fruits,
&c., without solid food.
* *^*
^iT^cFI n. Dry, barren de-
votion, r T • 1
. vf I religious hypocrisy.
^fr^cTST^TR n. Sanctimony,
^l?:i?fFq- „. Empty as-
sumption of spirituality.
^[f^-^ftT -c^r, ^ir^SiTie" ad.
For the dry food ; to be eaten (as
sauce or dressing) with the
bread, &c. : ^t«J <^T>» ^T^
^rr^qr^r^r^r Twm a term
for a rigidly e.xact or correct ac-
count. V. '^, mx.-
€;^off y Verbal of ^Rot. 2
also ^,TTuf n. An implement
for fashioning an idol; an in-
strument for cleaning the ears;
a picker for the hoof of a horse.
?ir^ V. c. To carve, to grave.
2 To pick (the ears, leethj.
^,X%^ j. Aloe-tree.
W^Z a. Newish.
^1^ a. New, just as made,
i. e. unwriiten,uuwashed,uuused
*in^
100
^r?fhT
—paper, cloth, &c. 2 fig. Un-j^g"?-^ f Xhe ye\\\n<y of
versed, iinpractisea. 3 Umm-i ;„ckals. 2fi?. Settin? unon^with
pn.ved (by a cou.se of ilisci- 1 vehement vociferation,
plinc). I ^ ^.
^n:f?;T?frcr a. See ^^?^^. i ^^^^ ^'^^^ "■ ^'o""g'' ^^'}-
-V I (It'i-. "2 I'resh — an egg. 3 fig.
^ir[^ 7i. Undressed corn i Mild— monnng, sunbeams :
(as given to Biahnians). feeble, juvenile — an understaud-
Tr?*r ^ n i 1 ,.,i,;^l, I in'4 '• erude, raw — a counsel.
*KI f. roor land, which, . _f_^
wh.en cultivated together with ^iF'^STST A punipion ooiird.
otJier land, IS not taxed. ! ^^p^ ^^^ ^ treasury. 2 A
^f<r^ ;>. Carved, sculptured.; dictionaiy. 3 A sheath", coatinir.
^[fR?;i^r^ a. Handsome,! 4 A scabbanl. 5 The eud of the
' sj)idcr. () A bud. / A measure or
neat, graceful. j ,ii,t,„ee-a kos. (-^ ^\,ry^,,Xy^
^.\^ n. An income, or pro-: ^fjf^f^ ^ ^^.j^^ silk-worm. 2
duoe of fields, &c. seized and ^ ^. ^ ^ ^.
sequestered (in_^ iinynient of ^[[51^1^, ^FF^T^n f. Raw
debt), r. tl^?! 3^, ^TlT. j fi-nit, &c. preserved (esp. as a
^\^A r. c. To ca>t off from ^ensoning)- [ertion. v. ■^^.
one's self upon anotlier (a work): ^F5T(^ f. (p) Endeavour, e.X-
^*T iTT^ri^^i^ ^T^t^t ^^^ ^rfrJT The web, cod, or co-
^••q^^T^?: *I5lH"[,Sf^ ^mia'C: ooon of certain insects.
^I^?ll. 3 To cast aside, reject. ^\^ gg^ ^\^^ except in the
^f?^^f /. A firebrand. 2 flS^.j Jast s.^nse. ^^j.^,,^ scrotum.
A false accusation, v. tw, with ^r^|l^ /. (s) Enlargement
^f^^T'ST, *fc=5Qisr A stick ' ,v
fnstened to the neck of a surly^l^'^'^ A caste. Thev are
dog. V. "^t^. 2 A mode of] spinners and weavers. 2/. fig. A
intervolving the arms and legs, i J^juder.
and thus i)iuningtliem by driving ^fg:^ ^^ „_ (^^^ ^ square
in a Ioug; stick : — as in securin'r (•„„;..* i i„ „r i i ..• \
. . r I (as in tables 01 calculation),
enininals. », ^ . .^
#^-^f f^^-^, ^Fc^F^F^y -c^F /. A ^^^^^^"f' ^Fa-^ff3-^=F n.
general casting off by one upon' ^'li^ n)ots of Costus Arabicus.
another fof a workj ; a bandying \ ^m^^^ a. Astriuiient.
nbf)ut.
^^JT^'c^ (s) A loud and con-
fused sound ; uproar; hubbub.
^Fc^F^ /. See ^Fc^%.
^^o F A jackal.
^r??"Fdr A tuniblpf ; a rope-
dancer. 2/. A summersault.
^1^ A measure of distance.
2 The exuvies of a snake.
^i^ojot y^ I i^Q tumble in
or down — a wall, &c. 2 'l"o fall
to ))ieces — a machine. 3 fig. To
dash down violentiv — rain ; to
fall profusely and ra])idly — fruits,
&c. ; to be blasted — a ])lot.
^[??-[^^F^ 5T?^ V. Ostenta- ^ft ind. (s Who am I ?)
hon of boldness ; bravado. ^he e.Kclamation held by the
«fi|??rQ5' A loud bellowino". ! Hindus to be made by every
^Fe V. A j;.ckal. ^ j
ll??^J^% ^"ItT.oT -OT n. In
oblique ca<es with ^^ or ^. n.
To sit cowering. 2 To be ap-
proaching t(i setting — the sun.
^r^i{?J-iTF^ /. The yellinrr
of jiekals. 2 Kaily dawn.
^F€1TF^ s The thought or
mental state of the foetus iu
utero whilst exclaiming ^\^.
^fcZ^fJT V. c. To weed (a
field) with the W\o5'^. v. i. To
be scorched ; to be blackened
by the sua — the body, cro])s.
^[SCf j)^ An instrument for
outrooting grass, &c. from
fields.
^TS"^!" f, c A prawn.
#3'?Ti%^ ^F^I^ ji. A term
for a person exceedingly black.
-fe^F Charcoal. 2 A liird.
^[3"iiT^, ^rf^^iR n. (p) Ga-
lantral root.
W>lc6\ A caste. They are
fishermen and watermen : also a
caste \\ hich inhabit woods, living
by rob!)eiy, &e. 2 A creature of
the spider kind. 3 The snuff of a
lighted or just-expired lamp.
^[ot^P^ ^^ n, A long yarn ;
a tiresome speech.
^IIJ?^ n. s Crookedness.
2 fig. Perverseness.
%^ n. (s) Wonder. 2 Hold-
ing fondly. 3 Sports. 4 Amuse-
ments.
%^ a. Playful.
^l-jF"! 71. s A cloth covering-
worn over the privities, v. '^^,
H^FT n. s Childhood.
^{^ n. A tile. m. (a) Writ-
ing of assurance or engagement
as granted by Government to
the cultiv.ator of the soil. 2 Safe-
guard to pass (as granted to an
enemy). 3 The rice, &c. stuck
upon an idol when it is con-
^"'t'^'^- [a promise.
^fc^^R (a) An agreement;
^I'^^HF^ The response of
an idol to an inqnirv.
^i^K or "^ «. Tiled.
^f^ a. Held upon or relating
to *T?^. ./'. I^and now first
brought into cultivation upon a
child on entering from the light
and glory of the womb — in
which himself and Deity are re-
cognised as one, into the dark-
ness and delusion of life— in i^j^ from Government,
which the ^T^Tqf%?r or lilu- ;§'r ■rYrrVpTr a r
sion-oovcred wretch assumes l^f^'^^^^^ ^ fanner or
consciousness of distinct per- contractor upon n WS^ : fl
donnlity. See "tr^. J lease-holder.
^5rw
101
^=^
Cnn^ .?q" 7,. (s)Expertness,
i?kill. 2 Happiness, comfort.
^f^ A segment of a circle.
^ An arc. _^ rchination, a plot.
^\^^ or ^\^^ n. A 11) a-
*^
^fFJiq" s The gem of Krishna
suspended on his breast.
ST^l^^rr^^ a. s Saw-nosed.
^^ s Sacrifice.
^^ (s) Order, method. 2
Prnreeding.
S^^'T n. s Advancing.
3TH°t r. c. To spend (time)
pleasantly. 2 To cross (space,
ground).
^m\6l a. s That reads the
Vedas after a certain order of
the xf^.
^^^: utl. Regularly, in order.
ih^ (s) Buying. 2 Selling.
^^n3r"T Buying and selling ;
trade. [Saleable.
ST^^ a. 8 Purchasal)le. 2
STsq- 71. s Raw flesh. 2 Flesh.
3r°TR" a. Carnivorous.
STTcT ^. s Passed over ; per-
vaded. /, Advance, passage.
^^"H^ ??. r. To overrun ; to
take military occupation (of a
country). 2 To seize aud over-
come— hunger, &e.
^rilcT f. s Advance. 2 De-
clination (of a heavenly body).
3 The sun's passage along the
ecliptic. 4 Predatory invasion.
Wilh^:^ Ecliptic.
arrf^^ /. The sine of a
planet's declination.
l3r.IT (s) A worm, a maggot.
I^^^"^ p. pr. s That is un-
der performance. 2 That is to
be done. n. The actions of the
present life with reference to
merit and demerit.
f^m f. (s) An act, deed. 2
Obsequial rites performed im-
mediately after death. 3 A reli-
gious ceremony. 4 The several
matters and points (of any
work). 6 Substantiating (by
oath, &c.} 6 Medical treatraent.
7 A verb.
I^TTr^lTf^?" n. Funeral rites
and solemnities.
r^?Trtf5I?5T 72. Skill at mak-
^'"o- [False to one's oath.
37m=TS" a. s Ung.ate^ful. 2
T^^m^ n. (s) A verb.
\^'^\^Wi sin law. A minor.
2 An incompetent person.
mm^ n. s See Rfr^TRS".
Sfqr^f^^ (s) A verbal.
f^^Timrq-crr n. An adverb of
verbs.
Si"r^''T V. i. To play, to sport.
^^ n. s ^r^r /. (s) Play-
ing; sport.
^r?r^^f A sham fiuht.
^\^l^^ An animal kept for
amusement. 2 fig. A lu)bby-hor.<e.
3 fig. A simple fellow at the beck
of another. r i
^ [purchaser.
^f^ p. s Bought, sold. 2 A
^^ p. s Enraiied.
^^ o. (s) Cruel. 2 Feroci-
ous. 3 Raging — fire, &c. 4
Harsh — ways or deeds.
^1^ o/.y. Ten millinns. ^TF'^r
ad. To the amount of crores
(rupees, &c.)
^^T (s) Anger. ^F^^ v. i.
To be angry. ^'T^^T^fll^ An-
gi-y.
^f"^ s A kind of heron.
^fT n. s Cruelty.
^\^ p. s Wearied.
fi^ a. (s) Difficult, trouble-
some—a road, a work, &c. ; far-
fetched—thought, &c.
IS"!'^ m. n. 8 The neuter gen-
der. 2 An eunuch. 3 A weak
^and imbecile person. [labour.
^^ (s) Affliction : pains,
i"2[Iot V. c. To afflict, trouble.
#?r1 a. Afflicted.
f^f"^^ nd. 8 Somewhere ; in
some rare place.
'3'The second consonant.
^^ or -^ a. ill) Penniless-.
2 Savage, morose. 3 Miserly. 4
Fiery — a horse.
^^^ A mass of doug;h
thrown into the iire to be baked.
2 A ])recious stone; a pebble. 3
.A pp. to a miserly person.
^^if^ a. Dirty, foul—
articles, buildings, ])laces. 2
WrtHchedly poor.
^^[=Tr or -"^r m. ^^\^ f. (P)
Dust as lying or rising, v.
^^f3. V, g^. 2 Dust (as of
snufF, &c.) 3 Dust generally.
^f-^R'"^ V. c. To hawk or
force up (phlegem).
^^r^ a. Cross, ill-tempered,
2 Fierv — a horse.
<3^.cS"'^ 2j. i. To neigh.
l^^ s A bird.
• V,
^.^^ r. i. To be reduced
and enfeebled (from labour or by
sickness, &c.)
^^T^rril^ s A name of H^^.
^Tir (7. Infirm ; worn and
wasted from age. 2 Poor, lean
■ — a country, soil.
?iiirS"OT y r.To shake about in
water (a cloth, &c.) ; to cleanse;
to rinse.
^^f^ (s) The starry vault.
2 Astronomy.
^iffcTrf^rr /. s Astronomy.
mm^J or -im a. A swindler
or rogue. 2 App. to a vomcious
fellow ; to a ruinous l)usiness.
^^f^ (s) The obscuration
(of a heavenly body) under an
eclipse. 2 fig. Embezzlement, v.
^X, %I. 3 fig. Consuming
largely.
^^^ V. c. To set (jewels).
2 To stud with gems. 3 To ram
down ; to stuff, v. i. To yield
and sink down (as into a soft
ground) — a building. 2 To fall
or tumble from. 3 fig. To fail,
sink — courage, hopes. 4 To
miscarry ; to be blasted — an
; enterprise. 5 To die : to quail.
R=^^
102
W^TF
3^^cT[Tr^ Deterioration; de-
clining: state (of fame, wealth,
&(•.) [tr()ul)lfsome.
^"^TZ a. Vile, tedious,
^"^Z^ r. r. To cut rouobly.
to slash. '2 To drag ; to do with
rmle violence.
^V^^ p. (s) Set, studded.
In coinp. <"\s ?;a'3r'^'T-
^r^^r4 Established con-
clusion ; matter ascertained.
^€r or "^r a. Castrated. 2
Pruned.
W-^\^ a. Certam, positive.
^^ ad. I II lit. Closely to-
gether; hard and fast — persons
crowded, tliiii<rs stuffed.
?I^Rr or '^tRF (p) A trea-
sury. 2 Treas\ire. .'i The cistern
whidi supjjlies a jet d'eau. I
The reservoir to a set of salt
pans; a large cistern gen. 5 The
chanil)er of a gun. 6 The hold
of a sword. 7 A sort of mortar.
?^iTI3r a. Quarrelsome. 2
Libidinous.
55[sTr5?f f. Mischief-making.
^f'sR^r (pj The public
treasurer.
^'^\^ (p) A sort of dagger.
^'-'r /. Dale-tree.
^^^ The fruit of the date.
^Z n. An ulcer. 2 /". Grime
(on the articles), r. <^¥, ^^^. a.
Vile ; a rogue.
T^Z^^Z^ ad. Imit. of cer-
tain sounds, clap ! clap ! clack 1
clack !
^^T^H ?z. Vexatious business.
^T-T^ n. A tough-tisted
ti'iiiiiit.
TZ,Z^Z f. Imit. Fuss, bother.
2 Altercation. 3 Continuing
riiatter.
^Zi^Zm a. That wrangles
noisely and wearisomely.
^^.'^ »\ i. To Stop. 2 fii;.
'I'll stick — monies due. 3 fig.
To take su'ks and resist pcrsna-
siim. 4 To he restive — a horse.
^Z^Z f. Cares, pains ; any
fish fash, v. ^X, ^\^, ^T?-
2 A squabble. 3 Any trouble-
some business.
T^Z^Z^\ or -^ n. Bu^y. 2
Adventurous, s. A cook's mate.
'^TX TTT A miscellaneous
collection.
^Zi\n f. A term for any
person, business, viewed as trou-
blesome ; a fdagne. v. «?m,
^if?f^, Vjiv wiTJT. 2 Things,
traps; the furniture of a house
viewed as cninbersoine.
^Z^'J m. ^^^ n. A dispute.
2 Fainilv, followers, lands ; de-
pendence and possessi(ms. 3 Re-
tinue, baggage. 4 One's wife.
0 A tra<le. fi .An affair, a matter.
7 Lawsuit before the Judge.
^^T-^^Kr. One quarrelsome.
2 One speculating.
^?^^rt?J c. That has family,
followers, &c.
^Tr?^7 ad. Wilh a rpiferat-
ed and rapid clacking, clapping.
&c. — spending or giving out
1 U])ecs.
?:?TiZ"nT (n) Mighty and im-
posin? plans, preparations, &c,
^IZTJ^q'r or -^'^fa. Disposed
to make great parade or demon-
stration.
^irfiqiiT^^r: a phmse with
^^T^q. " Sound and fury
sii_'nif\ ing nothing."
T^Z\T\ The frame or hull
;of a house, cart, ship), as con-
sidered ajjart from the furniture,
bullocks, cargo, &c. 2 A huge
fabric gen.
T^ll a. (h) Sour. 2 fi^. Dis-
pleased, sowed. V. ^"5. 3 Of
faded brilliancy — colour. 4 Of
im|)aire.l keenness— a flavour or
fragrance, s. The joints of the
loins, the small of the back.
?^'j?:iTrr^[ f. The liuht of
imposing fines and exactions.
^^=R^r An under-tenant or
snb-lessee of lan<l.
*^Z^7E j\ A rocky place. 2
fig. .\ knotty point, a hnid nut.
a. lli)ekv ; abouniling in rock.
'^^^f A noise as of a per-
son or thing moving. 2 A
squabble.
i:§^vS*|H n. A work to be
executed by contract.
?^:§"^^ or -^f See ^^^i^-
^^^^J a. Blunt, rough ;
])romj)t at speech.
^^^'S or -^r nd. Imit. of
the sounds of carts, &c. pro-
ceedinjr over a rough road rat-
tlinglv : of paper, cloth, &c.
when shakea. 2 Flainly,bluntly —
si)eakiiiir.
^??^5ot v.i. To rattle, rustle.
^^^4fot V. c. To scold,
bloiv lip.
^J^^\Z A loud rattlinsf. 2
fig. Utter emptiness (one's
))nrse, of a well. &c.) '• utter
want (of money, &c).
^??lircT n. Dry and hard :
stiff and hard from dryness. 2
Hale, hearty. 3 Straight-for-
ward : honest. [Confuting.
^^^ V. Breaking. 2 fig.
^'t% /. Tribute. 2 A fine ;
an exaction made. 3 Cimtract-
ing for. 4 Grain paid by the sub-
lessee to the land holder.
'S^'^R'ir rt. Tributary.
^^^^ f. A contract of
work. 2 Settling the price.
^^^ V. c. To bre^ik. 2 To
confute. 3 To contract for. 4
To sctrle the price of (of a thing
to be purchased or hired).
^Z^ V. i. To fall — the leaves
of a tree.
^^cTr a. Vile, tiresome.
i^:?cf/^ot V. i. To clatter.
i^3"clT't"f n. Hard fortune.
^^^S'crr'Ir^cT n. a fierce, impla-
cable divinity.
^'S^ V. (s) Breaking. 2
Shattering, lit. fig. 3 Interrupt-
ing. 4 fig. Confuting.
?^5H*TI^ n. Di.-provingand
))roving.
*ii:^{^ a. s (Suitable, (fee)
to be broken, lit. fig.
^^ A bed of rock.
^^1 A rocky cliff.
^'W^
103
mrfTsrr
^^^^^ V. i. To emit the
sound ^^^^. 2 Poet. To be
confused.
^¥^^fT A loud rustling.
^^•^^fcf a. Very rough.
^^I^JTrHT A contract, a mo-
nopoly.
'^'3"^ r /'. pL Wooden shoes.
^*3rR"^*3" ad. In pieces. 2
Bit by bit. pi. (s) Fragments.
^*¥flS" f. Partial rain.
^-^^ n. A zigzag of a road
upon a liill.
^•^"^y. Scolding, reviling.
V. afii^ g. ot 0.
^^"^^ V. i. To lop. 2 To
chop roughly. 3 fig. To address
sharply 5 as m warning, enjoin-
ing.
^^fTfm V. i. To scold
roughly. 2 To enjoin.
^^c^^^^ ail. Intermitting-
ly; l)y Hts jind starts. 2 Here
and there. 3 Vjiguely. /. n. Oc-
currence with intervals, v. epx:,
$?T^, TTt«,-^l^q[. ■-' vagueness
lof speech) : fluctuation (of a
course).
^^?rR ri. (s) Knowledtrp
(imparted or acquired) by piece-
meal, by steps : knowledge by
analysis.
^^'^ A small stone. 2 A
nodule (of lune, &c.) ; a lump
(as of gum. sugar-candy, &c.) ;
the gem of a ring or trinket ;
a lump of hardened ia;ces. '6 A
mass of iToS- a. (h) Stand-
ing, perpetual; as ^» tji^'Ci.
2 Unclosed — accounts: standing
over ; rejected— a bUl.
^^i?I3" ad. Crackingly. 2
or ^^y^^^ On the spot, in
a trice. '6 Smartly — givmg, an-
swering, &c.
?I^s■^^^3" A very acclivous
gi^. 2 A rough or uufiuishtd
form.
5^^(^r See 'g^T^.
^\^^ p. (s) Broken. 2
Confuted, o Contracted for.
^aT^cTqrP^??! «, Scrap-learn-
ing.
^^r f. A species of steatites
used to rub over the writing board
or to whitewash walls : a sort of
pipeclay. 2 A composition for
raising figures on cloths. '6 A
device for determining whether
a sickness be from demoniac
j)ossession, 4 Pebbles : stones
broken u]) (as for a road), metal.
5 Squirrel.
^^f /i A measure of capa-
city and weiiiht. 2 .^pp. to a
great quantity; as 'Q^IVI^^K.
'6 A land measure, 120 liighas.
4 A. score (of sheep).
W^\ \^^^ f. Standing- price.
?I-^ra^r iU^ A scrap-
scliolar.
T^'k[ m^\ a. By candies.
^fr^r^U /. Unintermit-
tins; service.
W^\ crr^jlT /. Rising to re-
ceive or dismiss a visitor, v. ■^,
<I#l JTIT/. High noon.
?3fr^r5=fr/. SuL:ar-candy.
^'^r ^'^\ f. A hundi as yet
unaccepted.
m^^^ r. c. To make mnd-
<ly. 2 To make the eyes turbid.
'^^ /". A kind of pipeclay.
2 A comjjosition to rub over
vrriting boards.
<^¥^(3' Washing and bleach-
ing at the ^I'S'. 2 tig. 'i he iiist
rough dning. 'A fig. Great clean-
ness : rqi^I ^?^1 lio ^T^#f.
4 One very clean and piue.
^^^f An incarn;ition of
Shiva. 2 App. to one excited
and pushed forward to do what
his stupidity and timorousness
would never have suggested or
permitted.
"fi^^l^X f. Sugar-candy.
i^i\^^ or -^[ ad. On the
spot.
^^m A name of ^^^1^.
^^r^r^r ^^r a term for the
^i5jT of t&%i^r.
^^ (s) A sword. 2 A
rhinoceros' horn. 3 A rhino-
ceros.
'I^^r^ w. (s) A bracelet of
silver, copper, &c. with an over-
lay of gold. 2 Khinoceros-horn.
?I?qr% a. Made of or
relating to ^'^qi^.
^1"T A rough hole or pit.
^^JTRl^ A leopard.
'^^JTl^ a. Having bad tem-
per and ways.
^^ A squiire. 2 An apart-
ment of a building. 3 \ drawer
(as of a box). 4 A story of a
li'>"se. [own house.
^'T^^ f. A tale of one's
^^ -^^ .^t: X^\ -it?fr ad.
Witii a clang, clank, ring, twang,
^'^^r A sountliuo- hano- ; a
sharp aiul valorous contest.
^^^^ or -^r ad. With a
clang.
?af^?5lt^R: A loud ringing.
^'^^'^cT a. That sounds
loudly. 2 Hale, hearty — an aged
])erson. 3 Uluut, frank — a j)erson;
plain, honest. 4 Stiffly dry.
^^^\ V. c. To diiT. 2 fig.
To corrode. 3 fig. To fish for.
4 To sap — as water saps a wall,
5 or ^iJi«T ^Ts'H To extort
(a secret act, money, &c.)
^^^\ /. Digging up. V. ^1^,
qs^. 2 fig. Gnawing, burn-
ing (of a wound). 3 fig. Inces-
sant stirring. 4 A vigorous
attiick.
^^'\Z f. Determined ap-
plication and persistence.
^"^1"^^ V. i. To cl.aig.
?30Ti^r i\^^\ A modern
term for coal.
^-i^ f. Nausea, disgust. 2
Sense of shame. 3 Inquietuda ;
metital distress, v. g, "^X.
^^ n. (A) A l>ond. 2 Ma-
nure. 3 (s 59cf) A wound, sore.
^^^^ The bul)biing up of
a boiling liquor. 2 fig. A sud-
den imoulse to speak, &c.
^cf^lcl^ V. i. To emit the
sound '^fr'.'sirr! — boiling water,
&c. V. imp. To be hot or sultry.
#cT^r^ f. A loose term for
tricks, vices, ill-habits.
• *^
^ilcT^STT a. Nice, squeamish.
'_' Suspicious.
^^cf^^ a. Anv documentary
voiirlier or evidence.
^^'^ /?. Manure generally.
'^^r See fg^X
'JI^^^ n. The spot outside a
vilhiije uliereon nil the tiltli and
jnboish is tlirown. 2 Dmig, rub-
bish gciic'inlly.
?5icI^T, ^^\^ a. Kich from
dung and rnbl)ish lying upon it
— a spot. '2 Manured — a field.
'5f?rr /. Apprehension of evil.
2 Loss, o i''auU.
«:Scrff^'lT /. Tlie roll or paper
on wliich are abstracted, into
distinct heads, the items of the
day-book. "i Abstracting and
eiiiernig (the ^* ^TiJ-l) item.
^cTF^^ V. i. To get filthy,
stinking.
^scTH^ V. i. To loathe. 2 To
long and pine after.
^^["^^i V. c. To mark a roll
a.s a ^fTT'citn't.
^^ f. See ^'^ C'sp. sig. 3.
V. y^X, S. 2 Poet, Anxiou>
apprehension, a. That pines or
frets after ; that is anxious
about.
^Tfr A preparation of (opi-
um, aliini,&c.) levigated togetiier
in a copper vessel. It is app. to
ihf eves in ophthalmia, &c.
t3^T a. Vile, tiresome. 2
^';;='"- [dual of it.
'n'^r A caste or an indivi-
^*?"^ (A) A ditch. 2 A
deep hollow.
T^^m^or-^Url. Ha! ha! ha I
— laughing. "J Tlu- unit, of the
Hound of ol)ulliii>in.
^^^T See ^cT<:<cr.
^?"f a. (p) High mettled— a
horse : fiery, savage — a man :
wild, wilful — a child.
^H^\^ III. V. (a) A bra'^s
^\mn f^^J- - App. to the
English lantern.
^?r[^ s A firc-fly.
<3"'l'T II. s Digging. J Jury-
ing (of a corpse k
104
^T^^ a, s (Suitable, &c.)
to be dug.
m Sule, market. 2 Com-
po.^t or manure (for fruit-trees).
3 Working, toiling.
<^^7 n. A scide (of a fish).
m'>\ V i. To toil. 2 To
sell. '6 fig. To be consumed. 4
'I'o die.
^T^r /. A pointed bit of
stone, a chip: a piece of broken
glass. V. fsf^, '3^3", a)T.
^^cT n. (h) a flat tile
turned up at both sides. 2 ,\
tiled building. Ur-^1 a. Roof-
ed with tiles.
^^^ A peeling; a scab.
^^^ j- A small peeling off.
^^Tf a. (p) Displeased. 2
Dishking (a pursuit, &e.)
^^^^ 71. A term used to ex-
press an imiiossibility.
^^1^ a. Decayed, sunken —
features, &c. from age.
^"^TF a. Displeased. I^f a.
Irascdde, sharp. [Diligent.
^'^^r a. 'i'hat labours hard. 2
^^^f. (a) News. 2 infor-
mation regarding, o Mere chat.
^^^^rr./. (p) Skilful, clever.
2 Substantial, well to do. 3
Strong, sound. 4 A monitory
phrase. Take care ! Mind !
^^C^KF /■. Preservin<j, keep-
ing in safety, order. 2 Strength,
firmness. [an idle prater.
^^'^r a. A news-mong. r,
^^i^^r a. Kelating to the
city ?§gT^fr (Canibay).
^Ml f. Firmness. 2 fig.
Positiveness.
^^K a. Firm, strong. 2
fig. Steady, positive. 3 Huge,
niiirhty.
^5^^ ;/. (p) A dove.
^JT^hfot V. c. To scold. 2
To draw, bind, seize, &c. for-
cibly.
^^^'TF a. Smart, energetic.
^Rf=F4(^,?^^'iT f/.We.ll«piced,
^^""-^ s The zenith.
^% n. (a) Leaven. 2 The
working of leaven.
^^ /. Conceit, v. m^, ^1^^'
2 llestiveness (as of a pampered
beast).
^^ ad. c Where ?
^^(s) An ass. 2/. Rubbish
of various kinds, e. g. white
sediment in leucorhoea; particles
(of sdver or gold) remaining after
fusion 5 gravel and slime at the
bottOuTi of a river, &c. a. Sharp,
pungent. .2 Steep. 3 Of thick
consistency — mud, &c.
^X^ f. The fnioments,
scrii|)s, dirty leaves, dishes, &c.
remaining where a meal has been
made.
mW.Z^ V. c. To write or
draw roughly, v. i. To become
^r^3j— food, &c. 2 To be-
smear.
'^<*'il n. (A term of cere-
monial distinction between clean
and unci^an). That (rice, &c.)
wliich has been boiled or cooked
or has been mi.ved with water:
that (band, utensil, or place)
which has such food adhering to
it, or lying in or on it.
^^^^i^ ji. Any remainder of
?3T^ZT food.
<^^^^ or -^f od. Imit. of
the sound proceeding from a
body dragged; rustling. v.
J^T^T f. Painful throbbing
in the eye. 2 fig. Remorse :
concern, v. ^T'^. 3 Uattlc in
the throat, v. ^i^, ^Z'. 4
A fit of itching in the itch. v.
^aXmT^S] A classofMusal-
niaii mendicants. They force at-
tention anil extort alms by
fiercely gashing their breast,
head,&c. 2 The attendant upon
a hermaphrodite on his begging
rounds. 3 .V penniless and desti-
tute person.
?3r^fFcr a. Rough.
mtHZ^ V. c. To break
toav^ely ; to bruise.
^rnr
105
'^fri'
^k^^ V. c. To fry well. 2
To get red and inflamed through
heat — eyes, face.
'^rSflX f. A goddess wor-
shipped by persons afflicted with
the itch.
?3r^3T -?5T a. Itchy.
^r^ /. A scrawl. 2 Vehe-
ment reviling or abusing, v.
^I^ g. ot'o., f«Tg. g. ofs.
^T^^f^rr.A term of abuse
for a bad writer, barber, carpen-
ter, &c. ; quill driver, scraper,
chips.
^^^^ V. c. To scrape or rub
off roughly: to graze. '2 Tornb up.
'6 To shave ro\ighly : to scrawl;
to note down. 4 To bruise
(pep])ers, &c.) 3 To abuse, r:
?IT^^r f. Vehement revil-
^^^f Scrapings (as from a
culinary utensil). 2 also 'a'CS
n. A rude sketch, a foul copy :
!i day-book, 'A A spotted and
rough pearl. 4 A leopard. 5
Reduced stnte, i. e. such scanti-
ness as to demand scraping, v.
^rt^ilRr^r n. An inferior
kind of i)earl.
^T^irr a. That writes or
shaves rudely and roughly, s. Or
^o ^T^ A leo{)ard.
^Tm V. c. To scratch hard
ami I'oughly.
^^^^yf. A detached piece
(of bark, skin, crust, &c.)
^V\^ a.Well roasted ; fried,
&c. so as to be brownish and crisp,
and to have agreeable fragiancc
and flavour. 'J iig. Downright,
blunt— speech. 3 Well digested
or concerted. 4 Used as ad. of
emi)hasis.
?^^^? a. Unequal — tlie
ground ; rough through adhering
matter — a vessel, &c.
^^^STcT a. See ^T^ffcT.
^rj'^r a. Of the shape of a
musk-melon./. The musk-melon
plant.
ml^^ f. (p) See ^^ftr. 2
II. The fruit.
^^^K a. Severe, stern :
smart.
14
^mncT a. Hot, jHino-ent,
tierce — fire or heat. 2 Blunt —
sjjeech : energetic, smart — mea-
sures : plain spoken — a person,
^Xm^l f. (p) Excited state
— of a horse. 2 Vanity, conceit.
^■rff /'. An instrument of
braziers — the anvil on which ves-
sels are hung to be hammered.
<^?r?^ f\ Scrapings (as of
rice or milk) hardened and
adhering to the cooking pot :
rice, &c. adhered and capable of
being scraped off. 2 fig. Abus-
ing or scolding vehemently. '6
The remains of a fortune.
^<'^'T i\ c. To scrape off
or out.
J^C^ or ^l^^ m. f. Biest-
ings boiled with sugar, &c. and
inspissated. 2 fig. The white
sordcs which gathers at the cor-
ners of the mouth from thirst or
much speaking. [declivous.
^^IT'^^T a. Acclivous and
'^n a. True. 2 Genuine. 3
Good, unalloyed — coins. 4 Faith-
ful, honest. 5 Right, exact. 6
Com])lete, full. 7 Settled, fixed.
s. A piece of turmerick in ])reua-
ration for ^^. ad. Well ; at
least : «f cEJT^T '^Tv?T^ <rl^ ^^T.
^^ff" /'. Trueness ; honesty :
pureiK'ss; fitness.
^^\^T ad. Imit. of the sound
proceeding from a body dragged
along.
^^mn See ^h^Ti
^^f? a. (a) Bad. 2 Unculti-
vable or uncultivated — land.
?^?'I^r An abandoned or
waste piece of ground. 2 A bed
of rock under water. 3 Damage,
injur\\
^T\M\ f. (p) Damage, harm.
^^irr (h) a currycomb. 2
Currving a horse.
?ITf^ra3T a. True and
genuine; honest and open.
?5rfr?r/. (p) Purchasing. 2
A purchase.
^f^^r a. Relating to the ^-
K\^. 2 Troducing the ^<1q
crop.
^^r^ a. (p) Bought. 2 See
^^r^^cf V. A writing taken
by the purchnser from the vend-
or. 'a^i^^T^ A purchaser.
^HT or -TT The autumnal
harvest.
T^W^f, The itclu
^^ 2)1. Papulous efflores-
cence on the tongue from heat.
^■^^ ad. Yes; indeed; verily-
^^'^T «. Real.
?5[^r<5r?: ad. Positively. '^^T-
'MTj a. True, indeed.
^^ (p) Expenditure, con-
suming. 2 Expense; money, &c.
expended. 3 lu law. Costs.
^"^^i" V. c. To spend.
^^f"^ A general term for
expenditure.
. "^
^■^f /. Money taken for pro-
bable expenses ; road-money,
pocket-money, a. That is for
daily use ; common. 2 Expended,
i. e. slain in battle. 3 Embarras-
sed : TPiX ^\ ^T^TirT'^o ^^'^\.
^^S S See <^^^. n-
^ <>- |_lions.
^^ n. s Ten thousand mil-
^^ (s) A metal or stone
mortar. 2 Rubbing or pounding
in a mortar, a. Low, vile, base.
^?5"u[ y. c. To rub or pound
in a mortar. [tion.
^^c^^cT ri.{y) Secret consuita-
^^^cfr or ^tTF A pestle and
m"''tfii-- [tion of mind.
'f^'^^^'^ /.Clamour ; commo-
^^r^r (A) A seaman. 2 A
gunner.
■I^c^r^ a. (a) Consumed, ex-
hausted. 2 Ended.
^V^^\ (A) A purse. 2 A silk
bag in which ])etitions or letters
(r.o grandees) are enclosed.
"\
^^^ a. Rude, quarrelsome.
2 Cross, testy. 3 Stubborn — a
child : restive — a horse. ^<^-
^t./". Rudeness, &c.
^eT^ a. Penniless. 2 Lean.
??f5"3" a. Decayed; sunken —
features.
Wpfr^
106
i^r^r
l^prrS" The cbittering of
waters. 2 A clattering stream.
i^^^^ f. Smarting- of the
tongue and month under the
taste of somcthinp; acrid. 2 fig.
The burning sensation ot hunger;
the stinging of remorse; inHam-
ed lust, imi):itient desire.
t^W^"^ i\ i. To glow or burn
fiercely — fire: to be excited (by
hunger, ciqiidity, &c.) ; to crave,
long, itch, burn.
^^^J f/. Rather rancid. 2
fig. Acrimonious.
"fl^J" a. Strong-scented. 2
Bitter — a person.
^^^[qC 71. A churl, cynic.
^^"^r A pustule in tlie dis-
ease scald-liead. 2 A scale of the
itch.
^^TV^^ V. c. To arouse,
excite. ^^^To3l'/. Teasing.
^I^^"^ V. c. To scrape (a
cocoanut, Sec.) t§^utt A
Kcraper. ^tTuft /. Scraping.
2 A scraper.
^IcT^^S'ot r. c. To stir about
2 To shake and jolt. 3 fig. To
provoke, v. i. To get angry.
V. imp. To be queasy in the
stomach.
^^^ ji. A scale (ofaiish,
^c.) 2 .\ scab (over a sore, &c.)
^^r A scraper. 2 A disco-
loration (as upon a snake). 4 A
dint.
^S'^S'oT V. i. To work up in-
to fury. 2 To stir— bile. 3 To
arouse — an organ of sense.
^^^t f. A small scab.^^^^r
n. Ilavinsr scales, spots.
W^^^ JTi^lT m. n. Scaly ant-
eater. [Ijoiling.
^^r Milk inspissated by
*^'^li n. Tlie shoulder-joint.
^^W A goblin viewed as
the spirit of a deceased .Musal-
man. 2 A term for a furious
fellow ; a devil, a spitfire.
^^^^^1 ad. Scrawlingly—
writing. ^^Vile.
^? a. Cross, crabbed. 2
<^m?2fl(rT a. Plain, blunt;
positive.
^^^^ f. Poppy-seed. ud.
Iniit. of certain sounds as of
cutting rough grass ; of rapid
writing.
^^c?rcT or '^HT^^ /. (a)
Disposition : harsh temper.
^^c^^r or ??^r?5^r a. Of
a pnrtk-ulur temper.
^^m or -^f ad. Sharply—
spraking.
513^Ri^ or -^r ad. Imit. of
certain sharp, hissing sounds, as
that of cutting rough grass.
t^^r^^ r. c. To cut roughly ;
to sUa^h.
^^\ a. (a) Castrated. 2
Pruned. /. Castration.
^^T^ a. (a) Certain, sure.
^^'^ (I. (p) Slaughtered, cut
to ])ieces.
*^^^r /". ^d. Cares, pains,
trouble, fuss, ado.
^^/. Viscous matter pre-
pared from wheat, rice, &c. ;
))aste. 2 Flour boiled up in sugar-
water. 3 Stnbhoru determin-
ation, a. Vile, base.
W^ .^^ -^ r^HT -it^r ad.
Jingling, purling : clinking.
<5loJtt,| F)ao;raents of bottles,
&c. 2 The loud rippling (of
water). 3 fig. Brawling,
tjfoo'f^^r or -^f (I. Imit. of
the sound of rippling, gurgling,
&c.
(=1 c6 <=j cxi y. Rippling (of a
brook ) : clinking, rattle. 2 fig.
Clashing; trouble, toil.
JcTcZT^S^ r. I. To 1 ipple. &:c.
See the adverb.
■i«<a5<=|ai'J| I,, c. To rinse out
noisily. 2 To lavish out (rupees.
&c.); to vxake (the coin) to
rntllp. [clattering.
^S'S'^coR' A loud jingling,
^rfA^S^m a. Tl)?t ripples:
that clinks. [cavity.
^^nZ"^r A pit, hole ; a small
^^^r / A pit or hole.
'^'^ V. c. To paste.
^S"^c6»J| y. c. To shake about
in water in order to rinse. 2 To
wash vigorously. 3 fig. To dis-
turb or to make a noisy motion —
as water heaving and swelling. 4
To be in commotion and tumult
— a country. 5 To roll about in
the belly.
^^^^\ Disturbance in the
belly ; popular insurrection : agi-
tation.
^^r^^aifcf a. Free, flowing —
address, intercourse, a person.
't^^iTH: A term for an obsti-
nate and dogged person.
^oJlfS" '^Phe starch, dirt,
and size (as of a new cloth). 2
Dirt, filth.
^^^ Ti. A jocose term for
the feast of harvest-home a-
mongst the cultivators, because
they slaughter fowls or a sheep.
T^S"^rT Obstinate conten-
tion about.
l^^l^W^ Of J^ ad. Imit. of
a loud and continued gurgling
(as of a brook), jingling.
staTSTcS" The roar and bellow
(of l)re:ikers, surges) : the noise
from the collision of sonorous
bodies. 2 The rattling of a
stream. 3 Poet. A roaring
stream.
JSrST^ or -^r ad. With a loud
roaring, &c. : gushingly — tears
flowing.
icj cb rs'oj y_ i^ To emit a loud,
deep, and prolonged sound.
I^aF^r /. The rippling of
water over stones.
^°^l f. A pit, hole ; a cavity.
^<^ 11. A treading-floor. 2
fig. Mess of food made by chil-
dren in disorderly eating. 3 A
halo.
^\t. f. (ii) The pit prepared
for a widow intending to immo-
l.ifc herself. 2 A ditch.
^^T j\ Sweetmeat. 2 A
bribe. 3 Profitableness, a. In
comp. That eats. 2 fig. That re-
ceives, .sustains, midergocs: 3T-
^.\^ Tiio, ^ixx: ?sIT».
?3f3;(iT2r^ c. An ingrate.
<^r^ (p) Reduced to dust,
burnt to ashes.
m'^ See ^mi.
m^'m or ^r^^^ V. i. To
hav^k. v.c. To force up (phlegm).
MJMF
107
m^ft
WU^l f. Voracity, craving.
'3'raT? /. Ravenous htinger.
V. -^-z, f T. ru
"* ^. Lnuiisi'v.
IIT^R'^ ^^ i. To be keenly
J^\mi\ or ^t^R7 A young
cocoanut : a young guava.
^r^ or '^f^/. A pit, hole.
2 Bowshot. 3 Loss in trade. i\
^"^K^]"^ f. Risings and
sinkings. 2 Excesses and defi-
ciencies. 3 Modulation.
^r^"^ /. A groove.
'^f^ 71. c A small rice
field or small sugar-cane field.
^r^l?^ V. c. To groove in ;
to set in a groove.
^\^\ A notch (as on a peg
or stick, in a tree), v. ij, qi^,
^T^, ^X. [pit.
'^f^I^ 71. A large irregular
l^R/. An itching, v. ^Z. o
fig. An impulse of desire. 3
Illicit pickings (as of agents,
factors. &c.)
^^fff /. Cowitch. r^^
W^n^ or ^^f\\ See ^Ftf-
^R'T 71. c Cultivable land
lying along the coast or along
inlets, and exposed to he over-
flowed by the tide. '2 r Innings.
^rsr^ V. c. To affect the
throat or body with aa itching
sensation : to tickle ; to l)ring
on the itch — articles of food,
&c.
^l^^r a. Stinging, tickling.
i^r^frjfftor-j^^r/. Cow-
hage.
?^ir^r<^:^f f. Reciprocal
scratching. 2 fig. Teasing, work-
ing into passion.
IRf^^ V. c. To scratch (in
order to allay itching). 2 fig.
To tease.
l^rSTRr or J^r^rs^ a. That
is ever quarreling. 2 Lewd.
I3'r^f<5^w. The stinging va-
riety of 3ISJ.
^r^r n. Grocery. 2 Abridged
from xj^?3i^. 3 One's proper
or j)referred and pleasant food ;
one's pi-eij. 4 Any kind of sweet-
meat given to children,
^ar? fi. Cross, savitge ; hard,
harsh./. Sleei)ing cot.
?ir?:^ or I^rstr /. a tribe of
Hindus or an individual of it.
Thev are mutton-butchers.
^\Z^ 71. A small bedstead
or cot.
W\Z^ ^|3Tc?r „, A vulgar
term for Ursa major ; Charles's
ivain,
WIZ\ a. Dressed and left fal-
low (to gather by exposure to
the atmosphere, salts) for a future
sowing — land : corn raised upon
such land.
J^i^/. A break in a dam. 2
Denticulation. 3 A gap in the
teeth. 4 Abrfuvn kind of sugar.
5 n. A beam. G \ bit (of certain
things ; as of betel nut, turmeric,
&c)." 7 A flock (of sheep). S A
clump or division of a tree. 9
A division of a field.
^[^^•7 ad. Imit. of the sound
of trees, &c. breaking and falling
with a crash.
^i'^^r /. A chip.
Ji^f^^rC or -Cr An interrupt-
ed deep part in a river.
5=rr^^ V. c. To break; to
chop. 2 To dig. 3 fig. To gnaw.
J^f^f^^r /. /;/. Moustaches
with interstices here and there :
moustaches having a clear inter-
val in t!ie pit of tiie lip.
^r^r Intermission ( in a
work") : a vacant day. 2 A hole,
pit. 3 fig. Noneness. 4 a. Used
as 'gjo f^^^.
':^F3"r?r n. Any large breach.
'^r^r /. An arm of the sea.
^\^ 71. A boil. 2 A pustule
in scald-head.
■^r^^ n. A dry spot in a river.
^M f. A mine. 2 Nest (of
ants, &c.) 3 fig. Source, stock.
4 A redundant additament to the
word ^WW : IJfi'^ ^^IT" ^To
'^TR?^'^ See ^5^^^.
^MTcT f. Revenue arising
from mines and quarries.
m^^^r^ c. A digging thief; a
housebreaker through digging.
mm V. c. To dig, &c.
^•^r^S-y. Cost of eating at
another's house, board. 2 Com-
mon eating (at a public eating-
house).
^PTr See m\^ sig. 1 . 2 fig.
A source. In comp. ^\^ -'^Tl
^STPTr^r a. Of a good family.
^r^ V. c. To eat. 2 To em-
bezzle. 3 Swallow up. 4 To
take up ; to consume. 5 To re-
ceive (a beating, heat, cold). 6
To inhale (the air). 7 To take
(an oath). 8 To eat up ; to over-
come or subdue utterly. 9 To
omit, skip (words or letters in
speaking or writing). 10 Used as
^T'^ruf and ^^?l in the sense
of To bite : ^T^^^i ^t^f'T^if
The serpent bites, but he fills
not his belly. Used also of the
biting of dogs and of certain
venomous reptiles and insects and
troublesome vermin : also of the
gnaw ing of bodily uncleanness :
*To3 ■^I^r ; aiidiTSJ, fq^T, ^T,
&c. being implied, it. takes as its
subject ^T^ or ^?l : ^I^ ^l^
^T^. 1 1 To peck, bite — sin,
a crime: T?«T or evil conscience.
12 To gnaw, lit. fig. — disagree-
ing food, bile : to swallow up or
ruin — an enterprise. [food
'^l^ n. An eatable thing;
m^\T\ or -rr a. Gluttonous.
'^fcR f. (a) Regard; care
about : tt^I ii^T^^ <^1W ^\»
•TT^t. 2 Confidence ; convic-
tion : ^T TT^'SJ f^^T^ ^T^l ^r-
T^ '^Tfi^l ^T%. 3 Choice,
liking : 3^*1% ^TrT^^^ ^T^^
^ eR^. prep. For the sake of.
Ji^r^r^TiTr /. (p) Assurance,
confidence.
J^fcR^fr /. Guarantee. 2
Assurance of mind regarding.
^rcRR^rr / Satisfaction of
mind regarding.
m\^f. Guarantee : .f *€t ^\'
vw^ ?srro ^T, ^T?^ q^^f^n.
See ^Trl^, sig. 1, 2.
'^^Trrri'
108
wnr^
5:^TcRITR c. A sort of surety.
He expresses assurnnce, and en-
courasjes confidence regarding,
but incurs no respousi'oility.
^r^TT a. That eats.
^cTf^f^F a. That is in easy
circnmstaiices.
^fcTifer nd. To die without
])revioiis sickness; to die eating
and cirinkiiir/.
^rcfr^- See ^cT^^.
^1^ n. An account (with an
individual or of tlie outlay upon
any concern) as ajjpearing u|)on
tlie day-l)ooi<. '2 tij;. The rano-i;
or sphere (of rule, sway), o Pro-
vince, ])roper office ; department:
^frTcTfS" /;. j\n eatinii' montli,
J. e. a i)erson fwitV, cliiUi, servant;
requiring to be fed.
^r^^M ji. Dealings with;
business with (of buying and
'^^ ^^" [tradesman's book.
m^^m f. Balance on a
if^l'^^o'll" /. Squaring an
account (in drawing out the ba-
lance sheet*!, the item introduced
to make square. [;together.
^^t n. Rubbish as heaped
mmi\ f. The book framed
from tlie day-book.
^mrt^ c. One that has an
account I with a banker, Sec.)
^R"/. An itcl.ino-. r. ^^.
^i^f. (nkv.') A branch, m.
The shoulder, the back of the
neck. L? fig. Habituation, v.
xfS. 3 (youtendiug with ; as
in ^ro cifvju]'. 4 Soreness of
(shoulder tioui bearing).
^PT /'. Fond. 2 Good living.
3 Tlie nibbling (of mice): tlie
pecking of birds (as at fruit):
the devouring of cattle (falling
upon ft cornfield); the pickin-j:
and ])illagiiig (as by a village-
officer) : the peculating (as of a
public servant). 4 (Consu;nptiou
of the (ire). Waste iu melting.
J^T^^f A carrier upon his
shoulder, of a bier.
IfTfTJlT/. Embezzlement. 2
Allowance or board.
Wi^^r^ f, Aureement of
shoulder (as of bullocks, &c.)
^K\ A shoulder. 2 The
yoke-rest of a bullock. 3 That
part of the trunk of a tree at which
commences the shooting into
branches. 4 Amongst bearers. A
sh.ouhler's run or work. 5 Habi-
tuation. 6 An arm of a tree.
?aR"n3Tf^ m.f. Mutual emu-
^'^'^"^"^- [and devouring.
^FTf^R" /. Mutual biting
^\K\^ a. Gluttonous.
m^\^ ^\^^\ A term for a
glut^on.
5^i^R m. f. (p) Family, pa-
rentage. '2 fig. Clever, smart.
■^iTf%/. Nobility, gentility,
^^f^/. A branch. .^^^
^Hlf r /; A thick stuff of cot-
<?RT^r o. Well fed.
■^1'^ (t. One ever tliinkin"-
of his belly ; a belly-god.
^^tr'^^ A glutton.
^i'?^<"T A carrier (of bur-
dens) on the shoulder. 2 Carrier
of a corpse.
^\^ a. (s) Eatable, edible.
^=mr / Table -allowance;
a means of su^jport. 2 Family,
stock, race.
^R^f^ c. An arrant thief,
^Ff^r^ a. Of noble fumily.
mF^Z\, T^\H\Z\ Family,
stock. 2 The shoulder-joint.
^RF (p) A place. In com p.
m^^t\^\ or ^R^-Tr f. (p
Domestic dissension : civil dis-
cord j Fierce and furious battling.
2 iig. Sharp altercation.
^•TT^? a. Born in one's
house, i. e. the child of a slave.
^RWa /. Nimibering the
houses of a town. v. ^^. 2 The
number taken ; a census. ',i The
l)ul)lu; record of the luunber of
bouses.
^r^" /'. A pile (as of tobncco-
leaves. betel-leaves). 2 A notch.
'') A slice (as of fruit). 4 Solidi-
fied mass (as of clotted blood,
moist dates}, n lump.
^IT^ n. A broad and shelv-
ing earthen dish, in which cakes
are rolled : the lower half of a
pitcher. 2 A potter's vessel. 3
A shard. 4 A tile.
^^TFTr^ir /. A shard.
^T^^cff:?" n. A term of revi-
ling for the fifth child in descent.
^sITtlT^T'^IT a. Luckless, ill-
starred.
'IFRq'^^ir Grand-father of
one's great-graud-father.
^RTq^^ Grand-son of one's
great-grand-son.
^rqiqi^cff? or -m'^^^ v.
Grand-child of one's great-
grand-son. ^j„ ^^^^_
55rmr /. a shard, a. Relating
^^ A post. 2 fiij. The stem
of the plantain. 3 fig. The statf
(of a family).
C=rR:i"^^¥ a. Uneven.
^\^^a. A belly-god.
^\^^[ or m^\m ad. (p)
Positive!}-, certainly.
^\^^\^ f. Voracity. 2 Crav-
ing. V. ^'Z.
^1^ Salt. 2 Impure alka-
line salt obtaincit by burning
])lants. .3 Saltncss.' 4 liriiiy
liquor for pickling, bf. Innings,
ti Fleecy clouds, v. v, x^^.
7 Hiiziness and great coldness of
weather, v. ^z,, vi^, -^t. 8
Moisture from salt. 9 Red
clouds. 10 A squirrel. 11 A salt
marsh or meadow.
^r?^2" a. Salt. //. Innings.
J^ITHTJ^rt. Salty, savoury — '
food. 2 fig. Witty, smart — speech
or composition. A Spirited, de-.
cided — conduct.
^\lZ\k f. Saltness.
^rraf v.i. To be salt-pickled.
2 To be impregnated with salt-
earth, [sml.
^K^Z a. Saline./. Saline
^K^^Tr n. Salt water.
^rr?r A kind of doth.
<^K^f A caste or an indivi-
dual of it. fl. Relating to the
cloth ?gK^l.
rmrr
109
r^¥^
mm a. Salt. 2 Produced
on salt grounds — a. kind of vice,
&c. .'^ Existing in salt water —
fish. 4 Hard, containing salts —
water. 5 Blowing over creeks or
salt marshes — wind.
mKm V. i. To be salt; to
be imbued with salt. 2 To be
inflamed and red — eyes,
^rfr^ /". The fruit of the
date-tree plucked whilst im-
mature and dried.
^^r^lirrfr /. Earth from the
sea-shore. 2 Goods obtained
from a wreck.
^it'i^ p. Affected with salt
— soil, &c. 2 Imbued with brine.
mfmS n. Mineral salt,
^r^^^r or '^^^^r a. ItehU-
ing to the bottom. 2 fig. Subject
to ; lower. 3 Eastern.
m\^^ or ^rc^^qr^: n. The
region below the navel,
^r^^r ad. Below: down-
ward. 2 Towards the east.
«-» ^•
'^r^cTf or "^ ad. Sf j^rep. Un-
der, down.
^I^^?: ad. Topsyturvy.
m\^m or m^m (A)L;ind.«
or villages held immediately
from Government. 2 Lands man-
aged by Government in the
absence of a%r«T. a. Belouging
to the State — lands, troops, &c.
m\^m V. i. To sink, fall,
abate — wind, rain, ])rosperity. 2
To be reduced in circumstances :
to c^nne down. [employed.
mm a. (A) Empty. 2 Un-
t^r^r prep. 6r ad. Under :
down. 2 fig. Subjection; within
the range.
??rc^r?^2:?5T Baggase (as of
an army). 2 Traps, kit.
J^rc^rfqc^r «. Causeless,
gro^mdless. ^^^^^ ^^^
*^rcT[^K Blank firincr. v.
'^c^^ a. Relating to the
bottom. 2 Inferior. flow.
'^Fc^ prep. Sf' ad. From be-
^Fc^r^r^ ad. Rather below ;
in inferiority unto (in age, quali-
ties, &c.)
term for a base ingrate who
seeks to injure his friend.
m\^^ (p) Lord, master.
^f^rrr%fn «. Ready to eat.
2 Fierce, fiery.
^r^TRf^^r a. That is under
high excitement ; wild and
phrenzied from fright, rage, or
«"n^"^^- ' [noble !
m\^l inf.. (a) Bravo ! fine !
^r^fq^cT f. The upper ranks
or superior orders.
^l5-,^f^f a. Cross, crabbed.
m\^ ad. (a) Positively, as-
suredly. 2 Exactly, ])recisely. a.
Pertaining to the king ; govern-
mental, &c. 2 Own, personal. 3
Pure, genuine. 4 or Tutrf /".
(H) A cough. [c,op or produce.
55[r^iTriT^[^r /. The regular
J^r^^^?: /. A tit hen tic or
ofiicial intelligence.
^r^^cf a. Own, proper, per-
sonal, private, peculiar, ad. In
person.
m\mi f One's private
pro])erty. Or ^I^Jlt^T a. Per-
sonal, private.
J^f^'Trfr^fThe private cnsh-
keeper (of a king or grandee).
m\^^\ or mm^\ a shoe. 2
A thrust. V. J?T^. r ,
V. ^. [cough.
mm^ or mm^ v. ?:. uo To
mm^lT (h) a groom. 2
A meml)er of the body-guard, 3
App. lightly to any person con-
siilered as altogether sid)ject to.
m\m^^ /. The row at
meals in which sits host or
master. 2 The upper classes or
class. 'A A select assembly.
'sTf'^^^ 71. One's own troop
or body of horse.
^r^qmrThe body of horse-
under the immediate keeping
and command of the ruler or the
state.
J^ro^TTK An attendant that
carries the arms of a great
man ; a squire.
JIl^^frnK ;;/. The horse-
guard of the king.
t^rg^f Kf / The equipage,
the chieftain in person.
m\m a. Good, fine. 2 Re-
lating to kings, grandees. 3
Chief, principal. 4 Legitimate,
not baseborn. 5 A great person-
"^'^' ,., [grandees.
t^rerc^I^ The nobles and
^f^r /. (H) A cough.
l%^r^^f V. i. To neigh.
f€^R^ or f^'irajot V. i. To
neigh, 2 To giggle wildly or
^"•en-ily. [i„ giggling.
\m\m ad. Imit. of the sound
Nl^^r/. (h) a mixture of
rice and pulse. 2 A medley (as of
various grains, coins, &c.) : a
hodgepodge ; lingua franca.
m'm V. i. To fall back : to
move aside. 2 fig. To swerve.
fm'^fk^ a. (Imit.) Scribbled.
Kf^^l'T V. c. To scratch up
slightly (the ground).
Rf^r^^t V. c. To put back
or aside : to push out of the
way.
flf^^r V. i. (ii) To take of-
fence. 2 To get into a passion.
kfSfJTcT See M^^^.
UM'sm^l f. Exciting; provok-
ing— language or action.
Kqsrffof or f^^lf^^ v. c. To
provoke.
r^IJRI?:^ V. i. To emit a
light aiul sharp sound J to click.
\mi\ f. A chip of wood; a
little w edge to be driven between
bodies to open and keep apart,
or to make fast and tight. 2 A
small wooden bar (to a door).
im^ f. A clift between hills.
2 A gap. 3 fig. A portion (as in
a lesson) skipped over. 4 fig. A
creep-hole, a salvo. 5 A jag (on
an edge).
l%^^r /. (h) A window ; a
wicket. 2 fig. A mean excuse ; a
subterfuge.
Rf^-^K a. (h) Checkered,
divided into squares^a sort of
cloth.
r^THT
0
w?^r
rC3"^rr or "^ n. a lar^e breach,
a pass betwixt fields. 1^ Kuins
(as of a town or house).
ff^l f. A cleft, gap, &c.
Tmm'n or -"^lad. Tinkling,
clinking.
ftf^KfcTot r. i. To feel hot
and claitimy ; to swelter. 2 To
gi<rp:le. 3 To wallop. 4 To fret
— a child, &:c.
mm^ or -^r /. Wasting in
lansuor and pain. v. vT, or
R^rrqq or Kfclfq^ r. c. To
waste iu languor.
R^fe"?" or -5"f od. Imil. of
the sound in ^iir^ling.
r^^^ or fe^r^^, R^ina^
r. I. To roui]) ; to gambol.
m^J\, fe-^rrir Gambols;
romps. I". ^1^.
k=(<*l^ /. (p) Service or at-
tendance. 2 Servile obsequious-
ness.
fe^r^^JTR or -^IT (p) A ser-
vant of great men for petty
offices about the jierson; — for
kneading the limbs, carrying
slippers, &c.
rt^Hfrmfr or -^in/. (p) The
KT^f^e" /. Peevish conten-
tion ; cliiiiing, scolding, nd. In a
gigglins; manner, v. ^X, ^I^.
r%^ra-^^r „. i. To chatter
and gnash at — a monkey. 2 To
scold.
KT^nt^^r See r^H^'^fr.
r^^^^?:^ Nails, bits of iron,
pebbles, &c. as stuffed into a
shell.
^^'^ f- A dish composed of
rice, milk, sugar, and spices.
l^Ja^ f, A bolt, bar, peg. 2 A
round of a ladder. 3 See -f^Bgr,
under f?a'^. [of raisin. ^'^^"'^ ''^^''^ portion of a tumor
l%^lfr^ /. (p) A small kind" ' "''•^'* suppurating, the pin.
fra-rrr / x a i i. o t: 'W^ ^'f^- Imit. of rapid and
\^m (P) A pocket. 2 fig ^
A partition. 3 fig. Mental' -» - '~ ^ ^i.^-^y
reservation (in a statement), v.
ortice of fg^r^^rTJII'C.
[grieved.
p. (s) Distressed,
rarf^^qr /. pi. Scrawling,
tlourisbing with the pen.
fc^riqcT /. (p) Sweetmeats
served out to the audience at
the conclusion of a ^^T, &c.
2 fi;;. Munificent donations, &c. :
prodigality, f. ^^, "il.
r^?^rj<r/. Faring sumptuous-
ly. i\ 'sIT. 2 Entertaining
richly, v. ^f^. ^. ^T^.
m^Vi] or -^ n. Skilful at
l)iay. 2 Playful, lively.
^^■^^^{/.(a^A robe of honour.
R^^fT or V^^IT n. A herd
(Of cows, &c.)
R^^rfr "-WK A keeper both
of herds and flocks : in contrad.
from fi^T^T V»IJIK:.
R^era'TTT or K^R^?T o.
Testy, peevish.
Rapid and light laughter r.
^f^TS" o. Rather dwarfish,
^^r a. Dwarfish, stunted.
^2r A stump (of a tree, st
tail, a broom of hair). 2 A pile
driven (as into a river, &c.) .S
n. See fxioor, sig. 2. 4 A
teat from which no milk flows. 5
term of an instalment. 4 fig. A | The square formed by the meet-
vexation : ^f?g^1^ ^Tfl B^li. ' '"S "^' f*'"'' roads. _ 5 n. App.
ra"FraT^c=5T Quarrel, dispute.
r^Hirr Len^thlness and te-
diousiiess (of a business, &c.)
V. xi^. 2 A department.
r^^cT y. (a) An instalment.
2 Payment by instalments. 3 The i
5 fig. A ]>aiticular point, ^^ith
the implication of Pretence :
'^T •^^^£\v{ '%m\x f^^if ^-
RH^cl#<rr/. (p) Settlement to
be made after the manner of
instalments.
The Imsiness of borrowing and
rejiaving every day or other
short period with the interest.
kf^cfr a. An usurer. 2
Troublesome, tedious.
RfS^n^srr a. Rela.xed, slack
■ — joints, a person or a tiling as
to the joints, ^-yii^j^^ slackness-
to a stout- bodied, thick-set
(cow, buffalo, and woman), (y
A common term for the four
corners of the earth. / An end
of a road. 8 fig. A family, a
stock: an individual of it; a
branch of the stock.
W^ -^ _^^ -r^% .f>=^r Iniit.
of sharp, short, light sounds ;
with a snap, pop, click, crack.
^?^°T V. i. To be obstructed.
WZ^ or-HTr ad. Imit. of
certain light sounds (as of rats
scratching in their holes ; of
gentle tapping ; of pulsation in
the belly, in a sore finger).
^rJ^J- or -?r/. (Imit.) Swel-
ling and heaving (of a lia;ighty
Rq"o3"f<§"ofr f. Relaxation of spirit); panting (to be engaged
•^ ' about).
\i^^ f. Nailingdown; fas-' ^ror • r^ ., ,,
tening 2fig.DeU'ntionorcon-^-^ ^ ^'•^' To emit the
fiiiement.
Kf'2'T V. r. To nail down;
to fix. 2 To fasten by a bolt. 3
fig. To detain.
\(W^\ A nail ; a spike. 2 fig.
The clot that forms during milk-
ing on the teat. 3 The point
of junction of the bounds of
three or more villages. 4 A
j)rinting type. j-flxgd.
\*^^r^ p. Nailed down,
To
sound ^"Z ! ^z I V. imp
pulsate slightly ; to twitch con-
vulsivcl)'.
^Z^ or ^^ 7;.z. To be ob-
structed : to stand still : fig. to be
non-plussed, brought to one's
wits end. 2 To hold back dog-
gedly. 3 To full short.
§?:^Rc^r /. R A doll. 2
Standing on tiptoes, v. ^^,
or llius ^^ ^\ ^WI X.\%^.
^^n
111
q^f^
<3i^fn Sickness arising to a
beast being long tied to the
stiike. 2 tig. Any disease from
sedentariness.
<3'i^f A duty levied on ves-
sels on coming to anehor in a
port.
^Jl^"^ r. c. To arrest in
l)rogress ; to stop.
^Z^'^ V. c. To dibble.
^2T A stake or peg. 2 The
handle of a handmill ; an oar-
peg or tbowl.
•^df^ n. A tree reduced to
a stump : a stump.
^Jl^'T V. c. To be brought
to a stand. 2 To fix one's self
fast.
^if f. A wooden bell or
cla])per as tied around a bullock's
neck, &c.
^r or ^^r /. A peg. 2 A
short stump. 3 r A landmark.
^^^I ad. (Imit.) Dully,
heavily — a work proceeding, a
liorse trotting.
^JTf^^^r ^[^Sor A terra for
a sojourner : also for any fugitive
pleasure or pain.
?|¥^^af V. i. (Imit.) To
shiver from cold. 2 To emit
the sound if STg^.
'^■^^I'fcr a. Lioht and tight ;
l)risk and active. 2 Hale and
hearty. 3 Dry and hard. 4 Con-
veniently small — the body, a
house.
^^(^ f. Cropping, nipping.
•■*
^^°T V. c. To crop ; to pluck ;
to nip olf.
^■sj^ot or ^^cT^oy y_ ^^ Xo
nip off. 2 To bite off: y^
^■^^ /. A formation imi-
tative of certain sounds (as
of the rustling or rattling of a
mouse in straw, in a pitcher,
^^■^ ^. [sound Tg^5'3-
^^J'^'T V. i. To make the
^'ET^ror'^r/.Remorse.com-
punction. v. ^TT, ^j"?. 2
Earnest desire.
1^^^% /. Nipping. 2 Lop-
ping. 3 Scolding. ^_aiin,b.
^^r a. Affected with cramp
^^r f. A shade over a ship
or boat. 2 A cow-shed, a fowl-
liouse, a pen for calves. 3 The
hole, &c. made in a horse's stall
to receive bis urine. 4 A breed
(esp. of camels).
^^ "d. In the state of
having laid all her eggs— a hen
&c. n. App. to a stump or stock ;
it having lost all its foliage.
^^ n. See ^I^-
W\W^f. (Imit.) Vexation,
regret. 2 Whispering.
^07^0707 ^,_ i^ 'py e„Tit the
sound TgUT ! T^UT ! 2 To speak
with smothered (and nasal) ex-
pression of anger.
^"^r /. R A mark to pre-
serve remembrance.
"^^l^^A f. A comprehensive
term for marks, tokens, stamps,
&c.
^f^lff "t or ^'m^ V. c. To
direct, order, &c. by sign ; by a
nod, beck, bint, &c.
^c[^^ (Imit.) The sound
emitted by a liquid under ebul-
lition. 2 /. Anxious fretting
about. 3 /«. K The swarming of
lice.
^cl^cltiT V. I. To emit the
sound ^cT ! ^«T !
W^J^ /. (Tmit.) Fretting
about. 2 Troublesome ])ressing
for ; (a child's) teasing for. v.
^T, ^I^, ^TJT.
^cf^r (a) Au.ongst Maho-
medans. An oration in eulogy
of the five sacred jiersonages
(Mahomed and his four succes-
sors) and the king.
^?"«.(p)Own,proper. 2 Own,
by way of emphasis : ^ g^
?g«?; iTT'^. ud. By one's self.
^?"5!^^a. S)" ad. (My, thine,
his, &c.) own self; I, &c. in
person.
^R^^ / The spirit (of a
horse), mettle. 2 The panting
(of emulation, ambition, &c.)
3 /. m. Any long continued
(chat, bustle, &c.) 4/. An.\ious
inquietude for.
^cT^ITcTI^ ad. By one's own
person. [li^y*
^^^/. (a) Power, capabi-
^^Uqk^r a. Lewd, loose,
filthy; vile, calumnious — lan-
guage, a speaker. 2 Freely. Bad,
vile — an animal or thing.
^^% or ^^^% /. Treat-
ing roughly.
^^^^ or ^^3-q- I,, c. To
treat roughly ; to belabour ; to
handle or use violently (things,
beasts) ; to over-ride, over-work ;
to ruffle; to shake and toss —
a cart, &c.
^^^^ ac?.( Imit.) In a merry
manner — laughing, v. "^T^.
/. Merry laughing.
^^^^^^ ad. Imit. of the
sound of trotting.
^"^^ m. f. (h) Rancour,
sf)ite. V. y^K, ^^, ^TS3I. rjp^ii
^•T'B"f a. Rancorous, venge-
^% a. (p) A murderer. 2
Murderous. 3 Relating to mur-
der—a g^^^TT, ^1^, &C.
m^ f. Pricking, &c.
WV^ V. c. To prick — a thorn,
a hair : to touch painfully, to
hurt. 2 fig. To oft'end the sight :
to |)ierce with remorse ; to sting :
to fester in the mind.
^^^l Pricking of the eyes
(as during ophthalmia), v. 5,
«IT, ^r, '?rT'^. a. That shoots,
pricks, or smarts — an eye : having
an eye so aff'ected — a person.
^W /. Pricking of the
eyes. v. ^r, ^]n. 2 A disease
of the eyelids.
^7^r a. That fraudulently
inserts an item in an account :
that pockets what comes in his
way.
^tT€^ V. c. To thrust in,
^» ..."
to drive. 2 To slide in, insert.
^^ 711. n. (a) a people, a
nation, tribe, caste : i?lo3^^«l,
^T53l"^^. [hump on the back.
^^^ fi. A knuckle. 2 A
^^3T f. A pigeon-house. 2
A water-snail, &c., or its shell.
^^^
112
^5fl=^
^^^■^ V. c. To poraniel,
1)01111(1. [|M-OttV.
'^W^ a. (p) Beautiful,
^^S^T i<^ c. Tt) to?s about
upon tlic lap ; to (laiullp (a cliild).
r. i. To be tidj^fty and restless.
L' To be sliakcn and jolted.
^^r A prominent articula-
tion of the body (the ankle, knee,
&c.) : Ji bump (on the trrouiid).
- A sea-snail : a shell of sueh.
^^f /. (p) Comeliness, neat-
ness. ~ The distinguishing trait
(of a character, an animal, a
"ork, &c.) ; the beauty, moral
lof some tale, &c.) 2 A small sea-
snail.
^qf^r a. (p) Fine, elegant,
superb.
^w^i or -^"r, 5^^r^ (a) /.
Handsomeness, neatness.
^fT^^f or ^^^*^ V. i. To
move along on the buttocks.
^^T^TfT;?. i. 'lo itch or lono- —
as tlie hand to strike, the tongue
to speak ; to be eager to go.
^T^^rZ" Great fretting and
piiung : imjiatient longing.
^f^ or W%^.f- ^ cii.^ease
attacking the clefts of the hoofs
of cattle, the fuul.
W^f' ^ee 'J^^f^.
^^Z"^ or ^^Z^ V. i To
be stunted. 2 ISce ^T^^ui".
g^^T or -jffror-tr/.A chair.
2 A socket for a post.
^KZ or ^tZ a. i^tunted.
^TT^ or ^(Z^ r. i. To grow
stuntedly.
'fT^RA short leg. Or W^'
ti^qi^T a. A luckless wight ;
an ill-starred wretch.
grjl^ or ?f ^cl^^ V. c. See
TJJ:TrZOT ,„. T^t^^^ r. r. To
tread, to trample. 2 lig. To
rumple, rnHle.
grsrarr Trodden state. 2
Sliattcredness (of pitchers, &c.) :
cruinbledness (of bread, &c.)
^^'FT 71. (irass grubbed up.
'F^'^r /. Grubbing uj).
W^^ i'- c. To grub up. 2
To level with a t^k^. 3 To
scrape out with the band.
^^T 71. A grubbing hoe.
^^fl'r /. The posture of
sitting erect with the legs doubled
under, resting upon the toes.
^^5''^^/'• (IToof and Head)
The ])erijiiisite oftheMaharon
divers occasions of killing a
sheep or a goat. 2 Doubling uj)
(a man or an animal) by liinding
head and feet together : the
]U)sture of sitting with the luad
betwixt the knees, or of lying
down with the head and feet
brought together.
^r^ (p) Rich, nutritive
diet. es]). as ]irescribed forn per-
son or an animal out of couili-
tion.
^ri^r n. Relatinsx to vic-
tuals.asTf o^Tfllci.y. Quantity
or allowance for one's eating;
hoard.
^TJ^ or -^ n. A fowl-house.
^"Tf Z'. A stick with a net
attached. 2 The forepart of the
hoof (of calves, &c.) projecting
like a claw. 3 A division of a
cloven hoof. 4 A drill-plough.
^mfr/. The killing of a
goat or sheep before an idol,
throwing to it the head and the
hoofs.
^t II. (p) The small or the
less. Used with the name of a
village, when it is conimou to
t«o villages.
^rTR^ or ^^l^r^/. (H)
An eater of (defiled by having
been tasted) dish ; i. e. a grant
(of lands) absolutely irreclaim-
able.
^? (p) Small change. 2
fragments, crumbs. 'A tig. The
feeling of general dislocation (as
from triuch jolting) ; as in ^-
^^^ r. i. (ti) To open. 2
tig. To expand, dilate — the heart ;
to become favourable : to acquire
clearness, fulness, depth — a
colour : to clear off — rnin : to be-
come evident — a design, a sense :
to appear to advantage with :
^' mini rqi F.r^:ifi^^^T^^^:
to stand conspicuous with all
one's attaiinnents and talents :
^^r^^ r. i. See ^^fe
^^r a. (H) Open— a ph.ce,
a bundle. 2 Bare, void — a horse
withont a rider. 3 Empty — a
vessel, house. 4 Unrestricted. 5
Plain, clear — speech.
^rq^ Guiltlessnes«* of
(•riminal conversation. Affirmed
of or I)v a married woman.
^^im r. c. To propitiate :
to draw out ; to make cheerful.
^^r^ a. Open — a place. 2
Freed. 3 Frank.
•^^r^r (a) Meaning: scope.
2 Openness (of a jjlace). 3 Set-
tlement, decision.
^^a\^ /. Confinement
without fetters. 2 Free arrest.
^2T „. (p) Pleased, satisfied.
g^i'^r /. (p) The mainland
or continent. 2 Way by land. 3
Inland transit-duties.
5^W^_/: Good news.
Wi]i\i, ^^\ /. Fra-
grance.
'f ^irff / Approbation, fa-
vour. 2 Good humour, a- Favour-
ing. 3 Good humoured.
^^rsff or ^^^r^r «. Face-
tious, gay, jocund.
^^^SIRcT a. Consenting,
willinir. n-
' .r^ ^ I linirness.
^^jT^r^cif or -'<i /: Avii-
^^^?^jr /. ']'he season of
hilaritv.
^^^^^^Tr/. Of happy state;
vp]i f<) do. 2 (iood humoured.
^^^\^^ or -^ ./: Flattery,
lawniug. "^^inffl or -'^ ii.
That fawns.
^^r?^ a. Comfortable, well
off; happy, ad. Freely, safely.
^r?5"^'^ 0. A voluj)tuaty ;
a sensualist.
^^Fc^r /. Ease; healthy
state. 2 Complacency. 3 Fun,
frolic.
^"rt a. Pleased. /. Plea-
siire. 2 Will. [matter.
W^m\ m^\ An optional
1
^Q'^
?fT or ^*f See ^5T, &c.
^g-- ^^- ^r- i^# «c/. Light-
ly, freely — langliing.
^^ or <l"^tr See ^^•
^^<^€r^ V. i. To rustle.
^^^^TfcT or -^IcT a. Friable.
%m^ n. Frailty, v. ^FS". 2
pi. Light, trifling, obscurely-re-
levant remarks ; in order to in-
troduce smoothly and eifectually
some weightier matter (some
request, a reproof, &c.) : difficul-
ties started to deter an under-
taking, [finding.
^^^^rr a. Censorious, i'ault
^^m V. c. See ^^Wh-
^^■^3" a. Silly, foolish.
^^^^ ad. Imit. of the
sound (of little bells, of the rip-
pling of a brook, of the hollow-
rattling of a dry cocoanut, &c.)
^S-^^r A child's rattle. 2
A rattle used in teaching a horse
his paces, a. That makes a rat-
tling noise.
^S-^S-iNUf y^ c. To rinse
(the mouth).
^^iTf c A male buffalo.
^S"!"^ or -S'i ad. Imit. of
the sound of gargling.
^'^^ f. Gargling, v. ^^.
^5?^S*0T or ^roJ'STfi^ot V. c.
To gargle.
^3--^a. Silly, foolish,
'^^r a. Mad, crazy,
l"^! See ^^fir.
^S'fS^^ Wild sugarcane.
^3"R!£^r Remittent fever.
foolish. r
^ [crazy.
W^r^^r a. Mad and silly ;
^S"^^ A terra for a remark-
ably foolish fellow; prince of
fools.
*^^ f. Deficiency.
^^ /. An indication: a
badge, symbol. 2 A. landmark.
3 A sign ; a nod.
mW|fT/. A loose term for
marks, signs, hints, &c.
15
^W5 f. A knot tied to
Ox ./ ,
aid remembrance (ot a matter
to be done).
^^ (p) Murder. 2 Blood.
<^^n^r Murder and ra-
pine.
^^^riT Exemption from
punishment for murder.
^^ ad. (p) Well, finely,
handsomely, copiously.
^fcT^l^ or ^^cT^RTr ad.
(h) In a fine manner; spendidly,
dashingly.
^ (A) See ^^.
'^^r^ (p) a person of res-
pectability.
?f5^K ad. By families, &c.
^^ A hoof, a division of a
hoof. 2 A foot (of a couch,
&c.) 3 (or -^^cst) The ex-
crescence under tlie hoofs, and
the horny substance at the
heels (of a calf at birth).
^^ a. (p) Pleased, con-
tented.
^|5" V,, Idiocy. 2 A band (of
insurgents, robbers). 3 The
confusion and tumult, devasta-
tion and ravages daring an
insurrection : a disturbance, v.
5fTST, Vim, ^^''CT=?, ^^, 5Tt^,
^i^, ^T^, vSH^. 4 An impe-
diment ; a pest.
^^S" V. A speculation, pro-
ject. 2 A lying imputation. 3
Confusion of (an affair), v.
^^^ or -^r A crab.
^^^ or ^?i^ a. Decrepit,
decayed. 2 Cross, snappish.
^^[5507 or ^m\'^^ V. i. To
neigh. 2 To chatter and giggle —
children. [gether.
^H'J' n. Small fish sold to-
5;4JIJ'(5rr3r One of those terms
of reproach by which particular
castes vilify one another. They
who use it are honoured in
exchange with the term '^T'^
^cf-qoTf /. Drawing tight, v.
3<'f^- rforciblv.
^^m V. c. ^' i. (ii) To puis
^"^K n. (p) A mule, r, v
V. V. ^ ' Lhauliug.
<5f^f5^^ /. (H) Pulling and
^^ /. A wedge to make
fast. 2 A rendezvous.
^^"^ /. Crowdedness.
^Z^ r. c. To pass over ;
to travel. 2 To move out of the
way. V. i. To rub against (as in
passing). 2 To crowd and to
press together ; to sit fast, li
To be arrived near ; to press hard
upon.
^'£1 or ^l n. A term of
reviling for a shoe. 2 A term of
disdain for a person or thing.
^2:^^13: c. A term of a-
buse corresponding with Scrub,
scab, low wretch.
t7?:ri^2:fr / General beat-
mg with slippers. ^^rowdnig.
^JF^S: f. Thronging and
5^^ See f%^-
^^ /. Mixture : miscelinne :
mixing material — corn or grain.
2 in. A queer fellow.
'^^r Any coarse garment
or cloth of low price. 2 A
shroud, p^, ,
"f^-^ n. A small villaae. 2
*^^T[^ A comprehensive
term for villages and hamlets.
%^^rl n. A hamlet, &c. ,•'
^any petty village. ^^^^,^,,^^
^^r / (n) Agriculture; a
^^ (s) Sorrow. 2 Piemorse.
^^l^oy V. c. To vex, prieve.
^f^^p. (s) Afflicted, grieved.
^7 /. (H) A trip. 2 The pe-
rioclical supply (of merchandise).
3 A single time, a turn : f?i^
the whole jicriod of an action :
"tw ^^^ H>t ^^ ^T?l?IT? 4
A fruitless trip. v. x;]^. 5
Period of prevalence of epide-
mic : fifiT^T'^'l- ■t;€l'^ 'i^.
mmm ad. Whilst the
hand is in ; without pausing
from the present labour.
^m
114
<Krs*'3"
^^ f. An embrace, v. TI^,
3' I: - «• Welfare. [-^^^^^
J^JTrf^-f n. A friendly eni-
^^ f. Refuse, rubbish. 2
Confusedly mingled and spoiled
state, fl. Refuse.
^^<^Rr A lumber-room.
^?:€finF[ See ^^f^5T^r.
^T'Ct'Sf (I. (a) Extra, addi-
tional. 2 Excluded, execpted.
)ii('i). IJesides. 2 \Yitliout.
iw^ ^^^ V. A distinct
item, article, count.
^TfR SiJrr /. Extra-collec-
tions; miscellaneous items of
_^r(Tcnuc. ^^^ tj,e lj,nj_
^^fsfT^cT Extra assessments
^irR^T^r or ^^tRwr
Landsj&c.let out by Government
direct ; as distinguishe<l from the
lands' customs, &e. farmed.
;^f(5fl5rs^cr /. By-g-ains.
J^ffS^JTTin or -J^rrilTr Extra
uHowanccs, presents, &c. (made
to puljlic servants).
^■c^Fir (p) The baggnge
iind followers of an army. 2
Lumber.
l?icr n. m. A certain stuff of
cotton. 2/. A wkeezing cough
iiiciflental to cattle.
^W^\ or ^^^ V. i. To gnash
and chatter at — a monkey en-
rai;ed. 2 To cou^h wheeziugly. 3
To snort — a horse.
^\
*?rc5" Play, fun. 2 Playthings!.
3 A show, spectacle. 4 Exercise
(of the faculties) : operation,
action. 5 Tiie turn to play (at
any t,-anie). (i Tricks, jir^e doings,
prttly work.
WH^^'K a. Playful. 2 Cai)a-
Me of playing. 3 Miseliief-
h)ving.
C^s;Jlfr A play-fellow. 2/.
C I'layfcllo'.vship.
^^r /. Playing. 2 A play-
day; the vacation-season.
^^ V. i. To play. 2 To
triHc. 3 To play at some game.
4 To touch a musical instrument.
.5 To leap ami caper ahout wild-
ly (under demoniac possession)-
() To wanton ; to move irregu-
larly, lightly; to play — as
bodies in the wind. 7 Tu oper-
ate, act, stir. n. A toy.
•\
QHoJ^r p.jir. Arrived at the
])laying age — a child. 2 Allow-
ing the body play-room, i. e.
roomy — a garment, &c. 3 So
light as to admit of the subject
of it playing about ; — used of
ISS^q^ft n. An active affla-
tus of a god or demon.
'cTST^^T V. c. To set in ac-
tion ; to work (au engine, in-
strument).
ftST or -^irr A dancer or
sport maker during fsisr^T.
^^^^ f' Siiorting, playing.
^tjfS'fJTST J. Close intimacy.
2 Fun and sport, ad. Poet. In
fun and merriment : jjlayfulh'.
^ /. Conceit. V. ^l^, F^^^.
2 Restiveness.
'Ji'T A hanging, lingering,
and moist cough.
^^ A tree. /. (p) Welfare.
2 Well, good condition of things
outward. 3 Goodness (as of
God).
t?r^lT2" A Brahman so named
from his strength, being attacked
by robbers, he uprooted a Khyr-
tree and disi)ersed them. Used
of any one of remarkable
strength, a Samson. 2 App.
to an illiterate ^^s, fit only to
teach trees ; a hedge-parson.
^n A blight attacking ^Ht-
oST, cTT^^I, &c. «. Dark-
brown. 2 Vvhite sprinkled with
red. 3 Of diiferent colours — eyes.
4 Of mixed colour.
k-iTm / (p) Alms. 2 Lands
granted rent-free for the })ur-
pose of defraying the expenses
of mosques, charities to Eakirs,
&c.
<H<r a. Relating to the tree
swl kc-. [estimation; worthless.
^=iCf^fr a. Of little use or
^4^ /: (p) Well-being.
^FH or ^'^^ f. A hole or
bruise (iu the body) from a
blow. 2 A momentary cough, v.
5*
5e^T^^ or 5a r^^/. n. The In-
dian fox. 2 Ajip. to a man or
beast aged and ugly.
i^\m V. i. To cough. €i-^^r
A cough.
W^\ or -^r (a) A discliarg-
ed bill. 2 A letter of advice res-
pecting a hiiudi granted. 3 Re-
moving or ordering oif (from a
situation), v. ^, B^TPT.
^T^r The cavity formed by
hollowing the palm and turn-
ing inwards the tij)s of the
fingcTS. [-^jg^,^-^ ^g ^ saddle.
W^K m. n. (p) A cushion
^aPTKiT^^r /. Bulky and
\vorthless materials : insignificant
persons or valueless animals :
thhigs or beings serving merely
to fill np a vacuity. 2 A huddled
up and fraudulent muster of
horses. ,
^f^ /. A dint. 2 A notch. 3
A projecting point. 4 fig. A blow
in trade. 5 Offence, displeasui'e
conceived: TR^Tf^T^ptrm"^ ^^f-
?r ^t"^ ^I'l^. 6 A modulation
in singing. 7 'I'he beauty, point
(of an epigram, speech, &c.) : an
iusinnatiou. rf,.,>v
55iR3;JT V. i. To catch and
C?r^^r /. Thrusting.
'iS'mor V. c. To force into ;
to thrust. 2 To insinuate in. 3
To fix. 4 To prick or oti'end ; to
touch a sore point : ^Qiir?t ^^
^T^^T ^*r[<t II.
^Wr The tuck of the dho-
tar. 2 A bruise.
^V^\ (p) An eunuch. 2 A
Mahomedau of respectability.
^1^ f. A mass of metal
(unwrought), an ingot. 2 A lumj)
(as of curds, &c.) ; any clot. 3
Loss (in tr;ule). 4 Falsehood. 5
or ^\z The heel.
?;4[?^^^ 71. A written acknow-
ledgment taken from an ofleud-
er of his guilt : also in disputa-
tions, from the person confuted.
^r^T^r An extra assessment
iInpo^5ed to make u\) a deficit in
the revenue.
?3"f7?Tr
115
wn^
?5rrr^rS' a. Alloyed — a metal.
2 False, of a bad school. 3
Counterfeit. 4 Wicked.
mm a. (H) False. 2 Faitli-
less. 3 Spurious. 4 Alloyed,
bad — money.
mmk f. Falsehood.
^tlJRRTr a. Bad, false—
moii(:y, &c.
mi^Rl a. c False.
"^ri'r /. Delayed state, a.
Detained, hindered.
IsrrS" A young bull.
W^ f. An evil disposition ; a
had habit. 2 A vice, defect (in a
horse, &c.) 3 An error, flaw. 4
Sqneamishness,a fancy. 5 A stain,
blot. G n. Tl;e frame of a saddle ;
the case, without tlie head.?, of a
drum, &c. 7 A bit of perfume, a
piece (of sandal wood, &c.) 8 A
stock or stuinj) ; the lower portion
of the trunk. 9 A paralytic per-
son, f. 'iTsf.^T^^tr^uf. 10 An
old cow, &c. of which the womb
is closed ; an old tree wiiich bears
no longer. 11 In comprehensive
phrase, A tree.
^qf^^r a. Mischievous. 2
Having ill habits. 3 Fastidious.
^r"3"i5fcf j\ Blemishes and
breed.
♦-»
3^f^'T V. c. To cancel (by
erasini;, &c.) 2 To contract (the
• llinbsj spasmodically. 3 To stain,
stigmatize.
55[[5'^^ a. Mischievous.
^r^r Stocks for criminals. 2
A frame to encumber an animal
whilst grazing. 3 lig. An en-
cumbering (appendage, business,
&c.) 4 Paralytic state (of the
body).
m^oS See m^^^.
m\^\^i f. See^l^ sig. 1.
€rf[f p, of ^r^^ Erased.
^f^ A renter of a village,
a contractor. 2 An hereditary
officer, whose duty is to collect
for Government the revenue of
the village. 3 A tribe of Brah-
mjxns in Southern Conkan.
^TfTtR^ A contractor of
lands, &c,
^Fcl^r /. The office or busi-
ness of a %T«T.
^alcT^I^r^r Waste lands lying
about a village fanned off at
a fixed sum. y^^^^^ landholder.
ITr^f^^rrr The land-dues of
^[cTTCr/. An impost for the
benefit of the Khot.
W^T^f^r /. Balance of the
landholder's dues.
^^FcT^S" f. Service, articles
exacted without payment by the
Khot.
'^cT^^r Land tenanted
from the %j7! in contrad.
from K^?ft ^•ft'^T Land, of
which the rate is fixed, and the
tenure granted by Government.
^FcTf f. The practice, busi-
ness. &c. of a Khot. 2 Contract-
ing for a standing crop, for the
wood of a jungle, for the pro-
duce of a garden. 3 The busi-
ness of advancing srain to the
sower upon ^T^1f^€Y.
•\
^[^^FT n. Sculpture; carved
work.
m^mU f. Sculpture, &c.
jJrtjit^S- f. The price of
carving.
m^^i f. Digging. 2 fig.
An exacting of money by im-
portunity. V. WS[, TTT^. 3 An
instrument to scoop out and cut
flowers and figures from jiaper.
4 A goldsmith's die.
^l^'^ V. c. Sr i. To dig. 2
To engrave. #|'^»r #T^«T f^-
■=^T^DiTo question searchingly ;
to probe.
[&c.
5I^R:rf p. Dug. 2 Carved,
^=n"7 /, A brood, litter: a
breed or stock with reference to
its run or general character. 2
The run (prevalence) of any epi-
demic. 3 A hut. 4 A covered
bird's nest.
^^a: n. 5irqfr f. a hut.
W^^ n. Cocoanut-kernel.
^r^^?5" n. Gocoanut-oil.
^R-JTr^r3Tr€/. a term for
half a cocoanut-shell.
^f^^r The hilt-guard of the
large sword called xj-jT. 2 A
wooden tjCT for ])ractice and
sports. 3 The scapula. 4 An ex-
cavation or ])it (in the ground).
^?nTS- See ^^Z.
l^fJTc^of V. c. To dint (a
metal vessel, &c.) 2 fig. To
knock up,wear out — hard service.
^f^r A dint (as on a metal
vessel, &c.) v. g, tiT^.
^R^ 72. A sort of scraper.
I', c. To poke or stir (=g^,
or embers). r I'f
•\^. ^ Ln^^i'ow valley.
<?rR n. A sort of hoe. 2 A
^r^ a. Deep. 2 fig. Close,
secret : wise, sagacious, occult.
m^T>Z or -^J a. Deepish.
2 Low — ground.
^r^^r A pit, a cavity,
m^'h V. i. To fall into hol-
lows. 2 To sink — eyes, &c.
WM^\ f. (ii) Taking off
the shoes of a horse, and replac-
ing them after paring the hoofs.
mmT^ /. Profound wis-
dom.
mI^^^ n. A low spot. a.
Sunken— ground. 2 Deepish.
^T^y^dT Deepness.
^J^lf. Depth. 2 A room.
^r^'-l" V. c. To force into ;
drive in. 2 To slide in. 3 fig. To
insinuate (something evil).
^r«^ f, in. The membrane
in which the foetus is enveloped
after birth.
C^fS^?: a. Having a pucker —
a place darned or sewu.
^rs-^oy ^ I r^o stop or
wait for. 2 To be stopped,
delayed — a work.
^:iR-^Tr^of ^ p^ To make to
stop and wait, 2 To delay,
retard — a business.
♦\ .
3[^r3"^r Stoppage (for) ; de-
layed state (on account of).
^qrrcT/. (s) Fame : publicity,
notoriety.
«5^^ (p) A sort of song. 2
j)l. Freaks, pranks.
WIT^^
116
^I^HF
?oT}-f^cIiTfVrr (r) Singing and
spoi'liii^: ; mcrry-inaking.
^^i^r a. Full of freaks,
pranks, and frolics : t^ay, witty.
w\m ^[c^i /. See ^^r^-
^^[^ or W^ 's^i^ «fZ. Imit.
of tlic yelling of a dog on being
luirt : also of a dog's angry and
sharp bark. Ili-nce snappingly
onrrislily — turuiii;:
/. Yelling, ike.
upon,
&c.
^1
*\ The lliird consonant 2
Being the iirst letter of 31^, it
is used covertly for that word :
riJT'^T 31^1 ^I^T ^1^ ^l^
^i f. Merciful overlooking;
(of an offence). 2 The lower wall-
])late. 3 The roof iu its vicinity.
^t^ or-^rt.(A)Disappeared,
missing.
^5?^rir The ward of the
Tr^s'1 caste. 2 A cow-pen.
ifn'^fr /. The dale lying
along the Godavari river, a.
jielating to the coiaitry ^fir-
^'^^- [lieaveus.
^f]^ n. (s) The sky or
m^m (s Poet.) The womb,
or ar( a of the heavens.
JJIJ^ ^Mcf a. Kissing the
sky ; reaching to the clouds.
m^'^^ n. (s) A flower in
llie sky. A term used to cxjiress
an impossibility.
JFRaTT^ n. The sphere of
the heavens.
lyn^'i^r a. Facing the river
(lodfi, j. e. facing the north.
Am^i\ or -T\ or ifiTmrrTr
or -t1 ad. Towards the river
Cod;i, i. r. towards the north.
T^ir /. (s) The river Ganges
or its I'crsonification as a
goddess. 2 The river Goda. .'5
A sncrcd stream gen. 4 Water
from a sacred stream for sacred
uses and purposes,
^^\^\r[ n. The caste collec-
tivclv; esp. as assembled in
investigation of matters.
TiqRi{% a. (h) a cloth (for
dhotars, &c.) of which the
border is on one side of one
colour and on the other of an-
other.
jfiTR^r /. a vessel for the
purpose of holding water of
any sacred stream.
W^n: f. The country ly-
ing along the Godavari river.
ffTlJ^ A Brahman who
subsists upon the offerings made
to Ganga.
WrsT^FC Committing to the
current of some sacred river
(ashes and bones of a respected
defunct, flowers become stale
before an idol. Sec.)
mmmi^\ f. A term of ad-
dress for an elderly widow.
W5Tri:F=^' 72. A jMcce of
comi)ositioii in praise of Ganga.
^JTRrr?r f. The north.
W^^ V. Black hairs of. the
tail of the cow of Tartary.
ffiTRS- See ^^^55-.
jf^fSJ^f^ n. A tei-m for an
overlargc and bagging garment.
^^\^\ f. The spot on which
the Ganges descends (from the
lieavens).
W^'HIC The recitation of a
■^^TW, the ex])Ounding of a ^-
■?JT, the feasting of lirahmans,
&c. to tlie honour, and for the
projiitiation, of Ganga.
n^K^ n. Water from a sa-
cred stream. ^^^^ o ^ee Ji^^t
W^^^\ f. Undergoing jerks,
n^nJ^ V. i. To be jerked,
shocked (as by stepping sudden-
ly into a hole, upon a loose
stone, Sic.)
JT^^oJor V. i. To sink and
rise repeatedly — a ]ierson drown-
ing. L* fig. To be struggling a-
gainst (lirticulties.
^'^^'^[ f. The bobbing up
and down (of a drowning person}-
'2 tig. Violent effort.
JT^^q-fl^lDr V. i To read or
si)eak confusedly.
T^^ ad. Exuberantly, pres-
singly — rain, crops, &e. /. Exu-
berance or press, also reveling.
TI^ -^^ -^^ -^r -P^T^ ad.
Imit. of the sound of a thing en-
tering into some soft sounding
body or place ; as 3To ffl^ ^F-
'T'^^r A quick jolt or shock.
2 By meton. A hole, &c. where
a person is likely to be jolted. 3
fig. A blow of misfortune. 4 fig.
A trap.
nW^\ f. A hole, snare. 2 A
shock. 3 A soft or low eructa-
tion. V. ^.
Jl^^r^^r^ A ford uneven
from depressions and elevations;
a ford occasioning 3T^ ! 31^ !
jolt ! jolt ! to the forder.
n'^'T^ ad. Imit. of the sound
emitted on eager eating, v. '3T,
^^. /. (Imit.) The sounding
of bodies in mud. Hence mud-
dincss.
^^T'^fcT a. Noisily sloppy —
mire. 2 fig. and freely. Fidly,
thickly, copiously — crops, riches,
imports, feasting, &c. 2 Swarm-
ing, busy — a village, &c.
ir^prn/. The making of a
chunam floor : also the floor
made.
rj^"^ r. i. To sink into some
soft sounding substance (as mud,
&c.)
IT^^T, JJ^fcrr A shock (esp.
a^ affecting a rtrhtr/ creature), v.
^, Ti]X.'2 See Jl'qt^.
fl^T^/. Muddiness.
JT^r^^ or -^i ad. Imit. of the
sound of gn/./.ling, gulping. V.
fq, ^I, fjI55.
^^R' 72. A dense wood, a
thicket. 2 Density (of a wood).
TRitr or ^^rtr f. A shove
with the hand applied Jto the
back of the neck. v. '^, VIK-
2 Used also of the neck or throat
with reference to seizing it. v.
JT^RF^ ad. (Imit.) Crowd-
cdlv, throngingly.
Ti^rqfT
117
71TT(
fI^R[^r The crag and the
rump ; the shoulders iiiul the
buttocks (of an animal).
JT^M^r /. (Imit.) Close,
crovvdedness.
ff^rn The earing of corn :
blow with the fist.
TW ad. (Imit.) Tightly,
firmly — tying, fastening, shut-
ting.
T^r (Nashik, &c.) An ear
(esp, of ^tWB3T, ^T3I<1 or
wheat) well filled : the state of
being in well-filled ear : •^Tfi'^
aT% ^l^T q^^. 2 Contemptu-
ously. A fat cheek : fatness of the
cheeks.
TJ^lf^r (Imit.) Hesitating.
V. ^T, i, ^T^' ''"^' Hesitating-
ly, falteringly. v. i"!^, ^^..
l^r f. A chunamed floor.
2 Crowdeduess. 3 The slinf>;s
and tie by which the yard is
suspended and secvu'ed midway
across the mast. 4 Esp. amongst
children. A push upon the back
of the neck : the nape of the
neck. 5 A cheek. Used only
with contemptuous implication,
and with reference to ])inchiug,
squeezing, &c. : 31^ "^^^il-
II^&5" n. 'FiJ^r /. Runnini:
away ; making off. v. ^K, ^^■
^^ (s) An elephant.
1^ (p) A measure of about
two feet. 2 A measuring rod of
this length, 3 A quantity (of
cloth, &c.) measured by one
31 o. 4 A ramrod. 5 A bar
as fixed in a grate, window, &c.
6 The raised edge of a well or
tank.
'T'^ (p) A heap, stack (of
grain, hay, wood, &c.) 2 A case
as of mathematical instruments,
of writing-materials, of combs,
brushes, &c. 3 A box of tools.
4 A mart ; a bazar. 5 A large
copper vessel for water.
T^T^'T' n. Ringworm.
1^^/. (Imit.) Buzzing (of
a crowd) : also chattering (as of
sparrows).
ir^^"^ V. i. To be lively,
full of business and bustle — a
town, a house.
tT^iT^R: Brisk and noisy
business ; the hum of a multi-
tude ; the hunnning of bees.
iT3[JTRcr a. Lively, brisk,
busy (a town, &c.)
Jl^r^ / (s) Solemn and
stately gait. 2 altrib. Of a
solemn gait or stalk.
l^irfR^r /. A woman of
stately walk.
q^nlTor-fr/. The image of
x?T"lrr\ placed and worshiped
U])on an elephant.
JT^T^Kl^cT 7?. An observance
upon the day on which the sun
enters the constellation of the ele-
phant.
JR^jr/. (s) An elephant's
bell. 2 A term for a vociferous
Avoman : a babbler.
Am V. i. See ^m.
^^^^ (s) Ivory.
^^^^ a. See I^X-
»\
^^^^ a. (s Elephant-eyed)
That has small eyes.
^'^^ (a) Violent oppression
and outrage, v. ^X, Tf^,
^T^W. 2 A furious address
or assault ; running at open-
mouthed. V. Bif^. 3 A heavy
blow; an afflictive dispensation,
r. ^T, 31^^.
^^^^ f. (Imit.) The hum
of many people speaking.
iJiTiSroT V. i. To be lively,
full of bustle — a town, &c. 2 To
be struck aghast : 3lST'5ifiri^
'CT«t5^^I1. [brisk, busy.
^Sf^^rcf a. (Imit.) Lively,
^^^K (s) The power or arm
of an army consisting in ele-
phants. 2 A host of elephants.
JTsWRoffy. Measuring (of
lands) by 3i'5}.
^^^ A clash of musical in-
struments. 2 The chimes at the
expiration of a watch. 3 The
shout at a m^J, &c. 4 fig.
Proclaiming loudly and gene-
rally : publicity.
^^n (ir) A wreath of flowers.
2 A jmrticular bracelet (of pearls,
&c.)
T^^R (s) A large elephant.
^^^ (v) A lyric poem.
m^^mf.pL Chat, talk.
Jl^f 5"^ A name of ^'W.
nW-'-^^l f, A term a pp. to an
insignificant result of mighty
and imposing preparations and
professions.
jyif^Ff jj. (s Ablution of an
elephant) Unproductive efforts;
or efforts which produce the
evil striven against : also reme-
dies which exasperate the disease.
With reference to the practice
of elephants, which, after squirt-
ing water over their bodies,
throw dust and rubbish.
JT5Tr^c^$#r/.(s) Great wealth ;
a fortune which can support an
elephant. 2 Cant. Extreme po-
verty. 3 Cant. Ringworms over
the body.
^^R^ A name of JT^^.
T^l^ /. A tale : also idle
chat. V. ■^t'T, ^^. 2 Uproar.
C^^r m.f.jjL of nfm (p)
A pack of cards.
^*^r/. (h) a small stack or
pile. 2 See ■=^t^^T.
iJR^fS" a. Much, many,
great. r ,
• r- L^pack.
T^r^ /. (p) A single card of
^^^T a. Huge, vast, im-
mense— buildings, business, out-
lay.
^^U f. Scum and rubbish
brought by the tide or current
(of sea or river) ; alluvium.
TJ A body, gang. 2 A
dense body (as of troops, cattle,
&c.) 3 An ingot (of gold, &c.)
ir: -^^ -^r -Ml -r^^{ ad.
Imit. of the sound in gulping
or guttling.
JRT^^of or iJ^T^rff of V. c. To
appropriate fraudulently. 2 To
consume wastefully.
iRT^r, IJiT^r See l^^^f.
JI7JTJ or -7f ad. Imit. of the
noise made in guzzling or in gulp-
IT3^
118
yf^rl'
ins: copiously, v. f^ ; flls^o
of the noise of %vaUoping or
noilir.^;. r. 'SftST, ^ToT.
i]ZJ]Z^ or ^^nZlW^ r. i. To
sualloiv, eat, or drink noisily. -
To make a noise in boiling —
vice, &e.
*\mZi^ a. Large and fine ;
round and full — eyes. 2 Slack —
a machine, &c.
^^r^^r a. An embezzler.
JR-JTi^f or ^t^l^\ Gobbling
U]). r. ^X.
^m-ij. Familiar intercourse,
li or Jl^ti^ 71. A term for
vaunting talk ; frandidcnt and
foolish excuses ; rant, rigmarole,
JjirqZT 7?. Trasli, trifles;
a mass of miscellaneous articles.
^i^ or -^\ ad. Imit. ofthe
sound of a copious or continued
jrulping. [gulping.
*i^ ad. Imit. of tlie sound in
^f A mass, group (as of
troops, cattle, &c.) : a g.ing.
Tfr a. f. Close union. 2 A
I'ody, gang.
^\ a. Short and stout.
JTjf r /. (ii) A bundle (as of
clothes, &c.) 2 A little bundle
(as formed by a few rupees, a
few grains, &c. secured by a
Knot in the corner of a cloth).
.'> fig. Property, substance. -1
fig. A ])erson lying senseless
(bundled uj)) under drunken-
ness, ike. [Property, stock.
^Zs n. A bundle. 2 fig.
^Z\i5['^ c. An ironical term
for a miser — one who kee])s
his money and goods tight and
^'t'^-^ [Used for rvs'Ei\.
JRia-T /. A small bundle. 2
'If (I. (^'ompact, strong-knit
— the body.
m\ A bale (as of cloth, (fcc);
a btuidle (as of wood, &c.) 2
I'sod for Jr^. 3 A lump (as of
jelly or curds). 4 fig. A stock or
fluid.
m See m- r , ., „ . f
^Il'^rr c. (n) An adept or
Tff^r^- c. (That adds knot
to knot) A miser.
Jf^ (s) A cheek. 2 An ele-
l)hant's cheek or temple, 3 The
name of the tenth ^TT. 4 The
force, fierceness (of any disease,
of rain, wind, &c.) 5 fig. The
vainiting of conceit, v. ^i'^,
f^x:^. G n. A boil. 7 An aiiix
of contempt attached to the de-
signation of certain orders ; as
to ^«^t ^TTft, 5TT53l[. forming
^if^, ^TWTf'^, &c.
^'S (h) a small fort, esp. a
hill-fort.
713"^ a. See ^^.
^^Cr A soldier or a peon
serving in a hill-fort.
JT^JT^ar/.Crowdedly, closely.
n^^T^ ad. Closely together.
TT'JT^r Crowdedness. r.^^,
^■:S^^ or -^ a. Well-peo-
pled, well provided — a city,
lionse, table.
^'^^'^ or -^r nd. Imit. ofthe
rumlding, rattling (of thunder).
1T3"7TT or -^\ f. (Imit.) Roar-
ing, rumbling.
JT^irfcJr V. i. To rumble,
rattle — thunder, carts, &c. 2 To
roar. 3 To tumble down or fall
in bodily and noisily. 4 To die.
V. imp. To rumble in the belly.
JT^TTiirjZ A loud rinnbliiig,
rattling.
JT^IIN ad. In the state of be-
ing lost, mislaid, embezzled, &c.
^'?^\ or -^r a rubble -wall.
2 A dyke.
^^W a. Hard, difficult.
^^f^f /. A confidante or fe-
male companion.
TTof V. i. (ii) To enter and be
buried in. 2 fig. To be absorbed
bv. 3 To be firmly fixed in. 4
To become intimate with. 5 At
bovs plav. To be a playmat e
with, (i To sit close unto — a
garment.
^^ or -^ a. or ad. (p) Thick,
gross — ilarkness : sound, pro-
found, deep — sleep, study, stupor
of intoxication, cugagemeat in
l)nsiness: close, dense — a wood,
foliage ; continuous and heavy —
rain. n. Profound gloom or thick
darkness, v. t}^, 5. ad. (a) As
dead, perished ; as drowned,
l)uried.
IJ^^'^f
V. c.
[earth.
To hide in the
TJ^^or -^«. Stout, sturdy —
person or animal. 2 App. freely
as the words Bu/, strupping to a
weight or load. s. A weight
jdaced to press down : a weighty
load. 2 fig. A burden, obliga-
tion.
^'^^ or -'^ ad. (a) Disappear-
ed, lost.
Ij^^^y. Confusion, tumult.
2 Disorder. 3 Distraction, men-
tal disturbance. 4 Hurry, stir. 5
Kugged state of ground.
TTS'^^^^r A term for a hurried
and disorderly performance. 2 A
term for marriage as celebrated
amongst people of the fTl'STHi^
order : also for the rolling over
(as practised among this peo])le)
of a male towards a female, in
order to sexual congress. 3 Rol-
ling over aiul over (as of a child
upon the ground). 4 Embezzling.
5 Confounding, disordering.
JJ^^'J^ V. i. To be in con-
fusion, bustle. &c. 2 To be mis-
laid. 3 To roll along with rattle
and clatter : ■cfT'^4^^^^ ^t^
ST^'^l^^. 4 To roll over and
over.
T[?^:i-r^q- V. c. To hurry
over : to perform hurriedly.
iT^^^r ad. Wildly, noisily-
rolling, &c.
riS"^^r2r Extreme confusion
or commotion : confused vocifer-
ation.
iJI'^fl' /. Hurry, stir, tumult.
T^^^r a. Lively, active,
y^^y- [of the cheek.
JTT4^e^/2.sPoet. The sphere
^^m^J f. pi. Inflammation
of the glands of the neck.
T^^f /. A joint or sinall
piece of sugar-cane, as ready for
the raoutii. 2 A mark upon
cloth for a ^Jl^, &c. 3 A chop
(of wood or a metal-bar).
nTTl"
119
n^^
JJ^n^rr a. That has the
mark tt'^tI. [bezzlcd.
Tl^^m ad. Lost, gone ; em-
^^^r A kind of metal-pot.
Ji^l^n^ n. (s) An elephant's
cheek ; a cheek or side of the
face geu.
^^r An aggregate of four
(cowries or pice). 2 The string
which teachers of particular
arts and crafts (singers, conjurers,
&c.) bind round a finger or the
wrist of the right arni_ of then-
pupils. V. m^, ^\, ^t^- '^ ^'>
ornamental cord of black thread
bound round the neck of a horse.
4 A charmed cord bound round the
wrist or ankle to avert demoniac
influence : t-^\ ^15?^. To
bewitch, cajole.
^^\^ A loud rumbling, roar-
ing, a. Very precipitous, of a
high pitch — a slope.
Ti^r^oj y^ I Xo rumble, rat-
tle—thunder, carts. 2 Cant. To
die ; to be dismissed from office,
&c.
JJ^fcR n. (s) A term for a des-
l)erate sickness, an alarniiiig
danger, r, ^, ^T, ^3^, 'ZZ5, '^K,
^3"[[^^r V. c. To persuade
with friendly manifestation ; to
coax. Always in a bad sense.
WS'^\ A pathic. A term
of abuse.
nr^^TRT^oTf /. pi Lasses,
maidens, female playmates.
Jjtr (-f^/.) A man, fellow,
chaji, hand. 2 An underling, a
mate. .':5 A companion — as a
school-fellow, &c. 4 A person,
a body : as m?fTtn3T^, f?i:T:{Ti-
31^. 5/. A bunch or bundle
(as of vegetables, sticks, &o). 6 A
small foit. 7 Among children
and the vulgar. Friendship, v,
^X, ffla:, "dT^, ii^, f 1^.
JTtr3Tf"^<T A general term for
a labouring (or common) man; a
fdlow, a chap, a hand.
■^^A sort of drinking cup.
JJS^^^r The spear-bearer
before an elephant.
nifr See n^<T.
^Wr The bulbous portion of
a vegetable (as of a turnip or
onion). 2 A mass or lump. 3 A
small insulated and dry spot in
a river.
JTirio5"^r f. A lengthy prose
sentence or strain. 2 A brilliant
and rich morsel of prose-com-
position. 3 fig. A tedious, pros-
ing narratiou ; a yarn. v. ^T^.
^iT f. A bunch or bundle
(of vegetables, &c.) 2 A quantity
of ten quires (of paper). 3 A
small fore. \j.Qt.
*VS a. Short-sized and thick-
Aii\ See i\^^\.
^i^ See ^^^t.
^c3" a. Uncomely, shabby :
vile, wretched ; good for no-
thing ; — used of men,beasts,soil,
■^^^ [castle.
^ST f. (h) a small fortress; a
JJJSOj ^,_ ^_ Xo make turbid.
2 fig. To agitate.
Tf^^ a. Turbid. 2 Blood-
sliotten — eyes. 3 fig. Agitated —
the mind by any evil passion :
disturbed — a caste, race : foul —
an account. [fort
TS"?fr A soldier of a hill-
^°T (s) A multitude, a
number, a tribe. 2 A division of
the twenty-seven '^^^. 3 A
body of troops' equal to three
TT^. 4 A term for certain
troops of inferior duties, con-
sidered as Shiva's attendants,
and under the especial superin-
tendence of iTClsj. Hence, 5 A
terra for one (a male, in opp. to
^■^if^^, at feasts, religious
ceremonies) viewed as included
as necessarily of the livx or
party invited. 6 In arithmetic. A
number. 7 A sect in jjliilcso-
phy or religion. 8 In grammar. A
conjugation. 9 The deity srui^;
also a composition in verse in
praise of him and others. 10
Mind, meaning. 1 1 A connec-
tion, a group ; as '^'^ HUT.
W\^ An astrologer.
^^FcT n. A comprehensive
term for one's family, race, re-
lation, aud connections.
W^^ V. c. To count, calcu-
late. 2 fig. To account, regard,
mind.
m% f. Reckoning. 2 fig.
Regarding, account, esteem,
^^"^^■^ [common stock.
Wl^-^^ n. s Public property ;
W\H n. (s) Counting. 2
Amount or sum.
W\^\ f. (s) Computing. 2
fig. Regarding, esteemmg.
WIHV^ A name of^^^T. 2
fig. Anj" ca])tain or leading man.
W^^m a. s Calculable, nu-
merable. 2 fig. Estimable, va-
luable.
m^\^ (s) The deity T^^-
2 At the sugar press. A quanti-
ty of 31^ set apart in the name
of iTiTTqfcT on the ])Oui-ing of
the 3lcj out of the boiler.
J]mf%W;i. Worship of Gan-
pati. 2 fig. The very outset of
a work.
3TtJ[^q-Rr[q- J. The wife of
the 5t?iT or ^^■i^^ or ^T^^T
of a village. An official term
at feasts and rites. She receives
the first invitation upon every
occasion of assembling gossips. A
male and female (any pair)
invited to a festal rite.
^f^^r /. s A harlot.
^I'^fT n. (s) Calculating,
arithmetical operations. 2 Tlie
science of com[)utation, com-
prising arithmetic, algebra, and
geometry. 3 The sum of a
series, p. s Counted, computed.
W\^, mi^, m\^ prep. By,
to, &c. each severally, per,
^giTTUftqf, 3Zi?TJroftrr.
W^W/. spop.-f\ Arith-
metical progression, irfnTnT-
3IrT a. s Come by calculation,
worked out.
Ti'JTerr An arithmetician.
Jif^T^r /. Hostility. V. ^r,
^t^, '^T^'f- 2 fig. Tumult.
W\'^ Tile son of Shiva and
I'arvati. lie is the deity of
wistioin aud remover of diificnl-
ties. This god is the standard
TT^
120
^^^
of com])arison or reference for an
eminent nriler or composer.
m^^'^l f. (s) The fourth
of the lig'ht half of ^Tsfq^,
celebrated as the birtlulay of
Ganesh.
Jl'WTfqr /. A term for a,
doth thrown over the head of i
one whom it is desisjncd to pom-
mel soundly, v. ^\^.
m^\'^\ f. A slip of wood,!
liaving the fiirnre of 3I01?t,
carved npon it, fixed across the j
door-post of an outer door ; the
lintel of the outer door-frame.
^^^ a. s Numerable, cal-
f'ulfiWe. [weaver's spool.
iT'^^r A kingfisher. 2 A
^'T p. (s) ( rono, departed ;
as JirjTijTTsR?? -^1^ -^^. 2
Gone to, into, in, i. e. fixed or
seated in or at. In com]), as^j-
rTJlrT /. State or condition (in
an ill sense); pli;^ht, trim, mess.
'2 Quitting (on being released
from) the state of a v?!. v.
^ . ^ -^
g. 3 In music. Quaver, v. g.
4 A musical time. 5 An expedient:
also a refuge or resource. (J
Knd, issue. 7 Way, manner ;
but used elliptically with the
power of " Like" ; as ^^T^in??
Like a madman.
^^ n. Sliam, feint, v. ^, ^^-
'J A short and pithy piece of com-
jiosition. .'i An amusing anecdote.
'1 A rigmarole story, v. ^T=r.
^•n^^r Over-heated and
sweaty state ; sweller : M^\-
'^T to 'S'l'ST. 2 Heat and
ch)scncss of weather. '6 Noisy
boiling, t'. $. 4 The working
(of a tense and angry tumor);
tlie stirring, swelling (of atfec-
lioii, desire, crying, iS;c.) v.i\.
^^T^Fc3T or -^'ir a. One who
mars and l)eIlows lustily >i|)on a
sliirht beating : one who sliams
extreme indigence or madness.
JTrTJcZT n. (Quitted by emi-
gration of the parties — lands or
titu'inents. - Ajjp. to lands hav-
ing no proprietor.
Jf-1^^ n. An emigrutcd or
extinct faniilv.
^^^^r (I. That pretends po-
verty, madness, &c. 2 That
makes great show of jiain or in-
jury npon slight occasion. '6
Humorous, facetious.
^^R a. (s) Dead. 2 fig.
Frightened out of one's wits or
consciousness.
mm^n] a stock of tunes.
^cTJTcT f. Consulting toge-
ther. Esp. used by children.
J7^?5T part. Gone, expired —
a time. '_' fig. Dead. [years.
TcT^^^^ a. s Advanced in
TcT^^ -^r^ n. The past year.
HcICr a. (s) Sunken into
impotence and imbecility.
^^^f a. Fallen into poverty :
become unfortunate.
Tfrr^ 11. A term for a huge
animal with reference to its ex-
traordinary bulk.
rr^fjqfcf^ a. s That follows
in the steps of,
JTcTl^ a. s Very aged. '2
"Whose life is gone.
^^^«!^ n. s Understood, sig-
nified. 2 Done, accomplished, o
Ik'come poor.
^r^ f. (s) Going; passage,
progress. 2 Deportment, pro-
cedure. 3 State or condition (in
a bad sense). Sec UrT in the
first six senses. 4 .Access, reacli.
In comp. ^^iTRfrf, "q^T^^T-
3Tf?T Ilcach or range of know-
ledge, &c. .5 Coiu'se of events,
fortune, (i A i)eriod of life. 7
The diurnal moticin of a planet
in its orbit. S nd. In the way
of : 3T«ff^^ ^tn To drop the
mask ; 31<ff^^ ^TfI^?^I One
on tlie ])oint of death.
^icTcrrcTf Giver of emancipa-
tion (from mundane and separate
existence). A name of God.
n\^m -^'^ Stoi>page, de-
t^MUion. [void of refuge.
^rcT^R a. Remediless, de-
^'P^4^ a. Of departed glory.
^^[■^m? a. Dis|)iritcd, dcs-
poiulent.
^'^■^^ //. Another remedy
or resource ; a way of avoiding;
escaping : tj^'^I^t'^-sr 3TO ^T^l-
The word answers to Help ; — if
we can help it.
^'•^r ad. In the way of, in,
Avith, through, by ; as if^HI^
^4Rf^f Entangling, jum-
bling, lit. fig. 2 An entangled
business.
IT^TR" /. An itching, r. W^.
2 Swelter, o The sound of ra-
])id l)oiling, also of laughing.
^R^^ or -^r ad. Imit. of the
sound of fast boiling. 2 Openly,
freely. 3 Convulsively — crying.
JT^T?^ V. i. To emit the
sound JT'^JI^ — an article un-
der ebidlition. v. imp.To be sultry
and oj)pressive. 2 To swelter.
3 (esp. JT^JT^^ if^f) To swell
with some emotion; to choke.
^^^ V. imp. To be sultry
and o])pressive. 2 To swelter.
^^^/. Sultriness or close-
ness.
T?^^ V. i. To swell and fdl
and seem about to ripen — a
fruit, a tumor. 2 To swelter.
JR"n, ^^^ a. Approaching
to ripeness ; — used of m'ST
(Piper betel) and fruits.
JJ^ST n. Foulness (of a li-
(piid); dregs, refuse. 2 m. fig.
Disorder (of things, affairs).
a. Foul, mean, shabby — water,
])erson. 2 Confused, agitated.
iT^S"tT 15. c. To make muddy.
2 To confuse.
^^r/. (s) A mnce. 2 An
iron bar as a wcaiion.
if^ST, 7f?:qC p]. Evasive pro-
testation ; shufHing excuses.
^A^ s (Convulsive or emo-
ti(mal utterance.
iI^Mr/. (ii) Alluvial soil.
^^^^cR A concert of asses.
2 A reproachful terra for bad
singing,
^^ /?. (s) A sentence not
metrical ; an elaborated period. 2
Common prose.
Tjg^q or JI^TFT^ a. Con-
sisting of prose.
^RTT^
121
^^^^ n. (s) Prose and
verse. 2 fig. ArtiMces, wiles ;
craft, wiliness.
5N (s) Smell or odour. 2 A
fragrance. 3 m. n. A pigment
for the foreliead or body (of
sandal wood, &c.)
'T'-T^ (s) Sulphur. 2 A certain
modicinal compound.
^^^r An ass.
Jf'c[ff^, Jf^-^fr^ n, Bitloben
or black salt.
JT'MTTf^k /. The civet cat.
m^^ (s) Myrrh.
ff'-Tt (s) A celestial cho-
rister. These are a class of demi-
gods. 2 fig. An extraordinary
musician.
iJWt^f^ n. Celestial sing-
ing heard in the air. 2 fig.
Melodious warbling.
if-^t^iT^ n. A city of the
^^f^^. Aj)p. also to the aorial
ajipearances of earthly objects
])roduced by refraction. Fata
morgana. 2 The term will an-
swer for Calenture-visions.
mk\^\ f. Courteously
inviting one in, and then abusing
and beating him.
31>Tf'??5r n. Marriage nn the
mutual agreement of tlie par-
ties. 2 App. signidcantly to the
marriage called ms.
Jf'-T^r^r /. m^ '^ m. The
science of music.
if^T^R a. (s) Odoriferous.
ii^T^[Tf? /•. Utterly unknown
state (of matter) ; state of not
having been even sniellcd :
^'^r a. (p) Foul, stinking-.
JT'tnk^^rr or fi'-^Rn^ff (p)
Galbanum.
W^K One of the seven pri-
mary notes of music.
Am"'^^ f. (s m k ST^rT The
two substances constantly used
by the ceremonially i)ure.) Pure
and holy inU'rcourse : fJT'^
m\ f. A stink. 2 A vendei-
of perfumes.
16
WS-'JT Better n|o5''^.
^^^rr A perfumer. 2 A
stinking fellow.
TT^^^r^fS:^ The village boun-
dnry ^one. ^^^^ g„g„y_
-fln^rt" /. Depredations of
JTRiTfcT /. (p) Blessing,
mercy, a good : "^ ^t"^^!^
3I» WT^l. [public foe.
^^f^ (A) The enemy, the
^^ or -^ f. (ii) Common re-
port; news. 2 Idle prate.
3N-^=f-^^-[^r ad, I mil. of
the sound fancied upon sudden
and smart actions.
¥r^r (Imit.) A mouthful
noisily swallowed, v. fll^. 2
fig. A bribe swallowed, v. TT^.
3 A soft-sounding blow. v.MjK-
•l^FTT or -^rr ad. Imit. of the
sound emitted in eager gulping.
^^'^^ n. a dish, — cream
nitiljcd up with flour and fried.
m'^m ad.iii) Still, silently.
^^^^ /. (h) Popular rumour.
nmm f. pi Gossip and
chat; idle talk. v. ^X, ^T^-
iTTRr A huge mouthful, v.
^im\ a. That chatters,
prates.
W-1 /. See m ad. Still,
mutely. 2 Lost, astray : «5JT
To swallow. 2 fig. To embezzle,
JPTIS"^ 77. Chat, prate, light
conversation.
^q[Sr^3:ir a. That is ever
chattering, news-telling.
m\^m, Jl^Rl^T A news-
monger ; a chatterbox.
^Ti^^ f. (a) Carelessness. 2
Lost or mislaid state tlirough
negligence. 3 Disorder (of arti-
cles).
JT^c^cluT V. c. To lose care-
lessly ; to drop. 2 To displace or
derange. [neglectful.
ri'K'-^tf or -^^f a. Careless
^^^^\ A soft-fcoundino- blow.
[prate.
To chatter or
mm^ V. i. To be afflicted
with excessive catarrh or cough.
2 To overflow with tears — eyes.
3 To groAV fat.
IT^^ITcT a. (Imit.) Fleshy,
fat. 2 Pulpous, full and juicy.
"^«r?^a. (ii) Short and stout.
mT: or JMr/. m.(n) A gold
coin. Hence applied to a wealthy
person.
^^^ (h) a stout and come-
ly youth. 2 fig. A man of pro-
pertv.
^^\^ See iTRf^.
'Ma. Stout, sturdy. 2 fig.
Opulent. 3 Flourishing — a town,
&c.
W"^^ (s) The sun.
A^t^ a. (s)Deep — the ocean,
a river, &c. 2 fig. Grave, serious,
solemn. 3 Deep or full- — a sound.
^^ m. f. (a) Forbearance,
overlooking (an offence), v.
^T, m"^, ^. 2 A pause, rest. v.
^^^ n. (s) A proof, an evi-
dence. 2 A deep e.Npectorated
tone in singing.
^^^r Airs, affectation.
^^ (p) Affectations ; co-
quetry; pcrtness, or sauciuess(as
of a servant to his master).
Iiqa?^/. Toying, trilling.
f!^'^ V. i. To work in a
sluggish manner ; to go in a dull
spirit ; to linger. 2 To pass on
pleasantly — time. 3 To seem
fit unto. 4 To appear unto.
^^^ f. The passing of time
pleasantly. 2 Any amusing
object or occupation. 3 ii.
Biige-water,
mi^ or -^r^ /. The cavity
left in the bilge of a ship or
boat.
JTiTcRiTcT ad. Playingly
and idlingly; toying and tri-
fling—going, coming, eating,
working. j^jj^g — j^ person.
^^^\ a. Amusing, entertain-
riiT-f n. (s) Going or moving.
TjJTi^pjJT'F n. Goiii^> and
coming; frerpientuig.
nw^\
122
rir^n
T^^r a. A term of general
abuse, used R3 Rogue, rascal.
JT'T'fRT a. s Accessible, pas-
sable. 2 tig. Practicable.
mf^'^J V. c. To idle, trifle:
to beguile away ( tiie time) : to
))lay off or execute iillingly (a
v.ork) ; to auiuse and lead ])lea-
sautly (a person).
^^\^^ r. L fig. To be no
more ; to die and (thus) be
lost.
Jl'in?'^ V. c. (ii) To lose,
drop, squander, lit. fig. (things,
time, health).
nm^ f. See n^T^.
^^^ a. (s) ^Accessible, lit.
lig. ; to be approached, passed. 2
Knowable. 3 f. n. Ingress or
insiiiht into.
^m^^ m. See m\^^.
J]mW\ ad. (Imit.) In a
jiiteous manner — supplicating.
r. ^X.
JJ^TrfSf'T n. (s) Shradh and
other ceremonies jjerformcd by
))iii£rims at Gaya.
^'^\^^ a Brahman subsist-
ing upon the offerings made by
piignuis at Gaya. - fig. A re-
jjioaehful term for a Brahman
neglectful of ])reseribed rules and
rites and walking disorderly : also
for one who pretends poverty or
madness.
T^rST a. Deserted — a tene-
ment. '2 R Emigrated — a family,
.'i al.so 31?JTo3l ytupid, idiot-
like; caieless; flimsy.
JI^ Pulp, pith. 2 /. Itch in
the throat and breast of a horse.
r. 'H'C. ."i Tlie scurf of the coat
of a horse : also of the head or
skin of man. 4 m. n. s Poison.
•^^^ ('. (a) Drowned. 2
liDst in by absorption. '6 fig.
Devoted to. 4 Sound, heavy —
sleep. 5 Disappeared, iitteily
See under fjT^^tT, &c.
^T^^ V. i. To sink rai/ully
into : 7ir?trT ^m^l ^T3I^^ Jix:-
^^*. 2 To take fright.
^TWt\ Girth or circumference.
2 Lncirding. 3 Fetching a com-
pass. V. i, TlTT", ^¥. 4. fig.
Perplexity. 5 A ring of hair
aroimd the Shendi. (J A circular
(damaged) patch in a field of
corn.
^^^z or ^i^^ m. 71. ^nz
n. A dilute solution in water of
various medicaments levigated
together (as a beverage for jmer-
jicral women, or as a sudorific
drink in fever). 2 A thin sauce for
bread. '6 A term with which
rice or other article of food is
reviled vvheu too watery.
^T^Z^ V. c. To rub on a
stone-mortar, n. A stone-mortar
for levigating medicaments.
^^^r Medicines adminis-
tered to puerperal women. 2 fig.
Jumble, confusion.
JTTiir or -^r ad. (Imit.) A-
round ; in circles. 2 Smartly ;
— used of the growing of ii
child or plant.
^^f^ r. i. To whirl. 2 To
be giddy— the head. 3 To grow-
rapidly and richly — a plant.
^T^T\ whiriiuo-. 2 fig.
"Whirl as of business, v. ^'C,
Tj^fRRT Forcible turning.
ircqffcT a. (Used with ^\i\^\)
Exactly round. 2 Round and
large and fine — eyes.
^^Wr (r) A confused out-
cry against: any dislurbing cla-
mour : the disturbance occasion-
ed by it. V. ^1^, t?^, %[. 2
Confused business.
I^^r p A pit or hole.
^^^Trfr /. A term for the
neck; with reference always to
seizing, squeezing, &c. v.
^^^/. (A) Need. 2 Pres-
sing necessity.
iir^^r /. Thundering, &c.
n^sfOT V. i. Sc imp.'Vo tlumder
2 fig. V. i. 'I'o roar — cannon, wild
beasts. 3 To resound ; to make
a swelling sound, v. i. To be in
want of.
^'"5T^?T n. Needy, wanting.
^^m»-T a. Selfish.
^^tlor-^a. Needy. 2 That
saves or spares his labour.
^r^rjq ad. In the state of
being buried, misled, lost.
nr^T m. See ^^t 2 The
utterance aiul heaving (of a
dying person or animal).
JRTf;, ^^t f. A low eruc-
tation, or water rising in the
mouth. V. ^, ^TJI.
^T^, ^^f /. A decent
and reputable woman, a keeper
at home : opp. to a gadabout.
^^cfr/. A pit. 2 Laxly. The
belly. V. ^^.
^^^^f. (p) The neck.
'K'^r (h) Dry and crumbled
hemp-tops or tobacco-leaves. 2
^yith fi^igT^T The residuum
of an infusion of hemp-tops, &c.
JIT^eZT j\ (h) a mortar or
bomb-cannon.
^^^W a. Pulpy— fruits, &c.
JJ^iT (P) a. Hot, lit. fig.
IJ^^T^ a. Neither very hot
or cold — a thing. 2 fig. Sharp
and n)ild — a person, disposition,
speech. 3 New and old.
IT^*T R^T^r (H) Drugs or
spices of heating virtue.
^^"JTr (Pi Heat of weather.
IWr i]^ a. Very hot ; pip-
ing hot.
T^#r/. (p) Heat. 2 fig. Heat
of ten\])erament : niorbui heat. 3
Lues Venerea.
^^^^ r/(Z. Imit. of the sound
emitted by a thing in rapidly
turnnig. [venom generally.
^^ u. s Venom of snakes:
^f^/. A blind tumor.
n^^^i or ^^m^\ /. a
necklace of glass and golden
beads and the coimTriciJ\.
^
TTC^ f. The venomous foam
of the mouth of ser|)ents and
lizards. 2 r Concern ; 7551^
tlSUJIi^'1 3Io %i^^'^. ;MVater
rising in the mouth, v. $.
I^ST The juice of certain
herbs and drugs obtained by
chewing them (administered
by the mother to her infant in
cough,&c.)2 fig. A bribe, v. ^.
3 c The upper hnlf of a stalk
in
123
^iwm
of rice, &c. ; used with reference
to cutting.
JIU A lump of the pulp
of the Jack. 2 Rolong.
^\^T or -^^ ad. Around, in
circles — rolling.
JIHsT or -^ j: TTT^ m. A
bar fixed in a grate, window,
&c.
l^fjT/, c A Stick with a
forked and hooked extremity.
Used to gather together fruits,
&c. by drawing down or by
twisting off.
1^f>2"r A body (as of troops)
forming a line of investment;
an encircling wall, hedge, &c. v.
WF^, <l\^. '2 Sitting ill invest-
ment. V. ^1^, "^j t?^. 3 A
rail.
inl'r /. A cart rut, the rut
in which moves the wheel by
which pebbles are crushed and
mortar prepared.
^V^Jf. Sour material rising
from the stomach,
IR[r^ V. i. To whirl round
rapidly or noisily. 2 To soak into
rapidly. 3 To shoot up luxuri-
antly— crops, &c. ; to come out
into fulness and vigour — fruits,
a growing youth. 4 To be frigh-
tened greatly and suddenly :
^Tki ad. See ^Kinr.
ift^ff /. Mildness, meek-
ness. 2 Poverty.
^ffl'ITaf) A tyrant amongst
the ))oor and helpless (and a
fawning supporter of the great).
^M\ ?"ft^r /. Poverty and
opulence.
Tfr/. R A fish-hook. 2
Tender pulp of the Jack.
iftf a. (a) Mild, inoffen-
sive. 2 Poor. ^^^^^
irr^5'Cf^ 2)1. The poor and
m^ (s) ^The bird and
vehicle of X^^ ; the king of
birds. 2 A large kind of vulture.
I^^Tlf^ep a. s poj). v%'^-
•TWT Of aquiline nose.
ij^^cff^y. m. An emerald.
1^/. (a) Pride, arrogance.
nWJ a. Pregnant, v. iu ^•
JTTif^r^rf^r Jljr The period
of time from the fifth ^f^^T
before sunrise till the third
^f^^T; declared by tijit'^T^
to be a good time for setting
out on a journey.
it4=1w.-=1T/. (s) Thunder. 2
Roaring (of wild beasts or
cannon).
^^ (s) An ass.
nft or Jiff /. (p) Copiously
diffused state (of dust, smoke,
&c). 2 fig. Crowdedness. 3 App.
freely to overwhelming copious-
ness (of rain, of crops, of dishes
at a feast) : to vehement voci-
feration and wild uproar : to
ravage and devastation (as by
robbers) : to rout and destruction
(as of an army) : to disorder
and tumultuousness gen. : to any
sudden and great degradation and
disgrace (as of a courtier).
TiT (s) An embryo. 2
Pulp, pith, heart. 3 Area. 4 The
middle. 5 Meaning. (> The in-
terior or inside ; e. g. the womb,
the belly.
^^^ -^r -w:^ -^^^ a.
Causing conception, fecundatory.
T^^r^ s The uterus.
ipf^f^cT a. That has drop-
ped the womb. 2 fig. Frighten-
ed out of one's wits.
W?T?""^ n. s Conception.
JI^t^r^H n. Motion of the
foetus in uterus.
WeJlT Destruction of the
foetus in the womb. Hence fig.
Utter extermination. 2 m. f.
Culling or picking out. 3 The
bursting of a bomb. 4 Used as a.
Loaded with bullets,nails, spikes,
&c. — a shot or a cannon, ii^
WT^ irlo?T therefore will ex-
press Bomb, shell, shrapnell, &c.,
and 3T» flT'^f Gun for bombs,
also Jlo /. Alone, both as
Bomb and as a bomb-mortar.
rjifsJrqT/. (s) A sign indi-
cative of uterine conception.
'McTr^ (s) A man-servant
or maid'Servant ; the offspring
of one's female slave,
JJifrK 71. s The orifice of the
uterus.
wVlT'^ 72. (s) Conceiving.
iTif=lltr/. s Navel-string.
^ifqitcT (s) One learned
from the womb. App. to au
egregious ignoramus.
^^^T^^ n. Miscarriage.
JTlfqtq-Dj jj^ s Gestation of
the fa?tus in the uterus.
m^\^^{f. (s) Pain suffered
by the foetus whilst in the
womb.
W^oTf f. A pregnant female.
W%^ (s) Dwelling in the
womb; i. e. imdergoing forma-
tion and being in the \Yomb.
^^^\m or ^^TR^f r a. That
inhabits the \Tomb.
^^^^^\ f. The travail of a
woman under delivery or preg-
nancy.
wt^S'^ n. The membrane
that envelopes the foetus; after-
birth.
W^TJ s An instrument for
extracting a dead foetus.
^^^^^\ f. (s) The uterus
or womb.
W^ a.(s) Bold from birth ;
of native valour.
m'^^l^ or n^^l^ Abortion.
JJlt^jt^a. Born to riches
and honours. App. usually to a
purse-proud person. [tion.
^if^iT^/. Uterine concep-
W§#t a. Of which the warp
is cotton and the woof silk— a
web.
Ijif^ n. s Line from the
centre. App. by astronomers
to a line drawn from the centre
of the earth. 2 Any Hue passing
through the centre of.
^^l^ (s) Situated in the
womb. 2 Internal.
TlfeR 71. The womb.
T\m\^\ a. Wise from the
womb.
^^ A rite amon^xst Gu-
jan'ithi \\omen niul girls, preg-
nant and hoi)oful of pregnancy,
in propitiation of Devi.
m\^ a. (s) Blind from the
womb.
'Wf'-Tf'T ??. Impregnation of
womb. 2 A ceremony performed
after the n])j)earance of the
menstrnal du\ for the ^mrifica-
tion of the wonil) and faeihtation
of ^conception. ^ [nant female.
ijirrr or J]^r?Trr_/. a preg-
Wfn The innermost apart-
ment of a temple; sauctnary.
1^r4 (s) Implied meaning.
niTR^r /. The chain of
events ajipointed for a beinij
whilst yet ftrtns in utero.
^RT"^ /. A pregnant female.
r-f
^r^TcT p, s Comprehended,
implied.
W /. Area. 2 Girth (of
timber, &c.) 3 The middle.
^^ (s) Pride, arrogance.
^^^]'^^ n. s Liberation from
])ride.
^^?"cr a. s Of offended j)ride.
^"^5" a. (.s) Proud, haughty.
^^\\'r^ f. (s Proud speech.)
pop. Vn.\, ^ j-,,^,^^ f^^^l^_
^^^f rr or W^K'^lf. A i)reg-
l^f f. s Censure.
l-^fT^ n. Complaint against.
V. ^fir, ^^. 2 Petition or sup-
plication (as to an idol), v. WI-
^. ^X.
'^f^ a. 8 Censurable.
^^ f. The hole made at
marbles, i;^^ ^t^, "Src
TT^^^^ s A dewlap,
^'^r^r The curling extremi
tv nf a moustache,
^^^r Clamour; a hubbub.
^^^'^ s I^ilargement of the
j,'l(uids of the neck.
^^^\ f. A temporary sack
made by running stitches along a
Bftl^l' or other cloth, aud
gathering it up.
124
^^^^ f. Clamour. 2 Con-
fused chatter. 3 m. The viscous
matter obtained from certain
]dants. 4 Blubber.
JT^c^°T V. i. To become
boggy, marshy.
JI?57yc7fj A loud clamour.
iTc^iT^r /. A bog: marshi-
ness.
Jlc^JTc^r^ a. Squashy, mashy
— as over-ripened fruits : soft
and yielding — as blubber, slime,
&c. '
iJc^^'^cJ s Moustaches bunch-
ing over the cheeks.
^^^^ 8 Seizing by the
throat. V. ^X. 2 Quinsy.
^'^^ n. A boil or a tumor.
^^^ ad. (a) Astray; in the
state of missing. 'J (Jlf^rT s)
Tlirovvn aside ; east off as use-
less.
iTc^^, iJc^cTH/. (a) Confused
intermixture (as of ])apers,
books, &c.) 2 Ruin (as of busi-
ness) : mess. 3 At cards. Shuf-
fling. I'. ^^.
^^^ a. Disordered. 2 Dis-
orderly or confounding.
^c^y^^g" n. (s) a wasting le-
prosy.
ri^IWr a. Careless, heedless.
^W4\ In architecture. The
gentle curve in which the edges
(of steps, chairs, &e.) fire mould-
ed off : a ])rojecture, cornice, so
moulded. 2 fig. A well laid
and rounded road or pavement.
JI^:=^^^ a. Movdded off into
the form of Jl^?}T.
^1^=5^/. Walking upon the
hands with the feet in the air. v.
^T, ^I*, ^T^. [|>ii>?-
fl^^ 71. s Melting. 2 Drop-
T^^^ a. s Soluble, fusible.
^^7P^^ or ri^^^rs^ V. i. To
be mislaid— a thing ; to be lost.
^i==^7Zr or -^f?r Bewilder-
ment ; ])uzzled state (of persons,
animals, things).
n^^^ n. c A ship.
11?^^^ /. Clamour. 2 Con-
fusion.
in"
lT?^sr^ot r. i. To be in wild
alarm and uproar ; to be missing ;
to be^])erplexed. [sion.
Ij^^^c^r Clamour. 2 Confu-
JTco^^IT Vehement voci-
f'^ratjon. [Confused.
Jlc^^qr a. Clamorous. 2
JT?5"^r Hubbub or uproar;
clamour.
JTc^R#, TT^iT-jJ or "^F /.
(n) The extremity of a mous-
tache curling over the cheek.
^^^W.S^ a. s A phrase ex-
l)ressing Close fellowship, crony-
si tip.
^\^^ p. (s) Fallen, cast. 2
Melted. 3 fig. Sunken, impaired.
In com p. 3(%rl %^.
JTR^^cTf 3" See W''^^'^:.
^i5^cTq^ n. A t'.M'm for an
infirm, decayed man.
nf^cPTr^ n. A term for a
worn-out man: also for a decayed
^:^^™- [fdthy.
^c?JR or -^ a. (a) Dirty,
^^^i^ See 1%!?.
n^^ or JT^r^/. (p) A pel-
let-bow. 2 m. i> A roaring sheet
of fire. 3/. n. The })eiidulous
member like a teat under the
throat of a goat.
lyF^^^^r A stone or ball for
the pellet-bow. r ^t 9 \
■^ ^ L^ora, &c.)
W^ A case (as of a pillow,
^^^f a. Gross, heavy — a
bull: big, brutal; an iguorant
fellow.
^^\ (p) Corn. 2 The money-
pit (ill the shop) of shroffs and
dealers.
'Te^r /. (h) a lane or alley.
TlEirf^f /. (11 & p) A
comprehensive term for lanes,
alleys, courts, rows.
'7rt+<r A corn-ch;indler.
^^\Z^ See ^^^12:^.
^^ /. The grasp (as of a
Ijird'stalonSjOf the fingers, &c.) 2
The embrace of the arms. 3 The
critical ])()iiit ; the time and tide:
w^
tlT^-sf ^T;T'^fT. 4 Leisure. 5
Mercantile character.
r
T^C (h) a singer.
1^^ /. (Imit.; Clamour :
confused chatter.
Jl^n^r Clamour, hubbul). 2
fig. Notoriety ; blabbing far anil
wide.
^^f 72, A mason.
^^^ n. Grass. 2 By way of
eminence. Lucerne.
T^cf^r^ /. A cess for per-
mission to cut grass. 2 Hire of
grass-cutting. Qil-g^
l^cRJF^f /. Grass and suc-h
^^cT^F^r a. A grass-cutter.
Used of au inexpert barber, an
awkward soldier, an inexpert
workman gen. : also of the im-
plement and weapon of such
persons.
f ^cT^^Tr /. Piice of pastur-
ing on grass-grounds.
n^cTRF 3-J A Jack of straw
or Gaffer long-legs.
Jl^crrS" a. c Producing grass
luxuriantly — a soil : abounding
with grass — a place.
JT^cTfSOT V. i. To become
covered with grass — a field. 2 To
be choked with grass and weeds
— corn growing.
IfrTF ^rcr Lemon-grass.
m^\ a. See ri^cT^F^F.
JI^??TF'tliTF# A contemptuous
term corresponding to Some
fellow ; some obscure creature.
Used also of awkward and blun-
dering persons. [or vocalist.
^^^ (h) a public singer
Jjf^ or -^ See m^<l
^F^^TF a. Found or picked
up. 2 Picked up ; — used of a
woman or man kept without
wedlock ; a foundling.
n^^% /. A case, cover (of
a sword, shield, drum, &c.)
If^ot V. i. To be found. 2
To be seizable.
T^^FT ad. Advantageously
as respects sviitableness of time :
125
^^^Z A contemptuous term
for 3T^o3^.
m^^ f. A female of the
f[^'S\ caste. 2 Weaver bird.
3 A small creature resembling
a spider.
^^Ts^[^\, ir^^^r^ Hip quar-
ter inhabited by the cowherd-
caste.
^^srr A caste or an indivi-
dual of it. They are herdsmen.
n^F A wild ox. 2 The cloth-
ball with which ink is dabbed
and s])read over the stamp when
about to be impressed.
JJ^l^r/. ThehoinofiT^.
4^T^a. (ii) Rustic, clownish.
mm 711. k.f. See m\l\.
mi^ 71. The bag in which
a ^nS3T keeps his idol and
the articles he is to use.
iJ^rS'^^fcS" n. A comprehen-
sive term for one's kit.
Jl^F^^r a. That carries the
31^153 of, or that has a JI^T^.
m\^ m. 71. (s) An air-hole;
a loop-hole; a little and round
window ; a bull's eye. 2 A kind of
monkey.
W /. A smith's pincers.
^■^^ n. (s) Any produce of
the cow, — milk, butter, &c. a.
Relating to the cow ; vaccine.
W'K'^\ (I Wheat-coloured. 2
Spotted like wheat — snakes, cat-
tle. 3 Suitable for wheat — a soil.
T\~-^^\ or T|Sg-f^r a. Suitable
for wheat : prepared for sowing
wheat — a soil.
n'^\^ f. I'he rack for fodder.
App. also to the bar which lies
across the stall of the animal,
and, together with the wall, forms
the rack.
WF?: See A'^K-
IT^FS-/. Wheat-land.
^^qTF (I,. Of respectability,
suitable for wheaten cakes ; — used
of a tfi'^uTi or guest. Opp, to
^^^/. (p) Rounds or a pa-
trol ; going the rounds. 2 n. c
An intercoUuuaiation.
W^^^ A person going the
rounds.
mtn'^ 71. wM[i\ f. (p) A
tradesman's rounds; commercial
traveling. ^ ^^,^j^^_
JJ^ct'Tr'T A commercial Ira-
mm See ^^^.
^rsi^ See ^^^.
TcT^a. (s)Difficult of passage
or access — a road, river, &c. :
difficult of comprehension — a
science, &c.
^W^^T^ a. Of profound
course or way. Hidden vt'ay;
myste^-ious procedure. ^,,;^^^^^^^
n^'TJ'F^ a. Of profound
^r^r or JlPc^F (h) Trinkets,
jewels. [jfT^.
mi'^ or W\^^Z See under
^fc^^T n. The dregs of the
infusion called gi^'^T.
^^WT\ a. Deep, clear, intense
— a colour. 2 Close, dense —
water, crops, wood, shade.
JlfC^R" The heaving and
swelling (of some affection).
nr^^^'^r V. i. To be overcome
by some vehement emotion (of
joy, grief, &c.)
TfT/. A goldsmith's pincers.
Tfr^ a. s Mild, meek.
W^ (s) Wheat. n -u
^^l c A large wave, a
IF^ A fish-hook. 2 A drag-
hook. 3 The liook on which
devotees susjiend themselves by
the back. 4 The hangman's
hook. 5 /. A constant running
or flow (as of rheum from the
eyes, of pus from a sore) : a re-
gular and consecutive falling (as
of fruits, &c. in a high wind.) G
f. The hole at games of marbles.
^^^F a. Leaky.
^M^ 71. See n^J.
JT^T^T acL Imit. of the sound
in eager eating or drinking.
iTSS-ir^EJT^r a. A term for a
fellow ever ready to gulp down
bonnes bouches or fine morsels,
but backward at work ; a pud-
ding-eater or drone.
n^ni
126
nnfi"
'RTTS'f ad. With piteous
weepiiijz; — beseeching, &c. v.
31 o 3nw7T. [ousness.
J]^T]rS[Z Overflowinji; copi-
Jj^TJI^fcT ,,. Brimful. 2 Un-
savory— a dish. 3 Vague or uii-
ineaiiiiig.
ITSJT n. f. p A dewlap. 2
The teat-iike process under the
lu'ik of a goat, li A tumor on the
throat.
13-iT[fr/. p A dewlap.
JRTTr See ^^^?". 2 A pp.
lig. to a worrying beggar, a dun,
a taskmaster; to one who (by
want of jiuiictnahty, by unfaith-
fuhiess) stops, detains: also to
a ch)g or to a force, &c. :
7\a^\Z\ f. The throat. 2 A
neckl)eil of a bullock.
JT3-^fr or -^'rf r/. Tlie back
of the neck. v. fiK^.
^l^ST^^\ f. Seizing by the
neck. 2 tig. Stopping, keeping
in suspense. 3 Importunate be-
seeching. V. y^K, ^^'o5, ^'C,
IT^^Jf /*. nS^qr /. ;j/. In-
tiammatiou of the nlmonds of the
throat. V. ■^*f, V, «FJT, 'It. 2
The fauces or gullet, v. »T^,
n^l f. A funnel.
la^^t V. i To drop; to be
disengaged or detached from and
fall — as fruit, flowers, j)lasterfrom
a wall. 2 To leap..'i To let through.
4 To run, to emit — a sore. 6 'I'o
waste away. () To full away : to
vanisli, cease. 7 To be cast or
rejected : ^[JT ^HIiTl il'sr %T^,
o3T^. N To decrease, decline.
!' To fail — courage, hope. 10
To fain, falter — a person. 1 1 To
be omitted — a matter in a narra-
tion. 12 To suffer seminal emis-
sion, l.'i To l)e torn, worn — a
book. 14 To melt — a metal, &c.
IS'cT a. Dropped, omitted —
letters, word, &c.
^S"rTr f. A pitcher of water,
having a hole at the bottom,
fixed during the hot weather
over an idol : a vessel through
which water is filtrated. 2 An
oozing. 3 A rapid falling down
— of fruit. 4 The loop in which
bales, &c. are suspended to be
weighed.
^^W n. A leak.
^^^ a. Wild and wilful.
^SJT^ ad. Tiiihtly. v. ^l^,
^^o3, tj^. 2 With cramming.
^(ZftZ^ V. c. To complicate ;
to entangle, lit. fig. 2 To mis-
])laee, lose.
J\a^'^Z\, JTS'T^Rrr Entangle-
uunit ; perplexed state.
iIo3"qTr^ A noose for the
neck ; a strangling noose, v. %
^^^'^ Foretie of a 'ir'Ur.
2 The neck tie of cattle fasteuing
them to the ^T^'Sf.
TTS3"^''Tr 71. Filtered water.
T\^^^ J\ m. A necklace con-
sistiu"- of from four to eight
strings : a single string : a sin-
gle bead.
iTo3"HU f. A necklace of glass
and golden beads and the coin
5^^; [of the tonsils.
ijS'^Z'r n. ])l. InHammalion
i\aS'^^ 11. A ludicrous term
for the throat.
^^r The throat, the fore-
part of the neck and the ])as-
sages within. 2 In singing. The
voice. A The neck of a pitcher,
bottle, &c.
^^^Z{ f. c Entanglement. 2
fig. Kntangled state.
^^\^ n. A boil.
iTS-fqj See 1^1^.
n«5^f a. Of a powerful voice;
capable of ascending high into
the treble. /. Sharpness (of
voice) ; the treble.
^S^nr a. Fallen, cast, shed. 2
Of which the leaves arc fallen —
a tree : torn or impaired — a
book. 3 Dropped, oozed — a
licpior.
^o^^ p. Dropped, fallen, &c.
n^ ?^ A boil.
JTS^fT^ or -'^^r, ^^t^ a.
( Throat-cutter j Treacherous,
)iertidious.
•\
n^TT a. App. to a worry-
ing beggar, a dun, &c. ; to a
calumnious fellow ; to an imper-
ative duty.
*^ "^ '
^a^%\T f. Wearisome and
fruitless calling, reproving, in-
structmg, &c. [voice— a singer.
^T^^r^ c. Having a good
•\
T[^'^Z a. Thick and strong
about the neck — a beast. 2 fig.
Sturdy and overbearing — a
))erson.
^^cir[fr,?rs-?:iq"^r/. a form
of the ^fJI^ or other cloth
as a mantle.
^s:j,\Z^ V. c. To disorder,
confuse. 2 To lose, misplace. 3
To reduce, waste.
^oSK\Z\ or -5r Disorder (of
articles, affairs). 2 A distressful
condition, a plight. 3 Any esta-
blishment viewed as large, un-
wieldy, &c.
fir hid. See ^^r. r . , „ .
[A iull.ibv.
^\t f. A cow. 2 aUo Jir^T/.
^3rc^r /: Poet. a term of
endearment for a cow.
113^^ ;i. ( jain. 2 Unlaboured
for and unlooked for gain; hid-
den treasure found, v. '^\^^,
SffTJi.
m^^ or ^^^ A mass of
dough baked on embers, v.
^raT P Embers.
v.
^^'^ V. i. To bawl, roar ; to
call out loudly. [eonfounded.
^m^ V. i.Tohe frightened,
^r^ a. White with a red-
dish tint. A colour of horses.
m^^^ V. i. To set upon
with clamour and violence.
TPTfS'r /. c (Usually ^Rf^F)
A complaint against.
Jllfir rfJT ^l'=18"f/. ^^ c^m
(A piH-ase)To get into the clouds ;
to have one's wits a wool ga-
thering.
nmt
127
TT^
^fir R The tutelar deity of
a village and of its cattle.
mwn^ or ^\^^\ f. Teasing,
tormenting.
IfsT'T V. c. To worry. 2 To
press. V. i. To undergo annoying
or wearying influences or pressure.
W^^ V. i. To sound, roar —
thunder, drums, &c. 2 To ring,
resound. 3 fig. To become no-
torious.
Tl^ir n. A carrot.
irr^Tqrr^tr or -^m a wise-
acre, a jackanapes.
^r^g"^ /. A thin, soft hoof
(es|). of tlie horse).
mW^ a. Carrot-like, reddish
and soft — used of hoofs.
JJRR^ V. c. To make to
sound, roar. 2 To ])roclaira
aloud. 3 To perform grandly,
famously: fl^^T^ aTIsjf^W
To make one's sword ring again.
ir^rr (h) The dried heads of
the hemp-plant. 2 also Jif^IWI
See Jlt^r.
TTsfF/. A kind of quail, m.
(a) A hero ; a warrior.
rirtR^ (P) A hero. Used in
admiration of a horse.
IFsT^^ c. (h) a smoker of
3Tt5}T.
^firr The nettino^ into which
mangoes are cast when gathered
by the hook and net.
1^3^/. A knot : a cuil, snarl.
2 A knot in wood. 3 A joint. 4
The early foetus. 5 Encounter-
ing, coming upon, meeting. 6
l?usiness or concern with. v.
(you, &c.) have to do with me.
7 A blind tumor. 8 Concurrence
(as of events with jjrediction) :
synchronism of events. 9 The
purse : Pr. ^rmuT ^<1^ H
^T*T JTtfft ^%^ ^T •^IT. 10
pi. The corrugations of the fore-
head in frowning. 1 1 Consistency
or connection (of speech, &c.)':
7Q\^ MJV^ tl'lRDTi ^ 5^^' tr-
^of ^t^ flT» ^I's'lf, 12 Suit-
ableness of circumstances : ^^-
W^ ^^^ fl^l Jitff xj-twi -^^\
i,i^. 13 The knot or hard-
ness about the navel. 14 fig. Tie,
bond, engagement. fijurse.
JTfJ'^r a. Of one's own
^Sf\ f. A bundle.
TrJ^y. Interweavino- (as of
a bamboo. floor-frame); the cross-
biuding of a roof, &c. ( Both the
act and the work accom])lished).
mjot y. c. To knot. 2 To
secure with a knot. 3 To pop
upon ; to intercept unawares :
^•Sf "^T^ ^'^^^ %^^ 3lt^^. 4
fig. To bind, reduce under sub-
jection : "^T ^T-T^I#^I ^^TTI^'^
6 To accomplish (a journey, &c.)
nfjsr, ^\E\^ a. Knotty. 2
fig. Musculous, brawny.
iirstorCcT or -RrffcT n.
Creatt.
^FJr^ p. Knotted, secured
by a knot — a necklace or
wreath. r, i,
•\ fv ,v Lbnndle.
^f^r^r or -Sff f. A small
^\E\^ or -^ n. A bundle. 2
fig. A stock, property, wealth.
^r^ f. The posteriors. 2
The anus. 3 fig. The lower
side ; the back or bottom (of a
tiling gen.)
Ti^JTiTr3r c. A term for an
inexpert, silly fellow.
^r^rqr ;«. irr^a n. a small
earthen pot.
JTis-ijTErr m. JTr^-ir:?^ /. a
bump with the knee upon a per-
son's posteriors, v. ^, «i^,
TTr^5^rR'r /. Abject servility.
m^JVI f, n. Humblino- (ol
gxuis, &c.) 2 Rumbling in the
belly. 3 fig. Painful anxiety.
^^ V. c. (h) To bury.
^r?^ (Port.) An infantry-
soldier ; a guardsman.
l\\Z^^ a. Having- wealth
or property ; rich ; icell to do.
^\'S^^ m. 71, c The common
earthworm.
^r^r (hj a sugarcane.
^FTf A common load-cart.
2 The circumference of a wheel.
3 or ■^'JTTT^T JTT^T The
business and bustle of active
life ; worldly affairs. [ment.
nr^l^rr^r Worldly estabUsh-
^•^r (h) a cart with a frame
or box ; a carriage. 2 The roller
(of a draw-well). 3 The frame
(of a tambourine, &c.)
JTif'F'iir^t ^ri" n. a term
for the estate, office, &c. which
constitutes one's livelihood.
^\2\^ ^F^ n. A term for
one who rolls two ways, esjie-
cially for a master who, in which-
ever way his servant acts, finds
ground for censure. ^^^^^^^ ^^
^\t\^ p. Buried, set — a post,
TF^F^ (a) The famous bow
of^^T^cT. [coach-man.
^F3"F^F^ (H) A cart-man or
^F^«. Catamite. 2 Luckless.
3 Coward.
^\'^^ n. See ^\^^^.
iTF3-3-cFFr A ford for carts.
Tf^^n A cart-man.
irrl-^m^- n. a kind of ^^\^,
^\'S^]Z f. A cart-road.
^^^"^1 a. That buries.
nFSJTF a. A pathic. nd. Upon
the buttocks — moving, &c.
iFf^JTFc^F W\^^\ A term for
one over head and ears in bu-
siness.
TFT a. (s) Sound — sleep :
thick — darkness : gross — igno-
rance : dense — a forest. 2 Firm,
stout. 3 Fast, tight.
TFSTJTS" a. Heavy — sleep.
TrS"^ m. f. n. An ass. 2 A
whitish insect foimd on dung-
hills.
iFrg"^ or JFF^ff^T^ A term
for any rude block or rough
stone. ■ [blockhead.
IFFT^F^F ^ITF^F A term Ibr a
JFrS"ft /. A she-ass.
m^\a. (11) Thick— liquids. 2
Sturdy — the body, &c. 3 Bold
valiant : iTlf^^# ?frg JITS' ||
^t=% HKlnt^l^l^n. 4 Profi-
cient, smart : pre-eminent for
nr^
128
TT^ir
finalities; as 3IT^T TT?I^-
^l^ ?2, Sin""in2; or sonr;^. 2 fig;.
A childish uhininsr alU'r; any
tedious strain, v. 3IT, ^T^'^'^,
3 i\<^. A business, fiffair: ;ui event.
V. c. To sinu:. - To sint^ as a
poet ; to exalt.
JlPt^^rr^ot „_ (jj) Y^cal and
instrumental music.
^F'^ ;/. A common term for
the four pieces composing the
frame of a bed-stead, &c. r|)fr.
in" n. (s) A limb or luem-
^\^^^ Faintness allectiiio
the limbs.
W^^ V. c. To interweave.
^i^r/, (s) Simple prose. 2
Idle chat. v. ^fiT, '^Z.
lIRmr^r Jumbledness; cn-
tanjilement. ^ ^ [-,,i,l_
irS"^ i\ i. To become tur-
ir^flot r. c. To render tur-
bid. 2 fig. To disconi])o.se.
1RT (ii) A huge sea-fish.
irff /. A cushion. 2 The
seat of sonic eminent, personage :
Monopoly. -1 Ten (piires of
pnper.
mm %?5-Fr /. The treasure;
of the throne or state.
TTd cf^r-^S; /. A -eneral
name for the shop* of eorn-
chandlers ami oilier I" tty
•lealers.
Tf'-J/. A l)lind (nmor;— as
from a bite. - \ gadtly.
Tf'"-!^ )/. s S()ML% .<in;:iiiL;-.
Wi^^ wSr „. s Marri;i-e on
the mutual agreement of tlic
])arties.
ir'-^r A druuejist.
[flv.
WA\^ or ^m^ f. A gad-
Tf'T 71. s SitiL;in;^ or song.
TfTT^, ^m^.-,.(A) Inadver-
tent. 2 Dull, stMi)i.l. .'5 Idle.
in^r/. T/and olvvhieh Uw
owner is dead or long absent.
JTf^§r /: IF^T ;,. A patch
appikd to covtr up a hole.
T]\m^^ V. c. To mislay. 2 To
junihle.
^\^]^ n. m. Refuse, dregs. 2
A mass of old, torn, useless arti-
cles. 'A Dry blades of sugarcanes.
JimXaHW^ A torn or worm-
eaten book. 2 A book composed
of sheets from various books ;
a heap of waste papers ; a serap-
h'ok. [slovenly look.
JTI^f^JSrr /. Idiotic and
Tr^f^f or -^^r a. Slovenly,
careless.
^WA ibctus (esp. of a beast).
^\^Z^, ^fiT^^ y. I To drop
the womb.
m^^^ a. Big with yotmg —
app. to animals generally, but
not to the mare.
^m^ V. i. To be big with
voniig — cow, reptile, &c.
nnr ^i^^^t See jtmj^^.
^f"*Tr The heart, core, pith. 2
The fruit-receptacle (of the
Palm or Plantain) whilst yet nn-
evolved. ."> The bnsh (of a I'alm).
4 A cloth worn under the turban.
mm^: or -^r The inmost di-
vision of a temple ; the sanc-
ti^>'".v- [ness.
TPTR 77. s (iravity, serious-
m\ a. w. <^^ ^rW n.f.)
That 2:00s. In conip. 'aTT^TS;:-
3TT?ft, *TTS^T*lT. [,„an.
^R /■. A COW. 2 fig. A soft
m^^ (11) A singer.
^r^Til'^^r or -^r a. Basliful,
slice jiish.
m^'^l f. (s) A sacred verse
from the Vedas to be recited
mcntallv.
^r^T^JT '<i. (p) Conical, taper.
'Tf^'T n. (s) Singing.
^r^n*T n. An open pasture-
ground. 2 Uncullivaljle land.
JTf^Tf^rq'f (id. In a ])itcous
and whining inanner — sup-
Ijlieatino;. v. ^^.
[booby
ITP-Tf^r n\Kl\ An ingratc
^iK/: A (lint. 2 A liailstono.
• < .V lena fur gems and jewels,
in enumerating the things which
run away with money\ 4 A pit.
5 fig. The belly, a. Very cold —
water, &c. 2 Used enhancingly
with H^^T; as f^x:gT;iK
Dark green. Used also with
^^ ; as T^^JTI^ Intensely cold.
^\U\\Z\ A flint-stone.
^\TZ a. Coldish.
^f^^J'^T V. i. To be frozen or
much affected with cold. 2 To
be benumbed. 3 To become hard
— a fiuit without ripening, a
boil without suppurating.
lTrr3T iixtreme coldness.
m<^ ad. (a) As buried, sun-
ken ; as lost.
^R^FA foot-soldier. JTTT^ri/.
Insurrectionary tumult amongst
sneh soldiers : uproar : ruin, da-
TR^ a. p See ^KJ.
JTlTtfot r. i. To be spoiled
by hail. 2 To be cold. 3 To be
approaching to puljnness and
ripeness.
^irr A dilute mixture (of
earth, lime, &c. w ith water) ; to
be used as nnn-tar. 2 fig. Any
thick mess of solid and liquitl
food.
ffmof, iTf^lot n. Complaint
against, v. mx, ^R, "T. 2
Sup])lieation (as to an idol), v.
ir^^" ?j. A charm against
venom.
Jir^^r, WAZ\ Extreme cold-
ness (of weather, air, water).
^r^^r A snake-charmer : a
jnirtrler. [nery.
rjl^^ n. J ago ling. 2 Cliica-
^ITIsrr a. Of the colour of
cat's eyes — eyes.
^rcT A cheek.
^U^^^{ See ^^^^\.
T]]^!]'^-^ A pinch and pull
on the cheek, v. g, T;^^, 'Stj^.
JirrTrfJ ;/. j\ specific inflam-
mation of the ])arotid glands,
mumps.
^[^'^Z II. The hollow of the
cheek. 2 A reviling term for the
check. .'5 The cavity forn\ed by
protrusion of the cheek.
TTt^qfT
129
fitorfit
Tfc^J^r See ^^'^.
Jjii'^' 4f (p) A kind of woollen
carpet.
JTrr'^'^^r^ ^3" a handsome
but good-for-nothinw fellow ; a
popinjay, butterfly, buck.
JirP^q^R n. (s) Abusing,
cursing.
rrrcfr f. Abuse.
TR", 'Tf^r yn. n. A village.
Applied to a city or a town. 2 A
measure of distance, varyiuj^ from
nine miles to four or five miles.
JTff^r^n: The villa-e-ac-
count drawn out : the account-
sheet.
W^K f. Abandoning the vil-
lage and taking up residence in
another : any other open form
of refusal to orders issued by
the Goverument-othcer.
'^\^^Z^ c. The village-pest.
JTi^r A villager. 2 r A
man of the Shiidra caste appoint-
ed m a VI lage to attend upcm
the villagt -idol. 3 The chief
officer of a village. 4 The manag-
ing Kunbi of a ^iTn^^^I^T in
another-village.
Ti^'^r f. The rule or the
business of a village.
li^W ". 'Hie village wall.
qiffS-^^'^ The hereditary
village-accountant.
n.'?^^ The village-expenses
(for charities, amusements, &c.)
irf^F^ 7?. The village esta-
blishments (of Police, &c.) 2
The vdlage-account.
nm^r ad. Per village.
iTf^^r ^J^ A term for the
Mahar or village-watchman.
TF^^*^ n. Feast given to a
village in all its castes and classes.
2 Feast given to all one's caste-
fellows of a village.
JTf^r^r The descriptive roll
of the village-lands. [lao-e
^m\ A ^cT^STK of a 'v1l-|
Ti^jf a. Produced in the
country. 2 Inhabiting a village ;
a peasant. 3 Rude.
17
^R"^r A caste. 2 An officer
of a village.
m^^, ni^fS' a. Vulgar.
^f^ 7i. A small village.
^t^'i ft A hamleteer.
^\^i m m. n. A hamlet.
^\^^ V. i. To be found by :
to be obtained. 2 To meet. 3 To
be caught by ; to fall into the
power of.
iji^^T^ n. The site of a vil-
lage (yet standing or ruined).
rifW^ c. (h) a blockhead.
TTR>fr /. The tutelar god-
dess of a village.
^# n. A hamlet. 2 A bu-
siness in another village.
qlfR^^cT ^J^ n. A mort^
gage or grant of land on the
part of the villagers, to liquidate
the public debt contracted by
the village for various occasional
expenses.
iTi'^ trtlrT n. Village-lands
lying fallow.
^r^f^ /. n. A general term
for villages or for a village.
^if^C /. The annual pro-
pitiation of the village demons
bv oblations. 2 The village com-
munity as assem.bled.
TR ^^fcT n. The cultivated
lands of a village.
m'k^ f. The village-gate.
iTi^rfr ^^^Tf. The rakings
of the village ; i. e. a scurvy
fellow, a scrub.
thorough scrub.
n"l=ffy; The pincers, tongs
(fo goldsmiths, &c.)
^f^r (a) a small sitting
cloth, used as ornamental cover-
ing over the saddle.
irrfT^PK n. ^^ To decamp
(esp. with something stolen).
^\K^, nrCt^ n. (H) A pawn.
7Tr?"RJ^^ n. The writing
passed between the parties in
acknowledgment of money re-
ceived in loan and of an article
received in pledge. 2 A mort-
gage-bond.
ijirCroRT ad. In pledge; by
, way of pledge.
^Frr=^r °^NR The busi-
ness of money-lending upon
pledges.
TrrS", irrrrs? a. Lost. 2
Blundering, forgetful.
^rCS-^T V. c. To lose, mislay.
^rCf /. A smith's pincers.
^55- Refuse; dross. 2 Mud.
/. Abuse. V. \.
T\\W^ n. A quantity taken to
be strained or sifted. 2 /. fig.
Distressed and harassed state :
overborne state : confused state.
3 Rejecting : contemned state.
^\■3^\^^ f. The cost of
straining.
^STcffr /. See the verb.
^\^^ V. c. To strain : to
sift. 2 To reject. 3 To shed
(tears, &c.) : to lay (eggs). 4
To omit (persons, things). 5 To
purify (metal articles by fire). 6
To press (oil-seeds, &c.) 7 With
'ST^^T'JT To faint, yield. 8 To
liquefy, melt. 9 To clean out
(a well, a tank), n. A sieve or
a strainer.
Tirs-^rsr/. Refuse, rubbish.
m^l f. Abuse. V. ^•
nrs'rf p. of ^5^°t which
see. 2 fig. Adept, arrant.
R^te /. Confused crowd-
edness (as of letters) : disorder
(of accounts). 2 A scribbled
piece, a. Scrawled. 3 Confused-
ly unintelligible — speech.
R^l^ n. A dense, a thicket.
2 Density (of a wood), fjl'f
a. ^* ad. Close together, dense.
TniT\\ f. A spirit shop.
MT^ry. A metal water-vessel,
used to hold holy water.
R^" or Rfl (t. Short and
thick.
Rl'^m or -"^r «6?.With nasal
sound : with a ringing sound.
frronTrir /. Nasal utterance,
&c.
fJFTPW V. i. To speak
nasally ; to be natftl^-utterance.
fitoTfit
130
nr^
2 To sing ; to fill the air uith a , pjj^fiy^fcT a. Swashy, mashy
%/(/ ringing — small nies, ev;c. i •' •'
\mm^ a. Nasal. 2 Indis-
tinct. 'A Singing — niosquitoes,&c.
pT'^rrT'^r? Buzzino- (of bees, ,,. ^^ r. r^^^
&c.) 2 Din: distW hum. 3 H^'T: or m^^^fTT (p) A case
soft :iiul yielding ; — as slime.
jfjT^rfr (p) Plaster.
iRl^^cT p, s Swallowed.
Popnlar murmurini?.
fTIuTiriaqf fi xiuit speaks
nasally.
r^T^JT or MT^TT^ n. A vulture.
PlT^r A machine for sejjarat-
ing the seeds of cotton.
m^\^\ A whirl. 2 A circuit.
V. •?, ^^X, I, HTi^T. 3 A round.
I', i, 'ST, ^TvT, or, inversely,
■^¥, -q^sr. 4 A trip thither and
back, o fig- Circumlocution, (i
lig. Perplexity, t'. tj^.
?^^r/-. Avvhirl.r.^R:,^-,?^,
g. 2 Giddiness, v. ^. 3 Shake
(in singing).
nFfJR^ V. i. To whirl.
To go round ; to be giddy.
TnTZ\ f, A circuit, v. ^^.
(V'^r /. A cotton press.
\i\T^ f. (p) A small and cir-
cular cushion.
fiTT^'^/'. Forming letters, &c.
\^'J'.^^ V. c. To form (letters
in learning to write) by drawing
a pen through the letters of the
copy.
HlTFT n. An eclipse.
Vm s A hill. 2 An order
among Gosavis. [penury.
fllK^^^ a. (p ) That is in
\^\V^\^\f. Distress, penury.
fjlpT^^'fr ad. Among the
hills and rocks.
F^TU 71. (p) A pawn.
Pl^r A water-demon. 2
A pp. to ^T^. 3 tig. Used of a
5;K'c/re-ZiAe child. 4 fig. A plague,
pest.
in^T^ /. Business; the
stir ( of buyers and sellers).
frpff^ c. A purchaser. 2 fig.
One that can appreciate merit.
3 n. Customers.
as of a pillou).
[^E^r (p) A complaint, v.
^x:, ^\i[, ^^, ^T, ^.
FTc^fcT or -^^r Used with ^-
JJJT'^I'ST when the father of the
bride takesmoney from the bride-
grnoni ; and opp. to ^T^lifJ
FlS^HTs'ffT, TT^JT^fcT a. Brim-
ful. 2 Unsavory, uashy.
nrsjoj ^,, c. To swallow. 2
fig. To absorb. 3 To overspread ;
• — as clouds. 4 To embezzle. 5 To
suppress (anger, &c.) 6 To put
up with (an injury, &c.)
n. (s) Song, or singing
^ ^""=* [sacred poems.
^FcTr^. (s) A name app. to
^fcT /. s A form of the
Arya metre.
^ -'•4 A vulture.
IR" (p) An affix to nouns
implying an agent ; as ^f^'^l-
HK Fulp, pith.
^TT^r'^ s A god. a. (s) Divine.
fft^'R or m¥[\ ^\^\f. The
Divine {i. e. the Sanskrit) lan-
guage.
mf\, mi^- fj f. A place
of general resort for the disbur-
dening of nature.
^^ (I. (p) Jfeavy, stupid
(as under into.xication, sleep,
&c.) ; absorbed (in any study,
&c.)
^m\ f. Stupor (of intoxica-
tiim, sleep, &:c.)
^n°T r. i. To be heavy and
senseless. 2 To buzz. '^ fig. To
hum a tune. 4 To be besotted.
') To slip off.
mi'h V. c. To stupefy, &c.
JJTRot ,.^ i^ To whiz;— as a
stone slung. 2 fig. To defraud
and abscond. 3 To be under the
stnpor of spirits or drugs.
5^fn Buzzing. 2 The whiz
of a slung stone. 3 Bamboozling
and absconding, v. %, *TT^-
W^^ V. i. To be ^n from
drugs, &c. 2 To hum.
^TF f. Heaviness or stupor.
-5'5^ A fragrant gum —
Bdellium. 2 A tree or gum.
J'^^ /. Hiccough.
nW A dint struck in a top.
2 A. blow with the fore finger.
5^S" (s) A cluster. 2 A neck-
lace ; an assemblage.
J^ifr /. A blow with the
fore ])art of the fist.
5^ f. A small plant, bear-
ing a red and black berry. 2 The
berry or seed.
^sfn^ f. 71. Whispering.
•i
^SpTsIuj y. j. To whis|)er.
n3Ti[[? /. A secret matter.
n^ A native of Gujarat, (p)
A mere subsistence.
Hsl^'H" V. i. (h) To pass on —
time. 2 To pass away — riches,
&c. ; fig. to die. 3 To happen un-
to— a calamitous event. i\ c. To
commit unto ; to settle (as in a
post).
J5l^(tJr /. (p) A livelihood,
esp. a l)are or scanty one.
J'sffFT^^ V. c. To pass or
spend ; to make to roll on (one's
days, condition).
^^TRcT /. (p) Medium (of
person). 2 Legal presence; for-
mal witnessing.
5^rTcTr c. A formal witness.
^^rTr(H) SeeJ^^.
^^(^^ /: (p) Defcci, lack :
^ ^T^^ *IK% nlf'S^ 3^9 TT-
fs*^ ^Tff. 2 Error : '^T ft-
imjrf v^o m^^ ^^ ■^]i1. 3
A failing (in duty). 4 Profit (as
in l)usiness) : also with covert
implication, illicit profit.
^^r /. A female calf: a heifer.
J^^^r or 5^f^ /. The
bobbing up and down (of a
drowning person). 2 A low eruc-
tation.
y^'^r
131
m^
^T^r/. A ball given by de-
votees which, if hehl in tlie
mouth, is to accomplish some-
thing wonderful. 2 A pill. 3
A gulp.
^5^r a. Short, stumpy.
^JiTSfof y, I To hesitate. 2
To dawdle. 3 To fluctuate.
jfi^ s See 5J^r.
^IH^rfrrcT s Casting of lots.
Tffrarr, %?rST a. Globular.
^z\^\, 5Jr^r/. A clot. 2
A ball. 3 A blind tumour. 4 A
lump of hardened faeces. 5 A
hard part (in a boil, &c.)
^^ s Raw sugar.
^^ a. Arch, sly.
^^^^ ad. Imit. of the sound
emitted by a bubble bul)ble.
IT^JT^^ V, i. To make the
uoise ir^ ! ir^ ! 2 To erumble
in the belly.
Tf^Ji:gT f. A humble smoking
ap])aratus. [port.
5^r The knee. 2 fig. Sup-
ij^fr /. (h) a sort of
breeches. 2 Inflammation at the
knee.
iT:?q'Jl"K Beating with the
knees upon a person's poste-
riors. V. ^, ^^.
^^■^^r /. A cork.
iJ^lSee^^f^yr.
^^o^r /. -oS" n. A roll, bundle.
^^ A roundish stone. 2
fig. A shrewd fellow : a knave.
3 A ball of thread, &c. 4 A
squared stone.
Ij^r^-^ /. A preparation of
tobacco for smoking. 2 fig. A
plight, mess.
^^[55^ V. c. Sf i. To roll
up. 2 To gather together. 3 To
shut up (a work). 4 To confute.
5 To subdue and seize (a coun-
try, &c.) V. i. To die.
iJ^r^T A bundle, a roll.
JfTrs^T /. Tf^rs- „. A bundle,
a roll.
^^T /. (H) A button. 2 cA
bundle (of grass). 3 A ball (of
tliread, &c.) |
JST f. A pole erected on the
new year's day before the house-
door. V. ^HT^. I
J^rqr^^r The festival oijfi\'\
^5" n. The inhabitants of a
village in precipitate fiight (from
the enemy), v. ^H', x^^. 2
The body of peasantry of one
village on their way to assist at
the reaping of the crops of
another village. 3 A sheaf of
unthrashed corn. 4 A riddle, v.
js^n^r frr^^r The day follow-
ing the cutting of the crop.
^ (s) A quality or proper-
ty— of matter or mind ; a power,
faculty, virtue ; an inherent pro-
perty. 2 A property of created
things. 3 Virtue, freedom from
fault. 4 Benefit, o Effect. 6
Tlie product in multiplication. 7
A rope. 8 A bowstring. 9 In
comp. Multiplied by, fold; as
STSirtn" eightfold.^ 10 Abate-
ment (of a disease). 11 In
arithmetic. Multiplier. 12 In
geometry. The chord of an arc.
W^^ The multiplier, a. That
reckons.
ij'^^STr/. Reciting the attri-
butes and perfections of God or
a god; or the virtues, &c'. of
gen.
JPI^ or^'^^R^ a. Effica-
cious. 2 Endowed, gifted — a
child.
m^\^ The multiplier.
J\m-^K a. Well laden with
virtues and excellencies.
^WT /. Buzzing. 2 Sup-
pressed speaking or reading. 3
Whispering among the people ;
suppressed talk about.
mwm V. i. To hum. 2 To
murmur. 3 To speak nasally.
mm\ The fleshy root of the
septum of the nose.
J^^TCT n. (s) Appreciating
the merits of.
n'^^Tl^^ a. That appreciates
the merits of.
^^"n V. c. To multiply. 2
To re-peruse and recite (a lesson)
in order to conmiit to memory.
mi^Ti a. (8) Counted.
^^^^^^ n. s An adjective.
iJ'^^R a. (s) Endowed with
qualities or excellencies.
jjtiirf^q-or „_ A„ adjective,
an epithet.
f. Poet. Enamoured of; enrap-
tured with the beauties and
graces of.
JJir^^frS" «. Of talents or
endowments and good disposi-
tions.
5"^ a. That discerns the
excellencies of.
J'TF An axle. 2 A mason's
square.
J'^t^ (s) The product of a
multiplication.
J'^l^rr Multiplication. 2 See
JlWtWi.
>j
U^fJ'T The virtues and vices;
the excellencies and blemishes
of. r
V. I an arrant rogue.
5^f^ ^^W n. A term for
an accomplished knave.
S'^rsq" a. (s) Rich in virtues
and excellencies.
^'^l^FcT a. Devoid of attri-
butes. An epithet of the Hindu
figment of Deity.
5^5^!^ Reciting the per-
fections and excellencies of; ex-
tolling. [-f„i_
^'TRC a. Effectual, success-
5^^151 Efficaciousness. 2
Effect, success.
^M^^ a gifted person,
esp. with some of the minor arts
and accomplishments.
^\m 2). Multiplied.
n'TT a. Endowed with ex-
cellencies.
^^^f^ The multiplicand.
Jcfoj^ /• Embarrassed state.
Tjm or ^cT^ V. i. To tangle
—thread, &c. : to hitch. 2 To
5^^
132
JT or HTf^T ad. Sf- int. (n)
Sih ntly ; quietly. ruiaden.
^TgcT a. Vulgar J^ p. (s)
be embarrassed. 3 To be en-
gaged— a person or thing.
^Ff^ar f, n. Combines of hair.
2 Entanglement. 3 7«. A sin^jle ; ^:r ^\m Destroyino-, injur-
hair out ot a mass oi hair- 1 j .' ^' J
combings. nu fi. ^"-; ^ '^ ''"*^* '''"'^ '"'^'^'" ''*"
• r. i; ^ Ll't- ns- tack. r. 'EIT^, T?l^, ^r.
^cTf^'^ V. c. To entangle, I ^^^^^^^^^j^.^^j^^^^.j.^_
^^rror^r^r obstruction. 2;nq-?-^Ag
fig. Ditiicultv. ;:! Coml)ings of ^3.,^-, ' ;*jj
hair. 4 fig. Pollution on account j^'i'^'T w. Hidden treasure
of a death. [fig. j i- e. knowledge, virtue, &c.
^ niFT/. Entanglement, lit. j^STr /. A sword-stick.
5^^,5^f^ «. /. Entangled, J'^T See 57.
st.te. ia\,mbings. 3 The residue ij:f^dfr . Threadin^•, plat-
(ot ^m, isic.) after thrashing. "'^^^^^ -' ^' '
J'^r A contract or monopoly
^'^ot^rrspT Seeif^^.
^ n. (si) The anus.
^57/. Tickling.
5?5?T or/. Imit.
sound of ebullition.
^5^^ V. i. To bubble up. 2
To have the prickly itch or heat
— the body.
5'^°T v.c. To string together :
to H e. 2 To plat.
^'TTF/. (s) A sylvan abode
of a devotee. 2 A cave : a bower.
of the i iJT^rJ^ V. c. To slubber over.
jPlicT p. s Strung. 2 Platted.
HTiT^ p. Interwoven, kc.
n^?.^ V. i. To thump.
T\ZJ\i\ f, (n) Tickling. 2 Hi^^'^ y. i. To grow fat or
Prickly itching, &c.
flesiiv.
rfTTfr^ f. Tickling, v. ^, ^,^^3""^ «• Plump, fleshy
^^,^TS. 2 fig. Mental tickling, I^PTR (p) Heed, care. 2 Con-
t. e. pleasing. 3 lig. ItchinG; (to
fight or to do). V. ^, f^"^"^,
^*^^^ V. i. To be under
suffocation. 2 To swelter.
JTTJT^r Suffocation, v.^'^, CF.
^^■H^ w. s Sodomy.
JTfR (s) Piles.
^rT or -^1 ^i. (p) Past— a
year, &c. [year.
^^'^f ad. (p) In the past
^r See 5^r.
^^45'T ??. c. To rumple, ruf-
fle. 2 fig. To crush, bruise; to
overwork.
^'■^l^r Ruffled state, kc.
^K\ (p) A crime, fault.
n^^rr c. A criminal.
if'i-qr^r /. A fine.
U^^l^ ad. According to
the offence.
ceit. 3 n. Suspicion.
WhT n. Conceited
JiTl^cTRfr/. (P) The office of
^«T^T. [factor
J^Tf^nr An agent, de^juty
5^^^?r/. Roaring.
j]Tm or ^rr^r^^ v. l. To
roar, growl, lit. fig.
IpT^r n. Blustrous. 5. p A
fit of passion.
nr^ir^Tt/, Roaring, growl-
ing. 2 Intimidating by roaring,
SMarlini, &e.
ijr^ff^ V. c. To intimidate
by roaring, &c.
nr^r f. Angrily glaring:
loud bullying.
JFJJZ'^ V. c. To cover with
clotlies; to muffle up.
nUJV f. See 5^iT^r.
^TTTR -TJ ad. Growlingly.
3F-?J^ -H/. Roaring, &c.
jnj^t^r /. Growling, Szc.
^T7K^ V. i. To growl. 2
To caterwaul. 3 To rumble — the
belly. 4 To sound rumblingly —
the throat.
JTrj^FJ" A loud roaring.
£r^r (p) An iron club. 2 A
kidney.
^T^Z^ V. c. To involve con-
fusedly (thread, &c.) 2 To mis-
lay.
^73T Entanglement.
'J^^ A cast amongst Sh6-
dras. They are employed in the
service of the temple.
JJ^^^r f. The office, rights,
&C. of 3T^^.
^T^^J A^ cattle fold.
JJ^^jsT The ^^^ 's share of
the grain which is received by
Government from the cultiva-
tors.
^^€\^ f. A female of the
caste 3ix;cf.
J^Kfr -?s^ A cowherd.
^^(s) A spiritual parent. 2 A
religious teacher :(fig.and in a bad
sense)one whoprompts,puts upto.
3 A father or any venerable male
relation. 4 A name of ■?'^^f?{.
5 The planet Jupiter, a. (s)
Heavy. 2 Great. 3 Long —
a vowel. 4 Difficult. 5 Reverend,
honorable.
n^l^pfr/. An occult writing
or passage demanding a Guru to
explain it. 2 A mystery : tho
secret (of a contrivance, &c.)
J7^f[jzr Q Abstruse — a pas-
sage, &c.
JI'^Sf^T A dignified person.
iT^cr?qir s pop. 5^cT?qf a
violater of the bed of his spiritual
or natural father.
3^^ n. (s) Weight, &c.
^^15 n. The residence of
one's Guru.
3^; H t1 K Favour of one'3
Guru. 2 The product of a
Guru's blessing — learning, skill,
&c. 3 A term for opium or bhing.
4J^«I^ One of two or more
who have a common Guru ; a
spiritual brother, a co-disciple.
2 The son of one's Guru.
U^^^ Fio;. Covert and evil
council. V. f»i^?, ^i^r, '?W.
J]^T\f. (a) Pride, arrogance.
^^c^5l^^R (s) Attention to
the long and short vowels. 2
Careful and minute deliberation.
U^R: Thursday.
^^ n. A cow or buffalo.
U^ST^ n. A general term
for a horned beast of pasture.
^W^ or -^ a. Pitch dark.
5^?" (s) The district Gujarat.
2 An inhabitant of it.
T|"gT3" ?i. A sugar-work. 2
The business.
Jp^aS^T n. A sugar-work.
^^\< (P) The flower of
the pomegranate.
^^^^ (p) Conserve of roses.
^cT^fcTfr /. (h) Snuffers.
^^^R"^ f. Speech or action
designed to indicate intention,
esp. to indicate falsely ; making
the show of. v. i[l^^, mx..
JJc^^rff Of V. c. To deceive by
a pretence. 2 or it^^t^«t ^"f
To distract by a clamorous pres-
sure. 3 (with ^Tl) To dis-
play (the neck) wantonly.
|7c^4ir /. A fiee and easy
laugh. V. $, «tT^, ^\x.
^c^n^FcT a. Plump or sleek
— the body.
^cT^K a. (p) Beautiful, fine.
5c^^^orJ^^W(H) Marvel
of Peru.
Jl^^m f. (h) a small nail
with a spreading head.
^^K^^ f. Devotedness to
pleasure and diversion.
^ctr or £f^?'^tr c. (p)
One devoted to pleasure ; a volup-
tuary.
^c=?T^ (p) Common rose. 2
n. A rose. 3 or ir^T^x^jft n.
RoBowater.
133
5^RTr% /. Rosewater-
holiler. [relating to the rose.
U^r^f a. Rose coloured ;
iJc=^lC[iJfT f. Soft and sweet
^•'^'^'^- ^ [of weather.
nc^RRf^r/. Mild coldness
iJ^Ff (a) The son of a
female slave. 2 A term answer-
ing to rogue, rascal.
iJc=r|iTnin /. Servility. 2
Knavery.
5^PT5T[^ Rogue, scamp.
^c^Tf^ The red powder which
the Hindus throw about at
the ^lat.
JJcTj^r n. Dyed with the
colour ofiT^T^.
^^71. s A disease, any glan-
dular enlargement in the ab-
domen. 2 The spleen. 3 A
Knot. 4 A bump. 6 A spreading
'i"sli- [tension.
J^JT^fcT s Abdominal dis-
TJ?Rr?^ n. s A form of
dropsy.
5^5" a. (h) Dead drunk.
nrr^^irnfrr / a reviling
t rm for Spanish fly.
^Cr/. (s) A cave.
n5r a. (s) Private — a place.
2 Secret — an act, &c. n. An
organ of generation.
iJaSTTSrsTr^lt / Tender, deli-
cate (langauge) ; mincing the
matter. 2 Appeasing, conciliat-
ing (speech or conduct).
ijol'^orrcr a. Smooth and
glossy.
JJaS^E a. Sweetish. 2 Sweet.
3p^ m. 5^'^r / A mouth-
ful of water (taken to rinse), v.
i. 2 A mouthful (of blood,
water, &c.) spit out. v. ZT*. 3
Sour rising in the mouth, v.
V. 4 Rinsing the mouth, v.
^"^^ fin irsj.
JJoT^r Mangoes preserved
Jj^^Z a. Sweetish.
^^^Z^ V. i. To be gathering
sweetness — ripening mangoes. 2
To mumble.
1^
ij^^^ot V. i. To mumble. 2
To hesitate.
^los^csTcT a. Inarticulate, &c.
^S'^^ a. Sweetish.
J^r/. Indigo. 2 The rectum
protruding at stool, v. ^ri^.
'J^ Human excrement. 2
Rust of metals. 3 Mucus or
gum of the eyes. 4 fig. Spiri-
tuous liquor. [One'sown secret.
^ n. A secret. H^*[^ n.
^ a. (s) Obscure, occult —
science, &c. : mysterious, dark —
an affair.
r
'^r^ A passage in a writ-
ing or a matter difficult of ex-
])l.'ination. a. Occult, recondite.
J^l^T^ s One of the twelve
sons or heirs ; one's son through
his being born in one's house of
some strange woman ; the son of
secret birth. [thread).
'Tcf f. A knob (in cord or
^ m. f. (p) The charred
jiart (of a wick, match, &c.) 2 A
flake of fire. 3 The head of a
nail. 4 f. Clamour, hubbub. 5
fig. Publicity.
^1^ Coarse sugar.
'T3' 5^RC n. (Coarse sugar
and cocoanut-kernel.) StuflF,
nonsense; empty promises.
^Tp" ?TT (A stone occurring
in a mass of 3I5J. Hence fig.)
A wolf in sheep's clothing.
Jp qurfr f^ A sort of cake.
2 fig. Soft and appeasing, but
hollow and delusive speech.
JT^qrS" n. (Sugar and flour)
Good understanding together ;
sweet concert.
^ (s) A vulture.
5^ n. (s) A house.
^?^if-f^^ n. Domestic
duties, r"^ 3|jg'5 Domestic
dissensions.
«\
JTCR^ The ceremony of
occupying a just-built house. 2
The first entrance, by the female,
of the house of her husband.
^?^^^ n. The gem or orna-
ment of the house;— esp. said
of a child.
^^^r
n^^frcT /. Purification of a
lioiise (from infestiiis; drvils).
^^■^ A householder, the
inan of the sccoml order ;
or he who, having finished his
studies, and havintr heen invest-
ed with the sacred thread, per-
forms tlie duties of the master
of a house and father of a fa-
mily. 2 A gentleman ; a patrician.
o A ])crson, a boiiy, an indivi-
dual.
n^-'^FK\ f. Politeness, gen-
tii'manliness. 2 The duties of
1^^- [four religious orders.
^'^T'tTiT The second of the
^C^'^r a. Belonging to, be-
coming, resemhling, relating to
a TT"^^. jio3T^s[;>i. Business-
hand.
T^in'T 7}. The house-yard.
^Km\, m^\ f. (s) The
mistress ot a house.
^fcf p. s Taken, seized.
iTaT a. s Domestic. 2 Relat-
ing to the house.
^t ind. Abridged from ^^•
TT'^ V. i. To speak through
the nose, to snutfle.
m\^\ a. A snuflier. 2 Nasal
— utterance.
^ir^'T V. i. To be in great
I consternation. 2 To speak nasal-
Iv (as from a cold ).
^^ iT^^ar „, The fork of
n tree or stake. 2 The space be-
twixt every two fingers or two toes.
T^r (ii) A rhinoceros.
^ A tuberous or tufted
head (as of globe amaranth and
similar flowers): any flower
having many corolla or rows of
petals (as the rose, &c.) 2 A
knob or boss of silk or silver
(as on a horse's crupper, &e.) 3
A silver knob worn on the fourtii
toe (of women).
^^ /. A red chalk.
^c^r prct. of ^^ Gone by,
])ast — year, month, day.
ri?5|ifi?5T A careless phrase
answering to At all events, any
how: ii« ^li^^ ^%^^ "^T^-
ITS" V.
hoof.
134
A division of a cloven
See 31^ q\ sig. 2.
I^r a. (h) Slovenly : dull
and doltish.
^^ '^ a. ^^ ad. Lost, astray.
^^r a. (a) Hidden, secret:
Tfo 3?^ A secret (i. e.
anonymous) ])etition ; ir© 3?!-
WT5I Utterance from the
heavens.
^ ind. (a Other) A particle
expressing otherness or differ-
ence, but gen. of privative or
deteriorative ])ower. It corres-
l)onds with dis, un, by.
n^'^'4 Extra expenses.
'f\T^€j f. Displeasure, r
j^ ^ -^ ^ [swer.
rf^Tsf^r^ Disrespectful an-
rf?;?'^rr -^cTF a. Exempt from
Government imposts.
q^Iffn ad. Without being
allowed for in the account.
^?:JT^ii=^cr /. A wild, foolish
project.
irirrtfcr a. Unacquainted
with ; ignorant of.
Jl^^r^r A misrepresentation.
^TR^Ct^ od. Out of its
]ilace.
^Tmi f. Lands to which
no condition is attached to be
fnUilled subsequently to their be-
ing received as iTT'QFt aJ'Tt'T.
^r^IT^cT /. Mistake, mis-
understanding.
^^13" a. From some other
])lace but the mint, i. e. alloyed
— a coin. 2 fig. Unpolished — a
person : unsuitable — conduct :
rude, vulgar.
n^C^K a. Absent.
^F -n a. Weak, silly : stu-
pid— a person. 2 Trifling, worth-
Jess-a thing. j-^ ^^^^^^
^\K^ a. (h) Deep, dark—
% ind. See ^^ s Cow.
In comp. ITT^D).
^rj?^ ;,. (s) pnp. irif^ The
name of the village at whicli
Krishna was brought up. 2 The
mud figures (of men, cuttle, &c.
nT3T
in representation of the village)
made on the eighth of Shravan.
3 fig. Promiscuous and licenti-
ous intercourse, v. WT«I.
%sr?3^r /: The eighth of
^I'^UT liTSffrq^, the birthday of
^■WT. r
V. v L'^" arrow.
^ROT V. i. To sing, ring—
■TfR"^ v.i. To be confounded.
HRc^qR / A snail. 2 fig. A
term for a simple, inoffensive
man.
^mr^: Uproar.
^I^R"^ V. i. To buzz, twang.
irriTW (s) The portion of
food reserved at the beginning
of a meal to be given to a cow.
%=^^r /. A tick ; a cattle or
dog-louse.
^r^^ (s) An object of sense ;
— as sound, colour, &c. a. In
comp. Perceivable by the mind
or by sense : iT^T ^T^.^^n iri«.
^\^'^ n. (s) A cow's hide.
A measure of land, — as much as
can be comprehended by a cow's
4'''''^v. [in soothing.
Jir^r^^T V. c. To smooth down
^\^l\, m^X^m a. Hand-
some, graceful.
irr^r /. c a heifer.
^trr (ii) A metal wristlet. 2
Encircling, i*. ^T^, ■^. 3 A
camp : a division of a camp. 4
The hem (of a garment).
^r^r A roundish stone. 2 A
marble. '^ fig. A grain of rice in
the ear. 4 An overripe and rat-
tling cocoanut.
^\^ f. A roundish stone or
pebble. 2 A marble. 3 A large
lifting stone ; — used among the
athletic. A A terra for a round,
fleshy body. 5 A lump of silver.
() A variety of mango.
•\ »^.
'^\Z^ V. I. To become firm,
soild, thick — ground by beating,
ink, &c. by drying, milk, &c.
by boiling, any liquid by freez-
ing.
•\
^rJr A cow-pen.
nrr
135
m^w
ir^ n. m. The calix (of
certain vej^etables and grains). 2
f.n.cA lane (in a village or
between enclosures). 3 n. r A
cluster of pepi>er corns. 4 n. A
tufted or moss-like plant, cover-
ing the surface of tanks, &c. 5
m. The gathering spot of pastur-
ing herd in the niorning.
'ir^ a. Sweet. 2 Neat, pretty.
c. Any thing sweet considered
as an item in diet.
Jir^^r^r a. Fond of sweets.
2 Daintv-mouthed.
'TTi'Hrfq" The d;iinty bit re-
served to conclude the meal. 2
Dainty fare.
iTf^^r, 'TT^r a. Sweet rela-
tively ; i. e. sweet amongst. 2
fig. Unhardened. 3 (Used of
water, it signifies) Fresh, opp. to
salt or brackish : soft, free from
salts. 4 ( — Of a tree) Wanting
thorns : agreeable to insects. 5
( — Of wood, i. e. of the exterior
portion as o])p. to the core)
Soft. 6 ( — Of soil) Sweet or
fresh — opp. to saline. 7 ( — Of
the oils expresse<l from Sesa-
mum and Carthamus) Sweet. 8
(—Of a man) Mild, gentle. 9
( — Of flesh )Sensible,quick — ojip.
to callous,dead. 10 (— Of particu-
lar hot,biting.or bitter vegetables,
of chillies, &c.) Mild. 11 (—Of
varieties among plants of narco-
tic properties) Not narcotic. 12
( — Of serpents) Unvenomous. 13
( — Of a particular animal body
or a meml)er) Quick, delicately
sensible. 14 ( — Of fish) Fresh-
water. 1.5 (—Of rice) Produced
in unsaline soil. 16 ( — Of the
region of the groin) Vital. 1/
(—Of corn, as jit^t ^TpiT) Un-
salted. IS ( — Of the genuine
iMariitha, and as opp. to ^^-
^t) Pure.
JTI^tr /. Relish, liking.
^kE a. Plump, sleek.
^{^^ a. Sweetish.
Jlkr See ^ sig. 1 . 2 fig.
A full bunch.
JTf^r See JTf^^r. , ., .
V . [ou-tree.
^rr^ TT^ Common castor
irr^f'^ V. i. To become fresh,
sweet — lands, plants, &c. 2 To
be vitiated — the palate from eat-
ing sweet things.
^\^\^^^ V. c. To sweeten
(lands recovered from the sea)
by throwing down mould.
nr^l^ a. Having on its sur-
face the grass ttI^ISS — a tank,
&c. 2 Plump and sleek, n. A
kind of grass.
If^r /", Sweetness; — melody,
fragrance, &c. 2 Taste. 3 Good-
ness (of a dish, &c.) 4 Gentle-
ness (of speech). 5 A fondness
or taste for.
^\^\ a. Having a ^f^F. /. A
nnrrow passage.
'7r%>^Rr /. Friendly terms.
2 Suavity. 3 Agreement.
^f'^n a. Having a tufted
bead — flowers, &c.
^M f. A large sack (for
grain, &c.) 2 fig. Load (of cares
or business).
'Tf^err A bullock grain-
sack.
W\mZ n. Sackclotli : sack-
iugmade up (to receive the arti-
cles of a beast-load).
^\mZ m. n. Sackcloth.
^m f. Sackcloth. 2 A
l)acksack. 3 fig. A burden (of
cares, &e.)
^\^ n. ^m^\ f. ^TTcrfsT ;„.
A caste as assembled in investi-
gation of matters, or as consider-
ed collectively. 2 Relations and
kindred considered collectively.
^r^r m. ^\^ /. (a) a dip
(as of a bird or a paper-kite), v.
T^\ ; also a jerk to occasion a
di(). r. M'lK, % 2 A ruinous
business : a loss. v. ^^^\, ■^^. 3
Xx\ imposition upon. v. '^. 4 A
fruitless trip. v. i^t, and in
con., ^tT.
^fcriqfc^y. A confused inter-
mingling of castes. 2 fig. A
hotchpotch.
TF^ n. (s) Family, kin. 2
m. The founder of a race.
Jir^fjn: (Ax to one's fa-
mily.) Terra for an incestuous
person.
ir^^ a. pop. m^( Related.
^1^ g^^-^"5f A kinsman.
^"K (h) Gum.
HK/. (h) Dock.
^IT^ a. Having roughness
of skin — the body from biliary
disorder.
^K^ One of the eighteen
orders of JiT^i^.
JTK^^i^ a. Patched and
pieced. 2 Disorderly.
m^^\ f. (h)A party-coloured
quilt. 2 fig. A tattered garment.
JTK^ Rf^ n. A fruit of the
Shaddock kind.
^k°r V. c. To tattoo.
fikfr C^crr^ Yellow orpi-
ment.
"TKR n. (s) The givincr of a
cow (to a Brahman). 2 One of
the sixteen ^"^T'C ; shaving
the head twelve years after
^l'<\ f. (ii) Dock.
^f^^ n. (s) Wealth consist-
ing in cattle.
V.
^\^^ Disorder (of things,
&c.) ; confusion and perplexity.
2 Distraction. 3 Bustle, stir. 4 A
tumultuous festivity in projiitia-
tion of ■g;^ ; corresponding
somewhat to Wake or Ale. 5
Hurried and tumultuous, or
animated and vivid action, v.
Ji>4^ot, 'if'-^ISsrR-St y. c. To
disorder, derange.
m'^'^^ 1,, i. To be mislaid
—an article. 2 To whirl. 3 To
be confounded.
^\^^ ^^ n, a marriage
fixed during Jfit''?!.
^f^fST A caste. They are
singers and makers of Jil'^oS.
m^l^ a. Relating to WW.
W^oo^l A fellow ever dis-
turbing and disordering. 2 A
confused, thick-headed, blunder-
ing body.
^m (s) Wheat.
ITMT7
136
m^
^P-J^ m. n. (s) The ]ieriod
comprised between 30 r^ be-
fore and 30 t?^ after sui set. 2
Evening twilight.
iJiVfc^c^fr n. s Marriac;e per
formed in the period ifl"q"^.
Jlp-T3r-St f. Dust raised b\
cows on the road.
^rr (s) A caste. They an
covvhexls nnd milknieii. 2 Ai
ornament for the neck. 3 /
kind of grass.
^T^^r n. White clay. ^
fig. Destruction, devastation.
ir^ V. (s) Conceahng, 1
J»reserving. j-j^,,
WT^m a. 8 (Fit) to be hid
»lHr^ (s) A cowherd. 2 A
name of Krishna. 3 A king. 4
A caste.
^\^\o!:%\^\ The feasting ant
merriment which conchides tht
festival of iTT^^ie'Tl.
Ifm'ff f. A female cowherd.
Jim^'s:^ n. s While clay.
I^jr n. w. The building
over the gate (of a city, of tin
encircling wall of a temple). 2
A gate so ovcrhndt. 3 A gati
gen. 4 The figures drawn h\
women on the walls in the
month xj^. ;■) A grass.
ir^ a. 8 (Possible, neces-
sary, &c.) to be hidden.
W\^'^ s The holding be-
fore the month of a cow of child
born under an ill boding horo-
scope. The child is now viewed
as the offspring of the cow, and
as secured from the evil boded.
^rr An ornament for the
neck. 2 App. to a braided whip,
platted cord.
^\Vn f. (II) A sling.
i\\%m'^\ A sling-stone. 2
,App. to a smart and sharp fel-
J'"'- V [a sling.
^\%^'^ V. c. To cast with
mr The ankle. 2 The
hair-knot (of women).
iTPf CT V. c. To catch, to
ensnare (in speech, &c.) 2 c To
slubber or hurry over ; to shift
with. r. t. To be suffocated.
nrKr^T Trouble, perplexity.
^W\ o. Compressed and
bellying out — a ])itcher, &e. 2
Used revdingly of a low, com-
pressed face ; and, more laxly,
of an ngly, ill-formed person or
thing. f- 1 1 r 11
^ [and round lellow.
TIi^Un^^T^ A term for a tat
iTf^^^ A term for a soft,
simple, harmless Brahman.
nr^ f. A sort of centiped. 2
One of the seventy-two blemishes
incidental to the horse, viz. a
line of reversed hair resembling
a centiped. 3 fig. A fault, defect.
4 A border (to a dhotar, &c.)
like a centii)ed.
ni^T^T n. Poet. Sweet. 2
Fair — the complexion; attrib.
fair-complexioned.
m^'^l a. Relating to m^^
or Goa.
mR^ n. m. s Cowdung.
^rrirr Sham : sham of indif-
ference : sham of ignorance, r.
*^, ^T^. '- Affectation of
greatness.
A phrase used where one takes
a great pressing to do what he
strongly desires to do.
^\^\^^\ ^\^^\ a feigned
name returned in answer to
one im])ertincntly asking one's
name. 2 Somebody, some low
fellow, some Dick or .Jack. 3 A
terra for a mediller.
i7Rr^ /. Gadfly.
^^\^ n. (s) Beef. As beef
may not be eaten by the Hindu,
tiii.i word is used of a deposit or
an article of property of another
in solenni declarations tiiat it
shall not be, or has not been,
appropriated : '^1 3*^^ 3^
JTSHT TTJo ^^TUf ; ■^T g"^^T ^-
^\^^ V. A cow's mouth of
wood, metal, or stone. Used as,
in English, the word Lion's
mouth.
^\^^^ ^^m (s a cow-faced
tiger.) A wolf in sheep's cloth-
^\^m /. a glove shaped
like a cow's mouth, by which
the hand is covered in telling
the beads of a rosary. 2 c. A per-
son who, according to a vow,
takes up his food with hi«
mouth.
•\
Wj^ 71. Cow's urine.
m^^ Sacrifice of a cow.
Tiri^f^ The poor and
needy ; poor folk.
^K^ (s) Cow's dust.
nrrrFa. Fair — a complexion.
mrar^r «. Fairish.
'TT^^ (s) Produce of a cow.
^K^^ V. i. To be prepared
and made ready for the seed —
ground.
^R^ s pop. ^rr^ or JTR^-
•n^ The celebrated Hindu
reformer.
^K^ (s) A cowherd.
^irr A male calf. a. Fair —
the complexion ; of fair com-
plexion. 2 White.
iTRRlJTTr a. Of fair com-
plexion and graceful form, rr •
JTRRRFTB a. Sui)erlatively
%UiTT^r a. Of a light red
colour, or bright auburn.
niTl^r a. Deadly pale.
^f^ 71. R See 3^^*
^RT^r a. Fairish.
iTRf^ ji. A bright yellow
pigment prepared from the urine
of a cow, or vomited by a cow,
in form of scybala. 2 App. to
Bezoar.
m\ A bull-calf.
^f^ a. (s) Circular, round,
s. \ cylinder, globe. 2 An arti-
ficial globe. 3 A round pole. 4
The wooden ball used in the
play of trapstick. b A crowd, a
m^^
13:
a^,
flock, a volume (as of fire). 6
A division of the Zodiac. 7 A
sinjjle gold or silver wire of a
twist (as of a 5iT^).
ir^^ (s) A cas(e. It is com-
posed of the descendants from
the illegitimate offs))ring of
Brahman widows. 2 A sphere.
3 In the sense bnll, with some
accommodation ttTo is attach-
ed severally to the names of the
organs of the senses ; as 5rdt
iTTtgejf the auricle of the ear,
^^ ^I^^ the mouth ; also
\i^^ JTTo an organ of sense, or
pi. the organs of sense, n. (p) A
money box, a till.
^^'^T /; In architecture.
Bead ; the implement with which
it is worked.
Jlfc^^rr^ (p) A gunner.
JTT^is;!'^/. Gunnery.
W^^R a. Cylindrical. 2
Curling— moustaches. 3 Braw7iy,
plump — arms, legs. 4 Having
a iflwf or embroidered border
— a turban, &c.
^l^m^ a. (s) Globular.
Jlf^rr^Tr^T s A kind of mon-
key.
irr^i^: -j, m?^\'.
A leap
heels over head, a somerset, v
^f^r-^ 71, (s) A hemisphere.
k'^mm or 'TF^T One who
gain-> his subsistence by rice-
pounding.
^[■^^r a. A rice-pounder. 2
The iron strip running across
the teeth of the weeding instru-
ment ^To3^.
%% /. Stringing.
^mi7.c.'l o string.2To fasten
or tie up slightly (the hair, a
beast to a peg, &c.) 3 To fix or
settle at, in, with (a son, &c. at
school, or in mairiage). 4 To
confine, to bind (by promise). 5
To embarrass. 6 To catch in
speech. 7 To engage : ^<^T
JTT^ ^IvTf ^^'[%yi ^TT^lT ^T'C^
^^^ JT^T.
^r^^ m. n. (s) A cow-calf.
^if^c^R-^r /. s The twelfth
18
of 3TT^'iT^'^ on which day the
cow and calf are worshiped.
TR^ry. s Fatof kine or oxen.
JTf^C The measles, v. ^, ff^,
«Tq^, f-^^?3. 2 H Dry and
crumbled cow-dung.
JTl^^^f^r A term for the
litter of a cow-house.
^TRfr, A^U f. A bit of dry
cow-dung. 2 A cake of cow-dung.
mXV-5.\ ^m f. A concealed
but deadly hatred.
^rf>-T^ A celebrated hill
near 5{^?:t. 2 A large heap
of cow-dung or of rice, vegeta-
bles, &c. made by the people of
the "ET^vfT sect on the first of
^ifri^sXI^ ill imitation of the
^"^°""^^'"- [business.
JTRSTTIp-fr An entangled
m^J, 3Tk5?r A cowherd.
2 A ])articiilar devil which, on
entering into possession of a
man's bod}', removes the small
pox.
^r^r Ivaibarrassment. 2 Set-
tling fixedly (a person in some
situation).
Wm\ A cowherd. 2 /. A
plant and the pod if it.
^rffST (s) One of the com-
mon names of ?iW[.
^f^ n. Half-coagulated milk.
2 Ap|3. to an easy, liberal patron,
a lucrative sinecure. 3 Scaffold-
ing.
^rS" /. A story, tale. 2 A
word, a syllable, a sound. 3 A
matter, affair, an event. 4 Case,
condition.
3TifS"nq"Jr a. Fond of tales
and stories. 2 Full of talk and
anecdote.
W^r^n or -^rcTT/. pi. Chat,
talk, idle conversation.
fFfrS"o5^cf2: ^ Given up to
hearing or telling stories.
Jirrg-'^?^!^ a. Poet. Full of
jjleasant stories: fond of listening
to stories.
Jirrsr^rr n. a shr.^idh per-
formed in words only, 2 fig.
Mere chat.
^rS'TT^ a. s A house-hero,
^m^ V. (s) A cow's foot. 2 A
cow-track. 3Araeasure, — as much
as a cow's footstep will hold.
JTI^^Rr or WM<\ (p) Abs-
tract statement prepared from
detailed returns. 2 Cream, pur-
port, essence,
^r-HT^^r Contemptuous form
of the word Gosavi.
^f^r^r A Shddra (and some-
times a Brahman) that has
renounced the world. 2 fig. A
man without encumbrances.
3 A Ilardas. 4 A title of res-
pect to Shudras in notes. ppQ^y
^f§:"^^r /. (s) Killing of a
Jir^rr, ^\iK\ a male calf.
^rCf A husband. 2 An
adult. 3 Used popularly as the
word man or boy.
JiVr A globe or ball. 2
A mass, lump. 3 An assemblage.
4 fig. A wretch without arms and
legs, or without the power of
using them. 5 (Contemptu-
ously.) A meal, a sop. 6 Abortion.
7 A general name for the stones
of fruits and for the larger pea-
like seeds which have no sjjecific
name ; as ^^T^-^T^ Jrto .
J][S-[7ir^r /, Mutual firing
of guns.
feRTR /. Grand total. 2
fig. Essence, sum and substance.
m^\ f. A small ball gen. ; a
bullet, pill. 2 A musket ball.
h^mX Ball-firing; ball-
practice.
3Trr2iTFT?r n. (8) Calculation
of heaps of balls ; arithmetic of
graduated pills.
jtr^zrr^r or nr^^r z^\ m.
— Tf^iTft /. The range of a
cannon or gun, gunshot.
tr /. s A cow.
^r^ A tribe of Brahmans.
irr^fjirc^ //. juo-oiino-. 2 fig.
Arts, tricks.
3Tr^5fiT[5Tr A conjuror.
Tf^r A caste. They are
Sis
138
^^^
^^ a. {>) Inferior, second-
ary. 2 Substitutionary, n. Want,
iiiiixM-ft'Ction.
^^^?7 An inferior object ;
a secondary end : an alternative.
ffforq^ The weaker side
In conip. Devoured, lost, seized,
t-niitten, stricken : ^T^I -f^rTT-
^\^m n. Settin-r (of the
sun or moon) during its eclipse.
?T^%?^ Risinoj (of the sun
or moon) during its eclipse.
_(^()fanar-uinent). [hidden.
^M a. lliddeu. 2 Fit to bej ^^ (s) Seizing, takmi;-. 2
Kcliiise of the sun or moon. i5
%€r See mm. ^-,^
^\T a. (s) Fair, white. /'. See
^Kf 7t. (s) Vv'eight. 2 7n. n.
Reputation, honorablcness. 3
lutluence. A Deference, honour.
v. ^T, 3:sr, T-pg. f) Pomp, dig-
nity, solemnity. (> Grievous, lu-
borious, disagreeable state, a
hardship : ^i^T ^T^m ^1^
A planet. 4 An imp of a parti-
cular class. Ilence tig. A mis-
chievous fellow. 5 A fancy, an
opinion. 6 Tenacity. 7 Appre-
hension (as of one's meaning).
^^rfcT/. The pasi^age of the
])lancts as bearing on the for-
tunes of man.
^I^"^ n. Taking, seizing, ac-
cepting. 2 An eclipse.
q^tjyq:-a5- ,j_ Astrological pre
'TRT^'H' V. c. To crjorify. 2 dictions for the season of an
A covert phrase to express a I eclipse.
burning (of clothes, &c.) upon j q-g;qf^fvq- ^_ Impurity con-
one's ])erson : the plain ti-rm ^^.^^.^^^\ ;„ consequence of an
5fo5^ being held unlucky
^(^^f a. Polite, courteous
eclipse,
^^f^ /. s Dysentery. 2 The
■srvv ^ , . . r- rrririrr three Smaller intestines.
TRr f. (s) A name of Tf^cfr. .^^.r^
2 A maid. :S An unmarried girl ^^'^^ «• « (^^0 to bc ac-
of ten years of age. 4 The vigils ; cepted.
and festivities in HTgft:!^ UJW- ^^?^I f. Aspect of the
tig in honour of ■qT^Trfl.
planets, considered as influenc-
ing the lot of man.
^E^R ??. Presents made
?T^ (s) A book. 2 Strinnini: 1 ^ .. ., .,,„, ^,„„ ,„^,_
/ ,. ,. ^^., ?! to Brahmans that they may
together, composing, lit. hg. -:! A [ p,„pitiate the planets.
^^r^r /. Pain, poverty,
sickness, &c. arising from the
^f^ a. (s) Village-born J
produced or relating to a village.
2 Rustic, homely. 3 Tame —
animals, opp. to wild; cultivated
— products of the ground, opp.
to natural. 4 Used of the Pra-
krit and the other dialects of
India as contradistinct from the
Sanskrit. 5 Secular, engaged in
worldly business : opposed to
^7^ Living in wilds.
m^ (s) A mouthful. 2 Swal-
lowing. 3 Eclipse.
?Tr?r^ V. c. To swallow. 2
To embezzle. 3 fig. To over-
spread. 4 fig. To consume. 5 To
confute.
m?:^,^rftf/.(s)That receives,
seizes. 2 fig. One that can duly
appreciate.
ITf^ a. ( Possible or fit) to be
received, &c. [portion.
^ir^ra" The good or useful
^Iff /. (s) The back part of
the neck, and commonly the
neck. [June-July.
tit'^ (s) The h(jt season ;
'"^R n. (s) AVearied, languid.
'"^ri'I f. Languor, dullness.
2 Humble supplication. 3 Ima-
ciation.
r^rfr /. (p) Evidence. 2
Also T^T^I^T^ c. A witness.
A design.
section of a book. 4 li
W-^^R An author.
^*=T^ V. c. To string, to com-
pose verses together. [gather.
^T^-R or WA^ I,, s Tying to-
^^-rf^?^^r^(s)\'(jluininousness.
^4 (s) A knot. 2 A knoh
(iu wood, &c.) 3 A joint. 4
lig. A tie (as of marriage,
&c.) .') fig. A perplexity, as
^fe s Strung.
tfRRR (s) A disease in
general, characterised by the
eruption of bunii»s.
^^^ V. c. To swallow.
?tI%^ p. (s) Swallowed. 2
Slurred. 3 fig. Embezzled, 4
planet. [planets.
^^c^T n. Benignity of the
IT^ff^?^ n. The plaietary
sphere.
^fT (s) A village. 2 A scale
in music. 3 The head man of a
village. 4 s A coUeclion : Trtn"-
V7{- guji ^TW.
^\^^^ The vilhigc-pest.
^\^^'^ Village-expenses.
^R^f^T The village-astro-
iioiner.
?TR^^ n. A village-dispute
(upon matters of caste).
^RT5J A tame or domestic
beast.
^ The fourth consonant.
^f[lS5", ^^\'^ n. A circular
metal vessel with handles.
q^p?[ R^r The science of
taking. I'sed of the readiness to
receive of a greedy person.
^<t A vessel for holding
water. 2 The universe, consider-
ed as the work of the Deity ; a
creature. 3 A vessel filled with
water. Used in the ceremonies
of •i^xir^. ■! f. Loss (as by
wastage, leakage, &c.)
^^ (s) A manager between
parties ; a negotiator of matrimo-
nial alliances. 2 A manager gen.
q"5^r
139
q-^
^^r /. A period of
twentj'-four minutes. 2 The
metal vessel by the sinking of
which in water the q^^T is
measured. ^^on of.
^Z^m^ f. The exact sea-
^%^r m The influence of
a passing hour.
^^^ c}";3Jrr3r -oS ■!,. A term
for the body or the life.
^Z^Z or -^Tf ad. Imit. of the
sound of gulping.
^°T V. i. (h) To contract —
cloth, &c. 2 To decrease — grain,
&c. by dryage, leakage. .'^ To
grow firm — the body. 4 To
become settled (a science) by
studying. 6 To be versed :
^siit or ?TT^T ^T«T gs^T. 6
To befit. 7 To abate.
^3:tr /. (h) Loss (in trade) :
wastage, v. $, ^TJT. 2 De-
crease. V. ^, ■^TJT.
^J'T??. (s) Forginp;, forming.
2 Happening, ci Negotiating.
^3"^ /, A term for high-
sounding talk; rhapsody. 2 App.
to the operation (in declining,
conjugating, &c.) of gramma-
rians, logicians, &c.
^Zm^f. In the =f^^f^. The
vessel of water, having a flower-
wreath over it, set in propitiation
of ^^^.
^^^Z a. Stout, sturdy. 2
Strong, solid. [in"-.
WZ^Z^\f, Negotiating, trear-
STJ^rS'T n. m. c Division
amongst relations of their bouse,
furniture, lands, &c. [cloth
^Z\^^ V. c. To shrmk—
^f^srrq^rr /. (s) The rite of
placing a vessel filled with water,
having a cocoanut over its
mouth, and the red-lead mark on
its fore part, in the ceremonies of
^Z^%\Z The ceremony of
ejecting irreversibly a person
from caste : of coneUuling an
offender to be dead, and dis-
posing of him accordingly.
^^l f. (s) A bell : a plate of
metal struck as a bell.
^Z]m^ Sounding of bells.
2 fio-. Noising abroad.
m\im Any hemispherical
covering ; a dome or cupola. 2 See
WZm (h) Array (as of troops):
display, any outlay or disposition
indicative of a work in pro-
cess or intended, v. qi^T. 2
Air, cast, aspect (of a speech). 3
Agreement.
m'j^r See ^^r.
^r^^r /. s A bell.
?ra:^[^2]-f!T=r „. (s) The cere-
mony of placing on Vi^ater the
^f^^T on festival days.
m^^ n. (s) Amity of horo-
scope. V. '^^T.y «TiT, s^xs, m^T,
g. of s. or o. 2 Friendship, v.
ST^r, ■^'SS, ^T. 3 Fate. 4 p.
In comp. Formed, composed :
^aj^go. a. (s) Proper, fit.
mZ^V^ s The result of de-
liberation. 2 Fate,
^r^', s A period of twenty-
four minutes. 2 The Indian
clock. 3 The metal sinking cup.
4^A small jar. [fit season.
^r ^^ 7/. Marriage at any
mi'^ p. Compact, become
settled. [3 Tight.
^ a. Strong, stout. 2 Thick.
c
^IT? f. Closeness of texture.
2 Tiiickness (of liquids). 3 Tight-
ness.
^^ (a) a bunch. 2 fig. The
testicles. 3 A band, body. 4
Agreement.
^^^\^ n. Smithcraft. 2
Forming or fashioning, skill. 3
Form, mould.
^^^\^\ or-^rrqr a. That
forges — a smith.
q"3"q"T-^r acl (Imit.) With a
rattle. 2 fig. Smartly, briskly :
qr^q'^jq- y_ I To thunder. 2
To rattle. 3 fig. To be knocked
on the head ; to go to pot — a
business. 4 Cant. To die.
q"S"^:3T3: A loud and con-
fused rattling, ck'shing, &c, ad.
Rattlingly,
^^^ f. Form, fashion. 2
Workmanship. 3 Also si^t^it-
^af The price of smitli-work.
^^"T V. c. To form, fashion,
forge ; to make by hammering,
&c. 2 To draw up (an account).
V. i. To happen.
^^^\^ f. Making and de-
stroying (pots, &c.) 2 fig. Re-
ceiving and issuing; buying and
selling. 3 Changing, shifting,
setting up and pulling down (of
public officers). 4 The composi-
tion (as of a piece of machinery) :
the intricacies (of a business):
the art, key (of putting to-
gether, of managing, of explain-
ing).
q-S-JTT^ot V. i. Poet. To be
constructed and destroyed.
ET^^f r /. See ^^r^r.
^^^^ See ^^^.
Ej-g^fEfO]- y_ f. To bring to pass.
?^# or -^r /. A low caste.
They are musicians.
^^r An earthen pitcher.
^3T^^y. An unceasing ham-
mering, &c. as at a smithy.
^^r^^ V. i. To rattle, clat-
ter, crash, &c. loudly and
tumultuously. 2 fig. To be
knocked on the head; to be
blasted.
^^[3Tr^ See ET^^r^-.
^^r/". A period of twenty-four
minutes. 2 An instrument for
measuring time. 3 A fold or
double. 4 Folded state. 5 A
cloth folded up. (i Harmonious
correlation. 7 Cotton, &c. placed
on a sore to absorb the pus. 8
The pitcher which is applied to
the Pogi of a Palm to receive
tl^e exiulation. [continually.
^I'rtrl'r ad. Every hour,
^it# ^^'^0 n. A term for
the life, or the body,considered as
transitor}'.
^-iTcf n. Metal given to be
forged ; an article wrought. 2
The price of working.
^^r^ p. Forged, wn-ought, &c.
2 Formed between the two
hands— a cake.
sr¥f?T
140
^vn
^mf\ See ^^Rtr. I
^fl^\f. (h) a stand, asi
for water- pots; a lamp-ladder.
cj^mFS" n. (h) An hour-glass. I
2 Gong. 3 A watch. I
m^J^ fjq^ n. The mallet
with which the gong is struck.
2 (Cant. la reviling a meal)
Cakes and chillies : IJl^^t'T
m^\^^\ .M\ The striker of
the hour upon the ?j'^To3.
^ A sledge-hammer, a.
Thick — liquid substances: copious
and heavy — rain: of close tex-
ture— cloth : dense — a wood :
thick — a plank : crowded.
^^i\T\ a. Fresh from the
mint — a rupee, &c. 2 tig. Brand
new.
^TW^/. Ringing, clanking.
ErfJI^JTor -^r ad. With a ring-
ing, clanging, v. ■JiTs}'^. 2
"With a voice loud and clear.
ncss.
Ej-ij[qTj[ot y. i. To ring, clang.
2 To be clear — the throat of a
singer.
mWW: A loud ringing (of
bells), a ])eal.
^q'aTl^ a. Clear, thrilling
^^^l^ a. Close, crowded r 2
Dense, thick, profound, f. A
crowd, press. 2 n. fig. Also
guT^T^I /. Poet. Close
friendship.
^^^ A serpent.
^m^a. Thickish.
'^ (s) A cloud. 2 The cuhe
of a number, H A cube. 4 A
sledge-hammer. .0 ?/. A general
name for Musical instruments
wliich arc to be beaten or struck.
a. Coarse, dense, solid.
^^r^ a. Thick, copious :
close, heavy : gross, furious,
deep — sound.
ER^^ (s) The clouds, as a
revolving mass. 2 A dense body
of clouds, li tig. \ close and
heavy tight. 4 (With ^^-
uiT'^t) a sumi)tuous enter-
tainuuut. 5 ad. <y a. In dense
masses : close and vehement :
extensive and animated — busi-
^r? See ^^I^IJ. ^eontent..
^'^'^ 71. s Cubical or solid
^^2" a. Of close texture —
cloth. 2 Poet. All-pervading.
.'< Poet. Grave, deep.
^W^ a. Of the colour of
a dark cloud.
m .^^ _^ .T^r -K^\ ad. A
]iarticle used with words signi-
fying smell, and imphing sud-
denness and profusion : ^T^
mW^ or -^i ad. Imit. of the
sound of eager breathing, gut-
thng, swallowing.
mN\^, ^'^mm^ A confused
medley. 2 Perplexity. 3 Dis-
traction, as arising from numer-
ous duties. 4 Busy stir.
^^^ n. An unexpected gain.
r. SJTJT, ^t^^.
^^1^ n. (s) An auspicious
Jluhurtt or period. 2 fig. A wind-
fall.
^^r^firq" n. A low term for a
measure greater than the market
one. 2 An all-devouring
stomach.
cT'^^ a. Profusedly ])lentiful.
V. A wind-fall. 2 Profusion.
^*T^ ad. A word expres-
sive of ditfusedness and strength
(of a fragrance) : ^IJITI-
2 Sweetly : 31T?J go ^"^ cj^.
^I^^^^\ r. i. To smell sweetly
and strongly.
m^m^ A widely diffused
fragrance. [fusive— an odour.
^fm^\^ a. Strong and dif-
^H^ or -^r /. (ir) Abun-
dance. 2 Any over-bearing press
(of business, ^c") .'5 Reveling in.
^^ /". c See ^^, sig. 3.
^^R n. Wild, tumultuous
jollity. V. 'EJTST, Tf'^. 2 Iliot,
revel. .'■J Exuberance (of dishes,
&c.) 4 Trampling, a. Large and
tall — a person: splendid : strong.
2 .\ voluptuarv.
^N^ See ^^^.
^ n. A house. 2 A house-
hold. 3 Domestic or social life :
-q^ ^TT<Ti 'g^ ^TT^'ifl". 4 A
house of agency. 5 A den, nest
(of a beast, bird, &c.) (> A hole
as a place of lodgement : fH-
/ A frame, stand, groove. 8 A
Compartment. 9 A square (of a
cliess-board, &c.) 10 The station
of the sun or a planet. 11 Line-
age. 12 Quarter, region (of wind,
rain, &c.; of an aifection, ma-
lady). 13 Source, spring, lit. fig. :
^tR^T^ W^. 14 Basis, foot-
ing (^of an argument, &c). 1.5 The
com])ass, reach (of a tone); the
kev. Hi The keys of a musical
instrument. 17 ^Meaus, resources:
^ ^t^'^ ^T.V\ W ^TT W ^^ TTT-
^^ ^^T^- IS A single divi-
sion as defined by the bracing
cords (of a drum). 19 The art,
secret, key (of a science, &e.) :
TTTJTTg?!^, WJIT^I'C ^ f^^^T^
g^. 20 A point reserved to
stand by : fJT'^i ^T^iniT?r ^^
^T^ ; '^T g^ %-3-iT tl'Sm. 21
Home, self, one's own person :
Pr. ^=^"1 ^K■[ wl g^T.
qr^WI^r /. An estate. 2
A person of the domestic esta-
blishment.
^^^^f The master of the
house. 2 The good man.
^^^\^ f. The mistress of
the house.
^f ^r c A bird's nest.
^^5^^!^ A house-bird ; a
house-mope.
tR"<I3'cTf A house-business.
2 A family-dispute.
^^"^ House-hold expenses.
^riT'^fr /. The number of
houses (in a village, Sec.) 2
^sunibering of the houses : the
account taken.
^<*\'^ a. Born, bred, made
at home. 2 Of the house>hold.
(id. By one's self.
^rrsj"
141
qr^T
^C^r /. Rattlins: in the
throat (esp. of a Jjing person).
^^^^ or -^r ad. Imit. of cer-
tain rumbling sounds.
^T^uh V. i. To rattle.
A cheat.
^^^3-, sjrq-^ir See ^^^^f.
OT^r or -^r / A married
woman who has run off to live
in the house of another.
»\
^^^•3^ a. A general ruiner of
families.
^T^r a. Beloiifiing to the
household : horn, bred, made
at home : Ho •^^gt One eas}'
and comfortable at home.
^^Rra"[2:^r ad. Used of a
person or thing of no well de-
fined place or service.
^"C^IT The manners, cus-
toms, &c. of a family, 2 House-
l^eeping. ^^.^^
^TT^rRofr / Poet. A house-
^^[^C One who, with his
wife, dwells in the house of his
father-in-law, managing his con-
cerns.
Wf:Tk^(it f. The furniture,
implements, &c. of a house.
^M^ /. Frugality; good
husbandry.
^^2" A large handmill.
mZ^l -^r House-tax.
^^J'T" T). House-site.
^^J^ V. c. To husk.
^TTTf c A bird's nest. 2
House site. 3 A hole in which a
body might lodge.
^^r /. c The share (of a
collection) due from or to each
household. 2 r Each house
considered severally (in matters
of taking or giving, in taxes,
fines, &c.) 3 c A "large hand-
mill. 4 A whirl. 5 A trip or
turn, esp. a fruitless one : gfxf-
^i\^ f. Numbering of the
houses in a village.
¥^r^ ad, c Per house.
^TZ V. mE\ m. A bird's nest.
^^i f. The hot and dry
rising in the month of a dying
]ierson.
^T^^^ n. A domestic hog.
2 An idle and useless female of
a household. [hold.
^TcTrr 71. A term for a house-
^^^ n. House-tax.
^^^ Domestic duties.
^?^'^'iT The master of a house.
^ITq|r See ^if^-
^^^5T The ceremony of
occupying a newly built house.
^T^'^ f. Intestine discord.
?m^oi yj_ Burglary.
^^RiJT a. One that fo-
ments dissension (in a family
or state). 2 A burglar.
^?:^^??Tr ad. Whilst staying
at home, x. e. without entering
into service ; without travel-
ing, &c.
^^^r^f A family man.
^T^3T a. That is performed
or done in the house — service,
work. 2 See g^cj^^T-
mm^\ See ^TR:^r. 2 The
first entrance, by the female, of
the house of her husband, aud
the festivities on the occasion.
^^iTr3J A member of a
family ; a co-heir.
^^irr^ n. House-rent.
^^rn A married and house-
ke^epiiig man. p^^^^^^
^m^\ ad. Privately, at
^X\im\ or ■\t^^^\ /. The
ceremony of occupying a just-
built house : — consulting signs
and aspects ; feasting, &c.
^^^r^R"^/. Thatching of a
^^«f^- [household.
^^^R Economy of a
m^m^ Household affairs.
mmi\ House-tax.
^r#'r^rc=y a. Attached to the
house — a beast, &c.
^T^^fcf/. The ways, habits,
&c. of a bouse,
^nt^r m. -"^ n. (h) Family,
race.
-^im 'f:m^f. a person tak-
ing care of a house. 2 A little
store, stand by.
^T\^\ Friendly relation.
^ (s) Sweat.
^tV v. (s) Rubbing. 2 fio;.
Persevering and strenuous ef-
fort. 3 Discussion. 4 Squab-
bling.
^^^ V. c. To rub. [ingly.
^Wf ad. Copiously, swarm-
^^^# V. i. To emit a strong
and spreading fragrance.
^WtlcT a. Large, fine, dash-
ing;— ornaments, eyes, &c. 2
Full, plum]) — the person. 3
Covered with rich and luscious
things — a dish. 4 Strong, sweet
— an odoiu'.
^ST A rough rub. 2 A rude
shove in rushing by.
^^ /. Loss (in trade), v.
^^T. ^T^, or used inversely
with arg, ^u^, ^. 2 Loss (by
wastage, &c.) 3 The black mat-
ter adhering to ))ots. 4 Gold
drawn otf by friction on the
touch-stone.
q-^ -^=f -^r -PcT^ -f^^T ad.
Words formed to express prompt-
ness or smartness of action.
^^^r A blow or cut ; a
stroke (with a blunt or an edged
weapon). 2 A rough rub. 3 A
rude jolt. [workman.
^^^^^r a. Rough, rude — a
^^^^rr a. One ever chiding
and scolding — a haggler; one
hard at bargains.
^^q'^rcT See ^^ffcf, si^.
1, 2, 3. 2 Used ad. implying full-
ness : ?gT^T ■^T5T 'Efo "^^ ^TlfT
^TiT^l. 3 Copiously, richly
— of things or actions.
^€?^/. Obstinate chaffer-
ing and haggling. 2 Incessant
finding of faults and reproving.
3 Discontented muttering. 4
Animated arguing, v. ^X,
?^'^r/'. Familiar intercourse.
^fr?
]42
?Tr^rr
^^J"^ V. c. To rub against
(as in passing); to graze. 2 To
nib. .'< To do hastily, carelessly.
^T^-F f. A mark o( abrasion.
^^«Tr Coarso, chimsy — a
workman. 2 Dull, heedless.
^^^3" a. Sli[)pery — a place.
/. Intercourse; dealing with or
acquaintance with.
cT^T? /". A slip])ery place.
^fT^^ V. i.To slip : to slide.
2 fig. To assail brisk]}- : ^t
?qT'^T BTfTTT^^ 'S^^SIT. .3 'I'd
set to : '^Tr i^f^^i^' ^jfl jgt
■^#i. 4 To err. 5 To slip iVorn.
6 To waste away — the bodv. 7
To break — the constitution. S To
fail, sink — courage, confidence :
to flinch — a ])erson : to sustain
- — reverses ; to ffo down the hill.
^Finfr /: Scolding vehe-
mently and coarsely, i'. '^T^
g. of 0., "^^ g. of s.
srVn See ^r. 2 a loss (in
trade, &c.) 3 A shock (of some
calamity).
^B^Z^ V. c. To rub off. 2
To be ])ractiscd in.
^^r The o ull^^t : tlie wind-
])ipe ; tlie throat in its two senses.
^^\^^ -^i dd. Imlt. of cer-
tain sounds, as that of cutting
gras.'!, chewing, &c. : fancifully
expressive of the manner of
lavishly spending, recklessly
gulping.
^^^^ a. Coarse— cloth.
^^ f. A furrow ; a ravine.
2 f. m. A hole (as worn through
a wall or eml)anknient).
^a^'^BS or -'^\ ad. Used of
tears or of a stream flowing
copiously.
^^^r£^ 1), c. To become
loose (ornaments, Ikv.) from the
emaciation of the body. 2 To
have the feeling of utter ])rostra-
tion of strength.
^a!;T^7E^m\ a. A pp. to a
])erson whose clothes hang bag-
ging and slopping about him.
^cS'^aS\^ a. Loose, hanging.
2 Free, frank, candid, ad.
Copiously, freely.
^[t^Z[ Poet. A wound.
^i^f. Haste, hurry. 2 Hur-
riedness. 3 l>ustle. 4 Tumultu-
ous and violent commotion. 5 A
stunning sound ; a din (as of
(hnims, &c.)
^r3>^ a. Whole or round ;
— used of numbers : ^T«>^^*T.
2 All at once, ii 13y whole sale.
^TT /. A vessel to hold
water.
q-fJRiT^^r W^\ A cant
])hrase for the employment of
water-carrying.
^Rn(H) A fea^le garment. 2
A child's rattle.
^Rfr /. A bell or jingling
ball (as of a child's girdle, or as
worn on the toes by dancing
girls, &c.)
mZ, ^\Z f, Tlie throat, esp.
the ui>per part or larynx. 2 A
bell.
^13" A mountainous ran^e
dividing countries. 2 The Sayha-
(Iri range in jiarticular. 'i A
didicult passage over a hill. 4 A
wharf (on banks of rivers or
tanks). 0 The country eastward
of the Sayluuiri range.
^- Form, figure. 2 fig. Sem-
blance (of a plot, project). 3
Indications.
^RT'^ V. c. To bruise, mash,
beat, or stir about (with a ladle,
&e.) 2 tig. To tease, harass. 3
To agitate, argue. ?/. The stick,
spoon, &c. used in bruising, &c.
2 The act of bruising, stirring,
^IZ^^{ f. Blocking up of
a pass over a hill. 2 Toll levied
on passengers to defray the ex-
pense of mending or making a
pass.
^\ZmA\ Tlie crest of a
mountain. 2 The head or out-
let of a pass.
^\Z^ n. A little boll (hung
around a bidloek's neck).
^\Z^^^ -set a. Relating to the
Desh or country above the
Sayliadri range ; — used of the
piople.
^i?r a. See ^\Z^^, but used
esp. of things, i)roducts, &c. /.
A hand-bell. 2 The throat. 3
A string (of sweetmeats) for a
child's neck. \
^r°T /. An offensive smell.
2 Any thing nauseous. 3 A
term of reviling ; — used to per-
sons and things : "^T ^\'r\T. ^J-
(.Agreeing with stiiikurrj stuff,
stinking fellow). 4 Disorder
(of an account, affairs) : plight,
mess (of ])ersons or things). 5
The wheel-rut of a linu^-grind-
iug mill. 6 Smell. 7 Used as
an int. expressing vexation, im-
patience.
^m V. i. To Stink.
^Ml An oil-mill. 2 The
block in which the ^T^ or
roller moves. 3 Materials thrown
into the mill at one time, the
charge. 4 fig. The quantity of
rice, &c. put at once into the
pounding mortar or parching
pan. 5 A sug.ir-cane press. 6 At
marriages, &c. The making of a
^lUTT (?'. e. a "^'T^l full of rice)
and the pounding and singing,
ike. by the assembled gossips, v.
^m^J, ^m\ a. Stinking.
2 Disgusting : a stinkard, scrub.
^l^ (s) Killing or striking:
a stroke. 2 fig. Destruction (of
a work) : ruining (of a ]ierson,
council, &c.) 3 Amount of a
multiplication.
^f^ /. The proper time (of a
work) : season : q^ugT"^ ^f»
Seed-time.
^fcT^ or '^ a. Murderous,
destructive; baleful.
q-fcrq-qr -^m «. That disap-
]K)ints or that ruins at the fairest
or most promising moment.
^FcffTrcT A comprehensive
term for killing, injuring, &c. :
for loss, hurt, iS:c.
mm^ a. Mischievous.
^rfT^R An inauspicious day
(of the week).
qTcffS" j; An evil time.
^M^ (I. s Murderous.
qT^''Tr.i.(H)To be overcome
(by terror, grief, &c.); to be
amazed. [terror, &c.)
^(^^r a. Overcome (by
?f^^ir=f^r V, c. To terrify.
^^■^r ad. With consterna-
tion ; aghast, terror-struck.
?r^ Sweat. 2 fig. T!ie ooz-
ing from wet sticks, &c. under
combustion; the steam which
settles on the lid of a pot boil-
ing on the lire ; the melting of
a hard heart.
m^^m, "^^l^ f. SvvelterinP-
state. 0, Puffed, blown.
m^nr -3- a. Filthy, slovenly.
^Hf^r f. An eruption from
heat.
sT^fotT n. The prickly lieat.
2 A pimple arising from heat. 3
The ])iece of leather along the
sole in the inside of a shoe : a
cloth, &c. under a saddle to
receive the perspiration.
^R (H) A wound. 2 /.
Hurry,
"^l^^^l^r c A term for one
that bellows and blubbers upon
the slightest injury.
W\^^'^m a. A lu.rrier.
^f^^cT f, n. Vehement ex-
citement and eagerness, v. ^.
2 Vehement urging, v. ■^,
^T-^, ^x, tTf^. 3 Restlessness
of the animal system, v. ^. 4
Violent and hot itching, v. $.
Wm^4 f. A term for an inter-
fering beast betwixt two beasts
fighting.
q-fZfEf JO]- y_ I ^^ ]^Q wounded.
m^^?r A wound.
m^\o^ a. Wounded. 2 fi'^-.
Confuted. 3 Weakened. 4 Af-
fected with shame, n. The
shradh performed to the manes
of tlie slain in battle and of the
de;id generally by violent deaths.
^f^ /: A kite.
^K^l^r a. Havino- eyes of
the colour of cat's eyes.
^iTF a. Of the colour of cat's
eyes — eyes.
^r^ /. Attackino;. r. m^,
T?T^, tf^. 2 fig. Ruining, v.
q^, ■&C. 3 A heavy calamity.
^Iw^rS" /: Putting in and
taking out ; placing and re-
moving idly.
143
^\^^m f. Delaying : defer-
ring. '2 Pushing and driving.
^Fc^fr^ /■ A rough carrying
(of a matter according to one's
own will). 2 Slurring over (of
a work). 3 Disorderly entering
(of items in an account); con-
fused speech.
'^l^^ V. r. To potir. 2 To
throw. 3 To spread. 4 To thrust :
^^rt ^T^ ^^t. 5 To put on,
set to : ^^ilT t^^T^^T¥ sT-
?J^T. (i To set up : ■^^T^T ^T-
fj^. 7 To put on : 3T«IIrr ^If-
^^T VT<TvlT. 8 To serve out :
TSTT ^TfT ^IvT- 9 To bring
upon (something evil) : ti^t
W»K '^^^ ^T ^i^^ ^^T. 10
To briug forth (young) : to lay
(eggs), ll To set, administer, give
(a lesson, a sum, an oath). 12 To
cast out. 13 To cause, excite :
■^-q -^W -^^ m^m. 14 xMak-
ing, doing : '^T'Sj; -iritif o3 -'^ITT-
^l^-iTT-vrf«T qirfof. 15 Plac-
ing, putting. r
^^1 => [ness.
qr^fq"^ That feigns mad-
m^H^ f. (h) Disorder:
tumult. 2 Jumbling together;
tig. busy chewing. 3 The hurry,
bustle (of any business). 4
Disturbance of a course. 5
Turning and tossing : distress of
system (as under fever), (i In-
trigue, confuseil trickery, frau-
dulent eomi)lexity (in accounts).
^fc^^r,^rc^^^r «. One ever
disturbing. 2 Busy and bustling;
full of schemes and projects.
^r?^fq-ot ;,, c. To turn away,
pnck off: to send. 2 To throw
off (an as])ersion) : to wash awav
(sinfulness, &c.) 3 To squander
(money) : to spend (time, vouth,
&c.) : to throw away (character,
credit, &c.): to confound, blast
(a business). 4 To cast out,
eliminate : f^gfi^I^ '^\'^ 'EftSf-
f^% fT^ ^^TT 'rr^rllrT. 5 To
force in. (I To see off.
^\^\ Attacking, falHng
upon. V. V]^, tiir. 2 Bring-
ing ruin upon. v. ^l^.
^r^ -?5Tr a. That trades
fraudulently. [-(;„ trade).
^I'T^HjA wound. 2 fig. A blow
srar
^r^^r^ Fit time: grasp,
clutch. 2 Arts, wiles. 3 Efforts,
plans.
mf^T^Rr /. (From a practice
of the famous gif^TTT #1W-
^TifT, crowding Rrahmans in-
to close rooms.) Exceeding and
suffocating crowdedness.
^m or ^i^ A mouthful. 2
The quantity put at once into
the mill, the grist. 3 The grains
which slip aside into the hollow
of the mill : i m\h WN ^Tk^-
4 (ii) Grass.
^r5Ef^2:f3r, ^rr^^r^a. a term
for a rude fellow. 2 App. cou-
temjituously to a swordsman.
qr^HT^, mm^ v. c. To mb
off. V. i. To sustain a loss (in
tra<le).
^\m\ f. Rubbing, scrub-
bing. 2 Rubbing stuff.
m^of or ^f^^ ?;. c. To rub. 2
To rub off. 3 To scold. 4 To
discuss. 5 To defraud. 6 To con. 7
To rub up ; to practise diligently.
8 To brush up (one's knowledge,
&c.)
^l^mFTor -^mf. Reiterat-
ed rubbing. 2 tig. Constant
chiding and scolding; squabbling
bargaining, v. ^x, wTR, Tf^.'
tTrS'^rS" Disorder, confusion,
mi\ f. A whirl. 2 Com-
passing. V. "EJi^. 3 A trip.
4 A hovering.
m-^Rr^r a. One ever chid-
ing and scolding.
r^^Pf^ See ^T^?r^.
Nmil A caste. They are
blacksmiths.
^r n. (h) Clarified butter.
^i]7, fjH (Hi A cloak worn
over the hc;id aiul the face.
^^""Cr /. Grain boiled whole.
2 (jrain which, after the ri[)euing
of the crop, the cultivators pre-
sent to the Patil, &c. that they
may make ^o.
^f /. The^hoot of the owl,
of the pigeon, and of the bird
^^
144
tr
Wr^^fS" n. A reproachful
term for a srowii up boy yet
chil.lish.
qr- ^^ .^< .V^H\ -r?"# ad.
With a gulp. 2 Siuldenly, with
a pop : Ho ^TUT tt^T.
^^r (ii) A gulp. 2 A magic
hall jriven by devotees.
^^^^ or -55JOT „. I To
flicker or quiver in the last ago-
nies. 2 To speak confusedly
and falteringly. 3 To hover
around.
^r f. iMilk sj)icecl and sugar-
ed I givi'u to infants).
3^^r See JJ^^^l
5^^ n. An owl. 2 fig. A liide-
ons, oM woman. ' [l,o!low.
^JRJ[a7 ^.^ ./_ To sound deep,
to: a dome. 2 n. A sort of
musical instrument.
5^r /. A little dome.
^■^ Eruption of bloody
blisters on the internal surface
of the eyelids, r. v, %\^, ^^.
2 The inner side of the eyelids
(as turned out to frighten).
^Wn V. i. To resound. 2 To
last long; to hang on — a sound,
a rumour, a discussion, a game,
a disease. .3 To swell and heave.
4 To ferment ; — used of '^^l^^.
5 To play, stir. 6 To coo, to cry
as a pigeon : to make a loud
and deep singing — birds.
^^<r f. A play amongst
cowherds. 2 iig. liawling. v.
^'[y^. ."5 A certain iinisical ins-
trument. 4 Poet. Abundance.
^r (In top playing.) A dint
struck on a top. 2 Thumpini:,
hanging (of man or auimalj
in order to tame. r. HT^T, JTl-
^^, g, g. of 0. .'» Holding
under long procriistinatioii. -1
[fingering about, v. Htffl"ir «^^,
^^\ -^^Ut. Reserved, sullen.
^qr'S^ -^ Excess above the
(i<)vcrinnent-revenue(of a village
or field i received from the far-
mer of it.
^m^N A close or deep fel-
low that accomplishes his pur-
poses without vain blinter.
S^l^ V. i. To roar. 2 To
grumble. ^ [--^^_
5^ n. Epilepsy, v. ^, ^R,
^^ n. A caterpillar.
^^^ofr /. See 5^^^.
^^^^ V. r. To thrust or
force into. 2 To handle violently.
I', i. To enter forcibly.
5^^r Rumpled state (as of
clothes, books, &c.) [plino-.
S^'^'S^^ ./• ^^ general rum-
^H^ V. i. (h) To enter forci-
blv. 2 fig. To enter amongst
unprivileged.
^^^Z^ V. i. To be nearly
sutfocatcd. 2 Iig. To choke. 3
To rumple. [trampling.
5^3?^ /. Treading and
5^R^ V. c. To force in.
^^^'^ 72. Churning. 2 Curds.
^^!»°T V. c. To churn. 2 To
shalie violently. 3 fig. To work,
knock up.
5^^r .Matter obtained by
churning.
5^r (A) Anger.
3"^^r (h) a blow.
^^ (h) a bunch,
^^ f. (ii) The bandicote rat.
2 -V])p. to a very black female.
fcT //. (s) Ghee.
^^^^' s A poetical figure
for an enraptured lover.
^cTf ?^r/. (s) pop. fcT^^^f;;/.
Rivers of ghee ; — used to express
abundance and niceties at a
''■'^ [hension.
5''^f^i^ f. Slowness of apj)re-
q"3:qf57a c A term for one
that is ever borrowing or I)eg-
ging. and who seldom feels dis-
])osed to give or to lend.
^ /. A determined, vigor-
ous onset. 2 A word used by
soldiers in shouting and rusliing
to the attack.
'#IT[T A determined eHbrt.
r. ^^. ad. lliuriedly, impe-
tuously.
^•H V. c. To take. 2 To lay
hold of. 3 To get, suffer :
ff^- JT^T^rTT^TT^i^^. 4 To
admit : rqi^T «IT7TlJT-cjf gTf't.
5 To espouse (a side). 6 To
allow :7?IT3TT^i%^ "^I^ ^TT^ill"!!
^^', a Q[?ft ^n^ ^T?J ? 7 To
appreciate (merit), rf To form
(^doubt). 9 To assume, affect:
^TJT-t^ ^DT. 10 To catch
(fever, fear, &c.) 11 To take
away, destroy (life, character. &e.
1 2 To take off: T^j^ ♦IT^ ^%y^.
l.'j To require (time, space, &c.)
14 To take in hand ; to scold :
J?IT fJJTvfT W ^rr#'. 15 To
do : iri'fef guf. 1() To get hold of
(tidings). 17 To hand over:
fft ^^nfr "?;^ir ^T. 18 To
incur; to be the subject of (ri-
dicule, &c.) : 5TT^^ -»rTTl7i"
B^. ID To cross (a hill, &c.)
20 To take up, add unto :
^T ^T^T 3T^^ ¥1^T, ^m^
■fl*! ^Trf g. 21 To contract
(habits, &c.) : 51^-iI tof. 22
To cast (aspersion) : 3TTc5-
g''?iT^ ^ffi. 23 To admit the
action of: 3iT^ ^T^^ ^T*T
yff *i\ft- 24 To take (as a
cow, the calf) : ^ JTT^ ■JfT-^^
^<T "iTT'^T. 2o To take the
life of : -ft -ff ^"1 -^^trl ^?R ^T-
^TS ^rft. 2G guf is taken up
ad libitum after verbs ; some
times denoting that the agent
is tlie subject of the action ;
sometimes snpjdying emphasis
or ])aiticularity to the agent :
but generally it is redundant and
only rounds the period : ^^T-
^'C ^T-si ^^^ ^T ; ^KT5T
^^^fr c A creditor. 2 fig.
One who, although he can render
no service, has a claim for sup-
port ; — a servant ever sick.
Ef(Jr?07 ^j^ Borrowing and
lending.
^^k^\ ad. On the final di.s-
eus.sion ol the terms : 'J^^JII'^
fx^Mri "^I^T ^1?^ ^tfl?lT, MOT
»^
^ (ii) A circumference. 2
The skirt of a garment.
q"r»f
J 45
^rsr^r
^°T V. c. To encompass. 2
iig. To beset or lieni in ; to in-
volve in difficulties. 3 To seize —
fever, slecj), &c.
^^rr a. IJaviiig a border.
2 Hiiviui; a skirt.
^n See ^r-
^^r /". Giddiness, v. ^•
^^f^r The pendulous fila-
ments of a roof or vvull from
smoke or iliist.
^t'?'^ f. m. Trade or tralFie.
^^TJ A retailer; a huck-
sferor.
^^2r a. c Dull and obstinate.
m^fr^Tf One that knows
only by rote.
%OT _/: Connino-. v. ^, %•
'2 Unceasing nieiilioii of a desire.
V. §, 5Ht^,'^T^, *^, ^^, ylTJr.
q'r^^ r. c. To con. 2 To
harp upon.
TOR p. of ^f^^. r , ,,
^. ^ '^ Lcloth.
^R^r f. A woollen, cuarse
^\n^ //. A black blanket. 2
An encumbrance ; a care or
trouble ; a burdensome but im-
perative task. 3 iig. Mess or
])ickle made of one (by rude })ul-
ingand shaking ) : ^{1 '^Tgi»ff
^r^T^T V. i. To roar — wind, &c.
^ To buzz-tiies, &c. ^^i^g ^,^-^^
^R^r a. Rough, hoarse —
gTjy[q"a]- ^,_ ^ Yo swarm around
with loud buzzing — liies, &c.
mm V. i. c To roar— the
sea, Avind, &c.
^f^r ad. Imit. of the roar-
ing, beating (of waves, wind, &c.)
^l^ A gulp.
^r^oTr /: iiubbing, &c.
^l-^^^r V. c. (h) To rub with
a hard ami smooth body in order
to polish. 2 To levigate. 3 To
rub and stir in order to mix. 4
See fji^f^uf.
m^:^ V. c. To gulp.
^mm see \mm. 2 tig. To
revolve nieutallv.
19
^r?r or ^(2"r a wooden pes-
tle. 2 The ankle-bone. 3 Dry
leaves of hemp-plant ground in
water with spices, &e.
^\Z\oS^\ f. Whisking about.
^[jf^^, ^[Z\^^ V. i. To go
backward and forward (as in a
maze). 2 To veer: to eddy.
V. c. See fn^Hjuf.
^kfST or ^k\^l Turning
round and round. 2 Disorder,
confusion. 3 A labyrinth. 4
Shifting and chopping about (of
wind).
q}f[^ ;.. of ^CT- j-,^^.^^^,^
^\Z IK A drenching horn
^r^ '^l^k A term of ridi-
cule for a fuU-growu boy ap-
pearing as bridegroom.
STR'^oS" u. Horse-troops.
tfr^^ST^rn A term of abuse
for a boy remaining unmarried
some years bevond his nubilitv.
'^[■J^lw y; A row of horses
picketed. 2 A stable for a stud,
o Contemptuously. A long, low,
unseemly house, a barn. 4 Con-
temptuously. A grown up girl yet
unmarried.
^f^^rSTr^qV^rs?/. a stable.
Hr^[5T"^?T A term of ridicule
for a grown up boy now ap-
pearing as a student.
m^^R f. The great tendon
above the heel, tendo Achillis.
^r^T A horse. 2 The knight
at chess. 3 The cock of a gun.
4 A hobby. I) A giddy boy. ti A
clothes' horse. / A term fo)' the
foot considereil as a means of
conveying the person; a nay
of ten toes. HA stand from which
a cradle is suspended. !> Tlie
posture upon hands and knees
of a child begiinnng to crawl, v.
mX- 10 A stand vvitli stej)s on
both sides. 1 1 Tiie swell of the
tide. 12 A chopping block.
^rft /. A mare. 2 The cord
from which offending school-
boys are suspended. 3 The
tVaiiie to support the ^^gj'ai.
4 \ term for a woman of girlish
manners; a hoiden, Tomboy. 5
A chopping block.
^r^ n. A hoise (without
distinction of sex),
q'ri'^rs:^ a trooper.
^[^^r^r 4^/. A phrase used
in answering a question of im-
pertinent curiosity.
^r°T /. A sort of centiped.
^R^ c See ^'^^.
frq c A cluster.
^^'^ n. An unexpected gust
of fortunes, favours; a windfall.
''. ^, ^Tfq^.
»\
^r^ (s) Anxiety, v. ^^, ^m.
2 The dying rattles. 3 Longing
and pining after an absent per-
son. V. ^ g. of 0. 4 c Loud
howling : ^T ^TTrf"^ ^KT^J-
cd}'^ iiicff^ qx^ ^^T ; clamour.
ff. (s) Frightful — appearances,
sounds, &c. : deep — sleep : gross
— darkness : thick and gloomy
— a forest : furious — a battle :
huge — a buildinc;,
^K=f)K Exceeding action and
strenuous exertion; vehement
and strenuous e.vertion : r£fT^'
^\<'^l V. i. To snore.
^rrq^ /: An iguana. 2 tig.
A care: ^T^Jlc5}trT'^|^15?l^"~-\
^f^ (s) A deep, continuing
sound. 2 Conning. 3 DvvcUing
upon one note or strain, v.
it, ^T^, «Tt^, ^HT.
^r^^ n. s Speaking loudly :
publishing.
^rtf^H)Abunch. 2 The lower
end of the sail-yard. 3 r A
sea-trip.
^r^ a. Large, fine, full ; —
used as 'S'^'^, ^W^CTrT.
^\^^\l a. Tiuit has %^ —
an ear-ring, &c.
^r^ Turning round and
round, lit. fig. ; shaking, sifting.
2 Disorder. 3 Distraction. 4
Busy bustling, v. qi^, m\-^.
5 The skirt.
m'^^l A band (of men or
animals). 2 Clamour, tumult. i\
-It, •^^, "^Twf, mx.' 3 Confu-
sion (of affairs).
qr^'irr
146
qrs^ir See ^rs- sig-. 2, 3, =^^^?r /: Brightness. ^^^
J, and %IT<:^1^. [injr. ' =^-^^tr^ a. Brinht. 2 Clean,
^r^^ «. Sifting or winnow- =q^qT ^,, 'f|j^t squints.
qrST^r/. Shakiiii; about. =E)-^af ^,_ ,^-_ ^o be lost in
^\^^ r. C. To sh:ike about, iiniiizement ; to be dazzled: to
.1 'p II 1 1. ..;,.i.>„tiv '^ l^e befooled. 2 To err.
l' io ])iiU aud ))usli violently. «J ^
To shuffle (cards). 4 To arsiue : ^^cff y. A thing in general
to revolve u)ent;illy. 5 To tease_. j circular. 2 A scrap of writing ;
6 To sinootii (by .scrapiiiir). 7 I ticket, card, label, &c.
To cross-examine. 8 To practise ^.^ .
in. f) To have much to do uicii. '^'f^'^^ m. v. A circulai
10 To use; to hriiig under wear sjjot; any round aud bare space.
anil tare. - ^IS- liitibezzleineut. 3 L tter
r^p-i-i-n- r,M 1 r7r~ ^ ' con^iiiiuptiou.
^rST^^FT a. Tluithas a ^1"-^ '
attached to it.
^^ mt. Here! take !
^^=T^T (h) Fiagments,
|)ieces. 2 The feeling of being
nocked up : ^'UT'-^T '^'''^t^T.
STR n. (s) The nose. 2 The ^^^p^j^^ Spent, exhausted.
sense of smell. rsmcll -ra— rr-rrr m x r .1
vr^ L^mcu. ^[gf^f^Tj- r^ j-^^ account of the
STRFS:^ «. (S) 1 he sense ot ^ ^.j,.^,^^ j^^,^,,^^ assignments,
grants, &c. ; a document descrip-
tive of the boundaries of an
t:;2»;-t-«>— estate or a tield. 2 A written
engagement.
^ 1^5^^ a. Neat, tidy— per-
sons, ))laccs, &c.
^ The sixth consonant. ///t/.^^J^^^f /. Defining off the
An a{fi.x of emphasis or of' lH)undanes of an estate,
enhancing power; ^ express^- , "^^^^ /. Astonishment,
ing certainty : HT '^TT'^ 3^1% j uuia/crneiit. v. ^^^, ^^.
He is re?% athief ; ?fi^^T^ "^^.W^ f. (ii) A flint and
^Tlt iie is .1 thief ; ^^^^ ^t^ ; steel for striking fire, 2 T!:e
Come at all risks, you musi \ steel alone. 3 fig. Collision, v.
"^W^mp] V. I. To glitter.
^^^r (H) A division of
country comprising several
T?^5nin. 2 The court of the ma-
gistrate of a ward. 3 A stand of
come ; *fl ^^rTJ^ ^^vft 1
rose instiinihj ■Av^v my meal ;
*fT ^'<;*r^ or ^ »4l^^ "^i^ 1
will come assuredly, positively.
"^^ f. Rest, ease.
■^+ Awe, reverential fear.
2 Law, rule. 3 Coml)iiiation,
union.
^?;^^ -^f ad. Glitterini^-
ly. 2 Imit. of the sound of lap-
])iug.
•cJ^-^^'T V. i. To shine. 2 -,^,^^-r ^ ^ •.. i
To recrret. 3 To utter its click- ' ^^'^If^./- l^nihcd state
a shroif.
^^r^ r. c. To dazzle, be-
uilder : to deceive. felare
^^r^'^r V. i. To gleam : to
^^r=fir f. Gleaming : glare.
a liuMsc-lizard.
"^^^^r^T Rtfulgcnce.
^^^^^■^ V. L To chatter
— a monkey.
^^Tqr^riVr v. c. To slap or
smack (the check); to make the
^^\K The name of the letter
■=^. 2 A cant term for two
''"""I- [for a backbiter.
^^flRf^^^T (I. A cant name
/=7^IT?T5? A \vor<i, a sylla-
ble : M\ ^o SfiT^' ^T?JT=^T ^I^'t-
eyes f ask: v^ ^Tilt^^T^'C i ^^Rf A cant t'jrm lor "^^^T^"
'*(*'5r^Tf%^ ?f 5?r ^'^'f\ WfrlT. I or two anuas.
^^f"Cr /. A covert name for
backi)iting.
^^itr /. A wheel- rut. 2
Vt'l'.eeling round (of a carriage).
3 A recess made otf a road for
carriages to turn.
^[^^ p. Dazzled, bewildered.
^■T.I^f or -^ or ^^IcT^l (h)
A fruit — pompclmoose.
^JJ^jcT^ See "^^Q^r.
^^ a. Bright-shiiiimx, trim,
fine. 2 a. c^ ad. Lost in admi-
ration or wonder, n. A flash.
^^^ -^r .^^ -r^ifr -I^^^ir ad.
With a flash.
"^WX n. A plaything. 2
(k) a circle. 3 The lounge. 4
'/;../. Vertigo. 5 n. A ring before
the eyes (from biliousness, &c.)
() A halo. 7 A turn; a compass.
8 The wheel-rut of a lime-miil.
^^T m. ^^R:fr H.(!i)Miik
coagulated llrmly and uniformly.
2 (Cant) A good dinner ; a blow-
out.
^^r/ (ii) A handmill.
^^^T^iT a. Astonished, won-
derstruck.
"^^ n. (s) A wheel. 2 A
discus. 3 A plaything. 4 Cir-
cular lines at the finger-ends.
5 An army. 6 A realm : a district.
7 A circle. 8 A cycle of years.
9 ( Vulgar) A trouble.
^^TfcT /. Rotatory motion.
Tf^i^S" An exercise of the
gvmnasiuni.
^^m"S-(T[r The flibric of
swinging boxes erected at fairs.
'^^^\\^ a. s Ijearino- in the
hand the ^^ or discus ; —
an epithet of Vishnu.
■^?h"*T^ A wily mant^uvre,
stratiigcm.
~4V^^^ n. s (Ellii)iirally
for si;i^f ^o The skipping
from branch to branch of a
monkey, &c.) Desultory study.
^^^ ad. Circularly.
^^^^FtT a ruler of a "^T^ or
region extending from sea to
j>-i [duck.
^''ph'^l'^ Bialiuiuny youae or
"Ci^^
147
=^?T^
^3T^[5"/. or ^^^lS"5^r^ n.
Compound interest : also the
Rule of Com})omul Interest in
arithmetic.
^^^rcT(s)A whirlwind. r^^^_
^ST^r^ s The sensible hoi iz-
2 A range of mountains supposed
to encircle the earth.
=^3r>c^r /. pop. =^^^5r A
certain astroloj^ical period or
season ; any matter now com-
menced lingers long in hand.
^3r?rC /. Compound in-
terest.
"^^W S JJnp. -rW -R^ A
form of military array, the circle.
2 fig. A deep, complex plot or
scheme.
^^f^rr a. Circular.
"^^m^ s 2^'>P- "^^f^'^ A
white stone bearing indenta-
tions. 2 Used of a person pitted
with the small-pox or marked
with otiier discolorations.
^^f^ST f\ ^^[^[57 /: Com-
pound interest. 2 A series of
rings of hair.
^fhF f. An entertainment
consisting in the reading of the
Purans, &c., or the sin2:ing of
odes and light airs, all round
the assembly. 2 The ridge band
of a turban. 3 A bandalour. 4 An
ornament for the turban, con-
sisting of buds circularly dis-
posed.
=^^rirT /, Sleep in wliich
the subject turns round and
round. [a turban.
"^^r^fTa. Having a "^^l —
^JITZ" a. Clean, pure, er^cel-
lent.
"^^ (p) A Jew's harp. 2 A
streamer or flutterer of i)a])er
pasted u])on, or tied to, a kite. 'A
One of the eight suits at cards.
^^ a. Sharp, smart, intel-
ligent.
=^"^^1^% a. Epithet of that
jff^T^T (pack of playing cards)
of which the eight gt^s or
suits are named '^Tr,^t'^«', &c.
xflTST, =qfjT5rqfr /. (II) Abun-
dance. 2 Pros[)crousness. 3
Satiety.
"^^r a. (ri) Good, sound,
pure.
"^flfoS" or -^^ /• Over-flow-
ing abuuda.K-e. ^^^^^^^^,
^Mf, ^^MJII A dissolute
^^(^ n. m. The chewed and
trampled portion (of the fodder
thrown to a beast). 2 App. to a
fellow ever dinning one thing
upon the ears ; to a dull fellow :
to speech in the sense of Prolix
and prosing.
^^■^ <i. Loose or slack.
^q'SJcj 1,^ i^ (h) To chew
slo'.vly a7id long.
xf^S'^Sj'S" r>. m. f. A loose
term for half-chewed fodder
lying before a beast. 2 Foolish
t^ilk.
^^ a. Shrewd, brisk, active.
^^^r. i. or^V^^^ (Cant)
To die : also to be dismissed.
"^^^ a. s pop. -^ Shaking,
trembling. 2 Pickle.
^^c^F'^tT a. Fickle, caprici-
ous, volatile, of unstable mind.
=^^r^ot V. c. (^^^ or ^W{)
To kill (as by assassination,
])()isO!iiiig, or other covert way).
(xi"^) Shrewd, clever: also
Y:^^'- [or pockets.
■^"^r /; A bag with divisions
^*f /. ^5J^ n. A beak or
bdl.
"^^T^RT A slight entrance
into or hold upon, lit. iig.
^Z f {W,Z^ To taste) A
taste, taking ; an acquired like-
ness or fondness. 2 A thin
coating.
"cfS" ad. Wholly, altogether,
clean, clear, smack and smooth.
"^^TC/. (h) Matting or mat.
^Zi^ rr^ /. A bracelet of
the arm about the elbow.
^Z"5[i/. (h) a taste, an ac-
quired liking or fondness. 2 An
ill habit. 3 The anguish of se-
]iaration and longing for the
return of. v. tilTJr, '<^T^, ^^.
"SlZm^Z^ ad. Iniit. of the
sounding of the toe-ornament.
^j^^i^rqr or -wfKoir /. a
woman enchanting all by her
beauty and blundlsliments.
'^r^I^f^'a]" n. Bright moon-
shine.
'HZm\, "^Z^WW (h) a slap
also a lash with a whip or cane.
"^Z-^-^-^X .\^\ -f^^r ad.
Imit. of the sound of a stroke
with a cane ; smack ! whack ! 2
In a trice.
^J^r Glow, ardour, scorc/j-
ing heat (of tlie sun, fire, &:c,) r.
^TTT. 2 The smart following
up on a burn, or, to the tongue
and palate, upon touching any
thing sharp and biting, v.
g¥. 3 The scar of a burn. 4
A ))ang, thrill.
^Zm\ y. A snap Avith a fin-
ger r.ud the thumb. 2^/. ■^^-
■^T Merry stories and jests.
^3:^?T[t W\^^ jd. or "^Z^^t.
■=^T *?t^^ Big- swelling yvords
of vanity.
^Z^Wi^Z^^\^ ad. In a trice,
shake, jitfey ; with a snap of
one's finger.
^^^^STor -Z\ad. Imit. of the
sound of lashing or caning : of
the stinging and biting of mos-
quitoes, fleas.
^J^d^ V. i. To emit the
sound ^3 ! '%'s\ — a thing in
spitting, sputtering, crackling,
&c.
'^S'^frcT a. r^ot dissolved or
duly softened — boiled rice, &c,
2 Bright, shining — a blade; as
^^ fq?S3T-^To5T.
■STcTqr or -^'/. (h) a sea-
soning formed of chopped
chillies, &c. 2 fig. State of being
cut to pieces,mangled, mutilated,
mashed.
^JTJ"/. (Imit.) Fretting and
grieving, anxious longing and
hankering. 2 or -^f ad.
[grieve after.
i. To fret and
a. to mart,
Quickly.
'^z^z^ V.
"^Z^Zl or
lively, brisk.
'^\i f. Matting or mat.
^Zl^Z -Z\ ad. (Imit.) In a
trice, .shake.
^HTT
148
w^r^qT
^cJZK (commonly "^^K) <f. Nf^^F, "^^F /, The goddess
Light, low, scnmpish ; of disso
lute or ineu;ular habits.
""^JRof V. i. To acquire a
taste, liking, fondness for.
=^fr sc ^m^{ See =^fr
^Zmm A term for a miser.
"^ a(/. Wholly, altogether.
^r (h) a smarting part, a
sore. 2 fig. A loss.
"^fr /. A loss in trade.
''^fF^fr f. The business of
tlie toiU-ttc, — bedecking.
"^t^^r A belted messenger,
a peon.
'^^ a. s Irascible, fiery.
'^ (s") A misshapen stone
^vhieh is jilaced near the idol of
^^ f. A slap ; a stroke.
^^ -^=T -^ -F?h7 -P^F r/c/.
Imit. of the sound of a stroke
of a whip.
=^rste^ (s) Poet. The smi.
^^^^S" f. Scarcity.
'qf^^^'^F V. i. To rise high
— market rate.
"^m^^ a. (s) Fierce, fervid,
lit. fig. 2 Fiereer and fiercer,
hotter and hotter ; increasingly
ardent (q^m^r lij^ ^im^).
^^%'? f. Finning, raving.
2 Tossing about (as in fever).
^?T;?^ v. L To chafe. 2
To tD^s about : to flounce.
=ErT^?F7 Outrageous be-
haviour.
^5'iT^ (s) A high wind.
^3"F'?5" (s) An individual of
any of tlie lowest of the mixed
tribes. 2 fig. A vile, iillby, abo-
minable person.
^^■^fsT s The sun.
■^iri. 2 A passionate, violent
woman.
Tf^fc*?" The pyramid-crest-
etl wood-lark. 2 with b^'^'^T
Inhaling the smoke of the
opium through a pipe. v. ^x:.
3 A preparation of opium.
♦ *\
^^F^^'^^HF A place for pre-
paring or smoking •^i'loT-
^S" Ascent, rise. 2 Adv;ince-
ment, lit. fig. 3 Increased assess-
ment. V. ■^^^j ■^. 4 Attacking.
5 Surpassing, a. Excelling.
"^STJcFFT Ascent and descent;
rise and fall. 2 Exacerbation and
remission(of afever, a paroxysm).
^S''^ /■. An ascent. 2 Steep-
ness.
^<^^ ii.i.Tn ascend. 2 To rise
or advance in height — a heavenly
body, a building. 3 To increase.
4 To rise (from fermentation) —
bhclng, &c. 5 To rise into the
head; to affect with giddiness. G
To go on — clothes upon the
body : to go in— a peg, &c. 7 To
accumulate : TT^ ^^ f^'^'^
■^■5%. 8 To be pufled up
with ])ride. 9 To cover ; to over-
spread— dust, rust, &c. 10 To be
oifered , to be presented in obla-
tion. II To rise or get high —
the voice in singing. 12 To be
turned up — the eyes. 13 To be
a])plied or laid on — plaster, &c.
14 To acquire fullness, clearness
— a colour. 15 To be braced — a
drum : to be strung — a bow.
"^^Ip.pr. Rising. 2 fig. Ad-
vancing.
^^^ITF^FF Thriving footing;
impniving state (as of one's for-
tunes).
^S"^ /". Rise, advance.
^S'^F^^R f. Prosperou.-^
season.
^S'cTRi^F f. The waxing pe-
riod of the moon. 2 See ■^S'-
a new proprietor of an estate, and
the removal of the old one.
^S'f^oj ^, f, To make to
ascend : to make to advance. 2
^^IF^'^oT V. An invalidated ,,,^,^,
bond or note of hand. __- ^_ ^ [tcrest.
^TF^fF^tF f. A band ^,| "^^"^^"^ ^^- ^^'"l^'^""^ *"
blaek--uards. " 1 "^^W f. An e.xtra cess.
^'fF^F /. Mad deeds. 2 also \^^^ w. f. Superiority over.
■^^Tsi^ ./'. A female of the j "^T^^^ TcRCT ^^ The insertion
■^f^ToS caste. | (on the records) of the name of
To string (a bow). 'S To api)ly
or lay on (a slap, stroke, &c.) :
BTl^T. 4 To ])ut into the
mouth (tobacco, kc.) : rf^T^-
■^^Tif. -J To nistigate, incite,
&c.
=^STi /. (n) Attacking.
^S'FC^ An e.xpert horse-
man. 2 An expert climber.
^5"F^ (II) See "^S".
"^sc^" a. Haughty.
■q'S^F^S"! /■ Emulous contest.
ad. In continual rise.
^OT -^'=^ -*T -fcTR -\K^\ See
•=^3- -qi?:, &c., sig. 1.
^^I^F The smart of the
sting (.f a scorpion, &c.
^q^[^a7 7'. i. To shoot or
smart — the bite of scorprons.
^ay^crr j-_ Scarcity. 2 Throb-
bing.
^(JT^oy o,. J^\ ,^fi ii^^if^ of the
clank of empty pots : ex])ressive
of tile lively action of bug.s, tieas,
in the exercise of their office.
^EfOT^ojar ^, i ^1^(3 i-i^g high —
price. 2 To smart — a wound. .'5
To be sharply hungry. 4 To
sound — strokes of a wliip.
^OT^^IJ See =^^^^.
^f^^^Fcf a. Nicely season-
ed. 2 Sharp. j-pavt stung.
^orq^OTy; '|-jg smarting of 'a
^"^F cfiam.
^OTJTIOT pi. Parched gram.
'^^i\T, ^cT^? ni.f. A fourth
(of a cake, fruit, <S:c.) r^ Four.
"^3^ fl. (s) Shrewd, clever.
'^^t^ (s) Having the four
])owers (elephants, cavalry, clia-
riots, and infantry) — an army.
^J^lf f. Sagacity.
^J^*^*^ «• s Four-faced.
^^'4fi.(si) Fourth, r ,
^ • '' [ous order.
^T4F'^JT The fourth religi-
'cTT^TT
149
^W^
"^^^l f. The fourth lunar
ilay
"cT^?"?! a. s Fourteen : four-
teenth, [-j^jnar day.
^g^f^r /. The fourteenth
^^ij^ a. Four-armed, a
name of A^'isluiu. '2 fijz;. Having
the arms tied behind, v.
^^. "tt- 3 fig. Having a wife.
4 Having four sides, [months.
^J^W s The four monsoon
^=r<T s The four objects ot
human jmrsuit collectively, viz.
■Slfl-, ^TTT, ^4 ^T^-
=^m% a. Of four kinds.
=^§mrgRT /'. s The four
great divisions of ^r^i, viz.
^g^T^rn, ^*ri:^<TT, ¥^^rlT,
''^T^j^. [A square.
'^^'^^R a. Quadrangular, s.
xj-^cq^^ xjm\^ a. Qua-
druped.
=^^^[iTr/. The four bounda-
ries (of a iield, &c.)
"^^ (s) Sandal tree. 2 n.
Its wood. 3 Unctuous prepara-
tion of the wood. 4 tig. Demo-
lition.
=^*^^gf^r c. A sensualist.
=#?Hf a. Relating to '^^•
'^^r (ii) A share of contri-
bution. 2 Raising money by sub-
scription. V. qi^.
=^fr /. (h) The daily allow-
ance of grain (to horses, &c.) 2
fig. The daily consumption (of a
household), v. '^I^.
"^5" (s) The moon. 2 The
day of the moon, the date. 3
fig. A white spot on the face of
cows, &c.
=^3t^^r /. pop. -ST A digit. 2
A cloth used for qT^%. 3 The
light of the moon.
^S^^icT A fabulous gem sup-
posed to be formed from the
congelation of the rays of the
^°°"- ' [moon.
=^5:5r?""^ n. Eclipse of the
^Efsc^^rfcr /. pop. -trcf a kind
of firework . 2 Moon-light.
xf5"^o7 n. Piopitiousness of
the moon.
^5"!'?^ n. The lunar disk.
^ST^^c^ n. The moon con-
sidered as a region. 2 The disk
of the moon.
^5^^r The moon.
^JTJ^, '^^^^^\ f. Terms of
rapture for a beauty.
=#5r#r^r «. That lets the
moon beams through the roof.
^Srf^^ltit (I. Blowintr on the
rise of the moon — certain
flowers.
^ST or ^%^ Gum copal.
<5r[^, ^Vr^^r ad. Poet. As
long as the si'm and moon en-
dure.
=^f^^ /. Moon-light.
^Srr f. Fixedness and glnze
of the eye-balls (in intoxication,
or in death, earnest attention).
^5"r?^ The rising of the
"^00"- lad. Quietlv.
=^T int. (II) Silent! still!
^7^ s A flower-tree. n. Its
flower.
^q -^^ -^r -r?% -f^^r ad.
Quickly, in a trice.
=^^q" -Tt ad. Quickly.
^^'^W^ See ^f^^^.
"^^r or -^r a. Low and flat :
flattened. ^ [beaten flat.
'^^Z\ or -^r/. Any tiling
^q^r^or ^W^/. A slnp.
"^^^r a. Left-handed. 2 App.
to the left hand when it has the
skilfulness ordinarily possessed
by the right : 'f T ^^i^t^T f T-
flT^ Y"^ -^K f^f^HT.
^T^^^ V. c. To slap.
^ri^f-tr (h) A peon,
messenger, beadle.
^^^ a. (s) pop. -^ Active,
nimble. 2 Restless, fickle. 3
Wanton — a woman.
'^^^ or -S" J. (h) a sandal.
^T?5T /. s Lightning. 2 A
wanton woman.
i^^^r a. Smart; active.
^TZSrrf y; Smartness.
^^[^7 ad. Quickly.
"^12^ n. Demolished. 2 fig.
Devoured.
=^^[^07 y_ c. To gobble up.
2 To despatch smartly (a busi-
ness).
^Ti^r/. A slap.
^fTT^r /. (n) A cake flatten-
ed with the hand without a
roller.
V.
^^R'T V. i. To draw in from
niodesty or from a sudden im-
pression of fear ; to be abashed.
^W Of/. Quickly. ,,.
^ ■' [tion.
^"T^ s A species of comj)osi-
^'^2: /. (s) A pat ; a blow
(from a cat's paw). 2 fig. A stroke
of misfortune : a stroke of a
vief. 3 fig. Mastery, a. Struck
<^ ''
down : fig. devoured.
"^TTT H A smart slap. 2 A
blast of wind. [Quietly.
"^^ int. (H) Silent! still! ad.
^cq-r^y.SS" See "^ToS".
^^^^^ V. i. To be drip-
pingly wet.
^Ef^^i^fcT a. Dripping wet ;
drenched ; — used as ad. with
^^^f , =^^^^ a. Troubled—
water. /. Stirring about (water)
so as to befoul it. 2 Tossing
about (of things) : intermeddling.
3 Picking and messing (as of
victuals). 4 Busy scheming. 5
Befouled state (of water) : mess-
ed state. ^ ^^ ^ig_
^^S"?!, ^^^fr/. A wanton,
^^S'qf -s^r a. See the noun.
=^Rl"^ or -^r Parched grain.
2 The masticating machine :
"^^cTn or -^r (n) The court
of the magistrate. 2 fig. A toll-
booth ; a raised seat or 3{T^r.
"^1 '^ A goglet.
"^^f. Glitter, flfish. v. ^TR.
2 fig. A feint. 3 Quivering (of
the muscles) : shooting pain (in
the back, &c.) v. TIT^, ^, ^'S,
^JT^
150
^MrT
xmW.^ r. i. To glitter. 2 or
'^iT^-iT "^T^D? To strut ; —
UM'd fs]). of woini'ii. .'! To start.
^q-iT^Rrf ^^r /. A t(M-iu (or a
niinljle and lively woiiiun.
^^riT^ff^, ^JT^ff^^ ?;. c. To
lUiike to flash. 2 To lasli
souiidh'.
=q"i1^(?^ L\ i. To show o(}'
and dazzle, to cut a figure.
'^^r /". A switch ; a cane.
'^^'^^ .^\ ad. Imit. of the
sound of caning, lap! rap! of
the jingling of bells on the toes.
=^PT^JT(3r An illumination ;
refulgence. 2 Profusion (as of
good things at a feast) : riotous
merriment, '-i Of' high-seasoned
and ])i(iuant quality — viands.
=^3T^^r^ a. Pvichly dressed,
piquant. '2 Plentiful.
"^PT^r (ll)A spoon.
=^n^r/. (H) The skin.
^H<:^fr (s) A wonder ; an as-
tonishing event. 2 Astonish-
nieut. r. %T, WT^.
=erJTr^lK^ a. Wonderful.
^^•T (p) A garden-walk.
2 SpkMulid disiday. .'> llevelry.
^RHr a. Fond of s])orts.
^tf^ f. (s) An army.
^iTt^T f. (s) A si)ecies of Jes-
samine, [biagc.
^^ s (^olleetion ; asseni-
"^m, ^^PH^rf r /: do Roam-
in" in gardens ; reveling in
sports and amusements.
^^=1/ Rest, ease.
^P^m a. Fond of taking
one's ease.
=^«, (s) Moving ; as "^^^T.
^ (ii) A ditch ; a long
trench. 2 A scratch, v. ■q^g-.
^^T^ (p) A sugar-cane mill.
2 A mill. '^ fig. Wlu-eling. conti-
luial going on of any matter :
sgji'gi'^I ^«> '^Ivf'sII ^Ti ; or
jg ad. In amazement: TiT^
^T^"^ V. i. To undergo, as
it were, rending ; to be torn
mentally : to be distracted :
^^. r. e. To rend.
^TmJ The sound or the sud-
den smart attendant upon a
burn : a burn, brand. ?'. ^^^.
2 A sudden pang (as affecting
the mind).
^^$r <?r f. A grindino
wheel, a. Turned in the wheel —
jiots, dec.
^?:^r .T\ (id. Imit. of the
sound of rending ; of flapping ; ol
cutting grass, &e.
^^^^ a. c<)- ad. Sharp. /.
Smart pain. v. ^T3T. 2 fig.
Picgret. [sound '^^ ! '=gr !
=^?;^?:"^r r. l. To make the
^r'^HcT a. Rough, cf)arse.
2 Pungent. 3 fig. Peremptory.
4 Sharp, ad. Pully, exactly,
just : %■ ^■[^^ ^o ^^ =^IrI
m^^T-S f. Coarse grind-
ing. 2 Material so ground.
^^^T 7i. (s) A foot. 2 tig. A
metrical foot. '6 A quarter (as of
a %T^). 4 or ^«jlT ^o Tlie
fiist part. 5 A foot of "^^
•if 27^.
'^T'^f. Pasture. 2 Grazing.
."J i'riee of pasturage.
^T'^rTraf n. (s) Water in
which have been washed the
feet of a Brahman.
^Tqm?r //. See =^^^^r^'
^^(^1^1% s Poet. The
foot.
^•^r V. i. To graze. 2 To
pick up (grains, &c.j ; to feed as
birds, .'i fig. To extend — an ulcer.
^Tq7, =^^qe: qsifr /. a pro-
li\ narration.
^^STRIST f. s Establishing
(in au image, &c.) the •^^ffT
permanently.
^TT^^- See^^T^^.
^^^ ad. (p) Exactly, fully :
"^^^^ f. klie talk. V. ^\^,
f^\Y. 2 IVrtness, sauciness.
(I. Rough to the touch. 2 Hard
to the tongue — articles of food.
J Sharp — a blade; fig. sensual.
4 fig. Sul)tle, wily. 5 Saucy,
])ert. (> Idly talkative.
^r^°T r. i. To i'eel roughen-
ed or rubbed (as from chew-
ing hard su.bstauces, such as
sugarcanes, or anstre substances,
such as betel-leaf) — the tongue
and month. 2 To be rough and
coarse with pustules or scabrous
eruptions— the bod\'. ^J p To
chatter, prate.
"^^^^-fcT a. Coarse, hard to
the touch, 2 Not duly solved
in boiling — rice, &c.
^^^r /. (p) Fat, suet.
^^ n. (s) Last, final.
^■T^^/'.Sharpness, piquancy.
2 fig. Acrimony, ad. Sharply,
saucilv.
"^mi^ a. Sapid, tasty. 2
fig. Saucy, smart.
^r^Tf See "^^"T.
'^ri^'T r. c. To graze,
"^^fr /. A sort of bowl.
V.
^^^ 71. Food for beasts and
birds.
"^^ (ii) Exudation of the
flouers of hemp, prei)ared as an
intoxicating drug. v. B^I^, f^,
"^U A scratch : ajag. ^t,,in„.
^^f^^ a. (s) Every created
"^Tl^T or -^f ad. See =^^^^.
2 Expressive of recklessness.
"^^12^ n. A rope.
^iTcrr4 (s) Accomplishment
of a work ; serving (of purpose) ;
in a passable manner : "^l^T
=^R^ n. (s) pop. ^ff^ Ac-
tions, deeds ; exploits, feats.
^^^, "^ik^ V. c. To smear
(ashes, &c.) ujjon the body.
^'^'T n. s Smearing.
^^r f. s Cursory expres-
sion. 2 Rumour. .'3 Reciting the
feats and achievements (e.sp. of
the Avatars). 4 Idle slander. 5
Anouiting. (i Alternate recita-
tion, by two parties, of the lines,
Ike. of a poem.
^F"^^ ]). Anointed or be-
smeared with sandal, &c.
Wif^
151
=i?53-Rr
^ffr^^r /. (s) A particular
metre, ilfctice 2 A loiij^-winded
story ; a long 3'ain. 3 An ornate,
l)isi,lily wrought up sentence.
c
"^^ 71. (s) Skii., bark, rind.
2 Leather,
c
^R^^ n. The eye of sense.
=^^^^ n. Wealth in cattle,
— in sheep, horses, &c.
'^^^\'^ v. A general term
for drums, &c.
"^f a. Leathern.
c
^^1 f. (s) Deportment, way.
2 Air, look, character of the com-
plexion (us to healthiness or sick-
ness). 3 s Regular observance of
rites and customs.
^t (id. Iniit. of the sound
in tearing, &c. '2 s n. The shock
experienced in the lower belly
ou su(Ulen conception of terror:
'^t'T //. (s) Chewing. '2
Chert ing material — parchedcorn,
ike.
=^rtcr ;,. (s) Chewed.
"^RcT ^^^ n. s Chewing a
chewed substance. 2 tig. Tedious
reiteration.
=^rCi3: n. A rope. 2 fig. A
long-winded tale.
=^^ a. (8) Movable. 2
T'-'">«'^^"-y- [ness.
^^^rf /: Activity, saiart-
=q^^?r/.=q-^^^[2: ,,,. Influ-
ence, prevalence.
^^°r r. i. To set (off, forth);
to start ; to begin a joiu'ney or
wiilk. 2 Misused for ^i^ijf.
=^^^r /. Rule, influence. 2
Access, reach. [Currency.
^c7^ n. (s) Moving. 2 /.
=^ci?=^^?H n. Acting, work-
ing ; vital movements.
"^^^i a. Current.
^c^i%^?5- a. Unfixed. /.
Instability. 2 Prevarication.
'^^'^l^ a. Passable.
=^^f^ M a. (p) Smart.
^^r*T -^?r/. Activity, agility.
"ST^f-cjV) a. s Movable and
stationary. 2 fig. Animate and
inanimate.
"^r^^ 2^. Moved.
^T^H ^^ll^ m. s Disorder
consisting in the moving of
foetus in utero.
^f /. Taste, relish. 2
Flavour : agreeableness. 3 m.
Excitement. 4 Scrapings of co-
coanut. 5 A measure of estima-
tion obtained from a calcula-
tion formed ujion the ruimber or
weight of the pearls.
^f^?:, ^^^¥[, Sec. S(-e tf-
"^^^f /. A mess, pickle.
'^^Z\ Place of junction of
four roads.
^^^ /. An orderly heap. ?^.
The fibrous integuments of the
cocoanut.
^^"ST The middle of the
foot. 2 A disease of the foot. 3
The middle ])ait of the hand.
^q-'^^^, ^^cTf^of V. i. To
foam u]3on ; to gnash the teeth.
^^?'R a. Having ta.ste,
flavour.
^•W^ /: Taste. 2 (or ^^3"^)
Discomposure. [tongued.
^^'\Z a. Fastidious. 2 Foul-
^^?^^fc7 I'lie canopied tow-
er upon an elephant.
"^^^r /'. The tail of Bos grun-
nieus used to whisk o(f flies, &c.
^^?:^fcS" a. Forty- four.
^^co Two annas.
'^^^j\ f. A silver coin equiva-
lent to two annas.
"T^r^r A spot on which four
roads meet. Hence any place
of assembly for gossips or
scamps, answering to Ale-house,
barber's shop, village-tree.
^ffoS" n. A web divisible in-
to four. 2 A coarse blanket. 3
The poles and ropes by which
fom- men carry a load.
^*f ^rS" a. Forty-four.
"^fl^ a. Tvventv-four.
■^^W\Z\ Sec ^^f^r.
^^CfSS" u. The jaws.
=^^r or -"^r (p) Spectacles,
^e^ V. i. To die. [-(p) Tea.
"^Wl m. f. Liking for. 2 m.
^^RTS" a. That prates.
"^^^f^ a. That divulges nn"s-
deeds : a vilifler. 2 That will not
boil soft— a grain.
^^r^r f. Mi.licious bab-
bling of one's misdeeds : invent-
ing and telling tales of.
^^KRf /. (p) A tea-pot.
^^ a. Four. Only in comp.
^?^^?7r a. Of the qaurteis
around.
^f ^^5 a'l- From all sides.
"^§"^1" ad. On all sides.
^f ^r or =^5:r5rr interest at
fom- per cent per month.
^^ Slipj)eriness. 2 Devia-
tion (from one's word or from
same rule). 3 Idiocy. 4 m.f. An
obstinate whining (as of chil-
dren). 5 The state of inability
to cease from crying, to which
children, by obstinate crying,
reduce themselves. 6 ?//. Wild
desire after, v. g, VT'C, ^, ^m.
^t2r^[v"§"r/.A squirted stream.
^ocT^fq' Excessive quaking
through terror : excessive terror.
^oT^^ or -S"f ad. In streams
—making water through fright.
2 With excessive tremors.
^S"=E[srJ Exuberance : great
abundance.
^^^sricT a. Abundant, co-
pious— good things at a feast.
=q-S='J[frZCT n^ Acting, work-
ing. '2 Deportment.
V
rfS""^ v. I, To become doting.
2 To err. 3 To slip aside, to
yield, lit. fig. 4 To be missed.
xfa'^oT See ^^^^.
^^^afffcf a. Well oiled.
^3"^^ y. Restlessness.
^^^^°t V. I. To be restless ;
to run about — a child.
^Sf^^^T a. Fidgety. 2 En-
terprising.
^^\m V, c. To make crazy.
2 To bewilder. 3 To let run.
■cisrra"
152
^nT#
^STSrot r. c. To flow copi-
(nislv.
^js) An eye. ^^i„,,^
^^KIX^ 71. s The sense oi
^^^^f A serpent or snake.
^[^^ f. A sound, scent,
^r^ u. A wheel, a. Neat,
tidy,
^r^^rq'r /. Neatness. 2
Tiiimniiip; and tricking out (as
of the person).
"^r^^ (ii) A servant.
=€Ii^^^^r j)l. Serviints, fol-
lowers ; sing, a or aiiij servant.
H^F^S^r A low menial.
=^R^r /". Service.
=^r^fr^ir r. A servant that
spares liiniself.
^r^'Cr ad. In a statigenng
manner. 2 Hesitatingly. 3 Slip-
pinirlv.
^'I'^tl f. Reeling, &c.
^^?^ II. (s) Unsteadiness,
'if- I'g- [pirates.
"^f^f A tribe. They are
^[■^rW^ r. c. To fume and
chafe at.
^i'^ji. A single syllable; a
word or sound : T^T^T ''i:^ "^^^
A hem of one's wakefulness.
"^PT a. Light, low ; cf black-
gnardly tricks. 2 Tediously
talkative.
^li^ V. c. To ll;-k. 2 fig. To
graze — as a bullet, &c.
^IJ a. s Pleasing, giaceful.
=^|=h-<MM*iR f. Land ;: rant- =j-r^ , Ti..f /.a-o- K,.iK« c
.. •' . pHiv (I- lliat tcikes biibe. s
eii tree ot assessment on certaui , "^^ ■,
' A \\ooden spoon.
condUions.
=^:^Rr/. A wheel-rut.
^(^r /. A circular and flat
])iece. 2 A round, tiattish gourd,
a rondle.
^T^ (ii) A penknife.
^i<^%/. Tasting.
^r^^ r. c. To taste.
^RTiTR The business of the
toilette.
TTtT'^r o. Good. 2 Prosper-
inir. 3 Regular, usual.
rTirp^q- /, Goodness.
^f^ II. A band of pirates
termed "^i^l.
^f^^ n. An ant of a large
anil red species
to a man of parts anil shrewd-
ness : to a sharp and apt child
or woman. [.^ spinning wheel.
^fcT III. f. V. The whirler of
^f^?^ A bird.
^f^ /. A flat and circular
piece (of metal as prc])ared to
be stamped and converted into
coin). 2 Sec '^Trf.
^ri^FlT /. ILxaminiug, try- j ^[J^ a. Shrewd, clever.
____^_r,_rrT^ . p.. , M^n[4^ (s) 1 hc tourth dav
appeaviug. r. f<C^. "• Thel^-;''"^ [four mouths _
nlurnin^ crepnsele. ^^ , ^^IfR^ U. A period ot
=^N^?^or^r^T3:^ r. c. To'^^rj^f ». (s) Shrewdness,
sriipe. 2 tig. To speak with ' intelligence.
i,eMt.uion. ^^ I vjp^T^^^Tf ^_ Ingenuity.
^Efim^ or ^^ r.c To; ^j^^o^ ; -^-i^^^^^,,. ^^.j j^,,
feel with the hand : to feel for '
as for something amongst others.
2 tiir- To touch (a bribe).
xir^q r. i. To reel.
To digress. '6 To falter.
2fi<
^CTFTR^ Tho fortnight of
the waxing moon. [a.vning.
^Wr /: A star. 2 An
^i^tjfi^rer /. IMoon-shining
night.
^\^H\ /, Target practice.
^r?rr/. (H) A sheet.
'^i'?"=rr An awnino;. 2 A glass
s])augle stuck in or at the
bottom of the ^^ mark on
the forehead of females.
^f?r /". (h) i'ure silver;
silver bullion. 2 Silver gen. 3 A
lumi) of unwrought silver.
■c/[^fri«T s Lunar measin-e-
ment of time.
"^l^l^^ n. An expiatory
observance regulated by the
moon's waxing and waning.
"^f^ /?. m. (s) A bow. 2 HI.
(n) The lock of a gun. 3 wi. A
screw ]iress. 4 .V torturing instru-
ment, b The lobe of tiie ear.
"^mZ a. Low and flattish :
flattened./. A slap.
'^riZ'Jf V, c. To pat or stroke
, ,, ., , ■ , , , for the purpose of flattening,
holds oil and wicks : tlie vessel .^ ^^
below which receives the drip- j^fqiMFaJr f, A s!ap with the
1""="- l'='l-'"- [flat. 2 A slan.
^FTl^s^ or-^ A term app. ^^fRff/, Any thmg beaten
"^n^ V. c. To press. 2 Hg.
To ]n'ess (a bribe), v. i. To feel
about ; to touch and press as in
order to discover the seat of pain.
2 tig. r. c. & i. To take bribes.
"^R?^ 71. (s) Activity. 2
Fickleness.
^R^ See "^m-
'^ffTT A flower tree.
^fTr^fT or -^r /. Pressing
and feeling. [>'u\\
"^RF o. Having a lock — a
^i^ 7?.K.\tractof the flow-
er of '^j^\.
"^r^^r Jaws : a jaw.
^f^fr See =^[5T?r.
"^'l^* (P^ ^^ horsewhip.
-7If^^^Kiii\.\ horse-breaker.
^\mr See ^r*^(^.
^rWl^ A v.ail.
[for.
"^rS" /■. Likino:. 2 Regard
^^rS" See =^*^I^-
^r^ or -S" ». The saucer-
form vessel of a '^fJX which
CMstCS.
^t? The moon. 2 A certain
monn-forni ornament. r ^^^
^i^lr f. A small cake, a
^rqr
153
'^r^r
=^Pr5: a. Tough.
'^^^f\ f. The skin.
^rirt n. Skin, hide, bark. 2
^'""tl^'l- [frog.
=crf3T5" ^<:^ A lai-ge kind <.f
'^r^^ 7). s A chovvrie. v. ^rC,
^r^rr a caste. They are
workers in leather. f'^T^TT'C
=^rgrfr^r /. The business of
^re^-R^^n? f. Close exa-
minatiuu and hard haggling (in
purcliasing). 2 Ilvpercriticism.
=^r^rr^fS7ftjfr j. Excessive
shuffling.
^SIIT^ A contemptuous
form of the word ^t'^T''^.
^^ pi. Light habits; mis-
chievous tricks. 2 Splicing.
^rr /". Young green grass. 2
Any thing green considered as
food for cattle.
"^f^ a. Four. 2 listed to ex-
press a moderate number or
quantity : cu,\^J ^1^ jttsI
^\
^IT hid. An enhancing ad-
junct to T'^K'^], as f^^^T '^K
Dark green.
V.
^ITSi^C 72. pi Learning ;
a measure of education.
=^r^^"[0fr /. ;;/. The four
classes under which the Hindus
enumerate all creatures of the
animal and vegetable kingdoms,
viz. Bf:g5T, miK^, ^^^,
and ^f^^.
^K^^rsfiTfflT/. The grant
of the four corners of the earth.
Used to signify the ample do-
main of the beggar.
^^I^'^ A caste. They are
carriers of grain, &c. s A per-
sonage amoug the gods, a pane-
gyrist, r
"-• r.^ Ln^'^zing upon.
^rr-^f /. Grazing. 2 A
^^nrof r. c. To graze. 2 To
feed. 3 To ^ive money, &c. 4
To splice.
^mm / ;;/. The four
stages of Voice from the first
20
stirring of the breath unto arti-
cidate utterance. [and birds,
"^rn (h) Food for beasts
^[^I^^r Bits, crumbs.
'^T'^ a. s BeautifuL [^tt
"^rrr^r /. a seed of the tree
^R[^ (y) An atheist of a
certain form.
^\^ f. Moving, walking. 2
Custom, way, manner. 3 Gait,
air. 4 A pace of the horse. 5
Currency (of a coin), fi Manag-
ing- with : ifr ^^T BfJI^^mT^^
■=qT^ ^fV?fr. 7 Power : -^rm-
Tfrf r?IT^^T^^T<fl. 8 A sort
(of metre): a tune (in music). 9
Assailing, v. ^X- a. Current
— money : jui^TvI-
r
xffr^=5f?7f j- Ways, manners.
^fc7^^^ y*. Deportment,
K'haviour. [That shifts, gets on.
^rc7-^c^r37 a. Passable. 2
^ro^=^c?r[^ or -^ a. Svvift-
goiig — man or beast.
^\^^<^\%j\ Speed : activity
in moving.
^r?7S"^c^ f. Cursory and
imperfect performance. S Manag-
ing : driving on of life under
difficulties. 3 Piocrastiiiatioa.
^fc^r^ Custom and course.
^r?50T V. i. To move, go,
Avalk. travel : v^] ^isr ^t"^ ^i^
■^I^^T. 2 To proceed ; to be
in process : 'ETt ^t^^, $TO "^t-
^w?i. 3 To flow, pass, have a
course — days, life : to continue
on ; to pass tlirough sr.ccessive
ages — an estate, a fashion. 4 To
have effect, influence : m\^
^T3 ^T^rT 'ilT^t. 5 To have
currency ; to be received, per-
mitted : •n^'-STTS-^ST ^T^-
T^T^ TiTf- 6 To conduct
one's self ; to behave : iTl^^^T
^T^ ^sriiiT '^T^Tir. 7 To pass
with ; to satisfy : sr^y '^T'':^!
^cfi^T ^Tffl'Tf- 8 To act, work
— a machine. 5^ To walk with a
particular air, gait, pace. 10 To
suit, serve, do.
^r^cir p. That is in motion,
iu force ; or that is in use ; as
^I" m^\ A quarrel now
going on ; '^T<» ^TTvI The
batch of business in hand ;
'^jo ■^^^T A current rupee ;
'^To ^T? Power of passage ;
^To ??^^ Traveling by con-
tinuous stages ; ^T» "^^T^
Smooth and easy cooking;
■^T" '^f%'^T^ Present mnnage-
ment and fruition (as of an
estate enjoyed successionally) ;
'^To ^TH The season of
power, prosperity , &c.
^fc^cir %c7c[r a. Able to
walk and talk — a child.
^r^cTf tl^cTf or=^r^cr ^-
^ff ^T'^Trlt ad. Kapidly : sud-
deidy, outright: ^r ?fIfTT^I
^\^^ ^r n. The establish-
ment or the transaction of
the current business of a Go-
vernment. 2 The records kept at
hand for current business.
"^Fc^cT ^^ n. The common
name of a person.
^rc^-T n. (s) Turning over
and about (tiles of a roof, pages
of a book, &c.) : turning in order
to revise, examine, &c. 2 Caus-
ingtomove. [bearing.
^loT ^m^f. Conduct and
^r?^(=l'^ V. c. To make to go.
•2 To maintain in flow, passage.
3 To make current ; to set up.
4 To keep iu action (a machine,
&c.) b To make to satisfy.
^r?^ a. That is in motion,
action, &c.
^r^ a. Tough, clammy. 2
fig. Tiiat prates persistingly :
that babbles.
^l^K /. Persisting and
wearisome prate.
^Rtf /. (n) The Kotwal's
hall or court in the market. 2
The village-hall. 3 fig. Any
place of resort for scamps and
gossips. 4 Tax to be paid into
Government.
^f^^r V. c. To chew. 2 To
bite. 3 fig. To peculate : to
take bribes, v. imp. To gnaw in
tlie belly.
^r^rr a. Addicted to biting,
^[^sroj- y. I To rave,
^f^r Abite. y."^. 2 The bite.
'^n^
154
r^T=T
^Rf/. (n) A key. 2 The|
clasp or lock of the pieces of a
t.ible. I
^^'^ v. c. (ii) To love or
like. r. imp. To please,
■^lo^ 7n. 71. A measure of
land, — 120 square biglias.
^f?^^ /'• A sign, signal, r.
'^r^ /*. A long and narrow
building : a row (of uniform
houses). 2 Trick, whimsey- 3 m.
The threads of a web left un-
woven where divisions of it are
to be made.
^fS"^ a. Mischievous. 2
TuU of blandishment, (s) That
sets in motion; ^^■=^t°.
^15? ^^?f% /. A term for a
loose woman; a wanton.
^[^5^/. A sieve. 2 fig. A
well supplied by numerous
springs; a cloth of loose te.\ture.
3 n. An act of sifting. 4 Quan-
tity to be sifted. 5 The chaff
remaining after sifting.
^rs-JIffS- j\ The price of
sifting.
^rSTffr J. A sieve. 2 Sifting.
3 Turning the tiles of a roof. 4
fig. Searching.
^r^oj y, c. To sift, &c.
xfi3;qQj j-^ Tantalizing, teas-
ing, iScc.
^fST^r^R?/. Constant de-
hiding : teasing and e.\citing.
^rs-|Vf i;. c. To stir. 2 To
cause to slide. 3 To allure and
mock ; to cajole. 4 To ])rovoke.
^^rr^^r or -^r /. Dimness of
vision taking place about the
age of forty. 2 Tlie age of forty.
^3"f Tricks, pranks. 2 A
fondness for. v. ^I3T. 3 A
silly lialjit : a habit of imlilier-
ent character. 4 The name of a
class of goblins.
xrrsrr^rs- or -^\ /. sifting
and straining.
TTT^FTfE^R ad. Alternately,
^[^-'r^ p. Sifted, lit. fig.
=^^Fr o. Forty.
^TSzt^TT? ;?. Spectacles.
^tTfS'^rr c. A person full ol
])ranks and tricks.
r^^K^^ V. i. To be viscid.
f^sFir'^IT Great clamminess.
r^?r%^fcf a. Viscid, sticky.
F"^^ a. Gummy. 2 fiir.
Niggardly. 3 Tough. 4 Tough
and enduring — a frame of body.
5 Persisting, dogged.
N"^"^ /. Clamminess.
r^T^Jof V. i. To stick. 2 fig.
To cleave imto; to be devoted.
r^^HTftT n. Sticking stuff-
gum, &c.
R"?;^f^ot ^,^ c. To stick.
r^^iirr Clammy sordes ad-
hering to the hair or skin. 2
Blight (on corn) consisting in a
(•lanimy excretion, v. 'm^. 3
Bird-lime. 4 A particular grass.
f^^Tff /. Stickiness.
r^^^r a. fig. Tough.
r^^'T a. Hard — stone : tough
— wood : hardy, enduring. 2 fig-
Substantial. 3 Unctuous — soil.
4 Thick, rich — milk. 5 Miserly.
R^'^firr /. Fat earth:
black earth.
r^^'^3"TRr/. Betelnut ga-
tlicred at an early stage of ripe-
ness, and prepared by boiling in
milk.
V^^^ a. (h) Unctuous, fat.
r^^^rt /. Greasiness.
r'^^^Tf f. Surmise, suspicion.
R^r? Muddiness.
r^^lJT f. A certain gripe of
the xjf^^^T'ST. 2 A gripe of
the wrist. r.T^x:,^!^, 3 fig. The
gripe of an opponent in argu-
ment. 4 Toughness (of wood). 5
Endurance. 6 Importunity. 7
Dawdling. 8 Firmness of seat
(upon ahorse).
f^f^r The milk bush.
r^^rr ad. A particle used
witii the verb *?^0l ; and in
this conjunction signifying To
cram together : ^ Jl^^ff *TTfI-
r^^r^Rl^r /. An occult
mode of speech. fo-um
m^rST a. Containing; much
r^r^^6"^ (s) A physician. 2
fig. A probing examiner, viewed
as silly and pretending : a would-
be judge.
l^ra<:^?^K e. A hypercritical,
caviling person. 2 Fastidious.
Rf^^^r/. The practice of
medicine. 2 Prognosis. 3 Close
examination. 4 A suspicion : a
fancy, v. ^.
r^^r /. Inferior ^ToZT. 2 A
paste made of flour of ^^'^.
3 Glaziers' ])utty,4 Sugar boiled
to consistency.
r^^R" a. Troublesome, vex-
ing—a work.
f^^a. Miserly.
T^^^ Mud, mire.
r^^^^ a. Muddy. 2 That
readily becomes muddy — soil.
r^ilf^iT a. Mucky.
pErq^^TOT J., i. To melt, run —
sugar, &c.
[^^^^ a. Soft and oozy.
1"^^ /. The tamarind-tree
and fruit. rr- ,
. r^ [nrework.
l^^^^r /. Muskrat. 2 A
F'^^r^r A tamarind-seed.
r^^rr a. Lii-ht, trifling.
r^^lfr /. Levity.
fq^rs^F a. Taper. 2 Nar-
row, slender, s. The gathered
head of a burning wick, the
cabhdffe.
F^^jJItFT f. s The perceptive
or intelligent ])rinciple.
mE^J f. A snap with a fin-
ger and the thumb.
r^Z^\ a. Small, little.
F^r2% n. The half of a H^-
I'^Z^ i\ c. To continue
milking or sucking, an almost
exhausted udder (sometimes
breast ).
NT^iF^F/.The oftice of ["^HT-
♦r^^¥. 2 Mere note-writing.
f^^
155
r^^wr
fqZq?W, 1^2:%^ rp) An offi-
cer of state ; an under secre-
tar}' who wrote and answered
despatches, &c.
R^f^^Tr a. Rpkting to the
department of f^ETTfti".
f^Tr^^ n. A phrase denot-
ing utter stillness and solitude.
i^r?5"JT A term for a little,
lively, and intelligent boy ; a
^ if- [writing; a note.
r^2"Rr A slip of paper for
r^fr or -?r or -If /. (H^ A
note or small letter. 2 A bill of
exchange.
f^f r The roll of 5f JTRfr ge-
neral account of the revenues. 2
An order upon the treasury. 3 A
roll of Inam-lands in a fTT*?^!-
4 A roll of stipendiaries (of a
district, &c.) 5 Roll of lands
under cultivation.
R"fr^TrsT/. A general term
for notes and letters.
1%^[%^^ V. i. To be miry
and mucky — a place. 2 To be
clammy — the body. 3 To be under
irritation.
r^^R^r a. Muddy. 2 Pee-
vish, cross.
^^f^ffcf a. Miry, sloppy
— a ])lace.
r^:g"pErS^rr a. irritable.
|xf;g"07 y_ I 'Pq i^\ie offence.
2 To rise — the flesh from a
blister.
V^^T\ a. Irritable.
r^^^qr/. Teasing. [-,,,,e.
f^TR'T V. c. To excite, pro-
r'^^f /. (h) a hen-sparrow.
I^tTf c^ a. Little and pretty.
PWT V. c. To ram. 2 To
entomb. 3 To kill outright. 4
To build up (a doorway, &c.)
f^^ /. s Intellect, mind, &c.
r%cr^ a. s That thinks,
minds. In comp. ^^ fTJ<7^.
i^cIJ a. Scrawled, scribbled.
r^^'^ff /. Considering or
pondering.
f^cTof V. c. Sr V. i. To
think. 2 To ponder. 3 To desire.
4 To plan ; to imagine. 5 To re-
Jlectupon. ^ _[sulering,&c.
l^^'l 71. (s) Thinking, con-
r%cRr^ a. s Fit to be con-
sidered.
f^cT^"^ V. c. To cover with
ligures (a wall, floor, &c.); to fill
with flourishes and scribbling (a
paper, &c.) ; to draw badly, v. i.
To trace figures and images, to
J''""'''- ^ ^ [antelope.
f-crcTS" rn. n. The spotted
r^^r f. (s) A funeral pile.
r%^r /. (s) Care, anxiety. 2
J'""^'"S- _ [tons.
[■^cTrjc^ a. Anxious, sohci-
r^cTriiT Extreme anxiety.
r^cTT^ a. Scribbled.
r^^r^TFT n. s Funeral ashes.
r^^ffiTW / s Burning
ground of the dead.
ik^mFJ A gem of ^fJT
supposed to yield to its possessor
every thing wanted. 2 A name
of ^iJT'^fiT. 3 An auspicious
mark of the horse.
r^cTfTf A painter.
r^cTPff s Intense anxiety.
r^fcfcT p. Thought, reflected,
pondered upon.
r^^c^r /. s The sentient
principle of animated creatures ;
the portion of the divine intelli-
gence.
r^^Tf n. s The faculty of
reasoning; the reason. 2 The
heart considered as the seat of
sentiment, afl'ection, or passion.
r^^^rc^^ «. .That rules the
will and affection. An epithet of
God.
F'^TfR^TC Restraint of mind.
r^^r^|f% /. Repose of the
J^''"^- [mans.
I^^TT^ A tribe of Br^h-
f^TfJT^^ a. s Pleased, satis-
fied in mind.
R'tT'4'^ (s) Failure of the
mental powers. 2 Aberation of
^mind. f-jQg_
f^rfi^PT^f/. Heart -bewitch-
r^^cJ^fr y: A fancy of the
the mind : a sudden emotion of
^the n.ind. [-^j„j_
f^TTR^iT Distraction of the
r^TT|rTr /. s The mind, the
attention.
r^xT^'il^ a. Heart-piercing.
mxif^?^ n. Bewilderment.
I^^TT^Tr?"/. Purity of mind.
f^^T^ w. (s) A drawing. 2
The mirage. 3 Variegated colour.
4 A puppet, a. Various : f^^T
i^^^rr A painter.
FT^ffH" The registrar of the
court of ^■?T ; the recorder of
the vices and virtues of man-
kind. 2 fig. An accomplished pen-
man.
f^^F^r^^ a. Variefrated.
2 Various ; — used of actions, ap-
pearances.
r^^r /. pL s The four-
teentli lunar mansion.
R^r^ 71. A hotch potch of
boiled grain.
r^^rffoT /. s A portion of
the food set aside before the
commencement of the meal as an
off"ering to some deity.
f^^^m s Epithet of God.
f^^5^^ n. s The bliss con-
sisting in understanding.
rw'^^ See r^^r^.
l^^^^i A rag or a clout.
2 A spot, mole (on fruit, the
skin, &c.) [citing.
r^^T^'^f or r^^r^% /. Ex^
r^^rff^ V. c. To excite.
T^^^ a. s (Full of intelli-
gence.) An epithet of God.
r^T2ir% /. The Divine
mind as a ■J^f^.
FT^RTT^ 3 The conscious
principle (of animated creatures);
the image of the divine intelli-
gence.
N^
f^vjTj^^r /. A rag, shred.
r^'^^^/. A vile rag. ^^^^^
f%'5r /. A shred, strip. 2
fEfV:ifKfr /. A road-o^oddess
to whom rags are offered by pas-
sengers. 2 fig. A ragged and
slovenly slut.
l^i a. Relatiiifr to Chuia.
r^^^r a. Small-sized; small
nnd tiny.
f^r /. A variety of (he
yam. 2 A sort of sugar, ft. See
r^^r^r See r^=TfrJ. ^j,,^^^^
r^^iTir a. s Full of kiiow-
^^^^\ a. Blear-eyed. 2 Con-
tracted, half closed. r^p ja^vn.
r=r^7 n. The first glimmering
f^Z\ f. A squeezed sugar-
cane ; fig. a shrunken belly. 2
^A t«ig. [pacity.
J^^t n. A measure of ca-
r^^^ n. A grain with its
liusks on, as lying amidst husked
and split pulse.
V^TS ad. Duskily, dimly—
objects appearing. 2 GUramer-
inglj — dawn breaking.
f^? /. A strip of a baniboo.
2 An emptied pod. a. Dripping
wet.
f^^fx}"^ y. Dripping wet-
ness (of a cloth, ike.) 2 Miri-
ness (of fi roadj.
pq"^P^^ V. i. To be diip-
pingly wet. 2 To be mucky —
ground.
P^'^r^^t'^ ri. Dripping wet;
sloppy — ground.
\^^Z a. Toucih — wood. 2
Shrunken, -i Moist — a cloth,
&c. n. See f^«(, sig. 1.
r=r^3" n. A morass, bog. a.
Marshy.
r^^^ r. i. To shrink—
wo >d, leather, fruits, &c.
f^ip^OT ,,_ c. To i)inch. 2
To squeeze.
^^^\ See r^^^^r.
156
r^fl^^r A i)inch. V. ^- 2
A scratch.
?^^Z f. A pinch. 2 The
quantity contained between the
finger and thumb compressed.
RJT^ot r. c. To pinch. 2
To squeeze. 3 To shrink.
P^rr A innch. r. ^- 2
Pincers, tongs. 3 fig. A dilemma.
r^H?r /. A pinch, y. '^.
pgiTf^ii^^r a. Pink-eyed.
RiTf^gr a. Little and pretty.
N^^r A cock-sparrow.
r^iT% /. A hen-sparrow. 2
A piny- thing.
I'^^^'y^l a. Small-sized,
r^jr^r a. Puny.
T^^^ A pinch. V. ^-
r^*^a. Thoroughly drenched,
i^^ ad. s A long time : 1"^'
r-mf r or r^^^ttr /. a
stream spurting out forcibly. 2
A syringe. 3 fig. A torrent of
rain. v. ^TJI.
i^^^"^ r. c. To rend with a
sound. 2 To have a sudden and
scanty stool; — used of children
and sick iiersons. v. i. To scream
— the elephant.
f^';'^ri<:^€ a. s Having en-
dured a lo!ig time.
r^^^^FoS" ad. For a long time.
H^irr n. Cloth. 2 A rag.
P^'Ci^r or -^r ad. Drizzlingly
— riiining.
r^r^f^(s)A term for a son. 2
A term of address in notes to a
son, a younger brother, or any
person viewed as a protege.
?^t^\^\ f. A term for a
daughter, a (s) Long lived.
F^^^r /. A slip of land. 2 A
shred (of cloth). 3 A small piece
torn from a plantain leaf.
I "^^T f. Offence ; angry ex-
citenu'ut. r. »T^. 2 Irritability.
R?T<^fr or r^^f ranr c. An
irritable, pettish person.
j^^rs^ V. c. To squeeze, to
j)ress injuriously. [-j^^^ig ^^^.^
r^^^t f, A garment for a
f'^^^'iry". A running groove.
V. g, xcis, ^K. 2 A kind of
chisel. 3 A thin wall of one
brick.
r^^^ V. c. Sc i. To split : to
rend. n. A small chisel, rpudj^er.
l%^5Taf V. i. To shrivel : to
r^^^rqlr a. (s) Durable.
r^^n (ii) Virginal purity. 2
A hewn and shaped stone for
building. App. to a shapeless
fragment as living up from an
exploded mine, and, sometimes,
to a rude rock.
r^rifcT or r^f^ n. Gen-
tiana Cherayta.
V^Tm f. (p) The light and
ollering iaefore the tomb of a Ma-
homedanPir: the Government
allowance for the maintenance
of it : the service of setting it.
FTTR (p) A lamp.
I^'TR a. (s) Longevous,
r^fr See =^Rr^r- 2 a fine
c'"'^^!^- [the toilette.
P^mft/. The business of
l^r<5fr'Ty". a stone-quarry.
R^t^r /. Stone- work.
Nfr^r, r^fe/. A strip
slip, shred (as of land, cloth
j)aper, &o.) [ott'springs.
r^'^Ti^f fTPrr a term for maie-
l^'qTf^^r W/ An indeli-
J3le impressio^i. [armour.
R"^^cr oi- ?^^^i^ n. Body-
r^?5"f^?5'IT (Imit.) Confused
chatteruig (of birds, monkeys,
men, &c.)
r^c^ 71. A mosquito. 2 The
^y^ ^y- [tering.
R-^r^r^l^: Confused chat-
r^c^^ /". n. (II) The bowl of
I^*"^! a. One that smokes.
2 Set on foot by idle smokers —
.."^'"'^A^i^.' [children, chits,
r^c^rPr^r n. pi. Boys, brats,
r^^iT
157
^3f|-
FTS"^ (Canarese.) Small,
minor, s. The uon-uescript pett\
expenses.
\^^{ (h) a bow-string.
f^^I^^ /. The twittering of
sparrows. 2 Angry or con-
fuseil clamour; the demanding
of duns ; the chatter or din ot
beggars.boys, &c. 3 Discontented
excusing of one's self. j
FT^r^^'^'f V. i. To twitter and
chatter ; to squeal — rats. 2 To
Jje aiigry-a sore. [tering, &c.
r^^I^ffJ Exceeding twit-
f^^ a. Tough. 2 fig. In-
flexible, niggardly, 3 Squeezed —
fruits, &c.
r^f^'^r/. Mashing, &c.
r^cf^^cff ^ (.^ 'ft, mash, crush ;
to mess.
I^f^r A mass (as of dressed
food, &e.) 2 fig. Disorder, blast-
ed state (of a business, &c.)
r^^^rr^^^ /. Confusedly
mashing.
j^^SOT V. c. To squeeze.
f^g'SJot, r^gri^-ot V. i. To
melt, run — sweat. r^^
f^^T^ Sweat, ooze — of salt,
T^K II. (s) A mark ; a spot,
stain, a sign. 2 Pranks. 3 A
term for a prankish child, for a
person remarkable (for some
vice) : '^r -R:^ f^" "^ ^1%.
f^r%cr rt. s Marked, &c.
r^^^ or -^r /. Disgust,
'o^thinj,^ [j\?^miy.
PTST^^IK c. Squeamish,
^r^ The sap of ])articular
plants : sap gen. 2 Biestiugs. 3
Gluten.
^r^ /. n. (p) A thins; : a fine
deed; a fine thing. 2 A bit of
poetry, a ])iece.
^f^^cT f. Things, chattels.
"Hf^^afi^ a. A captious per-
son.
^\^ f. Offence, huff.
^^ a. Backed, thrown. 2
fig. Prostratedjruined, 3 Scrawled,
"^r^ /. A slate or slab of
stone, a chip.
^IT/. (II) A crack. 2 n. (s)
(I loth or clothes.
"^fl^^" f. Sudden spurting
forth of milk (from the breast).
^'* ^^^- [house-lizard.
5"^=^^ /. The cry of the
^^^^ ov-^\\ ad. Chirpingly*
^^^^ot V. i. To chirp.
^^°T V, i. To mistake. 2 To
stray. 3 To fail. 4 To miss. 5 To
be eluded. 6 To exceed or fall
short of (the due time, &c.):
g?fi l"H¥ ^^^t- 7 To be
missing of a number ; to be
short. 8 To be omitted by in-
advertence. 9 To undergo set-
tling : f%^^-^^T ^«R^T-
^^cf '^^cT ad. Erringly.
^^^fj^*. a. That is receiving
settlement — an account, &c. 2
That constitutes the settling :
'a^^ ^^^^ f^^.
^^ a. Confused ; lost in
amazement.
^^c^fiTF^oyr a. Straying.
^^^r /. Slander.
^^^r^^^ or -fr /. Careless,
evasive performance.2 Despatch-
ing, adjusting (of various de-
mands, disputes, &c.) ^^f^oi
V. c. To elude (observation, &c.)
^^^r'ST a. That evades his
duty.
^^F^^/. General blunder-
ing. 2 Mutual missing.
^?r^r f. Eluding observa-
tion (and running off), v. %.
^^rjtr, ^^rij^j/. see ^^r-
'a^, sig. 2.
5"^!^ or -n -'^ a. Stray ;—
used of the animal or thing only
after its being found by a
stranger.
"^^[^ c. ^^^ -37 a. Terms
for one that evades his duty ; a
shulHer. [servation.
^^Rf^ir /. Eluding of ob-
^^ir^of y^ c. To elude. 2
See ^Mvi.
5"*!'/. A mistake. 2 Punish-
ment for a fault inflicted by
the schoolmaster.
r-. r-, C-*
^^f^fSISTf f. In law. A
supplemental pleading, [dered.
3r^5 "• VVandering ; bewil-
"^W a. (h) Slanderous.
^^'^r f. Slander : malicious
babbling of one's folhes. v.
liT g. of o.
^e: -^^ .^T -r?:?r -P^Tr ad.
Imit. of the sound of snapping.
2 In a trice.
^^^r (ii) A witty piece (of
composition, song, &c.j;an epi-
gram. 2 A nap: a brief dreamy
sleep. V. ^IJI, Tjir. 3 A draught
(of a pipe, cigar, &c.) v. g.
4 A brand with a cauterizing iron.
^2^f /. A snap of the thumb
and the finger. 2 A pinch.
"^W f- (Imit.) Fretting,
chafing. 2 Earnest longing.
^752: or ^^S^l a. Suffi-
cient, scantily sufficient.
5^?r A leaf rolled up con-
taining tobacco. 2 A tobacco-
pipe.
^^r A bracelet. 2 fig. The
state of a married woman in
opposition to widowhood.
^^r /. A torch of sprigs
and twigs.
•\
^^^T-T n. A phrase used by
a woman to the physician who
has cured her sick husband, or
to any person that has saved his
life.
^•^M^r A select precious
stone. 2 fig. Abright-wittedand
sjjrightly child.
^'^^'T/. (Imit.) Tingling,
fig. Remorse, v. ^JJI, ^t:, =?t.
=jOT^CTT^ r. i. To tingle,
])rickle.
^•^^oith: Violent smarting.
^'^^ V. c. To plait. 2 To
pile up orderly (betel-leaves).
5"'^r /. (h) a small ruby,
f^r/, A plait, fold.
158
^Tr
^'^ f. bample, taste Cas ol
a science or busincssj.
^^fcT^ (Vulgar) Silly, foolish.
^^■^r Derangement ;ind dis-
orilerly interniixtiire (of articles
after a velicmcnt rummfii^ing) :
spoiled state(of a writing through
erasures, blots, <k.c.)
■^'\^^\ A nodule of unburnt
limestrnie. [\^^^^ni limestones.
^^^r /. A quantity of un-
^^J^PT /. A limestone-
q"I^.''T- [To choose.
^=^•^1 V. c. To plait. 2 (n)
5=riT?r/. A lime-ki!n.
5^^^r 71. Lime-water.
§^r Lime. 2 fig. Utter
destruction.
^^fS" A lime-pot.
^'in^f/. A terrace of clm-
nam-work. a. Consisting of
cluinam-work.
=SRTr^r ^T'^r a lime-mill.
^^RT ^?? 71. The wheel of
a limc-niill.
^^ or 3^^I7 ad. (h) Still,
silently, i/i/erj. Still! quiet!
^'^^ (s) A loadstone. 2 fig.
A iniser. 3 s A kisser.
5"^^^r a. Small-sized and
roundish ; — used of horses and
Tuen.
^^^S-of ,.. c. ^ i. To dip.
^.^*Sl/. A (lip. [a host,
^^f A bunch. 2 A swarm,
^^^0]- ^,^ i^ 'Yo be diip-
niiitrU' wet. '^■^•^■^rl a. The
roughly drenched. [suck
^•^^ V. c. To kiss. 2 'I'o
5^^ n. (s) Kissing, v. ^,
■^, ^. 2 A kiss.
^^o5" y, A ring (of cloth,
&.C.) to be put under a load
upon the head, or undcrueatli
n vessel.
^r^^j>. Kissed. [-j,^i^^
^^"^ ?-. c. (ii) To pierce,
griTT^ 7^ c. To crumple
(cloth, &c.)
5^^ -ri ar/. With spitting
and sputtering— a thing frying.
•J Fluently, volubly.
^^^^/. Smart, pungent. 2
tig. Anxiety, remorse, ii Bicker-
iuir. V. "^fsT.
^f ^^ See "5^^'^^-
^^irTHT See%"W^lH:.
^r^fr^ o. Crisp.
^?:3"q" r. c. To crush.
^^^r Crumpled state.
^^^ ?;. f.'. To reduce to pow-
der. 2 fig. To shampoo. 3 To I
crumple.
=3"^IT7^ V. i. To pucker.
^r^T^'^r r. c. To rumple.
'^^Z\, ^fjS'r /. A wrinkle,
^^r (n) A sweetmeat,
f^jr / (Imit.) Moaning
over : murmuring. rf,.gj. r^^
"^TWl^ V. i. To moan or
"^^5^ »?. or -<\ f. Cleaned
rice soaked and parched.
^^^/. (ii) Spite, rancour,
^^^f a. Rancorous.
^^r Bits, fragments. 2 fig.
The feeling of exhaustion, pros-
tration.
^^N[rr Pieces and bits ;
shivers and fritters.
^f^r Shattered state. 2
tig. Prostration of strength :
smash.
^^^ a. A word expressive
of collateral relation ; as "^o
3fT5lT Grandfather's brother.
^c^cTf A paternal uncle. ^-
vTfft/. His wife.
^^l A large fireplace or
cooking stove.
^55- -^ -^r -K^r -i^r od.
Imit. of the sound of a squirting
or spitting, or a sudden issue (of
water. sj)ittle, blood, milk, grain,
&c.) This word cxi)ressesau ejec-
tion or an issue at once ; whereas
'^03'HoJ is imitation of a
cdiiliiitiovs ])Ouring, &c.
^of^r The palm hollowed
so as to receive or contain (esp.
a liquid) : '^S^tW 'ITiTit ^^'ST
^W ^. Also a palraful. i-. M^.
^'(£^c^ or -oS"! ad. Imit. of
the sound of milk descending
plenteously into the milkingpan ;
of urine, blood, &c. streaming
forth ; of the rii)pling of water,
&c.
^f£-^'^ f, Urgine, hurrying
impatiently, v. ^T^. 2 also
^o3^o3T ?n. Restless cager-
ness, impatience ; itching, fig. v.
^^. 3 also ^ESl'^ofT m. Ke-
morse or regret.
^o5^o5T -^^rr a. Restless,.
ini|)atient : disquieted.
^^Tr /. A mouthful of
water taken to gargle or rinse.
^3^o5"y. The wrigoling and
fidgeting or the lively playful-
ness (of children), r. ^^, '^T^,
^i^, ^Irf^. 2 The lively
movements of fleas.
^oJ^S'OT V. i. To be besmear-
ed with grease or oil. 2 To be
restless : to fidget — a child.
^ScTSTJ See ^tS-^S".
^t^J'oflcf a. Smeared with
grease or oil.
^oST /'. The palm hollowed
(to contain a liquid).
"^^ /'. A mistake. 2 A small
I nail.
^^iTc^ / A comprehensive
I term for errors, faults, blunders.
"^T Bits, pieces, a. (h) Ab-
] sorbed in (as in study, love,
I fever, &c.)
/f'^ 71. (s) Powder.
^l°T5Jr r. s A sentence m
<^ •' . . , .
prose constituting the niterpre-
tation of a verse.
^^ f. A fireplace.
=f?=^iTf^^^r a. A kitchen-
idler, a house-bird.
raised place behind a stove. 2
The business of a fireplace.
"^^ 171. f. See ^t^^r.
%^ V. i. Poet. To wake.
W, ^nfl a. Dilatory. 2
Lingering. .3 Tiresomely Im-
])ortuiiate. ■^■JI3Ti /• JDilly-
.•''^l^vi"{?- [squeeze.
^^■^r V. c. To jam or
=^Trr
159
"^m^
^Ti^nT or tn^itfr^ /.
Confused or general jamming,
pressins.
%=^ot^ ^oj^ %=qTot, #^?:ot r.
t. To bruise. 2 fig. To bang
soundlv.
^£f. ^Z^ n. (h) Sorcery. 2
^fig! Guile. ^ ^ [-j.g,.pr
"^Z^l^m or "^dlir «. A sor-
^Z^\^ f. A witch.
^^ A play ball. 2 A term
for a sbort -sized, roundish per-
son.
xf^'T^oSt/. The oame of toss
and catch with a ball.
^cT a. Senseless, motionless.
/'. 711. Kindling, v. ^, ^.
^^^ V. i. To catch fire. 2
To be excited.
"^cT^r a. (s) Endued with life.
2 fig. Sentient.
%^=Tr /. Life. 2 Virility. 3 s
Understanding.
•\
^cT^^T 71. Straw, chips used
to kindle a fire.
%cr^q,^crrq^ v. l. To kindle.
2 To fall into a fit of crying.
%cTr^^,^crrR'T" V. c. To cause
to take fire. 2 fig. To excite, o
To make alive.
v«
■^?r Crushed state : any
thing crushed. 2 Great throng.
^ Mud. ^^ ^_ Tcrushed state.
^^f7r, =^?rJT?r Mashed,
^7 /. m. Pressing ; a press.
%2: a. Flattened.
■cjtTS'OTr /*. Compressing and
^flatt^ning. ^^ j-^^^^^,^_
^^Z^ V. c. To compress and
^tfqoj -q" /J. A press- weight.
^T'Tt /. Pressing.
^'^ V. c. To press ; to flat-
ten. V. i. To sink down, give way
— a foundation, wall, beams, &c.
"n^^T a. Moist, damp — a
cloth. 2 Tough — wood. 3
Shriveled. rK»„„„„„
». [berance.
"^^ /. (h) Profusion, exu-
^^r (h) a disciple.
^^ f. A female disciple.
"^^ Excitement.
^^^^(jf ^,_ ^ 'Pq become
wild, libertine. 2 To turn
foolishly mad
%f^at, %s"rh^ y. c. To
excite ; to stir. 2 To enrage. 3
To quicken.
^ST /. (s) Stirring, acting.
2 Wild capers ; mischievous
tricks. 3 The stirring about of a
demon.
^^m\ /. Provoking tricks.
'^S'^rrr. A person wild and
^mischievous^ [features.
^W^\ or ^^^r (p) Face,
•\ ^
^€^1T c. One of handsome
and enirairins* features.
^€"^"T£r /. A description-
roll of the visao-e of.
^^^ V. i. To force in, to
ram or drive hard down. v. c. To
melt and run. 2 To run riot.
^<T=^ 71. (s) Life, spirit ;
the Deitv considered as the
source of life.
^^ (s) The name of the
first month, March-April.
t^^r^ff/. Spring-foliage.
Wr a. Rehitino- to ^'^^
^•T ??. (ri) Rest, ease.
^^^fSf c. A pleasure- hun-
ter, a voluptuary.
^'I^I^ry. Sporting, making
lileasure.
"^•TRS^r Full or fond of sport.
'^^ n. Cloth or clothes.
^PTf a. (h) Genuine, unal-
loyed, clean, clear. r i ^,
^l^Z a. Poet. "^mZl Clean^
"^imi f. Sucking. 2 A
child's coral or gum stick.
^r?^^ V. c. To suck.
'^[Wi'^a. Dainty, fastidious.
^['^^r /. Verbal of ^F^"
^r^S-of V. c. To clenr off
grass and weeds (a spot of
ground) : to prune (trees) ; to
pick (teeth) : to free from a
thorn (the foot, &c.) : to clear
(road, vessels, &c.) 2 To ran-
sack. 3 To anoint softly (the
crown of a child with oil).
"^r^r <t. (H) Good, excellent.
%^rsr a. Poet. Clean,
clear. 2 Pure.
"^{^IZ a. Clean, clear.
=#f^, ^r^/ A beak. 2 fig.
The point (of a pen, &c.) 3 fig.
The projecting front of a turban.
"^[^rr u. That stammers.
^f^r, ^r^r See =^r%.
^l^rW V. c. To pick. 2
To prick by repeated punctureis.
^[■^ or ^f^ jil. Incisions
made with a razor, &e. in pre-
paration for the cupjiing instru-
ment. 2 Circular marks made by
actual cautery.
^r^ w. w. Poet. A wonder. 2
With faicfT'i and jil. Airs,
fancies. 3 Treating as a marvel ;
esteeming very precious, v.
^i2r f, A womid ; a cut. 2
fig. A loss (in trade, &c.) 3 A
lucky hit.
^rS" Membrum virile.
■^rST A division of a rice-
field.
^r^r, ^"f^r a wisp of straw
(as taken to scour pots). 2 The
residue of a substance of which
the juice has been squeezed.
"^i^^of V. c. To stuff in.
fi^^/. Stuffing in. ^,,._^^^
■^•K°T To hold in sexual em-
"^Kf Clouts, lags.
^f^[J^, ^iSrr^oT See =ti^^.
^PT Beatini: (as of a floor)
with a ^iqufl. v. f{\X, g, %,
apr, ^¥. 2 fig. m.f. Kuhng,
disciplining.
^RC f. A species of lizard.
^m^^/. China-root.
%3: a. Oily.
=^rTT
160
=gi^
^mZ^ V. c. To beat in order
to level. 2 fig. To beat, bang,
V. i. To fall in ; to become flat —
the body.
■c^md'^ V. i. To become
greasy ; to be smeared.
^f75'«. Unctuous substance.
a. Greasy.
^m^ -3T (h) Besniearin^of
an affected {limb or of a fatigued
beast) with a solution of uiedi-
cainents. v. ^, ^X, ^'^- -
Applying unguents to the hair.
^RT'^r V. c. To besmear.
"^f^tr f. (h) a stitched or
bound book I for accounts. Sec.)
=q[quj-^M\ f Verbal of ^m-
2 A mason's spatter.
'^m V. i. To fall in and
look flat; to grow thin and
lean. v. c. To suck. 2 To beat
the (floor) with the ^TtjTTl ;
to beat gen. in order to level
and smoothen. 3 fig. To cudgel.
^n^R" A mace-bearer. r_.
^ l_seat.
^f^r'^T A swinoino: bed or
&c. or attached to a bale, cloth,
&c. to denote the true price.
W^i^r /. A teat, little but
yielding much milk.
^IT^r^ )i. Work whici)
leaves little to show after per-
formance.
^[^■i^r^ A secret drawer. 2
A minor division of a house.
^RF^^ f. Narrow hill-pass
infested with robbers.
^iriTEfr/. A by-lane.
^RJRcT /. Secret rounds.
^^RTTfJ /. A secret knot.
^rT^r'3:?5" f, A trace or an
indication of the presence of
any person or animal obtained
by listening or watching secretly.
\^^Zl Thieves
Clan-
aiul such like.
^nZ\ a. Thievish. 2
destine. 3 s. A thief.
^rrJl'^T^ Thievish practices.
"^Jl^^I^pl. Thievish tricks;
1)ilfering practices.
tTI^S"?! /. Olbciousness. 2 i ^n^^f^ n. A crop well-filled
Disposition to blab, [officious.
^r^^r a. Loose-tongued. 2
=^*R^ ?;. c. To stuff in.
^r^R" See =#(q^n:.
%^TR iTT^^Ry;/. The mace-
bearers and spearmen.
^f'foS"'^ V. r. To ridj with oil.
^f^r^^jj, ^^f^r^"^ V. c. To
stM)ke gently. 2 fig. To cajole.
=^R c. A thief. 2 One that
conceals or reserves from. 3
Private. In comp. =iT^iTT3'-
3T?*1^. 4 The hard central
filaments of the flower whicii
tii)s and (jrecedcs each |)lantaiu.
f) Uuseful compoiuids are formed j rff^^:? f. The risen and
Willi this word in the .sense of I .^ctiurr state (of plunderers).
Sparer, rescrvcr, withholder ; as • ' /• * i i
^y\^^^K A scribe that writes i ^f^ J^ / A by-road.
and suppresses ; xgf^^i^ (.\| ^TrR"?ir f. An occult science.
l)east or man) that, working with I ••s-t" , ^^ xi • i
another, saves his own shoulder I "^RTfHrTr ad. By tlueves and
from tiie load. | J'ilfeiers.
^R^'^ or -'I' An extreme- l^Rf'^ n. The stirring or
ly small figure placed to number I being abroad in the exercise of
the sheet of a manuscript-book,
in ear, but of poor apjiearance
through shortness of stalk.
€r^ v. c. To steal. 2 To
conceal. 3 To do by stealth.
"^R^o^ An inner and
hidden curtain. 2 An inner
membrane. [stealing step.
=EJirqT3rc^ n. A soft, silent,
=^(^Hr n. Medicated water
for the chamber-ablutions of
sick persons.
^f^qprr Reserved milk.
"^iXm V. Pilfering brats.
"^ITTTJl^^n. The air, look, kc.
indicating a thievish disposition.
the ravages and atrocities coui->
mitted by them.
^RF / Theft. 2 Stealth. 3
Concealing, vnlhholding. 4
Call to or need of reserving :
"'^ITi^F ^\^ Stolen goods.
^iMf ^{^f. A dark matter.
^F^F'^q^F ad. Furtively, clan-
destinely.
^rHfTF ad. By thieves and
little pilferers — lost, consumed,
gone.
€f?|JTF?r or -^FfF /. Rob-
bery, munler, &c. [lying.
^^f^^FS^F /. Stealing "and
»\
^F^'I^i^'i (id. By violent
and lawless acts. 2 Privily.
"^ffi^ a. Twenty-four.
^f?"7 Poet. Good, fine.
€^[ff^% or ^fI'i^'^^ ad. All
around.
^F^y. Loss by rubbing. 2
Wastage by use. 3 Inflammation
(of a sore) by rubbing. 4 Beaten
or frequented state (as of a road).
^fSJJ^tT A web of cloth to
make a '^ToSI.
^F5?2:jf V. c. To rub roughly.
TffS'Jir (ii) A short breeches.
/. (Verbal of •■^To3^) Uub-
bing, kneading. 2 Separation of
the grain from the ear by
rul)bing.
^F^^^ V. c. To rub. 2 To
pommel ; to shampoo.
^FoS'f^cTf . c. To rub roughly.
^Irj5\ f A sort of sleeved
breast coat of women. 2 fig.
Land granted in Inam to a fe-
male.
^FoJTF'^F^T f. A comprehen-
sive term for articles of female
apparel.
xfFaJ[^f^3T f. A comprehen-
sive term for articles of female
arel and adorning.
their business— of robbers, &c. ;
a))
"^i^ (ii) A square court. 2
A showy pace of the horse. 3
A stanza. 4 The number of four
on a die. .i The square space
^f^^
Gl
^JTrT
forming the central i>nrtion of a
temple or house; the gniinl
square in a city where the mar-
ket is lield. 6 The small of the
back or region just ahove the
posteriors. 7 i'ld- Used in multi-
plying hy four any number ;il)Ove
unity : rTt-;? ^1^ "^T^T-
^■l^cT /'. (h) a fr.me. 2 The
frame of a ^rys. 3 A qua-
drangular space. 4 A band oi
foiu- bhuts or goblins. 5 A
combination of any four villains.
^TO^ ^^^ V. Derdh
through possession by the four
devils mentioned under "^foRS.
^IW.^l An ornament corn-
posed of four golden rings. 2 A
suit of (or set oi four) pearls. 3
The capering and curveting of a
horse.
^r^^f /. An acrgregate of
four. 2 A square (on cloth, &c.)
3 The bounding of a deer. 4
A ])eriod comprising tiie four
ages.
=tr^5Tt -#"r /. (h) Careful in-
quiry. 2 Investigation.
^r^^ a. Slirewd, sharp.
^f^^r-if^ (p) An overseer,
visitor, inspector.
"^/^^r (h) a small spot,
cleaned and cowdung-smeared,
in which to dress victuals on
n journey.
^rtr /. (ii) A guard. 2 The
station or post. 3 uuarding. 4
A sto(d.
#r^r# ^fcT 'pl The IVoiU
teeth, the hutter-teetli.
"iqfRr^I^ (h) a watchman.
^f'T^f'T -m a. Quadrangular.
#-FR[l^n A stone hewn
and smoothed on its four sides.
2 tig. A handy and clever fellow;
a Jack of all trades.
fi'^^r a. Having four
stories or four longitudinal di-
visions— a house. r
-5^ [year ago.
■^fm^ n. (h) The fourth
"^I^r A handbreadth.
=%c^r An officer of a
village.
21
■^f^sF An assemblasce of
four ];ettle-drums beaten by two
men.
=^% a. Four. 2 A few. 3
The public, the w.orld.
#f^f^7r^7 /. 'i'he village
ecnnmunity ; the whole village-
body high and low. v. fffo3,
'^f^F'^S" a. That is carried
away with every new fancy. 2
Talkative and gad-about ;—esp.
J[f™if^- [every fourth day.
^T^r<. 71. An ague recurring
#r5"|S-ot ^,^ I 'Yo break
through the distinctions of
caste, and to run into e.-vcesses of
promiscuous sexual intercourse.
V. c. To intermingle confu-
sedlv
■^icT'T^i or '^l a. Having four
lords or heads — a country, ad.
On all sides.
"^f^rrtT a. I'hirtv-four.
^f^ /. The fourth lunar day.
2 An assignment equal, nomi-
nally, to one-fourth of the
fT^^[,but, generally, to about
(nie-fourth of the Government-
collections obtained from the
Mahoracdan territories by the
Alarathas.
#f^"r a. Fourth.
#r^rf f. A fourth part.
"AWX a. Fourteen.
_?>> *^*
■^\^\ iJ^H" n. ])l. The fourteen
worlds ; the seven heavens and
t!;e seven hells.
"^r^r Tm n. yl. The fourteen
precious things obtained from
the ocean on churning it.
fr^r \^^\f. pi. The foui teen
divisions of science.
'^\^l\ (h) a public officer
of a village. 2 Ihe headman of
a trade or caste.
^f^TC^Cr a. Having four edges.
"^ITC -^ f. A sj)ecies of
lizard.
#R?n a. Four-folded. 2
Of four strands, yarns, or single
strings — a rope. /. A four-fold-
ed alms-bag ; a beggar's wallet.
^1^^ a. Fifty-four.
^RF^r A swinging bed, or
sitting frame.
■^f^^ ad. On all sides.
"^^t^l a. ill) Consisting of
four ; as a sheet of country paper.
^R<fr/. A sheet of Country
paper. 2 Four-fold state. 3
Shoeing a horse on his four feet.
"^NKl a. Makino; four ex-
plosions — a cracker. 2 Yielding
four times — a tree.
€fj'^:^r /. (II) A fortress
with four bastions. 2 attrib.
Having four bastions— a fortress.
^i^^ A square stool.
-^ • *'
•qlXJI'TT V. c. To mutilate by
choj)ping off the hands and feet.
"tR^ a. Quadrangular. 2
Squared; — as a piece of timber.
3 tig. Sliarp, clever. r,.^^,^^_
^R^cft ad. Along the"" four
#rfr, ^rn /. (h) The tail of
Bos grunniens used to whisk off
flies, a chourie.
#rrr^^ or "^f^m^T a.
Seventy-four.
tr# n. s Theft.
^pq-lQoyf <r. Ninety -four.
fr-^[^r,#i'q'[^r a. Eighty-
four.
#5T[^Rr ^IW,\ The round
of eighty-four lakhs of births. 2
An inextricable maze.
^f^^r /. A silver coin
equal to two annas,
^l-^^fco a. Forty- four.
^Rcf-^r n. That has borne
four times — a female animal.
fr^g-, f\^^ a. Sixty-four.
"cTr^S" ^^r f. pi. The sixty-
four arts of accomplishments.
^r^'lT^^HTofr f. H I ough i ti sr,
kc. the fourth tiuie.flc?. Fourthly.
f'r^rior, ff^^'r r. c. To
make the subject of a fourth
operation ; to plough, revise,
read, &c. the fourth time.
^S^ P- s Fallen, dropped.
Ill comp. ^ft^^K "^W.
^
162
CJ The seventh coiT^onant.
2 An interjection of contempt :
Pshaw ! fie ! 3 A covert mark in
bills and notes for '^'sf, in
expressing the date of the
month.
fcJl^? / (H) A slap. V. JTR.
2 fi"'. A stroke of misfortnne. v.
^^■q, $. 3 A stroke of deceit.
V. %. 4 An urging and harass-
ing for payment, v. s|^.
tJ^^r A cart ; — esp. for trea-
sure.2 A sort of travelling carriage.
U^^ V. c. To cancel (an item
or a name on a tradesniiui's
bookl. V. i. To be dazzled, con-
fonnded. 2 To be befooled.
T^-.^\ f. Befooling, v. ^\^^.
tJ^n^rr (h &^ p) yl. Devious
and tortuous procedure ; strata-
gems, wiles.
i5^K -T\ a. Lioht, trifling.
W^\T\ or ^iJrfr /. Levity,
frivolity.
0"2r a. A knave. 2 Miserly.
tJ3T/. An air, cast; a pe-
culiar style (of speaking. &o.) 2
A taste, tincture. 3 Virtuous
Cjit /. A cane. 2 An orna-
mented staff carried before great
men.
UfRjr (ii & p) The bearer
of the ^"^1 ; an usher, &c.
^^%§^ or -"^r ad. Chink !
dink ! clank ! 2 Imit. of jing-
h»?- ^. [.rle, &c.
^df-^OTor ^i To clii.'k, jin-
eJCTiJ'TIRr A loud and com-
bined clanking.
'3^ int. Pshaw ! pish !
tJcf n. A ceiling ; a cover-
ing in gen. (of cloth, planks, &p.
over a bed, room), v. city, if
of cloth ; V. vrT, if of boards or
chuniim. 2 /. Lustre.
SrcTllf ^ y. c. To ceil.
^T?!^ a. (h) Thirty-six.
^^ n. (s) A large and lofty
parasol. 2 fig. Defence, pro-
tection. 3 s An umbrella gen.
?J^=qrR^ n. A term for the
insignia of royalty.
fJ^T'fi' (s) One having or
entitled to have a W^.
6j^f%f!:m^ n. The regal
power or office.
'^tr/. An umbrella. 2 A
n tomb. 3 A mushroom,
reflection. ,^
The sixteenth ^^r. "' ^ne holding or
t3T[^ (II)
])art of a ^^\ ir^
^Zmf. A mensure. 2 A K^ («) ^^^tre.
cant term for a good dinner.
i§Z\^Z or -Z\ fid. Imit. of
the sound of slashing or cutting
rapidly soft and rustling subs-
tances.
t^'fr (n) A line of space or
distance; an e.\tent, reach,
range.
tJ^5 or er?^ / Annoy-
ing, teasing. 2 fig. E.\amining
closely.
tJ^'^r V. c. To tease. 2 fig. To
question closely. 3 To play (a
stringed instrument).
^^r A close and rigid
search, v. ^t^, iqi^^T, ;ffT^ ?•
of o. 2 A trace, v. ^^^^, ^m
g. of 0.
tj:?T?JT or -?r ad. Imit. of
the sound in rapid lashing, &c.
entitled to a ?f^.
2 A liking
for ; a projiensity. v. ^, "^K,
^^, WJIJI. 3 Impatient desire.
4 Will, pleasure, b Mischievous
tricks, (j A name for the Vedas ;
any treatise on prosody.
fJ^JlK c. A person full of
freaks and frolicks, whims and
fancies.
^i^^yj/.IMischievous tricks
and pranks, turbulent doings, v.
er?^R'^ n. (s) Prosody : a
treatise on prosody.
^J^RH'-T (s) Conformity to
tiie will of anotlier.
'^T^rS" a. Wilful, wayward,
^''^r (I. Of evil habits and
practices. 2 Wilful, &c.
^^R^ a. (s) Metrical.
^^i^^ False measure, vio-
lation of the laws of metre.
U^ n. (s) Deceit. 2 A secret
fault. 3 A sarcasm. 4 Aim.
^^f a. Guileful. 2 Satyrical.
^"T^f /'. i. (ii) To lie hidden.
^^^^\ or CJqi^^r/. Hiding.
tjcrr^i^, ?57rmr. c. To hide.
el'^q^ a. (h) Fifty-six.
JJ^^I^T^r^^r a. A constant
bankrupt.
^^^ V. (h) a thatched
roof. 2 A frame thrown over
houses to form the roof. 3 A
hut. 4 The canopy of a bedstead
or couch. [canopy.
?5i:q?;qroiT A couch having a
T3^{ A stamp, v. ^K. 2 A
sudden attack upon an enemy.
?5°Tf&Jl'^r /. A vigorous or
sounding slashing, hewing.
9"^ f. (h) Form, figure. 2
(biice, address ; a pleasing air.
?J^^^r«. p Handsome.
15'^^K (I. Of fine figure. 2
Pleasing, engaging.
^H'lr (p) a guard of horse-
men (around a camp or fort,
])iecedingan army, accompany-
ing a king, &c.) 2 A guard-fleet
or a a-uard-vessel. [ornaments.
^■IT^^ V. i. To dingle — tue-
ejn (ii) Small shot.
iJc=5" (s) Disguise. 2 A pre-
tence. 3 Teasing. 4 Fraud.
U^^\f. 3"3" m. ^^^ n. Teas-
ing:, tormenting.
^3"^ r, c. To tease, torment.
V. i. To suffer or feel harass.
^\^Z\ a. (H) A tijipler. 2
Drunk.
S"!^'^ r. c. To be drunk.
tJi^t^??. (Imit.) Hocus pocus.
2 Any make-bebeve, fuss, bluster.
U\Z (ii) Cuttings. 2 The
])ortion to be cut. 3 Refuse. 4
Picking, sorting.
^\^^Z m. mZ'^lf. Cuttings.
2 Paring. 3 fig. Savings.
U\Z^ V. c. To clip. 2 To
sort. 3 To wash (clothes) slightly.
v5TH7
163
sr^rf
4 To cut clea7i asunder. 5 To
knock off. 6 To retrench (ex-
penses). 7 To discuss (news).
8 To hold one's breath. 9 To
cut up (au anuy).
Ur^r A drop cast in sprink-
ling;. V. *n^, ^S^, $. [ping.
URrCJrr Cutting and clip-
^m f. The 1 ed coloured
clothing of the ^^T^.
sJr%/. (H) The breast. 2
The bi-easts of a female. 3 fig.
Courage.
tJf^RF a. Bold, intrepid.
0"[f f^T 5?T[qn: 'I'lade capable
of sustaining long waiting for
sale and jjrolit.
fjicfr^*!?- See ^^m^.
^K^ a. (s) Wilful.
0^r'T/^(H)Sifting: considering.
2 (a) Finer}-, trickery, i^ Showi-
ness. 4 Goodness, flavour. 5
Superb, splendid.
Srf=l^r -IJr^r /. (a) Deco-
rating. 2 Dandyism. j-j^g^^^
tJf^rOlJ -eJi^ c. A buck,
eJR*^ V. c. (h) To strain. 2
To sift. 3 fig. To investigate. 4
fig. To select. [Buckish.
Ejr^K «. Fine, gaudy. 2
tJFRT^r /. Fineness, &c.
E5TT (n) A type or printing
letter : any stamp. 2 An im-
pression. 3/. A stroke of the
hand (on a tabor). 4 fig. An
impression of the superiority of
another : SJT ^f^ffl^"^ ^^tjf^-
riUX Wiq ^^^1. :') Perfec-
tion. () A stroke of the arms in
swimming, v. ^T^.
EJiq^Hr (h) a printing
house. r-
^ [mg.
O'FT'^r /. Printing or stamp-
0"!^ r. c. To print, stamp.
UrTr (h) a stanij) : a stamp-
ing instrument.
^$\^\ a. Stamped. 2 Having
a public stamp — a paper. /.
Masterliness.
01^^ a. See mV.
^r^r f. (.s) Shade. 2 Re-
flectiog image. 3 Shelter. 4 lit
fig. Mark, token, symptom. 5
A faint appearance. 6 A slight
resemblance. 7 Countenance.
eJRrj^q" The figure of one's
self, observed in the air on lift-
ing the eyes from an intent
contemplation of one's shadow.
Supposed by its appearance, as
with or as \\ithout a head, to
indicate the remoteness or near-
ness of death. This word ans-
wers to^Wraith. p^j^^ buckish.
gTc^£5^r?^r-?5^^ra.(H) Beau-
eJ[?3r or -^ ji. A term of
endearment for a child ; darling,
pet.
m^^l or % /. H Canton-
ments, temporary erections for
troops. 2 Roofing.
i5"r?r (h) a young male ele-
phant. 2 fig. A handsome child,
colt, buffalo, &c.
fe":, ffjRj int. Pshaw ! pish !
T^J^]^ (II) Sprinkling.
The spots made by sprinkling.
fe-orr^-, r&J-ir^/. Rheumatic
shooting, v. f^g, ^K, WT^, ^.
rS"^ /• Reproachful treat-
ment ; hooting.
rlJcT n. (s) A hole. 2 fig. A
flaw. 3 fig. A way of entrance ;
a foible. 4 A saivo.
fe"??"5:fr a. That searches for
faults and foibles, r , i ■
^ [whoredom.
IeJ^F^ c. (ii) That commits
rU^l^^jrr A term for a town
or a iiouse abounding in loose
women.
fe"=7rf^r/. Whoredom.
r^^FPT^ V. c. To seize or
snatch from.
ftJ^ p. s Cut, slit.
Rj^fiT^ a. (s) Shattered,
mangled.
f&jcrJf /. A twig.
rCJc=J7r or Rjc^qr (h) Skin,
rind. 2 A chip.
ftJc^^oJ V. c. (h) To scrape,
r^l- [chintz,
^f^ 11. (h) Printed cotton,
^^ ind. The sound uttered
m driving off a dog.
^^ind. The sound used on
setting on a dog.
^K^r^'^ s The ceremony
of investing a Shudra with the
bill-hook.
S", tJfJ int. Fie ! shame !
Fj-^of See 0^^.
^^ (h) a hole. 2 A slit. 3
(s) Dividing. 4 The divisor. 5
The denominator of a fraction.
^^^ a. (s) That cuts. 2 The
divisor.
^^°t V. c. To cut. 2 To bore.
3 To intersect. 4 To destroy.
^^'i\^ a. 8 (Proper) to be
i''^' f'^- [big.
mzmzi a. (h) Little and
?if2:(JTRr a. Of the middling
or second place, rank, or sort ;
so so.
^ The eio-hth consonant, a,
s Born, produced ; as 31^«T,
^^FcT/, (a) Customs, excise.
^J^FcR"!^ c. A collector of the
customs.
5T^rcF^F€ n. A tollbooth.
■^Mm\ See 3f*[cF?Fr. 2 A
bird so named beca-ise he plucks
every bird he can master.
5T<53" or Sfifc^ a. Aged and
infirm, decrepit.
sF^^'JT i\ i. To be contract-
ed through cold, pain, &c. v. c.
' To draw 'tight 3 To tie up (as
a beast to a stake) ; — used with
^'I^qftTF /. Tying up : lied
^^^F^^^- or -^F /. Bind-
ing and securing.
^^^ f. (p) A wound.
SF?=riTq|F/. A plaster for a
WOU^ld. j-^^^^
¥^5TF a. Wounded, bruised,
■^mt ^^\if. The names
of two female fiends. Hence a
SfT^rT
164
5Tjr
general terra for tlie minor dei-
ties and demons woriiiiped by
tiie lower ela.sses.
SfJ^cf See ^^fcT,
^^M or ^'<.?i°T /. An indi-
vidnal of an order of female
goblins.
"^^'^ a. Decrepit, worn out.
^1 71. The universe. 2 The
world. 3 People, mankind :
5[^ (p) Rust of iron : of bras*
or copper, v. '^^. 2 fi<r. Loss
of readiness, brightness, through
disuse : Tgi'^T f^^^^ ^!3t k(-
^^T. 3 War or warfare.
sriRF?^^ a. Poet. That
moves or carries on the world. A
name of God.
SfTTsTr^R n. Known to the
whole world, universally cele-
brated.
name of God.
m^l^ or ^^^3: Harmoni-
ously disposed state. - Under-
.<;t0()d in the sense of amity,
fulness, and orderliness, 3
Jlatchedness, agreement. 4
Pull materials and ap])aratus. 5
Yokediicss. v. ^T^, ^T.
5nT^s[^?; (s) Creator of the
world.
5m^t.^ 77. The life of the
world : viz. the means by v.hich
animated creatures are sustained
(rain, food, ike.) ; the life-giving
Being, God.
5nT2^ a. Rusty.
^^'?^ V. Ostentatious dis-
play; imposing plans: empty
noise and sliow. v. Hlr!. 2
App. to the universe iti expres-
sion of amazement at its immen-
sity. App. also to any tiling
viewed as immense; huge, vast.
^*'*^i5X- Living out, surviv-
ing.
r.
i. T.)
[To survive,
live, exist. 2
^m
V.
i. To become rusty.
STflrT
71.
s The
universe. 2
The cartli, man, or his world.
SflTcfFT^T ]AU' after lecovery
from illness ; life from the ytave.
V. vlTJI ; as 5rrj[7<nq-5;[T^ ^TiOT.
2 fig. Revival (of a business)
after decline, v. ^^JT, ^I^-
c
3;^^^f The creator of the
world.
syil'^ir 11. s The three worlds.
^T:?r^, W\^^^ Ruler of the
universe. Terms for God : also
^^"" ^ '^'"S- [tlu-opist.
sfJIt^J" A universul philan-
^^^^ A Croesus.
^5T^2T See ^JT^^rrr.
^^^^r/. A name of ^^,
3[f[2rfiTW Seml^lance of the
world, J. c. unreality or ])hysical
illusion. [-Q^,,_
^HTf^, :^r?Rri^5r a name of
^TJ^f?: Salvation of the
world :nnd, by meton., Saviour
of ti e world.
^^^^ A name of God as
the Teacher of his creatures.
^^R^'T^ '/?. Ornament of the
world ; tlic Glory of man. (Hosea
^'••?-^'^i- '") ' [universe.
WK^ a. Adorable by tlie
^JT^rq", ^JlI^T'^fr^ a. Dwel-
ling or inhering in (pervasively
and sustainingly) the universe.
E])ithets of God.
^^f^ /. A term for a
quarrelsome, abusive woman.
^^^\^ a form of r^^-
^T^Inf a. Relating- to the
city ■SiU^T^.
Sf^^f^"?; Kuler of the world.
^P^W s Disposer of the
world ; PnovinENCi:.
'^^['^'^ a, Fiiendly, alike
to all.
^m^Tws" See srJT^rrcir.
■^^ITl^ a. That quarrels with
all around.
^^ n. (s) I.f;comotive. s.
An individual of a particular
• ^'^ „. rv [propertv.
^JR.^^^r/. Movables, real
^T^I^'i" n. A term for a
promiscuous assembhigc (as of
men of all castes, or of the pure
and impure).
^Wif^ //. s Animal poison.
'^i^l^ (p) Verdi oris. 2 m.
(s) A forest; a waste, desert
]dace.
^T?5" y; A ploughshare.
5fJT(>^?I?:Tr Rough account
(as of a revenue survey) drawn
up whilst on the ground; field-
book.
^^^\ A particular nmr.
■^^^r a. Abouuding in trees :
wild, waste — a place. 2 Wild ;
— used of wood, a plant. 3 Un-
civilized, wild.
5TT^3J See ^^^.
^iir=^^r 7'. i. To make to
Ij^e. 2 To spare, save. ^^^j^.^
■^^r /. A loop-hole : a port-
■^"^ir fi. (p) Relating- to war;
as ^]-jf\ oi'^TST-^TTJT'ST.
^^ (s) The hypogastric
)ubic region. 2 pop. The hip
and p
and loins.
^^r/ sjwp. ^^ The thigh.
5r3fl"3" 1)1^ ji^ The troubles,
cares, bother (of worldly con-
cerns). 2 A plague, pest.
SiRTF (p) An island-fort.
^i^fl" /.' A little chain. 2
A ])ort-hole.
^^ f. The hair matted as
worn l)v ascetics. 2 7/2. i^eague.
^^'"1 V. i. To confederfite.
i^^r (s) Se.' 517.
sTJf'^Rr ti. That wears his
hair matted ; used of f'ii"^ and
of the JiT^l^t.
^dprrsr a. That reads
the Vedas after a certain order
of xj«{;, &c. 2 That lias <jist
streammg down the back.
^z]^i^\ f, (s) pop. ^^um€i
Indian si)d\enard.
^Ffco fi^ s pop, -oT That
wears his hair matted.
^rcc^>c43; n. Black Orris-
root.
-5fJ^ n. (s) The stomach.
^3TT
165
5RT^
SfSrrW 8 Fire of the belly,
— the gastric heat.
^^ a. (s) Heavy. 2 fiii".
Dull. 3 Cold, apiithetic. 4 Heavy
of digestion. 5 Afflictive. 6 Ar-
duous : important. 7 Of dii^-
nitv. 8 Costly. 9 Profound — a
subject. 10 Severe — a disease.
11 Lauo-uid, lethargic. 12 Inert.
\'6 Hard; — used of water. 14
In grammar. Double — a letter.
15 In philosophy. Solid. ?i. A
solid body.
sr^ /. (h) Stock, capital. 2 A
root or a ramification.
^^^R n. Joinery.
vated ; to increase in violence or
intensity.
5T^lTl^.s The connection of
the spirit with a body and
with outward things.
Sr^r'^cr^^ v. Oneness of
matter and mind.
Sf^^^rsfr n. A general
term for gold and gems.
3f5'5[rircjr*T n. A tieneral term
for adverse contingencies.
Sf^aj j\ Joininii. "2 Setting
(gems in gold, &c.) 3 Junction.
sr^fTl^S" f\ The cost of join-
ing, &c. 2 Skill in setting gems,&c.
^^^\ f. Joining, &c.
^^^ V. c. To join. 2 To
inlay, v. i. fig. To be firmly es-
tablished. 2 To obtain place,
footinj; — a servant, &c. li To stick
to : %■ 5T^t^ mnt^t ^^'Sl.
^^^^ n. (s) Used in modern
tratislations to render Inertia.
ST^^fT^q^ n. Used to render
Attraction of gravitation.
5I^^TC /. (s) Stupidity.
^^^rrfr n. Poet. a trouble.
a. Arduous.
Sr^i!,jr?5"a. Heavy, ponderous.
ST^TSfS" or •'ST f. Joining or
putting together.
^^V^ n. (s) Victuals diffi-
cult of digestion.
^^r? (h) Setting (gems in
gold) : inlaid state. 2 Composi-
tion (of a poem, &c.) 3 Firm
settlement (iu an office).
Trinkets, jewels.
^5"r5T s Any material body.
W^\^ n. Ornaments set with
gems. a. Studded.
^^1^ pi. of ^5^-
5[5^rffr /. (h) Roots, herbs,
simples ; roots and plants of
medicinal virtue. 2 Valuables or
money laid up as a reserve
against evil days.
^^^r a. A jeweller. 2 fi2'.
also oT^T ITI^ One who, by
arts and wiles, regales himself
into posts and offices.
^°T 771. f. n. A person, a
body ; as -^iq sjur. 2 It is
app. to an individual amongst
living creatures gen. [custom.
iff^l^T^ /. The pojndar
^^co7ij. As if; as it were;
methinks : '^T ^PSrT ^i^ wf
^ '^
^^"^^ [worm.
■^^ The intestinal round
^^ f. Cnnsert, combination :
a confederated body.
-^^•Tyi Care; heed in order
to ])rotection. ad. Laid b}^ care-
fully. V. c5J^, H-^, ^g : n^T
^cT^Wr A pedigree.
^cT^rpfq-y ^ To take care of.
^^^ 71. An instrument for
drawing wire. 2 Any machine
or en!i:ine. r- i
[jugglery.
^cRSTcTr m. n. Hocus porus ;
^cT^r^fS" n. Flatulence occa-
sioned by worm, j-^^ ^j^^ ^^^^^
^cff^rr A disease — worms
^cff A relioious mendicant
of the wi^ sect.
mm^i or sr^fiT'^r /. Con-
federation ; common counsel. 2
In law. Res|)onsihility of one
solely or of the many sii'gly and
severally ; responsibility (in a
jiarty) of one member for all.
•^^ (s) An animated crea-
ture gen. App. to insects or rep-
tiles, to beings of the lowest or-
ganization.
5r^^rfH:aT^ To read their sa-
cred writings; — used of the
■^fTt sect. Hence, To chatter :
to gossip.
"4^ See tcR-
^^ry. A jieriodical festival
in honour of an idol to which
])il2:rims resort. 2 The assem-
bled jiilgrims. 3 Pilgrimage.
^^r/. (s) An index ; a table
of contents : any string of annals,
memoirs ; as ^j'^'^T'^Vsi^Cl-
^^^IT -^<^ A pilgrim.
■^^'^r V. c. To collect or
scrape together (money) : to yiut
together ; to construct superfici-
ally : to set on foot : f^Ji"^
^%'Tt ^^^ ^^]X ^o ^^^
¥91': ST^iTT. 2 To compile
(a Itook).
SfJi^l^crj j,_ ^_ To amass, &c.
^^r (ii) A band or com-
])any. 2 A tribe or family.
W^\W^ f. See the verb.
^m^^ f, A whole family,
tribe, race.
^^^r^ ad. By tribes.
W ad. When ?
^'T(s)A man or mankind.
2 A collective body gen. 3 m. n.
The peoj)le, the world
^'n^r/.(s) Creative; a causer.
In coujp. '^1^ Sfo.
^'i^ 7)1. A father.
sr^^srry.A popular tradition.
5r=T^=^? / Popular talk.
5r=i'=^rr Popular usage
■^•T'T 71. (s) Bearing, birth.
^^%/. (s) A mother.
^T'T^S'a. Customary amongst
the people.
^^^il f. Popular practice.
SI=Tc^35fr/. Regard to public
opinion. 2 Fear or shame of the
multitude.
SfiTr^ir Popular usage.
5I^f^grf=ir (p) Seraglio,harem.
^^rfr a. Made for, or suit-
^^m
166
snn'ar
able to, women. 2 Becoming to
the female voice — a son», &c. H
Etleminate.4 Feminine :— opp.to
mascnline. 5 Used as s. /. An
hermai)liro(lite aiiin-oaciiing to
the t'eniiile sect. [sation.
3f^FT?r^ (s) Popular accu-
^=fl^^ A name of f^'^-
3R1^%3:^ A sort of'beuzoin.
^^\^X 71. (p) A beast; a
living creature gen.
5IR^ p. (s) B<im, made. In
SI^FTfTJc-q" 71. s Attainment
of tlie object of existence.
^^Frrf^f'r f, a woman ever
blessed with her husband ; — a
term of benediction to a woman.
^^^riTT^^ 71. Native good
f ortnne. [tion
^'i^^iTrf Natural disposi-
W'^r^\ ^r^/. Stock for life.
sT^frT^T ;/, Another state of
existence ; another birth (past
or future). - Fortune, destiny.
^^f^T a. Blind from birth.
5T#Wf ru/. pop. ^^^=T InJ3F^[Oq"s7;o/^.5l=^r3:R*^«(/.
the mind of the people.
^'f^r a. In town and the
country ; in a crowd and in a
desert.
W'^ m. 71. (s) Birth, or pro-
duction. 2 Life-time : Si^frj
^li tlfil^t 'STT^l- 3 In comp.
From birth. [birth.
5FIT?;^J'I a. Luckless iiom
^^^H n. The business of
life; the duty pertaining to a
class of life. " 2 The birth and
life.
SFTnr? f. Indissoluble con-
junction (as that of husband and
wife). [lierty.
SFIJJ'T (s) A congenital pro-
sr-TTsT^iTicTfi ad. Through or
in one's birth.
^r^^T^t V. c. To bear ; to bring
forth, r. i. To be born.
3f^cf: ad. From birth, since
one's birth, in one's life-time. 2
V>\ birth, naturally. |
spqf^ ^\^^^ Birthday.
Sl^^r^ V. The name receiv-
ed at birth.
5FflT^ n. A horoscope.
^TiTiTITr/. Mother-tongue.
W'K^y\ or -^f^^/. Birth-
y)laci'.
3FR^rT 7?. Incessant birth
nnd death ; transmigration.
5FJTf^R^rT 71. A life-register.
ST^^T ad. For all one's
days ; through life, [courtesan.
3psi^^T5;iH /. A term for a
Since one's birth.
5[^r5"^r/. The eighth day
of the waning moon of 'qy^W;
the birth day of SiW.
Sf^RPJT or -#rtc/. From
birth to birth.
"^^ y. Born, caused. In
comp. fqTj3l^. 2 That is to
be born.
^^ (s) Repeating, in a mut-
tering manner, passages from the
Vedas, charms, names of a god,
&c. 2 fig. Reiterated mention
(of a desire). t\ VT, ^•
^*^r /. Lurking; patient
looking out after, v. f^X, ^^-
v^^ '^^ffl g. of o. 2 Kegard-
i";{^; [fig. To harp.
siq'^ V. i. To perform ^. 2
Sf^I^ r. i. To attend to :
"^i^^W ^^% qif^^. 2 To
cbscrvo, hold : ■q'^lT^ 51^^
r(K ^TJT ■^^T 'Ili'tT, '^ To
wait and watch ])aticntly : "^-
^iTf^r/. A rosary.
sf^r a. Regular and constant
in the performance of oiq.
"STH" a. (a) Sequestered.
^H'I f. Seizure, attachment.
^^^T (h) The jaws ; a jaw.
sl^r ti. (a) Powerful — man
or animal; heavy— rain, &c.;
difiicult — a business; huge — a
house, &c. : steep — an ascent ;
iiigh — price : severe — a disease :
heavily long— a stage.
ST^^^^cf a. (p) Oppressive,
tyrannical. 2 Superior.
^^r^^^r /. Oppression. 2
Strenuous effort.
^^n /, (a) Violence, force;
compulsive and iniquitous
action.
^^r (a) a sort of dag'jer.
^^r^r /. (h) a deposition ;
the testimony of a witness.
^rf (p) An answer. 2 Tlie
letter sent witii a hundi direct-
ing who is to cash it.
sf^Kr a. Ready at answer-
ing. 2 In law. The answer.
^^^ s A jackal.
^^^l^ V. c. (a) To kill:
to slay in battle.
^""^crn^ -^ r/. (p) Ready at
reply, quick of speech.
^'^'^^m f. (p) Elocution.
ST^TXig" a. Eloquent.
^^ Hypocrisy.
■^H" Agreement, fitting : the
meeting and union of upon an
object (of several measures, &c.)
5|iT^Rr (p) A sitting carpet.
W\^ V. i. (h) To assemble
together. 2 To congeal. 3 To
settle into comjiactness and firm-
ness— the body. 4 To acciunu-
late, lit. fig. — business, &c. 5 To
succeed or answer — a business,
efforts. () To agree, blend —
various ingredients, various dis-
positions. 7 To be fidl and
melodious — singing. 8 To be-
come opulent.
'^^^[^ (s) The name of a
^fq'. Ajjp. to au irascible
)i( rson.
5TiTf[slJT^ /. Gathering to-
gethi-r from all quarters.
STRr^"^ V. c. To assemble,
Sec. See oUTCff.
^nrr/. (A) Receipts, income
(esj). the revenue from lands). 2
fii;. Tlie being included amongst:
Amount, a. Collected.
■5fRr^# (p) Receipts and
disbursements. 2 An account.
^TTm
167
5f5r^
Sfirr^^^rr «. Relating to book-
l<eepin<;. [ther.
5|lTr^^ f. Gathering loge-
^,m^ f. (a) An assembly,
company ; a confederate body.
sprr^R (p) A commander of
a body of troops. 2 A jetnichir.
'6 'Ibe bead of a body (of guides,
peons, &e.)
sriTrfcrc^ff^ (a) The name
of tlie sixth Mabomedan month.
^^rf^^rWc7 The name of
the fifth Mabomedan month.
sPTl^fr/. (h) The general
assessment of lands, &e. 2 The
amount settled. '6 The account
of the revenues. 4 Levying
troops. 5 A levy.
^rsTRffsTiTr / The revenue
fixed by the surveyor at the
time of the alJ?i3f^. \n\xt.
W^\^mZ\ (h) a purgative-
^^r? (h) a concourse, an
assembly. [receipts.
STlTR^?y (a) Revenue-
SFTR^ff^r /. The collec-
tions and the outstanding ba-
lances.
^^R /. (p) Land ; the earth
as distinguished from the sea,
the air. 2 Terrestrial distance ;
3 A terrace. 4 The ground (of
a garment) as contradistinet from
the border. 5 The ground (of a
picture).
5T^(^q?5T (p & a) Lands
and tenements ; the whole estate;
the grounds collectively (of a
^'"''^Se). [towns, &c.
5f#RfTf?r A roll of lands,
Sf^R^fr (P A land holder)
pop. •55*ft?T^T^, orn^T^
App. to the Hereditary officers
•S.irjjTa & •^¥1X11^7 (and
soiuetiines to the ^la^^ and
sr^R^rfr /. The business,
lands, &c. of aT^T^t^T^. 2
Allusively. Chicanery.
513Tr^1^^ a. (p) Thrown,
floored. 2 Overthrown, destroy-
ed.
5j"iTR^f?:r /. Land-assess-
ment.
3r3Tf={%^, ST^f^fr^ The of-
ficer that inspects lauds, &c.,
and fixes the assessment.
5f#R^R /: Land-tax.
sT^R^rafTF /. Survey of land.
sfjTRP^T^^fTr Rate of land—
tlie rate established after survey.
SP^R^i^ acl Off or free from
the ground ; used of a load in
raising it.
^JTif J), of ^^\^^'
^n (s) Conquest. 2 Prefix-
ed to the names of the gods in
invocation : ^^ f^HT«lT.
»\
ST^^f^ Shoiitinijf, fifing of
instruments, &c. in proclamation
of victor}' or good tidings.
^^^^ or ^r^r^rJi^ir celebrat-
ing the praises of. 2 An accla-
mation answering to Hurra !
huzza! 3 An epinicion.
■^1^^^^ snTsiqT int. Bravo !
hail ! glory unto (thee, &c.)
^^cfry^. The day, or the anni-
versary of it, on which the
Hindu deity assumed an incar-
nation.
^^^^\^J f. a flag of victory.
^^^\^ (s) poii. ^M^ a.
Victorious.
^^^' /• '^^G glow, lustre,
&c. of a conqueror.
^^Hf a. Ever victorious.
5lT A fever. 2 m. f. (p) Bro-
cade. 3 conj. If.
^sR^^cff conj. If (at any
time) ; if (in any way). L'\?''-
^^^ a. Worn, wasted by
5T^ 51?f?TR n. (p) Gold and
golden things; money and trin-
kets, brocade and embroidery.
srtit or ^^tr /. c Inflam-
mation of the liver.
ST^cTKy. ?i, Silver wire cover-
ed with gold. ojTrJT^ a.
Worked with cfi?:?!!'^.
^T?T a. (p Yellow) Dun;— -
used of the horse, s. Tobacco
prepared for chewing.
^■^ /. (a) Terribleness :
imperativeness. 2 Overawing.
V. ^, •^T'sf^. 3 Terror, awe. v.
?gT, y^x, %, ^TW. a. Extraor.
dinarily large or heavy — a mea-
sure or weight : exorbitant — a
price : grievous — a service, work:
enormous — a load.
^ir^R n. Gold or silver
ornaments.
sT^Tc^cfj j^ Epidemic fever.
^n /. (s) Old age and
the debility concomitant. Also
«T^T^ (id. (a) Somewhat,
rather. 2 A little.
^^r^" V. s After-birth.
^sRI^sf a. Viviparous.
^n?rr ad. See ^n.
^\K^\^ n. See m'^^.
^n a. (p) Worked with
gold or silver threads. /. Gold or
silver threads.
rs. f~*
^n or ^n conj. Even if;
although. 2 If.
^fi^cTir /. n. Old brocade.
^rrqT^r (h) The streamer
of the grand ensign of the
Pesbwa.
^^f^ (a) a land measure. 2
pi. Land-surveying.
^iffr /. Old brocade. 2
Silver obtained from it by melt-
ing down. 3 fig. Secret hoard.
^RITU f. Epidemic disease ;
esp. the epidemic cholera.
^^'C nd. (a) Necessaiily, at
all events. 2 Scarcely, hardly :
f^^?r. 3 n. Invincible neces-
sity : T^T «TlDgi'^ 5f 3 3TT^.
Sf^tr /. (h) Exigency, oc-
casion.
^^V a. (s) See ^^^^.
^C ind. (p) A particle pre-
fixed or afiixed to fq^^T and
rit^^T in enhancement of
their signification ; as fq^ST
o}"^ Deep, dusky yellow ; ??t^-
^7 5fC^ Dark red.
5fc^ n. (s) Water.
Sfc^^r?ry. Diversion in or
on the water J — as boating, &c.
^^r^
168
^wr\
Sfc^^C w. A water-animal.
2 fi^. A foreigner from over tlie
seas.
S[c^^ (I. s Aquatic.
^Tc^^J" (s) A marine or am-
phibious auiiual. [jlasses.
STc^cTtT A wave. 2 Musiciil
STc^cTT^^ n. Fruitless labour;
tenting the air.
sr^?" a. (P) Quick, fleet. 2
Active — metliciiies, &c. : excita-
ble—tomiier, &c.
ST^^?"^?^^/. Penmanship.
s[^lf. Haste. 2 «f/. Quickly.
5fc?r^^cfr f. (s) A water deity.
3rc7r:[, ^TtTHF^ s The re-
servoir ot water, the sea.
3r?r^<^r An aquatic bird gen.
Sprq'r^q' A destroyinii; deluge.
ST^^Ti^ a. Abounding in
■water — a country.
STo^jfRr?: 71. A fabric erected
in the midst of a lake or water.
STc^qq" (I. Abounding in
water— a country. 2 Consistinij
of water— hail, &c. 3 Over-
flown—a country, n. Watery ex-
pansion ; the prevaihng all
around of water.
5T^Rr4 The way by wuter.
- Sca-('ustoni3. p \„ (,tte,..
SIc^iTf^k s pop. ^^JTi^ m.n.
W^m^\f. A voyiige.
^c^^^ Sitting in water up
to the middle during; certain
months of the year ;— a practice
of devotees.
^T'^fT'Trr-T f. Frf'eing one's
self from the troubles of life by
drovvnint^.
5T?TtWK f. The rite of
castin-j a hanilful of water on the
tenth dav after the death of a
person, utt.-rinj^ aloud his name.
V. %TT, %.
^^\^ a. (a) Fiery, hot:
stern — a disposition : ardent —
heat : |)incliing — cold : sharp —
a medicine, poison : keen — a
weapon.
^^.I'Sm (s) A collection of :ff^K[JTril^ A civet cat.
"^"^'■'■- .[jui'tice. iT^R a (p) You no-. 2 .v. A
^^^ /. (a) Oppression, ni- 1^,^,.^ youth : a youth gen.
5f?yr^C •//. ^s) Abdoniinnl ^^R3T<^ «. Bold, valiant:
dropsy. , robust and active.
^^ s Chattering, prating, i ^^i^ j. Youth.
3r?q^t v. I. To boast. 2 To ^^f^ See ^^ff .
prate, v. c. To speak.
sJlT^r ti. (^uick, kc.
5f^ nd. As long as ; whilst.
2 Until. 3 As soon as.
Sf^ Barley. 2 'I'he measure
of 1 barley corn,
'^^^l^rr Saltpetre, nitrate of
potash. [^■[^.
sT^^ f. (a) The wife of. See
5f-=[q^4^ ff/. Until.
sT^r An imaginary fiend or
hobgohlin. 2 Used as a vulgar
expletive: ^^"^T 'S^I^T %TOT
5f^^r ad. Poet. Until.
5f^^ Common flax. 2 m. w.
Linseed.
ST^S" prep. Near. 2 With :
noting ])ossesslon : r<jr-5 '^J"
^W ^T^. 3 To : em^o <• «•
Near or short — a road.
^^2r n. c A mass of clouds :
cloudiness.
'if^IZ'^r^f n. Close affinity.
sJ^aTf (t. Fit for storms and
tempests— a ship. 2 Stormy-
wind. &c.
^^^•T jivpp. From : noting
(lc>parture from : V] Tqi 5To3TT-
^T- - Iji'side : HI T^T ^U^
ojo ir^gr. 3 Away : rJJi'^ T3if
5To ^q5 ^^. 4 By: '? »Tf^
;iT=T ^o H^vt- ^ Out of;
from witliin.
sfir .junction, exact uniting
(as of two pieces of wood), v.
■^T, f«o3. 2 lig. Agreenuit. 3
.lust tallying.
sTfl-^ a. (a) More ; exceeding
in number, magnitude.
sT^rtr f. The perfume bag of
[ing reed.
the civet cat.
5I^f^r/.Fierceness,heat,(Scc. ^^KfK ». The black writ
Sf^R^rr a. Answerable.
5f^r^?[?r f. Uesponsihility.
^^R^tT (p) An officer that
answers petitions, &c.
^^KF a. Reqnirino; answer;
as ^■^\^'i ■^^■^^s^, &c.
^^IT n. -%/. (A) The villao-es
in tiie vicinity of : -^ ^'[^^ 4^^
^^rc n. Jewellery,
^^r^fa. Of country produce.
^^r?r or W^T\ a. Relating;
to the neighbourhood of towns,
coimfrv.
5[?rrtfr or srsrrcfr a
jeweller, a. Relating to jewels.
^rqrf rr, ^?r€~^ n. (a) a
jewel, gem : jewels ; a jewel,
trinket.
ST^rr^^^rr a. Just as it was.
SITrr^^Jjr a. Like to like.
^^^\, 5fWr, m^i a. Of
siu*h kind.
sfffT n. Like as ; such as. 2
ail. As ; in the maniu-r.
SfCrrcfm or ^^^^\ a. 6,- ad.
Somehow, in some way ; by
hook or crook. 2 Somehow^ or
other; — implying hardly : '^T^
3li^TH ^'l^^T. [of pewter.
■Sf^cT //. (u) A coarse kind
m^T:^ or ^^^f^ "^^ n.
Pewter putFed out like a sponge
bv exposure to heat.
^?r a. Relatin',r to ^^.
"^W^ )i. (p) Poison. 2 i"d.
Used with ^^ as an ailix of
enhancement; ^'S^'^'?^.
sf^^r a. Poisonous.
3[?"<R[?U Bezoar-stone. 2
I fig. App. to a fierce soldier, &c.
^ww
169
^rr-ri"
3il^^"^r/. -^ n. 8 Defini-
tion conveying a sense which, to
be apprehended, demands the
rejection of the literal sense ; as
tlTTZIT^'C TR, lit. a village
upon the water, but in implica-
tion, a village ui^on the banks
of water.
SffR n. (p) A ship.
^rR n. (p) 'Ihe world. 2
Mankind. 3 iig. Host, swarm, v.
■5HT, ^T^, fflof.
-^r?^ a. (h) Fierce, fiery.
^f^Tc^r /'. Fierceness,
^'f^ f. Waste (of metals,
&c.) on being melted or heated.
2 The soot at the bottom of
pots. 3 m. fig. Anger. 4 Spirit
(in a bad sense) ; stout-hearted-
ness.
^37 n. Water. [scorched.
SfS'^J flr. Rather burned,
-^ios^r a. Burned, singed.
^'^^aS j\ Internal heat or the
sensation of burning, v. ^3.
2 T3'ranny. 3 Angry envying. 4
The ardor of affection.
5r3"5fS"(T 7). c. To have the
sensation of burning ; as ■qi-
SfS'STSTJ Intense lieat (in the
throat, eyes, &c.) 2 Fierce op-
pression. V. ^^, vi\^, '^T^¥,
Sf^^fasTcT a.IIotjburninghot.
^oS^ n. Fuel. 2 fig. A
worthless fellow,
^f^^/. Tormenting.
^^•T V. i. To burn; to be
on fire. 2 To burn ; to blaze —
fire. 3 To be scorched — crops,
&c. 4 To be inflamed (with
lust, &c.) 5 To be fermenting —
pride, rage, &c.
5fo5"cr p, of ^3"^ Burning
hot, Ixiiling hot.
SfS'cT'SrT^ A ruinous busi-
ness of another as espoused or
embarked in.
3rS"cT^r 71. A highly danger-
ous or an utterly profitless
article or affair.
srsjcrrqRsrrHTfjrrrr a term for
a person obstinate even unto
bis ruin.
22
^r^cTf^irr a. Luckless.
■^^^r a. An incendiary ; a
committer of arson. 2 fig. A
vilifier.
sr^^JTr^r^^r ^r^r Any sum,
however little, obtained from a
bankrupt ; a ■penny in the pound.
Sl"a5'-hc6 f. Angry excitation.
SfS-fT^S-^ V. i. To be in-
flamed with anger or lust.
Sf^'Tiafrcr a. Glowing hot ;
burning hot.
^aT^T? n. A term for the pen-
dulous filaments hanging from
dirty roofs or walls : a viscid string
(as of phlegm or slabber from
the mouth, of clotty blood).
sr^TJTRJT -n. An individual
of a fabulous race of men
dwelling in water ; hence used of
fishermen. 2 App. to a dwarfish
and meagre person.
^^ /! s A leech. r, ^
"^•^ [latum.
■^U f. Jasminum auricu-
r
Sfffi^cS' r). A nutm.eg. \^,\{q
^V^ f. Husband's brother's
^m/. The thigh.
•^R The riotous vigils kept,
on the tenth night after, by tlie
family of a Shudra dying sud-
denly. 2 /. Waking, v. -^T, ^,
in con.
^\^'^ f. (h) Goods taken
from a shop to be retained or
returned as may suit. 2 or
«Tt^^^'€t The account-book
of goods so taken. 3 Linking
together (of beasts) : joining (as
a scholar to a superior one in
order to learn), v. ^^, ^t^-
m^"^ V. i. To wake, watch.
2 To be awake. 3 To be vigilant.
4 To be attentive to. 5 To be
fresh — a science, &c. acquired.
^in^r a. Awake, active:
ready, not rusty.
^Jlf^r^ /. A term for an
idol which is in the full enjoy-
ment and exercise of its divinity.
^m\ ^h /. Waking sleep.
Wm m. ^m'^ n. Wakeful-
ness. 2 Watching.
^\m a. Wakeful.
^\^^^ a. Watchfuk 2
Evident — proofs.
^STPT^qr or -^^r A person of a
village appointed to keep watch
at night over the baggage of tra-
vellers : a watchman gen.
STRr^oy y^ c Xo awaken. 2
fig. To watch : to maintain.
^f^rr a. Awake. 2 fig. At-
tentive. 3 Returned to a right
state (of mind, &c.)
^r^ry. m. (h) A place; a
spot. 2 Room or vacancy. 3 A
situation. 4 Stead. 5 Ground,
warrant, occasion. 6 Room,
field, i. e. standing ground,
footing, bold.
^r^cT a. (s) Awake. 2 fig.
Attentive. j-^f ^^^^^
^micf /. V/akefulness; want
SffiT^^^JTr f. Vigilance.
STR" See ^Tfa.
^r^ Teasing, tormenting. 2
A source of disquietude.
-^N=li a. That occasions
trouble — a business.
Sffx}"^^^ Tyranny and op-
pression. V. ^x, ^l^^.
SfF'^tTy. Tormenting.
^r^'T" V. c. To torment, v. i.
To fit tightly. 2 To be restive
— a horse. 3 To ofl^end, trouble.
4 To be hard of interpretation
— a stanza.
^i'Sf^r ad. (a) More.
^\^^, 5rr#|iT n. (u) a floor-
cloth.
^f^r q"^ n.f. Reiterated and
fruitless journeying backward
and forward.
^f^^?q" a. (s) Bright-blaz-
ing— sun or fire : refulgent —
metals: efficacious — a medicine:
wrathful, fierce — a divinity.
^rST a. s Relating to the
stomach, gastric.
^r^ a. Thick— a plank, &c. :
coarse — cloth : not dilute : stout,
^r^^p5T a. Rather stout.
^r^^ a. Thick i.sh.
^r?r a. (h) Thick— a plank :
coarse — a cloth.
^\^\ f. Thickness,
srr?^
170
^^m
SfT^ n. (8) Gravity. 2 fig.
Dullness. 3 Apathy. 4 Inso-
lubility. 5 Heaviness of system
occasioned by crudities in the
stomach.
5rFT a. Knowing. 2 Intelli-
gent about ; that considers. /.
Acknowledgment of favours : ap-
preciation of services. V. SITTir:
mwn V. c. To know. 2 fig.
to recognise ; to treat with no-
tice and kindness. 3 To requite
(favours, &c.) 4 To know car-
nally.
^PT?T ad. Knowingly.
^FTrTJTi^ a. That affects stu-
pidity ur ignorance.
^^^ a. knowing. 2 Well-
skilled (esp. in exorcising or
discerning spirits, in curing
maladies, inmidwifer}); a cunning
man, a quack, a horse-doctor,
a thief-tracker. 3 A judge : one
that can discern and estimate
merits. 4 Arrived at years of
discretion.
srrq^fjarry. The glow of the
developed and formed imder-
standing; the bright beaming of
intelligence, v. ^. 2 Intelli-
gence as one of the ^31
(pertaining to a living being).
3TR(%^ V. c. To make to
know. 2 To make itself felt by ;
— used esp. of medicines, the
non-naturals : WI^-'^WTfiT orjT-
jy^- [take notice.
^TTFT^ Please to know or
3fr%f /. Intelligent faculty.
2 Percipience, knowledge.
^[^ro/)j. As if ; as it were.
^P^, STPTR 31?^ a./. Know-
ingly, deliberately.
•'H'T V. i. To go. 2 To pass ;
to depart from, ». e. to be lost.
3 To pass on — time. 4 To go in.
.5 To be gone ; to be niuit'd.
spoiled : ft ^^'^'l ^JTSlI, ^m
'H^tfT ^[^ Jr^T. G To take
place — some oversight : ?qr
^T^,"ST fr?1?T isji^ ^^if TT^.
7 To be done by — some wrong
act:?!^ iTie iTOTqT^I irsO ^tl-
R To be deducted. 'J To lose its
power, virtue— a limb, a drug.
10 To go after— the heart, sffy^^pq-^ 9 In grammar. A
the eyes, ears. H To be, term expressing class, kind ; aa
made--a promise. 12 To go out] abstract noun.
,«l"S:;5r; S: l' T°N'f^^ «• innate hostility.
have sexnal intercourse with a] :f[rrcRflTrf The nature of the
female, ^ of 0
STRFTfr ad. Within one's
knowledge or experience: ^IT'^
5}iffiixrrt ^ irTa-^vfl^T^T.
■^rcl f. Kind, sort. 2 Nature :
STlri'W ff^. 3 The caste. 4
An iota, tittle : HIT^ ^jff
vt^T^^^^T'^ «?T«T "Tiff- 5 n. s
Multitude, mass,
STFcI «. (s) Born, produced.
In comp. l8g5IT?T ^^ Tree-
born fruit t ^^5IT?I ^^^
The lotus sjjring I g from water.
■^^ ad. An emphatic prefix
to adjectives of quality : oTlfi
^^^ w. s The predetermi-
nation, from the horoscope, of
fortunes and destinies of an
individual through life, ["sauce.
^cT^cf^r In law. A recogni-
^cl^Ct A caste-man.
5TfcfJa5T f. A general term
for all the particulars of caste
and lineage.
^FcT'^ a. In person.
s\]^m j\ A whole caste.
^Rir^ A general term for
one's kindred and fellows by
(^a'^tt'- [dependent.
^rcfJJ^R: a. Absoulte, in-
SircTJ^c^^^r A recognisance,
sricfc^ a. Of high kind,
breed — fruits, beasts, &c.
^TTcf^K ad. By the castes
severally — taxing, registering,
&c.
^Fcf^^^rr s A youth passed
his fifteenth year; oue no longer
a minor.
species. 2 Original constitution.
STFcff^r a. That is by, of, or,
as to caste. 2 That is of, or, as to
nature : ^T" MT3T-^t;t. 3
That is of caste, i. e, high born,
noble.
W^m a. (s) Relating to
(any particular) class, nature.
.V
^Fcf n. A handmill.
^^^1TITF=T Pride of caste.
■^FF^arf. Permanently. «. Of
long establishment or subsistence
— a custom.
^K\ a. (a) M ore.
^F?^ /. (p) Magic, sorcery.
sFF^^Fr c. A magician.
^^fitTF, ^rjiFTF /. Magical
arts. [lusty.
^Rsf?F^ a. (p) Young and
■sFRTUF'I (u) An acquain-
tance. 2/. Acquaintance (with
persons).
^]^{^m The stay of a bride-
groom and his party at the
village of the girl whoin_^ he is
come to marry, v. ^^, ^.
^•Tf n. The characteristic
thread worn over the lelt
shoulder and under the right (of
Brahmans, ike.)
«FR s The knee.
5FF1 (p) An answer. 2 An
expression. [more than.
^I^r n. (a) Exceeding,
-sfF^ The rose-apple. 2 The
guavR tree and fruit.
■^\^ (p) An answer. 2 A
letter of advice respecting a
hundi. 3 Speech, i. e. thing
said, skill of speaking.
^FI^^F See ^f^F.
^r?rrrrr:nT n r S" 77:m ^''^^'' (a) A law. 2 An au
^inNi^ll Dechne. v. h, "^Jm, . ■ . ,
' ' thorizins do
[Lineage.
Kind, sort. 2
^rf^ /. (s)
^FF^^^^F, 3lf ^R2[FF See ^FcT^T.
^[\^^^ a. Outcaste.
ociunent. 3 A pass-
port. 4 "Custody. 5 A describ-
ing and detining statement of a
conferred ^t:^I*T or ^^Tfl.
sTF^^^^T A conversation,
conference. 2 Speaking gen.
sn^m
171
Pd^yf
STR^fc^ a. Ready at reply,
^■"'^"*- [ters.
S[R^^ ?;rqT Business-Iet-
^f^^r a. Of a dark purple.
sri^r /. A fruit tree.
3rfjfcT The name of an
aged bear in the army of
^T^T"^'^. Hence app. to any
elderly and sage leader of an
assembly, a Nestor.
^\^ f. A fruit tree. 2 n.
The fruit of it. r^^ -^
^W^ or -^r /. (h) a yawn.
mm^ or STWr^ n. (h) A jaw.
^\^^JK (p) The officer in
charge of the treasure and jewels :
the keeper of the wardrobe.
5TrJRT^?IRr The public trea-
stu-y : the house of the wardrobe.
^TPRT (p) A long robe.
STRTcTT s J90p. ^\^\^ A son-
in-law.
5ir%=r (a) Surety. 2 fig. A
prop put to relieve a post giving
^'^/- [bond.
SffJTR^cT^r -^^^r A security
^mn^l f. Security, v. ^,
^I^, f^^. 2 The money
j)aid to a security. 3 Forfeit
from the security, on the failure
of his man.
^ri^RJTrT / Suretiship. v.
%, m^, ^K. 2 fig. The state
of being bound by any promise,
&c.
«TRR2rr?: c. a security.
^\^^^ -qr a. Borrowed for
an occasion — clothes, &c. 2 App.
allusively to a daughter: to the
body.
^\^^% f. Mace.
STT^RTS" n. Nutmeg.
5fnT^?T or '^l a. (a&p) In-
jured, hurt.
^m/. (s) A wife, the wife of
Sfrqt or ^tm a, (a) Destroy-
ed, spoiled.
^^T f. Fruitless journeying
to and fro. v. ^^, ^t^.
^r^ (s) A paramour,
' IT m. Ji. After-birth. 2 m.f.
The spume in the mouth of
infants at birth. 3 Blubber.
sTK^^T n. (s) Adultery.
^^^r a. Adulterous.
■sTRSf a. (s) An adulterine. 2
(used ignorantly for ?ii?;T^^)
Viviparous.
^^•^ n. (s) Incantations to
jiroduce impotency, diseases, &c.
STRqilJTfiTw, Incantations, &c.
^\\l^ f. An adulteress.
srrfr/. -^nr^y^. (p) Current
government. 2 Any current
^'W^ (share of the revenue)
alienated from the public re-
venues.
•^rtr a. (a) Current ; used
with TTTiT, ^T^<1, &c.
iTRT^p^TO/. The cur-
rent account of the public fund.
^Tc^ ?i. (s) A net. 2 A num-
ber of things strung together;
as ^jj: oTT^.
^rr^FT o. (a) Potent— medi-
cine : severe — a rule : haughty,
overbearing — a person.
^Rt" or ^t^t A son-in-law.
2 App. to a person who, with-
out warrant, makes himself at
home and easy in another's
house.
STRf^n^T A phrase used to
express the examination of a
piece of composition by a shal-
low witted fellow incapable of
discerning its merits.
SfRS" 77. The hair of a child
before its head is shaved. 2
The ceremony of cutting it.
^I^^c^l a. Twin, one of twins.
-^r^/. The wife of a hus-
band's brother.
^r§fr /. The office of a
messenger, a. Relating to a
messenger.
•^Tf^ (a) a messenger,
courier. 2 fig. A piece of paper
sent up along the string to a
paper-kite ; a messenger.
mm or -^^r a. (a) More
tl^^^- [force.
sfR^ /. (a) Oppression^
SfRf ^, S(R^, sff^?- J. The
shoe-flower.
^r^T'TK/. (p) An assign-
ment by Government of lauds
or revenues.
srrrrfirT^K a. Holder of 3Tr-
^ll^^R /. (a) a proclama-
tion or the paper containing it.
^rCR a. (A) Published. 2
Public.
[proclamation.
STl^nr^Rr (p) a written
Sfra" Fire or flame. 2 A
fever. 3 Passion, anger. /. A
thicket.
srraror n. Fuel. [ing.
5TrsrtT^ j^; Teasing, torment-
m^^ V. c. To burn. 2 fig.
To vex. 3 To give up to the
burning.
^f^J^r/. A depascent ulcer.
5rr^^ /. A term for the
burning of the ground (in agri-
culture). 2 Used for the burnings
and ravages of marauders.
^ra^l3r a. Fit for fuel.
^rST /. Network, v. ^3",
#T-3[,' ^^^, n% m^. 2 A
natural and close bower. 3
Matchedness (as of beasts for
the yoke). 4 The indentations
of the border of a web. 5 Any
thing drilled or perforated with
holes.
^rSfJTK a. Reticulated. 2
Drilled with little holes.
5f[STf p^ Burned — ground in
preparation for the seed : raised
on burned ground — a crop. 2 a.
Fit to be burned; fit for fuel.
^rs" n. A net. 2 A lattice.
3 A cobweb.
te^^^r, rsr^^c^r «. Belong-
ing to which quarter.
1%*|H ad. Whence.
r^,^^ TcT^^^ ad. From all
around. 2 Everywhere.
r^^i" ad. Whither. 2 Where.
|3r^¥ r^'R^ ad. Everywhere.
r^T^'T V. c. To conquer. 2
rwr^
172
r^Trr^ Poet. See T^^l
flr^^
To win (a battle, &c.) 3 To mas-
ter. 4 To repress (lusts, the
inina, &c.) 5 To excel. 6 To \\M^tP^ a. s Of subdued
find out ; to guess (a riddle). | affections and passions,
r. i. To overcome : to pass trium- ! Cij-r-r n j r ii
phantly throut'h difficulties or |'^^^ ^- Produce of the
a-aiust opposition. ground, or a labouring anima ,
P K r,, . J 1 • considered as a means by which
Isff+^r r/. 1 hut indulges in nfe is sustained. [which place.
J^^x, sig. 1, 2. M^^r, Tm^\, Wf^y a. Of
r^T^IT /. Persistent and |^ .r r^ -^ v-
wearisome mention; as peevish 1 1 ^l^TqJfcT, [T^TI^fir ad. As
complaining, v. ^T, ^T^. -
The harass (as given by peevish
children), v. '•;?, ^dK. 3 The
food. 4 fig. To agree with. 5
To be gulped. G To go in :
to be contained.
state of utter helplessness.
f^Pn^T /. Wearisome beir-
gin» and beseeching, v. STT^,
■JRT^. 2 Toil and trouble, a.
Tired out, wearied. [whom?
f^^r j)ro7i. f. Whose ? Of
I^sfsfr iiifl. A term of respectful
compellation for an elder sister
or elderly female gen.
r^'^ n. Living, existence.
r. i. To live.
jVf^r^ot ^. I To live and
esc.ipe; to live and hold out.
Ncf p, (s) Overcome. In
comp. as f^ifi^T^.
r^cT^ a. See %^^r.
f^cT^Ifr a. Of the number
''^''^^- ^ [as will serve.
r^^^^r^r^^ «, As mudi
l^rf^R c. Contentious.
nr^q See rM^^l
f^T^'T rt. As much as.
fsI^T'T n. Tlie record of
victory furnished by the de-
feated party.
r^rfn^ See f^^.
R^r a. Alive. 2 fig. Not
<xtinguished — fire : proceeding
from a steady spring — water:
active — quicksilver; extant — a
language, custom. 3 Cut whilst
green — grass.
f^^r ^[ST^f Charcoal pre-
pared 1)T being buried in eartli
(not liaving been quenched by
water).
hTcTr^ftf An emphatic term
for a living creature ; a livin'j
soul.
far as. 2 As long as. [Where.
fspT^f ad. Whence, f^f^" ad.
fsl'^icf^ ad. Every where.
[Sn^Rr^^oT r. c. To agree
with ; to stay on the stomach—
an article of food or medicine
through use.
R^^^ n. Any thing to
promote digestion. [into
RT^^Tr/. Making to soak
\W\m V. c. To make to
sink into ; to resolve.
RTf^^r or F^?:r^tr «. Re-
lating to fields — the tax, &c. 2
Fit for agriculture — land. 3
Raised on arable land.
nrrrf cT or fsiTl^er n. (a) Land
fit for agriculture.
r^r or fsft 71. Cumin- seed.
[Sfc^^R" (a) The eleventh
Maliomedan month.
R^r? / (A) Retinue.
pSf^rf^TK An attendant or
a retainer.
\^^^ f. GHtter, gloss.
R?Cr (a) A zillah. 2 A half
division of a ^^ or fold
of paper.
RFgTfir or -inr a polisher.
R?!:^ (a) The twelfth
month of the Mahomedan year.
rS[<^?crnr The governor of a
district, a. Glittering, bright.
\smZ a. Having hfe, spirit.
2 Capable, substantial. 3 Firm,
strong. 4 Productive — a busi-
ness. [„p„_
R^TIf (p) f. Living, exist-
ing. 2 Livelihood. 3 Goods
and chattels, articles of property
and animals as distinguished
^from lands. [sition.
fsfC f. (a) Perverse oppo-
mm^ a. Refractory. 2
Contentious.
RHirr^ -^r /. Sse R^^ir-
fsT^r (p) A Staircase.
R^^ (a) An article. 2
Wares, goods. 3/. A thing gen.
R^'B'^f^r a. Of various
sorts. 2 Fine, showy — clothes,
goods. 3 Drawn up item by
item — an account.
T^^m a. That is for freight
or transport of merchandise — a
^sliip- [man.
fsjvr^rioT^cr ji. A merchant-
fiff?, RITT /. A jilant
bearing a fruit resembling the
mnsk-mclon. 2 n. Its fruit.
TsT^Tc^r/. A term in endear-
ment for the tongue. .^
rv „ r^ Mf^ A creeping creature
f^firrsrr /. Tlie tender and ^^ ' ^
hisldy seusiljle llesh under the
nails, &c.
Ri?r f. A tongue-scraper.
r^«Tr / m. (a) Charge,
trust (of a thing).
f^^R c. (p) One that holds
a charge; a trustee. [fsj^ruf.
RT% /. Sinking into. See \^^o^\ j (g) 'fhe tongue.
Im^ V. I. To soak or sink f-srs^q- n. The tij) of the
into. 2 To go off; to be resolv- ; ton„„e_
ed (from the absorption of tlie f^ ",4Vrr k r li r x- i
liumors). 3 To be digested- R^f^rT A fault of articula-
Rf"T V. i. To live.
r^r^c^iT a. Darling,
rsi^r^of „ (. To quicken or
make alive.
r^T^f'^r ^R^r A companion
for life. 2 A jocose term for
Ris^K
173
snrgV
tion or speech. 2 A slip of the
longue, lapsus linguce.
f^f^K n. Poet. The heart
or soul.
fsl^^Kr ad. In a vital part ;
or in a hi.ghly quick and sensible
place — wounding, &c.
flis^r^^ a. That is on the
tip of the tongue ; ready.
pSTS^rs- See \W-K\^\-
jSfSg'r^r Spring^, source, lit.
fig. 2 The soul or very essence
(as of an affection) : aiT^
^■^■=^1 fsfo. 3 Capacity:
^fTTT. 4 Concern for : IJI
highly sensible part. G Tlie life,
main spring of : 51^'^T^T'^T-
fSfo^foST f. The mouth-piece
of a bugle. 2 A valve. 3 See
fal^TST, sig. 5.
flfs^r^^r'^r a. Of close in-
timacy with, of a deep concern
about.
fst^^r 5f3" a. That is unable
to utter clearly and distinctly.
m^^ a. s Ever triumphant.
r^Tsfr^r f. s Desire of know-
ledge, curiosity.
I^f^Tf^" a. Inquisitive.
•^r hid, A particle of res-
pect in compellation, as Sir ! 2
A familiar particle in calling:
^T 'a^^ft. 3 A particle ex-
pressing assent : from an inferior :
TT^. 4 An affix of honour to
proper names : "^TaJT^T. proii.
Who or which.
^fcT /. Victory, a. Living.
S[H V. m. (p) A saddle.
%^^^ (p) A caste of leather-
workers.
^^Jjfr a. Relating to ^R"
3r?;./.The business of«j^«TJi^.
€fiT /. The tongue. 2 The
jib-sail. 3 fig. The tongue-form
bit of skin exhibited by gull-
catchers on the back or buttocks
of the bull (^■<^).
^Wr^^S" a. Foul-mouthed.
%^ s A cloud.
^f^ a. (s) Old and wasted.
2 Digested — food.
tr^f or tfot"-^ A slow fever.
^C^r^K (s) Removino; of an
old idol or temple and substitut-
ing of a new one. 2 fig. Ex-
changing of an old thing for
a new one.
^f^ (s) Life. 2 A Hving be-
ing, creature. 3 A small insect.
4 (freely) Fire, energy : life, pro-
ductiveness (in a work): strength,
soundness (of articles, &c.) :
truth, reality (of a report): beau-
ty, force (of a writing). 5 Mind,
intention : ^^ sTt^ ^fwm «ITt',
TT^ ofr^ ^W^T T «ITW. 6 The
Sentient soul.
glow of life
^^^151 A term
#i#3r -Vrr -^^rr «. That
plagues to death ; — used of an
importunate supplicant, an ar-
^uouswork. ^ ^ ^^^^^^
^\^'^^ A small living crea-
-^r^^ a. Living;.
trtcT^I^r / The lustre and
bloom of life.
SfH^Air/. Living state, life.
^r^^R n. Giving of life:
the gift of life. v. ^^, ^^ 2
Rescuing from any jeopardy.
^l^^rr a. Having Hfe. 2 fig.
Having spirit, pluck.
■^r^ n. (s) Living, exist-
ing. 2 Any means of life. 3
\Yater. a. Life-giving : ^' affo
■5TT^ sTRff II ^a t^^T ^T?r^ii.
The gloss and
[body,
for the
^F^^tF a. s Purified by
divine knowledge, and exoner-
ated whilst living from
future births, and from all
ceremonies and rites at present.
2 Absorbed in Divine contem-
plation.
STr^^lrF /. Liberation,
through the acquirement or
spiritual knowledge, from further
births, and at present from all
ritual acts.
^^R Life and soul; life
emphatically. 2 A darling.
SfRirr^ One's soul or self
emphatically or intimately :
^m\^\ / s The class of
reptiles, &c.
t\^m a. Beloved.
^r^-^^5'^ n. A term for ex-
ceedingly warm and close friend-
M^'frSnyship. [c-eation.
^^W /• The animate
SfRTrirr The sentient soul ;
the vital princij)le proceeding
from that emanation of the
Deity which, incorporated, con-
fers upon its subject life.
#r^R:f^^ ad. With all one's
i'r""- [tence.
^rrr^r /. Means of subsis-
^frf ^ or -^f n. s Living, life.
■^ffr a. Living in, on, by.
In comp. flf^^^'l, 5T^5f1^t.
^^? or ^?^^ n. A yoke.
^^ ?;. i. To join parts or
pieces. 2 fig. To agree, suit. 3
To come to an understanding.
4 To correspond — parts of a
poem, &c. 5 To be joined in
sexual congress.
f ^^ f. Art, skilfulness.
ifJr^R See srSRTR. ^ .
^ r^ V [pieces.
iJ^r^'T^ V. c. To join parts or
^m Gambling.
f ^ifr --^r a. A gambler.
^^^y. An ingenious device.
2 Art, knack. 3 The meeting
(as of one's means with one's
wants)under frugal management.
^^ or -?T n. Fight, battle.
f STot V. i. To fight.
^Sfcfr p^ pr. Meeting; ap-
proaching mutually from oppo-
site directions; — used of beams,
&c.
^^?"R n. A cloth so sewn
as to form a sort of case (to
hold paper, leaves, &c.)
^^^r a. (A)Slight, flimsy — a
building. 2 Narrow — a business.
3 Slight, little.
^5TTT a. Skilled in, or fond
of. war.
^'T" V. i. To combine to-
gether. 2 To assemble togctlier.
^?r f. Confederncy. 2 A
combined body. 3 A multitude.
^^^ m. ^^ n. A little
bundle or bunch.
^^^ V. i. To apply to, set
to : !^^l^T5TT '^'k ^T^fTIff. 2
To unite together. 3 To agree.
V. c. To put together in orderly
disposition.
^^w.Dim.^^r/. A bundle.
^^ /. Inam-land granted
to servants of Government in
recompense of their service. 2
The assessment upon such land.
5^ n. A pair of sandals.
3^ «• (p) Separate.
^^- a. Oldish. ^^^ ^,ti,ie
5^a.(H)01d. 2Longinuse —
^^r? a. Old. 2 Matured—
trees, or judgment, experience.
Sj^FTf^rr a. Oldish : used and
worn.
^Rl^ c. A term for a
shrewd and sagacious old person.
^•1N"I V. i. To become old,
lit. fig.
^q'^r/. Yoking.
^^^ V. c. To yoke. 2 fig.
To set about ; to apply (upon a
work): to join, apply, set in order
(& business, dispute, Ike.) n.
Tlie yoke-collar (of a bullock).
5^^f (a) Amount, sum.
^^^ir The head account-
ant of the Kevcnue department.
^R m. n. ^^ m. f. (p)
Moving, yielding : tjt^'J ^o
^Tff ■iTT^'^. 2 Awe. V. ^T, m^-
^RIR'T V. c. To regard or
min.l. [pidity.
^'^/. (a) Ikjldncss, intre-j
5?^m^r rwnif a term fori
a work courteously yet impa- j
ratively exacted.
^T^r f^r or f ^^r "j^jtr
arl. Compulsivfly. 2 AVith diffi-
culty; by might and main. I
174
^^J^Rf (a) a fine.
^cTHF a. Tyrannical, [purge.
^^m (p) A purgative. 2 A
^^ n. (p) A ringlet.
^^^ (a) Oppression, injus-
tice. 2 Used freely to express
vehement action : ^fTsr ^T^-
3!(. ^^T. 3 Used to express
one's admiration at any enor-
mous magnitude or plenty.
^r^^^ or -^1^^ /. Ty-
rannical and opjjressive proce-
dure; violent measures.
^^^ n. Twins.
^^a5T a. Twin. 2 Double,
growing in pairs — fruits.
^faify, A pair, couple.
^^ Junction, (h) Gambling,
^f ^Sf c. A gambler.
^^^Rf f. Gambling.
^3^r/. Laying over harmo-
niously.
^3"^ V. c. To lay regularly
over (as one fold over another).
2 To put together in harmoni-
ous connection or orderly dis-
position, lit. fig. : to make to
harmonize.
^^r a. Twin. 2 Double.
I^STiTS" f. Disposition or
arranging harmoniously.
5»t /. A pile, parcel.
^^^ n. Twins.
^ n. The fi.xed front-cross-
piece or thill-yoke. 2 fig. Yoke;
burden.
^ 71. A body, club. 2 A
league. 3 An age of the world.
^ m.f. n. Combination.
^ a. Hard from matuiity
— fruits, &c. 2 fig. Ripened.
^^^ n. s Yawning, v. ^•
^ conj. That. 2 A particle
of respectful address : it ^TaJT-
pron. Poet. Who or which.
'4 yron. n. Which.
^T^r ronj. Poet. That.
^5r (h) a professional wres-
tler.
5rd=lc6" or ^dl^ ad. As long
as ; for so long a period as. 2 s.
Such a while as.
•\
^4 ad. Poet. Where, at
which place.
^^cT or -^M^ ad. As
far as. 2 As long as.
^^ ad. W^hence.
^■^ ad. Where.
SfJiT^rS ad. Wheresoever.
Sl^cisr ad. Every where.
%^ff ad. Poet. When.
'^^ n. Felt. r 1 * V
•, ^ [undrrstandrng.
5f^r^ /. A gross and heavy
^^rS" A plant bearing a
nut powerfully purgative : the
^»"J^- [other.
^flcPT ad. (h) Somehow or
•^ a. (p) Inferior. 2 Over-
come by, reduced by (disease,
&c.) r. ^T, or ^^ 3Tmu)-^§f.
^<*il"/. The strap of a bit.
^^^ (p) A martiniial.
■sT^ST fir. As much, as large.
2 As many. 3 Whichever one
^(of a number). j-^^^ ^^^
^^ n. Making a meal. r.
^^m^S" /. Making an en-
tertainment. V. WiK- 2 Board.
3 An ordinary table.
^^^ V. i. To make a meal.
2 fig. To reap. 3 To take bribes.
•^^ A dinner or supper. 2
Corn served to a ])erson for a
meal. 3 Board (as of a peon
billeted).
^°^\ nd. When 2 As, since:
3T5^[^'-:?r ad. Whensoever.
^?"fc1o?fF f,,i^ }lver and
anon. Sf or Jrf cotij. Poet. If.
ad. When.
=>,
-^*T A follower of the
principles of a sf^«f or a
teacher of heterodox notions.
^^r See ^^.
^r pron. Who ? Which ?
3mf
175
STT^TT
^r ad. As in the instant
that : SIT tl^T «T^^T ^^ ^TJT-
^f ad. As long as. 2 Until.
3 As soon as.
€r?;? or 5[f^^ n. See ^T-
5fr^ H. A weight. 2 Weigh-
ing. V. ^^.
^r(^/. A leech.
W?I^ V. c. To weicrh. 2
fig. To estimate. 3 To be
weighed out unto : g^^T "^T
5fff^^ a. Involving danger,
perilous.
^\^\ a. Of weight (not of
capacity) — a measure. 2 Weigh-
ed.
^\^ 77. f. (a) Risk, peril.
2 A venture. 3 The thing risked.
^r^R p. Weighed.
»\
•5fR Renunciation of the
work! and conquest of worldly
passions and affections, v. ^
^sTFT^r A contemptuous form
of %jn, sig. 1.
^mcTf or smir a. Suitable
unto : worthy.
^fJlfaft^f -^i'^f. A female beg-
gar of the alms called ^TJI^I.
•^rr^nrr /. a reproachful term
for a filthy and untidy girl ; a
malkin. [Idling.
'^m^^ f. Shifting with. 2
^r^^r Alms asked by the
worshiper of ^^.
^TfiJ^ V. c. To dawdle,
loiter. 2 fig. To get on toler-
ably well : Tm JIT^^T '%'^1^
■s(T^W *ri-^ "^TJI^^. 3 To
prosper ; to get on well — an
animal or a plant. 4 To do for :
^mf^of y^ c. To take care
of. 2 To treat poorly.
^*n An ascetic. 2 A kind
of snake.
^r^"^ /. A female ascetic.
^ff^rr A word used in lulling
infants, a lullaby.
^r-S" m. f. A pair, a couple.
2 A set (of vessels, &c.) ; suit (of
clothes, &c.) 3 A piece added
(to wood, &c.) 4/. Stock, hoard.
5 In comp. as ^t^ ^t^ -^^^.
6 Profit. 7 Junction, yoked-
ness. 8 Matchedness. riptter
^(^3f^^ ,1^ A compound
^r^^r a. That earns.
^r^f^ n. The work of join-
ing rightly together (of parts
prepared).
^r^r f. Joining, &:c.
^J^^ V. c. To join, unite
(pieces). 2 To add unto : to lay
over or along the side (another
fold, a lining). 3 To lay equally
together: "^T^ ^l^qi W^^
m=^T. 4 To yoke or put to
(cattle in harness) : fig. to settle
in a situation : ^T^T^T'^^T*^-
^T ^T^«r ■'tlT. 5 To amass,
heap up : ^^TT ¥31V ^^x^]^
^Ti II ^^ ^^"^ vs mm^ %T II.
G To accomplish : fll'^ rrj^T ^-
we" ^1^^ "^T. 7 To acquire
^^ -"Wm^, &c. 8 To contrive,
devise.
^Tf^'cn" p. a. That earns ; that
is the earning member of.
^r^?^ a. That corresponds
with as the yokefellow, or as a
match, fellow, mate.
Sir^T n. A wedded pair. 2
p A twin -pair, a boy and girl
born together.
^r^^ n. A ring worn on the
fore or middle finger or middle
toe.
^r^r A pair; a married pair;
a pair of living creatures male
and female. 2 A single shoe (of
a pair) ; a single one (of any
pair). 3 A match.
^f^^T n. A compound let-
ter ; as "Slf.
^rfr/. A pair. 2 A set.^ 3
Agreement ; HJT'^ '^'^ ^T»
^^SfT. 4 Poet. Stock, capital.
5}r^[^ p. Joined, patched.
■sff^ n. A wedded pair.
^f^ n. A yoke. 2 The
plough as worked by a yoke of
oxen. 3 The throat-band or
yoke-collar.
^ffcT /. Light, splendor. 2
Lustre (of gems) ; strength,
force. 3 An illustrious personage :
"?T ^T"«:l or ^ ^^^T'ST 'R'lfft^T* .
4 A burning in the throat,
^[cfr pron. Whosoever ;
even he. 2 Some : %lo ^m <Rt
•\_
W<^\ a. A ploughman. 2
fig. A clodpate. ^g^^;^
5Tr':^T^ A cereal plant or its
tntcT ad. Until.
■^^ m. n. (p) Strength, force.
2 Stoutness : power of endurance
or resistance. 3 Violence (of
wind, &c.) 4 Injustice, oppres-
sion. 5 Stress. 6 The force of
fulness (as of a malady, or rainy
or windy weather).
»\ _fv.
^rr 3f^r /. violence, force.
m^^^ f. (p) In law. A
summons with force to compel
attendance. 2 An exaction.
STf^f^ a. Strono-.
■SfKr Authority; power. 2
Force, unjust compulsion.
J^ '^*
^RF^'T V. i. To become
strong, lit. fig.; to become violent
— wind, rain, &c.
mm a. Powerful. ^Wl
f. Violence, force.
%r ad. Until. 2 Whilst.
■^l^ An astronomer. 2 An
individual of a class among
Shudras; they are fortune-tellers.
3 A bird.
tr^ /. The office of the
village '^T»t^.
■^TfC^r A jeweller : a pedler.
-^T^TT or -^ n. Jewellery,
jewels. 2 The business of a
jeweller.
-^rrCnC The word used by the
T^T'C, '^tVT^, &c. in saluting
tlieir betters or each other. 2
The word of obeisance used to a
Raja by his attendance, implying
O warrior !
■^r ad. Until.
Mil NT pron. Whose ? Of
which ?
^^tr^r, ^fVrr r/./. For the
reason, beciuise that.
^ffirrcT /. s Geometry.
^^■'3" (s) I'hc third month of
the UiuiUi year, ^May-June.
^ a. (s) Elder.
^^^*-:r or ^^^FT^^
Licorice.
m. f.
[Uistre.
176
where subterraneous fires break
forth, to which pilgrimages are
made. The word is uow used
in the sense of Volcano.
^^(fcl /. (s) poj). ^1^ Light,
^^ifcT^^ n. s Light itself.
A tith- of God. See John 1. 5.
^q^ff^^ s The sphere of
the kiminaries of heaven, i. e.
of the fixed stars.
Mq^fFrTlf^ir /. Science com-
prising astronomy, astrology,
and aritlmictic. r^f Shiva.
^'^]\H f^JT n. (s) A lingam
^<TrRT:3TR^ n. Astronomical
or astrological science.
5^(lcf^ V. Astronomy or as-
trology. 2 The profession, situa-
tion, or office of an astronomer.
^-qTreiT^^ 71. s The sideral
h^eavcns. [astrologer.
^^cffr An astronomer or
^C (s) Fever.
13
IT The ninth consonant.
IT^/. (h) a word introduced
from the Hindustani, and, though
much used in the senses here
"■iven, unknown in its primitive
sigiufication, that of Fly: "^o
iTT^of To err, to act or
speak like a fool ; '^W ^ifTrT
^^^ -5TT^^ -^<tt?, Sec. im
^^^ f. A metal plate used
as a gong. 2 The bang of
musical instruments, v. vfrJT,
^S. 3 A clamorous dispute.
?t^^ ad. With banging.
?T^^^ V. i. (h) To quarrel.
?FI^r A quarrel : a law suit.
?FT'i"r3r a. (Quarrelsome.
^JTF A robe.
?[|Trfrcr (s) a storm.
^^ n. A bore or pest, 2 /.
A knock.
ITJ^/. A smart and rapid
going and returning. fdenlv.
^^^ V. i. To start ott" sud-
plies' He wTu give, come, &c. \^Z^ or II^RifM" V. C. To
icilhj mlhj ; he cant help himself. | shake (a cloth, &c.) 2 To sweep
?T^ .^OT _^ -f?r^r -f^r^r ad.
With a flash.
?T^?T^/. GHttering.
?T^IT^ or -^i ad. Sparklingly.
^^?T^^ V. i. To glitter.
?pRIT^f2: Great brightness ;
flasliing.
|T?;?Tf^f /. Brightness, shine.
?T^IT^r^ a. Sparkling.
IT?^ V. i. To be lost in ad-
miration : to be befooled. 2 To
blunder.
^-f^TT^fr Return of fever IT^^ ad. Necessarily: ^f^
through the i)atient's exposint
himself, after recovery, too early
to the public gaze.
^^fjV7 f. Calenture-visions.
^^{"if^^K Dysentery with
fever.
^?n^ Feverishness.
H^OT i\ i. To shine brightly,
?T^[# /. Great brightness :
glaring.
?T?irCrcT a. Glowing : glossy.
?T^ril^ ad. Sharply, flow-
er go-
ingly— monies commj
ing ': suddenly and continuously ;
^f^^ ;). s Blazing, flam-
ing. 2 Burned.
^^^^ (common ^'^^) Rage, ,
passion. 2 Strong stench. .'3 ^T\Z n. A metal plate beaten
Awe, dread. on by certaui class of mendi-
^^R See ^^H. rburnin- '^'^"t' ' ^'^^ ^'^T "" "■^"'-'•' *''''
-TTT-rr /. / V T^i I- " hours are struck
^^r /. (s) Flame, hre
^^fc^l^fr a. Combustible.
^^I^IT^ n. H A mass of
flame,
^r^rj^^t /. (s) A place
Z\^Z^ v. c. To seize roughly :
to brush against frocibly. 2 fig.
To (lisi)ute with. r. i. To press
liard upon : ^^TH ^y^ ^^oS II
^TJlt ^^T ^JTzfci II.
by whisking a cloth over. 3 To
fan (grain, "&c.) 4 To jerk (an
arm, &c.) [trice.
ITf^ ad. Smartly, in a
IT?^ A smart blow. 2 A
sudden and smart pull. 3 A
sudden and smart pain. 4 A
puff (of wind, &c.); a bursting
forth (of rage) ; a blow (from a
iTfT). .5 A shake ; a flap with
the ^xj. V. X.. G A stroke ot
the sun. v. ^IJT, ^]X, ■^¥. 7
A knock (as in falling), v.
^Tir. ^ ^Tq flout.
llT^l^f^ V. c. To whisk. 2
^^ V. i. To apply assidu-
ously. 2 To rush violently
into contact with.
^Z^Z ad. Imit. Smartly./.
Altercation, v. ^^, ^r. 2
Smartness. [action.
STJqzqT a. Smart; brisk in
ITTFTJl f. Strife, v. ^^, ^^,
^T3r, %T, ^X. 2 Hurry and
confusion.
?T^/. Long continued rain.
V. s^TJT, ■^^. 2 Spray : a
matted fence before a door, &c.
to keep oif the spray. _ 3 A
stoop ^of a bird of prey) : fig- an
eager spring upon. v. ^T5T,
mx:, T?^. 4 A continued fall-
ing (as of leaves, &c.) ; wasting
away (of the body).
^^^^ See ?TJ^^.
ITi*^
177
?rT¥qT
?r^-^n ad. Poet. Quickly.
IT's'T" I?, c. To be shed in a
continued manner — fruit, leaves,
&c. 2 To waste a\va\ — the bod}-,
kc. 3 To fade — colours, &c. -4
'J'o be in smart action — the
''igi^^T : to be firing — guns,
&c. 5 To be under reo:ular issue
— waives of troops, &c. (J To
decline, give way — a building,
^T^'cTT^^ ad. In a droppi no-
un d wasting manner — a load of
hav, &c. ])roceeding along. 2
Fallingly and tripplingly.
§r3"^r f, A close search : fi^:.
a strict reckoning, w. g. 2
fig. .\ general clearance (of
ficcounts). 3 tig. Utter consump-
tion (of money, &c.) 4 Taking
an account (as of the movables
of a house, &c.) : the account
taken.
^^^ See ?[3-, sig. 3. 2 A
window shutter ; a door or a
fold of a door.
^S'T'^ /J. Any thing used to
fan. 2 A shutter, li f. A blast
from a frod or ^r??.
STi'^'^ry. Fanning, &c.
?T5'^'^ V. c. To fan, winnow,
2 fig. To blast. V. i. To hold up.
2 To stoop — a bird of prey. n.
A flapper or fan. [shn^ply.
^IV'^^ or-^f od. Quickly,
ST'^^r Smart (us of a scor-
pion's sting, hot spices, &c.) v.
^\i\, ^^[■s, %s. 2 A gust of
passion, v. ?(.
^^W: A twang. 2 A flap.
3 I?riskne.<s. 4 A fit of passion.
V. ^. 5 A dart of the scor-
pion's stmg. 17. ?TT^.
"^"^^FTor -^t ad. With a
clang. 2 Briskly.
^^mm V. i. To ring. 2 To
tingle, o To burn and ache —
the mouth, &c.
?roT?|UTr?: a hmd and exces-
sive ringing. 2 Excessive burn-
ing and aching.
IT'^^'jfrcr a. Hot, biting-
spices, &c.
ST'^":?*!^ A clanging, ringing.
'^"^Vm V. i. To clang.
23
5FTM ad. With a lond and
continuing clang.
m^, ^im or -7f afZ.Sniart-
Iv, briskly.
^mZ^ V. c. To despatch
(business, &c.) 2 To devour. 3
To attack — a ^TT
'm^\ A familiar word. It is
a]iplicable wherever briskness
and force combined are to be
signifipd : '^EfiT 'S'^T^I'ST Upon
a stretch, at a spurt ; IJXfr-
^TH^^r Witbaflap; f«^f%T7?IT-
^T "^o ^Tr\ g. of s. He, &c.
writes incessantly, or rapidly;
frTTT^T-q[T^T^T " •^o The
vehemence of fever, &c.; fqaiT-
■^T"^! ^° f^ blasC from a de.
mou ; WK^"^! W A stoop of
^ kite. [matters smartly.
mYm\ a. That despatches
^^\^\ ad. Smartly, briskly.
mZ f. (h) a stoop of a
bird of prey. 2 A blast from a
VTrf.
Wi^ n. A child's frock.
W^^^ or ^^f ad. Clanking.
2 Imit. of the sound of heavy
rain ; dash ! dash !
^iT?[Rr^ A loud jingling.
^^[?T^ or -m ad. Imit. with
a vehement and continual jingle.
5T5?ni#r/. The clashing of
swords. [quickly.
^^^, ^TTgrn ad. Suun-tly,
IT^'^T V. i. To ooze. 2 To
leak — a vessel. 3 fig. To waste
away — tlie body.
?T^r (s) A spring of water.
2 fig. A source.
^fU?: ad. Quickly, briskly.
IKr y. (s) A fountain-head
or watering place ; a spring.
^J^f. A hot blast of air. 2
A covp de soled, v. ǤT, ^TT.
W^ f. Waste of metals on
being heated.
i>T^^/. Glitter, v. ^Tl^. 5f^-
cS'Jf ?'. c. To sbine.
fl'^JT^^, ?T^ST^^ V. i. To
shine, glitter.
^a)'^^\Z Glare, great lustre.
ir^^T^rcT a. Bright. 2 ad.
Glaringly : ^o i'^^. 3 Utter-
ly : an^T W?T ^o flT^oS
^l^f. Sealfd state of the
eyes under the stnjior (of star-
vation, &c.) V. ti^. 2 Giddi-
ness : drowsiness, v.^. 3 Thick
shade (of clouds, trees, &c.)
?Tr^ /. Brilliance (as of
metals, &c.) 2 Wash (of gold,
&c.) 3 or ^S^T"^ "^T^ A
coup de soleil : a blast of hot
air.
m^^ V. A lid.
?If^f^r/. A cover. 2 A blind
for a beast's eye. 3 Covering,
concealing. 4 Closedness of eyes.
.V.
?rt^°T ?;. c. To cover ; to close
with a lid. 2 To hide. 3 fig. To
suppress. «. A lid.
?[i^'?yjn%^ n. A term for a
a man of great knowledge or
worth, though of unostentatious
appearance.
?T[^?^r[j5r<7f/. Privily; with-
out making a bustle.
^\^^ f The sound of many
drums or tabors beaten together.
2 fig. Squalibling.
Wi^f. Cymbals.
W\^ n. (p) A ship.
■'^\^^ or -^71. f. The first
glimmering of daaii. 2 The dusk
of evening.
?fra^0T V. c. To graze ; rub
off. 2 fig. To rub. 3 To wear
and waste.
^\-^Xm See sff?Rcrr.
?iir^ n. A tree. 2 A chande-
lier. 3 A cluster of lights of
frankincense around a stick. 4
A term for the subject of de-
moniac possession or of the
afflatus of a god. 5 A genealo-
gical tree.
^TF^^r r. c. To sweep. 2 To
shake (a cloth, &c.) 3 To fan
(a fire, &c.) 4 To scold. 5 To
deny. 6 To clear off. 7 To exor-
cise. V. i. To kick ; to recoil in
going off — a gun.
Srr^^rc^r a term for the herbs
and leaves and roots used medi-
cinally ; simples. j
^\m\^>\ f. Complete clear-
ance : the closing and clearing
payment in discharge of a debt.
?Tf^ See IT^^r.
?Trfr f. A thicket. 2 Sweep-
ing off. [sweeper.
5ir^^ (n) A broom. 2 A
?TrT^ ad. Wholly, utterly.
ITfiiTf a. A sweeper. 2 That
sweeps off smartly.
sTtT A load of loppif!2:s. 2
A broken oti' branch, o A fold of
a door, &c.
?lil/. A stoop of a bird of
prey. 2 The rising and spring-
ing forward (of a serpent, a
swimmer), v. m^, ^T^, ^IT-
3 An attack (as of a gang of
thieves).
fTR'^ /. Sealed state of the
eyes under the stupor of
biliousness, &c. v. ■q^g-, ^\^.
2 ^ [mal's eyes.
?TrW /. A blind for an ani-
m^ See ^Ti'^^r-
Srrrr a matted door of a
hut, shade, or fence.
STTTToS" a. Branchy and bushy.
ITin f. A long-necked ves-
sel to keep water cool. 2 A
spout.
STlT^^r An individual of a
class of ])eople who subsist by
shifting the ashes and dust of a
goldsmith's workshop. 2 fig.
A miser.
?ir^r/. (ii) Fringe.
?TTf ^r /. c A branch of the
Cocoanut.
^\^^\ f. Soldering.
ITT^^ V. c. To solder.
r^TH^ a. Rather cbrious.
F^rn'T' V. i. Tn be intoxicat-
ed. 2 or fiJUfl ^T^in' To
stagger.
rlmr or -^ a. Ebnous.
rlr^r a prawn. 2 A fit of
passion, v. ^.
178
\k^ f. Intoxication. 2 Spi-
rituous liquor. 3 A tress of hair
hanging disorderly.
r?T51'^R3" /. Loss by friction.
r^W /. Wastinir.
r?T5T^ V. i. (h) To wear. 2
To emaciate.
I^sfffar ,. (. 'Yq wear away,
rir^^r^Fcf A violent gust
with rain.
r?T?^r^°t V. c. To scout ; to
reject contemptuously.
mZ\ii£l ad. Drop by drop
— milk descending into the i)an :
by little and little — profit com-
ing in : here and there — rain
^fallin^^. [scorn.
[IT'3'^'^r V. i. To reject with
r^ri"^! A fling (of hand,
&C.1
r?T'2"^ITrf[r /. Flouting.
f?T'^r?T'TaT V. c. To ring,tingle.
rtTT^r/'. A loose tress of hair.
2 fig'. A slovenly and loose
woman, a malkin.
r^l^r^T^ or -^\ ad. Lightly
and softly — raining,
(II^iITC ad. Drizzlingly—
ranung. [loose te.xture.
^rflRf o. Worn out. 2 Of
^UT r. i. To waste in languor
^and iKiin. [Trickling.
r$R^'^r f. Wasting away, 2
flPTT^ w. i. To trickle. 2 To
waste away.
r$f^riT^ ad. In the fluttering
of extreme weakness. 2 In the
poorest, feeblest condition —
trees, crops, &c. '^ Scantily,
feebly, faintly — rain falling,
water flowing, the sun shining.
h^m (Vulgar) A boy.
r?T^riT55- or -^ ad. with
^T^uf, ^2*ui To liang or
move danglingly.
r?T3rfJT^r/. A pendant (of a
jewel). 2 /)/. Ornamental shreds
lof paper, fringe, &c.): pendulous
filaments of an unclean roof:
the bob (of a chandelier, &c.)
^r^ /. Waste, wear. 2 fig.
Loss in trading, r. '^^j ^t.
ifl^ /. Staggering (esp_.
under the infirmities of age),
giddiness, v. ^.
^^^ V. i. (Ti) To bend. 2
To walk nodding and waggling,
o To slip off. 4 To become lean
and meagre. j-^^^.j^^
^^\^^ V. c. To bend. 2 To
give the slip and decamp.
^^[2T m. -Z\ f. Eluding of
observation and decamping, v.
. rv [stagger.
^^rTFw.-^r/. A reel or a
^^m V. c. To throw, fling.
^^ n. Fight : strife.
tWl, ^^ V. i. To fight ;
to contend with.
^STpf^ i., c. To set to fight.
^mZ a. Violent, strong —
wind. 2 Warlike, ad. Boister-
ouslv blowing — wind. v. ^^.
2 Violently : quickly — running,
K'c.
^•i'^r A draught (of a cigar,
&c.) : a draught (as of milk, &e.)
See ^Z^T.
^?r/. (h) A tasted and there-
fore defiled aiul untransferable
dish. A deed of grant of villages
or lands never recoverable,
^^.^try. A company, troop.
ij7 or f ^7 71. A busli. 2 A
thicket.
gt^g"^ V. i. To whistle-^
wind. 2 To sing — as the Jew's
harp. ."> To tinkle — toe-orna-
ments, &c. 4 To tingle.
^^r A chandelier.
g^T^^ V. i. To strut.
^^r (h) A bunch ; a tuft.
S^<*'T' V. c. To take snuff
with a deep-drawn sniff : to take
a long pull at a smoking appa-
ratus, w. i. To run away.
^^r A deep drawn sniff (of
air or in taking snuff); a long
pull at a 5^T.
^^-^^ or -H ad. Imit. of the
gurgling of a brook.
ar^
179
^ai"ir
gr^^ /. Pining away. 2
Oozing away.
^i'H V. i. To ooze away. 2
To crumble down. 3 To pine
and waste away. 4 fig. To slip
off.
Sj^«^ or '^ n. A cockroach.
2 App. to kinds of tjfi'rr or
candle-moth.
^^r A deep draught. 2
A little window,
^c^ofr y; Nodding.
^^'^ z;. 2. To nod — as an
elephant in walking. 2 fig. To
saunter. 3 fig. To shake. 4 To
swing.
^55T^ y. c. To amuse from
day to day with various pretexts.
2 To consume idly (time).
^^ A basket suspended be-
tween two poles on which people
are swung at festivals, &c. :
a swinging basket in which tra-
vellers pass from crag to crag on
precipitous mountains. 2 A
swinging bed or seat.
^^ n. (p) A ringlet.
breathe gently — water, wind.
|f^ /. A gentle puff of
wind. 2 fig. A fair wind, the
time and tide of men's atfairs. 3
A faint appearance of (any ob-
ject). 4 A flow; a /•«« (as of a
wind), ad. With gentle breath-
ings.
^^ or -?T n. Fight, strife.
^ /. (h) a lie. a. Lying —
a statement.
^ff. (h) a body-cloth (of
horses, &c.)
?T ind. A particle expressive
of excess : ^ ^l ?:JfS^ ^^^T,
Sn^ n. See S^^.
?T^r (h) A flag, ensign. 2
The staft' surmounted with a
bunch of flowers carried in pro-
cession.
5T>f^ A flower tree.
?rT f. An inclination for-
words or to one side, as in
reeling, v. % ^T, ^, 3IT. 2
A stoop of a bird of prey. 3
The oscillatory motion of n
cradle, v. gjcff, ^, g.
W[^ V. c. To perform,
achieve (a work of difiiculty or
labour) : %' ^T*I (^TT"^" ^^ ^'tf^.
i^"^r /. Catching.
?T»5"'T 7\ c. To catch (a thing
tossed). 2 fig. To catch up ; to
apprehend and follow readily
(a song, &c.) 3 To admit (a
proposition, request). 4 To
take up (any challenge).
?T^ A bunch (of flowers);
a nose-gav.
?Tf^ or irr^ Inclination, v.
5jT. 2 fig. The inclination,
bent. 3 An affected manner of
speaking. 4 The sweep (as of
the skirt of a garment) ; and fig.
of animated speech.
*^* rv r-s
?rr^[=^ir /. An empty rote ; a
note, bill, &c. by which the
receiver is bilked, v. %.
^r^^r/. Reeling.
^rr^'^T V. i. To bend, incline.
2 To stagger, v. c. To di-iiik
by large draughts; to quaft'. 2
To throw, fling. 3 To perform
(a work of some labour).
^k'^r /. Beguiling with
empty promises ; hambucjying.
V. %
*\ »*
Hf^r or URT A swing, v.
§, 1ST. 2 A fraudulent term
of a balance in weighing out
goods. .3 fig. An empty journey
or walk. 4 A blow as in a
trade^ [or to one side.
?Tr^i^r f. A motion forwards
^rr^T A shameless, unprin-
cipled, hectoring fellow, 2 /.
A loose ti'ess of hair.
^rf^JT The spirit of a de-
ceased person now wandering as
a goblin. 2 App. fig. to a fellow
without wife or home, thus
likely to decamj).
m^^ >T(-IJrC /. a term for
anarchical and tumultuous
proceedings.
§fr^ /. I^hrashing. v. ^\^^\^.
2 fig. A banging. 3 fig. Heavy
rain. 4 Used vulgarly for vehe-
mence and excess : sfil*?!'^
^\^ A hector or bully.
m^^^ n. Coarse or com-
mon work.
^r^% / Thrashing.
?Tr^<T V. c. To thrash. 2 fig.
To beat. 3 To do roughly and
ru(lely(any work of manual labour).
4 To stuff (down one's throat).
^r^ A sheet (of fire): a
torrent (of water).
m or mf. Sleep, v. ^, %■
mfif. im n. A cottage.
imi^ f. Disturbing of
sleep.
?rnTf^r a swing-ins; bed.
ITRF^ a. Sleepy-headed.
irr^S' 71. A troublesome
person or business. 2 A quarrel :
a contest considered collectively
with the parties and circums-
tances of it : i?To ^ ^'To ^^-
cRT^tw "^^^ 3 A couple in
congress (esp. of serpents).
im\ f. Wrestling. 2 Striv-
ing with.
^m V. c. To affect with a
smart pain, lit. fig. ; to touch to
the quick. 2 To bite — a snake.
3 To seize hold of violently, v- i.
To gather up thickly — blossoms
or fruit.
Sfr/. Wrestling, v. ^, %^.
2 Contending with, v, g.
?Tr^ The loose and swing-
ing end. 2 A bagging, bellying
(in a cloth, &c.) 3 Sudden
motion aside, v. t- [oscillate.
?ri^^ V. i. (h) To swing ; to
^r^^T Swinging. V. '^, %• 2
Deceit (as passedoff upon), w.
^. 3 The skirt. 4 A bagging.
i\^\ ^ f. Evading by
many or on many pretences.
?rr^r^'^ v. l. To be corpu-
lent or flabby-bellied.
5[f^^S]"ox V. i. To hang
dangling ; to swing.
y|c64)^r Hanging loosely ;
dangling. 2 A swing.
W\^^\ The four-mouthed
bag of beggars. 2 A cloth
^r^
180
S"f^^
gathered up at the corners (to
carry off a woinukd person,
&c.) ; .1 sUng for animals in
raising them on board a ship.
fTr^r ti^iTif^ m\ The
trade of beirp;lng. r. t.
%m or 5^r 5^r lud. The ejacu-
lation used in urtringon ahorse.
' ""'"^Lr'f f f^'H'"'>'' k°T2:oT a./. Iinit. of the sound
'• ^'^r 2 Ihrobinngly . v. ^^^ ^ ^^^.j^j^^ ^,^_ -^ rebounding.
Z The eleventh consonant.
2"^ f. A continual throbbing
of the temples, v. ^'JT. 2 A
fixed look. I'. ^T?, ^T^. 3
tig. A continued noise : a long
recitation, crying:, &c.:^TTnTT-
Poet. The lixeihiess of amaze-
ment.
j'^ nd. A particle used with
nouns and verbs referring to
measures and weights. Exactl\
to the degree or quantity of :
Z^'I^^ f. Unceasino; and
wearying speech, v. ^t^, 5^TJr.
&c. t
«{i^. ^afiZ^irir. ^. To bloom
flowers. 2 To throb — the tem-
i)les.
Z^i^ n. s Brute borax.
S=hM* or -^i fi'L Staringly,
gazingly. i'. qi^.
Z^^l f. A liiiht term for
the heail, csp. for the crown of
the liead. 2 fig. Iligli ground.
T^^rr a. Bald. [A mint.
"dT^^fsyr /. (s) pop. t^m^
ZW,^\ See ^^•
Z%\ (h) An aggrcijate of
sixteen fil^^ri- pice : of four
])icc. 2 Money. 3 \ land mea-
sure consisting of 120 square
Biglris.
Z^\W>\ ad. Staringly.
z'kiZm pi. Knocks, thumps,
rubs. V. ^\, Bf, %T^, iTTJT.
^'^Fj^ Sec i^.
Z^T f. (h) A butt. 2 fig. An
eifort in rivalry, v. ^T, fiT^.
Z^^ n. Baldness or a bald
spot. 2 ficr. A bare patch (as in
a corn tieUl).
Zno^ ^3T3r /. Careless, su-
perficial doitig. 2 Dilly dallying.
ud. Hesitatingly. '6 Lazily. -I V.y
fits and starts.
Z"^ f. (From touch) Quality
of gold.
Z'^ Jf{^ -^ -[^^[ -K?fr od.
Used with verbs of pricking,
lancing, filliping, &.C. imita-
tivcly of the sound or expres-
sively of the manner ; as ^o
Z^^^ n. Hard, solid. '2 fig.
Hardy. 3 Ilale, hearty. 4 Large,
s. Exhaustion from labour.
Z^Wl v. i. To be exhausted
from labour.
z^\ -^^ .^T -r?% Tsr^r wh
Imit. of the sound of a ])el)ble Ixq-jqo]-
rebounding from a hard body;
of the twang of a bow.
Z'^W>\ a. Hale, hearty, s.
The darting of its sting by a
scorpion, v. ftJX-
2 Range (of a ball, &c.), gun-
shot. 3 A distance. 4 A stage ;
a halting place. 5 The bound
(of a ball, &c.) [The mail.
Z^m^Ti n. (n) A post-office. 2
Zn^ or Z^Z^ See Tsw.
J^T^'lIl^/. Publicity, no-
toriety. 2 A name for a town
where there is much gossip and
scandal.
2:JR>1TR^ n. A term for a
family or community where
there is no rule or order ; a
bears' garden.
ZX^ V. c. (h) To tear, rend.
3T^rr^°t r. c. To rend with a
sound.
J^'lic^ n. A husk or hull
gen. ; a pea-pod, &c.
ZT^ m. n. A watermelon.
Zt^ Zi^ or ZXX^ JTf^ nd.
Imit. of the croaking of frogs.
Z^ a. Small aud thickset.
zw:\ A
I bat or stick,
csp. with a
Hence used with the verbs of
leajiiutr, dancing, &c.
jcr[7:qaf ^,_ ^ x^ bound and
hop — a ball, &c. 2 To retort
sharplv and petulantly.
J'T^^IT Twang (as of a
bowstring).
Z^\Z^ ad. See Z'^^.
Tq A large marble. 2 Either
half of a tent.
2?T^^u. i. To fall drop ! dro-)!
TT-^^.^-R:^T -f^r od.
Imit. of the sound of a falling
drop, &c. 2 Jn a shake, trice.
Z^^ f. Waiting and watch-
ing.
Z^^ V. i. To wait and watch
])aticntly and intently.
Z^^\ A smack : a slap, cufF.
zm^ See z^m^.
Z^K A full grown ram.
-^Tf (^ii) A variety of song.
V. i. To bloom,
to look green, fresh, lively —
flowers, the countenance.
Z^Z^\ f. Freshness, &c.
Z^Z^\'^ o. Blooming, kc.
zm^ or -^^r a. zm^wT c.
LUe, wanton, mischievous — esp.
a child. 2 That is ever reviling;
or mocking.
Z^\^^S.Z^\^\f, Idle, mis-
chievons ways.
Z^\-^\ m. ZK\^ n. (H) A
leafy branch, a sprig. 2 A )dant
of '^Tsi'CT, ■qiZIUTT, or ^t'l.
ZWV^\ f. A small sprig.
Z^Z^ or Z^Z-^\^nd. Clear-
ly, brightly. 2 Particles of em-
phasis used with words signif\-
ing noon : "Zo '^^'[X ITT^^- ('•
Clear, looking large and bright
— letters, &c.
ZaS^ i;. i. To pass off, over
— a time, a danger. 2 To fail of
ol)servance. 3 To heel — as a
Ix.at.
Z\^ A weiiiht. 2 Tlie nib
of a pen. '.i By nuton., A penfnl
of ink. 4 (Erdnincing paiticle to
%f^^l) Utterly driid up— n
i3K'JT<^k' Brute boi ax.
3T^or
181
ft^ir
Z]W>^ V. c. To throw — away,
oft". 2 To leave ; to (/ive up. '.i
To spiead (a caipet). 4 To lay
upon: ^T rSJToT^^ ^T^WT
«r cEJI^J^T ; to consign over (a
business). 5 To lay (a bet). 6
To cast (sowing seed) : to cast
out (its ear or head); to shoot
the hose — corn : to put out at
the gallop (a horse).
Z\Wi^ V. c. To reset or re-
chisel.
2"f^^r¥ n. Hire merely to
convey and deposit.
J'lWrf^r The business of
the toilette, bedecking.
fr^ms" oYZ\^^\^f. A mint.
ST^^S'r a. Relating to the
mint.
Z]^\ or ^\^\ A stitch. 2 fig.
A joint of the body, esp. a ver-
tebra of the back. 3 Blight.
H^f^fSi" a. Fit to be thrown
away.
Jt^r or 2:r# /. a cistem. 2
A trough for watering cattle. 3
A stone cutters chisel ; a chisel
to divide bars of metal. 4 An
incision made with it (on a hand-
null, &c.)
JF^lTf^ ad. Close upon;
just at the heels of. 2 Exactly
to the degree of; up to the mea-
. sure of. 3 In the manner of the
post or mail.
JRT or mi\ / A low term
for the leg. 2 esp. zfiT A
stride. r i
V. Lpend.
2'R'T" V. c. To hang or sus-
cTl^ or 2:f^ /. The heel. 2
w. /. (Attach) An attachment,
judicial seizure of a property : a
writ of attachment.
ZJ^^or^i^'^ n. A matter
noted down; a jotting, note. 2
A meniorandum-]3aper.
jR'^r or JR'nr/. (h) a pin.
2 A note.
Jr^of or Z\^^ V. c. To
stitch. 2 To note down.
ffr^q^qr, Ji^sr^r v, c. To urge
the horse with the heel. 2 fig.
To urge and press.
fl^ or HTl^r A stitch, v.
2:r^^ 3Rra5"[^ n. a term for
one's wife's brother. 2 A term
for a beloved wife or a sweet-
heart.
Jiqr, zi^izm (h) Hocus
pocus. 2 pi. Piece-learning ;
scraps of knowledge.
HTFT or ^iT/. A stroke from
the foot of a horse : a kick from a
liiud foot. V. ^JX- 2 Knocking
on one's head with the knuckles.
V. JTT^- ti ??. A small plant
(esp. of an esculent vegetable).
^\^^N f. Stroking. 2 Rigid
rightaess, or fitness, ad. bee
2:rq^/. See ^\^.
Z\^m2m nd. Just enough.
S^F'T^ (h) An island : an insu-
lated territory.
Z]^Z^ ad. (h) Imit. of the
sound of a drum. /. Pomp,
parade.
"^K A term for a hoise in
mentioning the four things of
which the value is ever varying,
viz. ■Z\X, -ffl^, JTI'C, ^K
Horses, women, jewellery, dice.
3Tfr The cry of certain
birds. 2 The long continued
crying (as of a child), v. ^^T^,
^. 3 A loud call. A The
stirring of the heat and expan-
sion of the air in a soil, and
thus the rising to the surface
of its moisture, v. "TfS : ojfir-
^1^ A musical instrument.
2 Beating lime in music.
•rrs"^ n. A light term for
the head, /*«/e, sconce.
^\^^ P. c. (H) To avert. 2
To amuse, beguile. 3 To drive
on ; to kill (time).
3T^r Procrastinating, v. ^•
2 Averting (of an evil). 3 The
roof of the mouth. 4 r A small
leafy branch. ^ [beguding.
Z]^[Z]^ or -5^r/. Shuffling,
^rST f. Beating the hands
together, v. ^Tai^, efj^, fqs,
flK. 2 Clflpping the hands in
musical measure. 3 Striking
hands together (in bargaining).
v. M\K. 4 Clap])iiig the hands
(in deriding, tloutuig). v. e[T-
Jloi'r nf. A sprig.
^T^ f. The fore part of the
head. 2 The hair left upon the
sinciput when the head is shaved.
3 The roof of the mouth. 4 fig.
Thick and clammy incrustation
(as of soil) from the rain falling
under the f^^T »ig^. v. "^K :
H:rs-^r ?"icr a term for a
person or thing regarded as
dear.
3T3" n, A padlock. 2 A face
or plate (u])per or under of a
pa(ilock,of the works of a watch).
3 The upper jaw of the mouth.
r^^JR:^^ V. i. To flicker and
quiver — an expiring lamp, or
fig., departing life.
U^of V. i. (h) To live with
or at ; to stay. 2 To last. 3 To
leap — an antelope, &c.
\Z^'^\ The mark (circular
or otherwise) made with coloured
earths, &c. upon the foreliead.
It is either an ornament or as a
sectarial distinction.
[i^«r /. A plantlet. 2 An
ornamental spot or piece of
glass, &c. on the forehead (esp.
of females) ; any little circular
thing.
I^T^^r \^^^\ f. The busi-
ness of the toilette.
\Z^\m V. c. To make to
endure. 2 To nab a customer.
fsr^r See T^^'y^l The circu-
lar marks made with coloured
earths or unguents njion the
forehead. 2 fig. A circular and
white spot upon the forehead of
a beast.
r3"^f3r a. Lasting, durable.
iT^R Continuance, stay (at
or with, and with implication
of comfort). Used of persons, v.
^], fffsr. 2 Endurance, stand-
inq under. r ,
r-. ^ rv [great man.
rJ^f^r A term for a little
iJ^r^ or -^r G. Lartie- sized.
r^r^rr
182
HT«y^
l^?IT -T n, A term for a
large and tine horse.
l^^ f. A span measured by
the thumh and forefinger. 2 A
fillip, li A knock with a knuckle.
1?^ -^ -^ -T<^\ -f^r ful.
Iniit. of the sound of filliping.
R:^^ V. c. To fillip.
rz^[ f. A fillip. V. Hrr. 0
A snap with the thunih and
finger, r. '^15!^. 3 A distend-
ed belly, r. ^J\, ^^ ^.
r^^ot y^ c. To fillip. 2 To
hit ; to tip. V. i. To break,
crack — glass things.
r?^ esp. =Ti^r^ Pj^r and
with ^^, Vi-^, '^T, ^^ No-
toriety, ill-fame.
f^q^r A drop. 2 A spot. 3
fig. A pale and meagre fz^'^r.
4 Continual dropi)ing (of rain,
&c.) V. ^T^.
f^^'H" ?i. A note, jotting. 2
The document containing the
particulars of a nativity. 3 A
bound, skip. r. ei^. 4 An
appointed or a iiarticular place ;
the ])recise moment ; the exact
spot : also a spot aimed at (in
archery).
|iT°T V. c. To note down. 2
To dab up (ink, &c. spillcdl. 'A
To pick up one by one (grains,
&c.) 4 To iiit : to singU; out and
kill; to snipe, i) To stitch, v. i.
To drip. 2 To stitch.
jSTCry. A measure of ca-
pacity, a half-sher.
fd7^ -T n. A small piece of
stick used in beating upon
drums, &c.
f?^ ad. or a. (Used of tlic
shining of the moon) Brightly or
bright.
Ti'^"^ See Tjq^.
f^cqcffr j^ (s) ])op. f^T'Jr n. An
annotation ; a gloss.
r^^ V. A dot, the nasal sign.
It^^^ V. i. To fall drop !
drop ! — rain through a leak,
water from a cloth, &c.
ft^^\\ A drop. 2 A stain.
TtH^l f. A sort of drum, the
tom-tom.
^12:^ / The sound of the
f^i?^. 2 fig. The riot and
^rattle of higiriife. [thickset.
fZI^ a. Dumpy, small, and
TZ^^\ f. A chip sliced off
(as of a cocoanut-shell or the
seal])).
Tz^^ See f^c^r. 2 fig:. A
term for any leading member of
a family or community viewed
as an ornament of it.
rZ"Sf Jcf fcf a. Full and glossy
— a boil, grapes, &c.
lio^l The sectarial mark
made upon the forehead. 2 An
instrument to stamp the mark.
jf^r f. (s) A commentary :
a note. 2 fig. Amplifying (of a
simjjle matter). 3 fig. Remarking
censoriously, coinmeating upon.
Z\%\^\X a. A commentator.
^^ See r^^.
?f7 f. (h) Taking the
number (of houses, &c.) in order
to tax them. 2 A manner of
stitching, v. M^. 3 A memo-
randum of amount and value
(esp. of gold trinkets) framed by
a goldsmith. 4 A list.
^mm A double stitch.
^f^ /. A buttock.
Z^i:^o\-^\<i(l Wishfully—
staring at. 2 Fliekeringly — a light
burning, r. ^t:. 3 Scantily,
poorly — living.
Z^'^W\ V. i. To look (at>
intently.
p2^n%^ V. c. To balk and
make angry by playing ofi' u])on
the i\u\ called ^*2^^ «TT*T.
§^%cr a. Stretched like a
drum — the belly. 2 Filled out,
ficshy— a beast. .'5 fig. Having
sDuie wealth, substantial.
J^'^T f. Pricking, goading,
t'. wf(^, X, ^K. 2 fig. llefresh-
ing of the memory, v. ^T?,
2^^^/. Any continuing and
dis(piieting sound.
^^^, ^^^ n, Making a
flash for a short period ; a beg-
gar's revel, v. ^X, ^l^, ^f^.
^/. The secret of a contri-
vance ; the art, mystery, r.
^I^, ^^^^5. 2 Knack, ad-
dress ; taste, tact. 3 The inherent
wants(of man, animals, or things):
^T^T'gl -^KI-^ -^flT^ ^^.
4 Earnest and intent gaze.
^ f. Flashiness, buckish-
ness : stately airs ; gaudiness. 2
A remarkable point or feature ;
any new and pretty thing ; a
new and striking thought.
^Tf^ a. Large and hand-
some, &c.
Z^ or Z^ f. Exhausted
state : f^f^^flt f^f%fit ^*-
IffT^. 2 (h) Steadiness, v.
^I?§, ^MIZJ, "tr^. 3 The in-
herent or habitual exigencies, v.
^1^, &c.
Z^ m. n. A hillock : a
mound.
*^ •\»
2^^^ or -^ n. An eminence ; a
hillock. ri
Z^^\ f. Rising ground, a
Zm or Z^^ V. c. (h) To
rest ; to place on a support. 2
fig. To repose (one's hopes), v. i.
To recline or lean against ; fig.
to rely upon. Tj, .^
S^^rorJ^FjJ^rfr A prop'.
^■^r^ or Z^\^ n. An emi-
nence, a hillock. 2 fig. A heap
(as of a ruined building, of
gathered earth, lime, rubbish):
a mass (of iiooks, papers, busi-
ness, cares, &c.)
Z^^ or Z*\(A w. A bump up-
on the body ; a knob upon a tree.
2"7 m. n. A mound. 2 f.
IJntting. 3 n. A term (of penal
confinement).
Z'^l c Crest, peak (of a hill,
or tree). 2 also iafnT A stake ;
fig. support. 3 also ^VTT A
rude flambeau.
ZZ^A\ f. Walking about.
Z^^ V. c. (H) To walk
about (a horse, &c.) r^^. ^^^^
JIT^^T V. i. To take a turn
zw^
183
^i^r
Jg"?^cfnTr?Tr Watch in whicli
the watchman is to walk about.
'kw^<^\ or ZK^J f. Survey-
inj^, examining,
arrs-of „. I To look at with
an examining eye. 2 To surve}'.
3 To see by close inspection :
i^oo^r a. That surveys at-
tentively.
Z\^ or ^r^ /. A beak. 2 n.
Point, as of a weapon, pen :
extremity of a strip of land, &c.
Z\^^\ V. c. (h)To challenge —
a sentinel.
fr^n or fr^rr a circular
leathern basket. 2 A boat com-
posed of leather overliiying a
J''^™^' [basket.
Z\^T[f. A small leathern
il^U f. A lono- bill-formed
head. 2 The extremity of the
tongue (of snakes, &c.)
im^^ V. i. To poke the
head forwards (as iu looking at
any thing).
?r^or^f^AbilI. 2 n. The
puncture made by a piercing
body.
Jf^'^r /. Pricking, piercing.
d^ot or ilw^ v.c.To prick. 2
fig. To probe, cut. 3 To scratch
or pick idly (a fruit, &c.) 4 To
freshen the memory (of a
J'^t^'on)- [a cudgel.
^I'T^r A stout piece ot" stick,
mnr A male buffalo.
ij"^^ f. A female buffalo.
2 fig. A big and rude girl ; a
Tomboy.
mq^ V. n. To cudgel.
Zim^V^, Z\^^^ Terms for
a ijlockhead.
im^\ A cudgel. 2 fig. An
unlettered savage.
mq^C A huge cudgel. 2
A rude and unlettered bully.
Zm A vessel, mainly for
holding milk, &c. 2 A sort of
wig on the head of a man when
he assumes the disguise and
acts the parts of a woman. 3 A
wooden crown (for the king
^in plays). ^^^^^^
2"FT^r A term for an Kuro-
ZmJ or-^ n. A little cap
(of children, &c.)
S^n^T n. A sort of awl. 2 A
thimble. 3 The frame of a drum.
4 A. top, lid. .5 A term for the
name by which a person is
known amongst his friends.
ZU^^ V. c. To pierce: to
thrust or drive in the puncturing
body. 2 To bruise (with a
maliet, &c. wood, &c.) in order
to detach the rind). 3 fig. To
beat soundly.
Zm^lf, A small basket.
Jiqr f. The skull-cap worn
under the turban ; a sort of
hood used in rainy weather ; the
hat of Europeans ; any of the
military caps. 2 A cloak with a
hood.
St^^r Ablowuponthe T^i\
in the play of f^s^"^!^- 2
fig. A sly hit, a sarcastic reHec-
tion ; a taunt.
t\^^ See ^1^% sig 2.
Z\^\ (h) A stroke with a
stick : a blow with a stone. 2 A
brick-bat. 3 fig. A cutting speech.
it^l^ Putting off (of a
person) from day to day : (of a
work) from one's self upon an-
other : a general shuffling.
^"fc^rr a. Hollowed out (as
by insects) — grain, &c. 2 Un-
filled— pods, &c. 3 fig. Shrunken
and flattened — man or animal.
Zl^ f, Theeighthof a pysa.
•TTc^sfir ct. Strong, firm — a
building, &c. 2 Huge, vast.
Z\^ A locust. 2 A grass-
hopper, [tack of locusts.
Z\^^\^ or -SfffcT /. An at-
^ffS-^R"/. The depredations
of locusts.
^^r /. A band, troop, body.
J A. warm of locusts. ^^ gj^,.^
Z\^Km f. Beholding with
zmX^, zhm V. c. To be-
hold intently.
3T*t /. The fore part of the
skuii.
2^rcr, 3irfH:f ^rrt r/f/. imit.
of the crying of a little child, v.
5" The twelfth consonant.
5"^ (h) a rogue, cheat.
Z^ n. Poet.. The fixedness
of amazement.
Z'^Z^f. A din, clatter.
S"^^r a. Knavish.
5^"^ f. Suffering a fraud
and deceit.
Z^^ i\ i. To be deceived.
J^^f^r/.Trickery, fraudulent
dealing. pj^^^ cheating.
Z^^^ or Z^^mf. Defraud-
Z^T^^ V. c. To cheat.
Z%\f. (H)Jesting and joking:
jeering.
Zl^K c. (p) Jocular, witty.
Z^m f. Throbbing. 2 m.
Exhausted state, hid. A particle
of enhancement or absoluteness
after $K^T or ^^T, express-
ing Quite or utterly.
Z^^^ V. c. To throb.
J'T^r A throbbing sharpness
(of wiml, &c.) p^j^^^j^
Z^^l^'^ V. i. To smart and
S^^fP^ot ^,_ c. To ring (a
vessel) in order to ascertain its
quality. 2 To sting — a scorpion.
3 To reprimand sharply. 4 To
execut^e. p^ ^o clank.
Z^Z^^ v.i.To throb, beat.
Z^^]^ or with iT^iqrsS-
A term for a lout without wit
or money. 2 See 'Svizvwz,
sig. 2.
Z^Z^Z Loud clanking, ring-
ing. 2 fig. Dryness of a well ;
exhaustion of stores (of grain,
&c.) ; poverty, scarcity.
Zm^\^ a. Sonorous. 2 Dry
or empty.
5T^r (h) a Stigma, slur. 7\
3f m, 3"^, ^. 2 A falling drop.
j?r^
184
^ra^
En^Zimi f. A term Ibr a
woman of elfgant form, fstviit
ffJT^'^ V. i. To mince : to
5"^^r Stnitting. 2 A ttuning
round on the heels as in huff.
5^°T w.i.(H)To become fixed,
settled, decided. 2 To dwell ; to
be settled at. 3 To become
imprei!;n:int — -a mare, cow, ike.
ET^^ll,Em^^ f. Deciding,
determining.
Zm^ v. c. To decide.
S'Hf Decision. 2 Stay, con-
tinue.
ffTR%. Zl\^T> See ZT^^l
ZT\^^^ n. Ill law. A written
award ; a decree.
J^r^^'T Tiie paper furnished
to a Mamlatdar, &c. proceeding
to his charge, containing his
directions and instructions : a
code of regulations ; a paper of
directions regarding the execu-
tion of any settlement or decree.
5T[f^ V. c. To decide.
Z^ a. Clear, bold — writin'j,
&c. : strong, full ; — used of tests :
strong and close ; — used of
clothes.
fffT -^ -^ -K% -f^Tr ad.
Imit. of the dead or flat sound
emitted on the collision of cer-
tain bodies.
5H^ The sadden sensation
nrising (in the nose, eyes, &c.)
from tasting any thing hot and
biting, from water, &c. in reper-
cussion from the gullet, r. ^JT.
2 A Sudden and dead blow. r.
^T3T, ^'J. .'i Forcii)le iinjircs-
sion (as of speech ^ ; wcightiness.
J'TJ^frcT or-^1^ (I. Full and
throbbing— a boil, &c. 2
Sharp, energetic — speech : keen,
sarcastic, o Fiery, pungent-
spices. 4 Huge, thunii)ing — orna-
mcnts.^^ [sate.
Z^Z^^ V. i. To throb, pul-
S^SRTl A stroke of irony,
a bhirjiif. V. •^. 2 Treating (a
guest) badly.
5H^ r. i. (n) To sink deep;
to l)e well formed — a stamp or
an impression ; fig. to be imprint-
ed on the mind — a counsel, &e.
J^I^'T r. c. To impress or
stanij).
Z^l (111 A stamp, r. ?, ^^,
■qi'g'. 2 A stamping instru-
ment. 3 A dint of the forming
hammer. 4 tig. An impression
on the mind. r. tj^g".
Z(^^ a. Thick, solid— metal,
vessels, trinkets. 2 Clear, full
— letters, marks. &c. 3 Eminent
(as to learning, riches, &c.)
J^jSTcf /-,, Clear, shining.
ST^ii a. Known.
Z\W^lZWt\ f. Arranging, dis-
posing(as of articles of furniture,
Sec): order, neatness. 2 Repair-
in ir. r
f^ [ous.
ZlWl\Z^^\ n. Finical, fasiidi-
Zr^Zl^ a. Right, orderly.
Z\^Z\^ ad. Imit. of the
sound of reiterated strokes of a
hammer, &c.
Z\^^ ??. i. To be tricked out.
2 Poet, with ^^T To stand ;
to stop still : ^^T BT^OT.
Jr^FJr^r a prediction (of a
^i^). V. XI, ^f^x, ^^z, ^TiT or
Zl% f. V/ay,-Jtyle. Used with
■^(7^^', ■^moi', 3^lOTin, fmd
then signfying To mimic. 2 A
thick vocal signal (^3tj^ ^t-
<fi^T 3?T'^"5f) made bv the
look-out thief to the gang. v.
■^, ^T3T'^. 3 Art, way, process.
ZJf^\, ZTfT\ f. State of
credit and reput.ition in the
world.
Sfii^ Z\^^ ad. With manv
arts, much care and caution,
constant i)iecing and patching.
Z\^ (n) A tribe. 2 A chief
amongst certain castes of
Rajputs, Bhils, &c. ; a title of
respect. 3 The Supremo God :
an idol or a god. 4 A family
priest among certain tribes of
Shudras.
Z\^ n. (II) A horse-Stall. 2
A post or station (of aiT=?Tsi).
3 Place, spot. 4 A posture of
archers in discharging the arroiv.
7R^^ or -f r a. That is ever
in his stall — a horse, &c.
JFI^-rr /. Confinement (of a
beast) to his stall.
JC^ffPT y/.Compacture, make
(as of the body"). 2 An attitude.
Z\^ n, (ii) The head station
of a ffl^^RT ; a station under
the civil authority. 2 The esta-
blishment (of peons, &c.) main-
tained there. 3 A horse-stall. 4
Used fig. of an indecently long
stay of a guest, v. %.
ZV^'^K The officer in charge
of a z\^.
Z\^ a. Fixed, firm, lit. fig. :
^TT iTsfiTTi' -f^'JirT. 2 Used
with tr\^ -^4, &c. The fix-
ed sum, &c. ad. Exactly to the
degree of: TiJT -^^fiT^ ^^^ a^T-
Zm A place. 2 Any thing-
spread to receive the food at a
meal — leaves, &c.
Z\'^ ivd. A particle used in
counting cattle, vessels, &c.
Z\^\Z%\^ n. A general term
for a i)lace, abode, situation.
ZK ad. (n) An emphatic ar-
ticle expressing suddenness and
completeness of loss, ruin, cor-
responding to Oiitriijht, smack,
clean : T^JT^ rQI^ ^T" 'ITW
lie killed liini on Ike apot;
BTo ^^T^T This A'oar his
trhole business is smashed.
5Tf (h) Bottom (of a well,
&c.) 2 fig. The utmost extent
or profundity. 3 fig. The ])lacc
(of a thing lost and sought), v.
wjT^, sjiTJi. 4 A ])lace : "^ ^j^
■^^ijft 3To. 5 Room, (i See
^IW, sig. 2.
Z\^^\ a. Known.
Z\^ or Z\U a. (ii) Firm
(from being closely crammed or
])ressed). 2 Clear and high — a
note. 3 fig. Positive, decided —
speech : well considered and
stroiiglv determined— a scheme :
autiientic— intelligence : fixed,
fast, ixe. [ming, &c.
Z^Wni or Zm^ /. Cram-
Z\W^ V. c. To cram or stuff.
2 To add together or sum up
(several items).
f5"^fff
185
Urn
fS^'T V. i. To leap — a horse
or deer. 2 fig. To walk lightly
and airily.
fJ^^r/.(n) A chip (of stone).
T^^m 71. TzW^m m. (II) A
place gen. ; a spot, an abode, 2
The unknown spot (of a thiuj;
lost and sought), v. ^T^ g- of
o, and ^TT g. of s. 3 Consis-
tency (of speech or conduct). 4
A])peai'ance, signs. Neg. con.:
.^) Bottom fig. ; the hmit : 71^
f«<fr l^Nf fH» ■STiTf. (i
ground, basis (of a rumor, &c.)
7 Place of inherence ; seat,
home: ^^[g-si ^jjii^ fao ;
^T^ ^T^I"^ fso. 8 Pitch of
a note or the tune. v. fHX^,
M-\^, K\^, tl^, -%^.
15^ n. A lot of ground. 2 A
mole, spot gen.
IZW)'^^ f. Dividing of land
into fields. 2 The schedule of
the fields.
iJ^^ a. An adjunct of en-
hancement to the word ^To3T,
as eRio3T f^"* Coal black.
l^Jl^ n. A patch.
fjl^-ot V, c. To patch. 2 fi^j.
To wound with a bullet : to cut
a cloth into lioles — moths, &c.
r. i. To get s[)ots and discolora-
tion— a fruit, leaf, &c. rsniik
fkn^\ f. c fe'^'ir /. (H)' A
\Z^m, \Z^m v. l To drop ;
to leak ; to suffer to ooze.
feq^r, fe^^r A drop. 2 fig.
A watery, faint looking f^cfi-
vfT. 3 A spot.
m^Z^ -^\ ad. Imit. of the
sound (fsq ! fsq !) of water
dropping.
Tz^^a. Brittle. 2 fig. Flimsy.
3^1 f. The place (in reading
ami writing, &c.) at which one
had arrived when some inter-
ruption caused him to break off.
2 An appointed spot or moment.
'A Art, process, way.
ST^ a. (h) Right, just, cor-
rect, ]n'oper. n. The gem or boss
in the middle of a finger-ring;. 2
. , DO
A mole, spot.
24
Sr^JI^R a. Itight, orderly ;
repaired, &c.
Zm\ a. Short, dumpy.
SJFTcT, Zm^ n. A bold or
wild doctrine in religion ; a
heresy, v. ^t^, ^1^"^, ^I-
im. 2 Doggedness.
S"^ a. Shoi t, pigmy.
Z^^]^\ A familiar term for a
^'lj:_^'i;;f'- [for a dwarf.
ZW^\ A term of ridicide
5"^ or Z"^ f. (h) Striking
of the foot against a stone, v.
^\J\. 2 fig. A loss. 3 Throng-
ing, pressing. 4 fig. of sig. 1 with
wiTJI in con. Learning a lesson;
receiving a rude hint.
5^^ V. c. (h) To bruise. 2
To stuff together.
5xJ"3"CT y.c.To bruise slightly.
V. i. To strike the foot against
(a stone, &c.)
•\
3"^ f. Stoppage through con-
tact. V. ^T, ^F. 2 fig. Limit,
bound: q^Ti;^^'^ ^° ^T'3:
nijfT ^T^. 3 x\n appoint-
ment or engagement : a term.
Wrq/. Regularity, fixed-
ness.
5"T'^r V. i. To stop at through
striking against. 2 To lean
against. 3 To reach the end (of
one's journey). 4 To be fixed for
ft certain date — a matter to be
done : ^y^ra^n^t ^'^ Hq^
Zm^''H V. c. To arrest in
progress and bring up. 2 To set
so as to rest against. 3 To fix
(a business) for a certain date.
?^ /. A stock or hoard ; a
buried treasure. 2 A deposit. 3
An air, manner ; a peculiarity of
speech or action.
5^^ 11. A place of aligliting.
2 /'. Tlie foundation in a well of
the masonry. 3 Foundaticm,
solid ground (in speech, coiuluct,
course). 4 Also ^^^^\ f.
Cast, form. 5 Style, fashion.
Z^^ V. c. To put, place, set.
2 To put up ; to lay by (a work).
3 To keep, spare, reserve. 4 To
fix, settle. 5 To engage : to
kecj) up or maintain (servants,
Sec.) 6 To preserve : rai'? '-^J-
^1 ^f?r^T if^^'t ^T^t. 7 To
let alone : ^'^i^T'Tf ^tTf ^-
TfcT ^f^^l "fllTf. 8 To keep
fa mistress).
3"^^^ f. A hoard, a reserve.
2 A deposit. 3 Order, array :
Arranging, disposing : fsj^^
Zm A hoard ; stock. 2 A
Z\^ A blow with a cudgel or
stick. a. Tliick, solid — ornaments,
&c. 2 fig. Eminent (as to learn-
ing, wealth, &c.) 3 Whole or
round — a number: wholesale;
— used with T^5T, Tf^, &c.
ST^^r^r An individual of a
class of Shudras who employ
themselves as fortune-tellers,
diviners, &c.
Sr^^r A contemptuous term
for a goldsmith.
B'f?)°ir f. Knocking, striking.
JR.'^ V. c. To knock (with a
hammer, stick). 2 To strike
■jentlv.
Jl^cffST A rough estimate.
3"r^r f, (h) Trippino- or
stumbling, v. ^T, wfTJI. 2
Thumping. 3 fig. A loss iu
trade ; a blow of misfortune.
^l^Pf^ft/. Sale by whole-
sale.
•\
3f^^ a. Large and fine ;
stout, solid. 2 Gross — an item.
Jf^S'flcr n, A religious tenet
or notion grossly disagreeing
with the Shastras or with reason ;
a monstrous or wdd doctrine.
Jf^^r A block of wood.
Sr^ir A blow (wit!) a stick,
hammer, &c.) 2 A dint of the
hammer (as on metal vessels), .'i
A prediction, esp. a foretelling
of the weather, v. g?f^, ^^.
4 An event corresponding with
a prediction. 5 Letting out or
taking of fields iu tlie gross. '5
Unccusiusr and weuvisome noise.
3^f?r
186
¥«r
3T2!T a. Deprived of arms
or legs or fingers or toes : de-
prived of its crop or boughs — a
tree.
Z\^\T^ V. c. To knock with
the knuckles (as against a
pitcher) to ascertain its sound-
ness : to raj) (as at a door):
to hammer : to tap. 2 fig. To
twit, taunt. 3 To jog or nudge
(a person about some matterj ;
to knuckle or knock {m order to
remind or admouish).
5T?r f. iNoising abr<iiid. v.
mx. g. of 0. ad. Imit. of the
sound Tap ! tap !
ffPPTF c A blow with tlie
fist. 2 fig. A stroke of irony, v.
E\^^ A term for a fellow
wthout wife or home, used with
reference to the insecurity of
money transactions with such a
person. 2 A rude fellow.
Sr^C or 5[^^ a. Coarse,
thick— cloth, &c. 2 fig. Dim—
the sight : blunt — speech.
fft^r or E\m\ A blow with
the forepart of the fist. 2 A sly
hit. V. ^, ^-[K.
i\^m f. Big, swelling
words. V. f^K^, ^T^, "iTi"^^.
^ The thirteenth consonant.
^^^^ or -^f ad. Imit. of the
sound emitted by a loose or
flabby person, camel, &c. in
motion ; flop I flop I by anything
slackened in the joints, and thus
tottering, rocking : reclingly. v.
__ •<»
3'^T^'T V. i. To shake tre-
mulously— a flabl)y body : to
totter, reel — a post, a l)uilding :
to quake and quiver with fear.
^^"^ V. i. To stick.
S"^^"! n. Sticking material
gen., gum, paste, &c.
^^J A large kettle-drum. 2
fig. Publicity, v. ^T^T g. of s.
3'<^ The bite or sting (of a
venomous animal), v. mK, *TI^.
2 riaiicour, malice, v. ^t'3,
■^^^ V. c. To bite or sting.
M\^ f. A class of female
im]>s : a term of reviling to old
women; corresp.with Hag,witch.
^T Trembling, rocking (of
a building, &c.) v. ^T. Hence
fear, danger of tottering, and fig.
of failing : JTl^T "^Irl^T TTT-
Trft^ ^o ■iTi'^'f. 2 /. Fear.
■JT"?^ Of -^i^ ad. In streams —
sweating. 2 Of the sound of
a rickety thing shaking, v.
^^^n*^ ?5. imp. To swelter.
2 To be close and sultry.
^n^JrrcT a. Tottering. 2
Bathed in sweat. .'J Rocking. 4
Freely. Having bodily sustenance:
3"Jiq V. i. To tremble. 2 To
give way — a beam, &c. o To yield
to timorously. 4 To adhere to.
^^^/. Precariousness.
^^1^^ or -Tf iid.]n a tottering
manner. 2 In streams — sweating.
^^^^^ r. i To totter. 2
fig. To fail with fear ; to be in a
StCiV.
^^^ JK A kind of jacket.
;?-n3-, ^^a^ a. Slack, loose—
a garment : loosely built — a wall
of stones. 2 Large sized — fruits,
&c. 3 Large and full — letters, &c.
4 Loose of hand (in donations,
&c.) ; liberal or lavish.
^^^^^'{, :3-q-srar „. /. To rot
and run — a matigo. 2 To tumble
down suddenly — a building. '3
fig. To lose strength. 4 To
si)rc.id out luxuriantly — a tree,
&c.
^m^ V. i. To be hot and
sweltering. 2 To totter. 3 To give
way. 4 To decline.
^^r f. A boat of a particu-
lar description. 2 A basket car-
ried over the shoulder by means
of a stick and ropes.
^"^Z. ^^^r m. A sudden
impression of terror ; a shock, v.
^^. 2 All abodement. i'. $,
^I?. 3 Sudden rising from
the stomach ; regurgitation in
dra^king. j-^; ..^1,,,^^^^
^"^^^T V. i. To start. 2 To
:S^ -^^ .^T T?% -f^ ad.
Imit. of the sound in which
eructation bursts, or water spills
from an agitated vessel.
^^^^^T 11, c. To burn in the
throat ; to rise and scald — fumes
from vancid articles of food in
the stomach. 2 To shake and
flop about.
^^cPt"^ jT, Shaking and flop-
ping about (as of liquid in a
vessel).
^^^JT^ot y_ I To shake and
flop about. V. c. To shake or
agitate (a liquid in a vessel).
'^ A sort of tambourine.
^^mf ^ ad. On the point of
death ; on the ))oint of delivery ;
on the point of ruin gen. v. ^ .
t^, ^^ ad. Quite full.
^^^ 71. A puddle : a little
pond.
3"^^^"^ V. i. To sound flat,
dull, dead — a drum. 2 To be
filled to the brim. f^T.
^^^ffcT a. & ad. Brimful, v.
^mZ>l\,^^^a. Pot-bellied.
■^^^r (h) a hole duii- for
water : a hole filled with water.
2 A pit dug to receive dung, dirt,
&c. 3 The ])it of a sugarmill to
receive the juice.
^^r (h) a little box, as a
snufl-box, &c. 2 Enlargement of
the liver and affection of the
bowels.
^^r f. (h) a very little box.
2 fici'. A treasury (esp. of a tem-
ple). 3 An ofl'ering-box.
^^1^ A Raja's secretary.
v. •v.
v^J"c^^ or "^ n. A reserved
treasure. 2 Hidden treasure
found. V. ^TT, ^t'^^.
^^W A sort of tabor. 2 A
little rattle.
^'■^ ad^ 'J ensely — used with
the verbs of swelling and sound-
ing : X(^■z ^»JI ■^^^ or ^T5I^,
IT
187
rrr^
^T (h) Fear.
^^(^-fTT /. The roaring of
a tiiier, &c. v. TT^, ^T^.
^^^'T V. i. To roar — a ticrer,a
bull, &c. ; to croak — a frog : to
rave and storm at — a man in a
passion.
^^R^ /. Roaring at in
order to frighten.
^^Roy y^ i^ See ^ST^^.
^<^mn V. c. To intimidate
by rude storming at.
^^^\^\ f. The roar of a
tiger. V. '^T^, ^K.
^^of J. i. (H) To fear, j-^^.^^^
^rW /. Tlie croaking °oi"
^T\^ ^i\^ ad. Iniit. of the
croaking of frogs.
«I^o3. 2 (Verbal of ^^Tf^uf)
Roaring at in order to overawe ;
vociferous scolding. fdate
3Tf^^ V, c, (h) To intimi-
^eiT(H) A little ball or lump. 2
Hidden treasure. 3 A lump (of
any thing good), v. '^'m,
^m f. The ^\^^ or sweat-
ing i)iece of felt uuderneath the
^TiTir.
^^■^'^ V. i. To sweat in
streams. 2 To be rich in flower,
or foliage.
^^^'T V. c. To lower ; to
bang black and threatening —
clouds : qT^^ '^^^rilT.
^^ (s) See t^-
S-ff^, 3-en a. Addicted
to biting — a horse, dog, &c.
^W^ V. i. To sting or bite —
a scorpion, snake, horse, dog.
V. i. To stick or adhere.
(5'3'^3'rcT a. Full and glossy
and tremulous — a ripe grape, a
y)oil, &e. 2 That shakes tremu-
lously, rockingly — as flabby
flesh, &c. _ f^vvay.
3"S"iT(Zr -3"f ad. In a tottering
3"3"IT^ f. Tremulousness,
lit. fig. ; instability.
^5rJT5r^ r. i. To totter. 2
To roll and rock about — a ship,
&c. 3 To shake — liquids in a
vessel.
Trembling. 2
-a buildini'. Sfl;;!;.
Slight, flimsy-
Loose, vague.
^STJT^r^ ad. Brimful, v. ^T.
^\^ or ^Ri(ii) A bit of the bits
of tin, talc, &c. with which shrines
or pictures are enameled. 2 A piece
of silver, tin, &c. placed under a
gem to heighten its brilliance, a
foil. 3 A coloured substance
placed under glass as a mock
gem. 4 Solder, cement.
^r?>y. (u) A disposition (of
horses, runners, &c.) along a
road to convey the post or tra-
vellers. 2 R A necromancy
among Shudras. 3 A musical
instrument.
^^^ or ^r^^ V. c. To solder.
^r^'T" V. i. To become black-
spotted — fruit, the body, &c.
^t^r (h) a large kettle-
drum. 2 An attack by robbers.
i'.'^T^i M"^- Hence, by meton.,
a robber-gang. 3 The rite of
summoning the spirit into a
corpse on the twelfth day after
the decease, v. ^i^.
^ff%% /. s pop. ^m^, ^r-
xflur. See ;^^DT.
^m^ a. Soldered.
^r^fSf^ ad. In the manner
of the post ; postingly ; without
stopping by the way.
V. i. To become
spotted from rottenuess^a fruit.
2 p To be casting its old leaves
— a tree. 3 To be soldered — an
ornament : to be aff"ected and
alloyed by the solder — gold, &c.
^n", ^\m\ A thing, article,
piece.
^f'T f. A whole plantain-
leaf. 2 (h) a crook, esp. of a
bamboo. 3 A kind of grass, a. p
Rude, rough, brutal.
^f^ (p) A spot, stain, blot.
2 A mark of tlie actual cautery.
3 fig. A slur, stain.
^R^^it -tr, ^m^ / (p)
Repairing or doing up.
^m^Jl f. Painful hesitancy
(as between a sense of duty and
a feeling of reluctance) : Tl'^T
"Sm V. c. To brand. 2 To
fire — a gun, &c. 3 fig. To probe.
A To stigmatize.
S'lfR^". The plant producing
the (huk-green pompion. 2 n.
Its fi'uits.
^m^^ or ^R^°t V. i. To
become spotted — fruits, &c.
^i^r f. a small branch.
^Flfl^l or "^r An ornament.
2 A thing, article, item, piece,
&c.: V{\€f •^^ ftTo3^ xt'ST^
^KJTui ^Tt.^ ""[stained.
^mi^ or ^r^^ a. Spotted,
^WT\ Notice by the public
crier. 2 A proclamation, v.
fq-3-, ^T5T^.
^F^r^li^c^r A violent and
convulsive cough; hooping
cough.
^r^^ n. Used hyperbolically
of a thorn which has run into
the flesh. 2 Dammer.
^R^r^ Equipage, retinue,
pomp, and pageantry. 2 Ado-
ri ;ing : smartness : strutting and
sweUing. v. ^K, ^T^?, t^K^,
^^ See ^F^.
^m^, ^W^ /. Wild
uproar and disorder. 2 Unsettled
character : changeful condition
(of afi^airs).
^R' (h) a game (at chess).
V. %53, 2 A throw (of dice).
V. Z]^. 3 The turn up (of
dice). V. ^^^. 4 The time or
turn to play. 5 Season, occasion.
6 The time of prevalence. 7 The
power, clutch of. 8 A hand at
cards. 9 Spite, malice, v. t}'^.
10 A sclieme, measure, v. ^cS.
11 f. A bowl of wood, coconnut-
shell serving as a ladle. 12 m.
A description of boat. 13 A
work made with hot iron.
^r?^rr, ^mR\ a. Left-
haudod. 2 fig. Confused,
irregular — a business.
^f^'^^^ pi. The artful turn-
ings and windings of a wrestler,
2 Arts, wiles.
^^rr
188
tr^
^m\ a. Left-handed.
3T^ a. Ui\.
^^ A large stingino' fly, a
gadrt)-. 2 Mosquito. 3 c A bite,
r. y. 4 The i)iirt bitteu.
STT See ^f?.
^\^^\ A phuit of §T^Tr or
^T^. '2 A leafy branch, r-^^^
^rcr The sensation of burn-
^rST /; Sec ?^I^.
^[2^ V. c. To pile. 2 To
cover over (with a basket, &c.)
3 To pat together : ^^T g^'t
^TT^^T "il^T. 4 To shxu up,
close: ^1 ^T^ g^fJIT VIT^?T
^n^"^ The pomegranate
tree. n. The fruit.
^rfo5"fr n. Kelating (o the
pomegranate (like in colour,
&c.)./'. A half of any -pulse split.
2 Anion;:st chihheu. A red spot
made in the flesh by rubbing.
^r^r f. A mat of bamboo. 2
A bamboo-basket.
rt^ Gum. r^^r^or-^r/
The vessel in which is kept the
gum used in closing up letters,
J^'^- ^ [ing resin.
I^^RFo^r/. A Strong smell-
pT^sr or r?^ f. A clot of
b()ih;il rice : ciu-tlli'd milk : a little
clod of earth : a lump gen.
f"?^^ ///. n. Poet. A boy or
n child.
l"\^^r=^r /. The belly (esp.
of a child and with reference to
stuffediiess) : ^XT?^ iT(^ f^o
FT^ s Poet. A son,
iT^r ov U'K\ m. r?fr /. A
new slioot or Sfirout. v. '^'Z,
^r^ or -^ Gum.
^r/. m. n. A hog,so\v, pig.
^?;7^pr^~f or -jTftr /. Udsii
of a hog. V. ^\x^ Hence, rush-
ing through or into headlong
and violently, v. ^IK.
^al^r f. Nodding (from
drowsiness), i'. ^T- - A nap.
^^'?^ or -^ /. Anxious
trepidation (as under suspense,
&p.) 2 Eager desire.
^^^f. Tying two of the legs^
(of a horse, &c.) v. ^\^ g. |
or ace. of o.
^'^^'T' y. i. To gambol in
the water, v. c. To tie the fore
legs of an animal after the me-
tJiod called ^^gj.
ff -^=r -^ -err% T?^ ad.
Imit. of the sound of a body
faUiiig suddenly into w ater ;
plump ! flop !
^■^^H^ r. c. To plunge into
water (dirty dishes, ike.) and
muddle it. 2 To beat about
(^water) noi;;ih'.
^^^^■^ V. c. k V. i. To dip.
^^^r/. A dip. V. jtr:,^,'^.
f ^r /. A dip, dive. V. ^K,
■^. 2 fig. Hiding one's self.
J^jtfcf od. Up to the brim.
V. vr^:, ^1^. a. Swelling, over-
flowing.
f^"r v. i. (n) To sink. 2
To be bankru])! or ruined.
Ii;^ ml. Quite full. ^^^^^
^TT^*^ V. i. To croak — a
^'^^r/'. Nodding (from drow-
siness). V. -s^T, ^;, g- 2 A nap
or doze.
^oywj" f, x\ To walk nodding
and waggling; to reel. 2 flg.
To sink, fail — money. 3 To
oscillate.
'^ (h) a dip (of anything
into a liquid). 2 Overabundance.
^W or ^^ n. Stalk or stem.
•\
5"^ /. (p) A large metal cu-
linary pot.
^^r The crop (of a lierb). 2
fig. Tiie crown (of a matter). i\
*l^, ^X, tli^: the very
nick(of an occurrence), v. '^X :
^IW 7». ^r*r/. ^^^ n. An
earthen pitcher. 2 fig. A pot-
belly.
^^r (h) a large kind o
earthen water vessel. 2 fig. A
pot-belly. A tent. v. % 3 fig.
A tabernacle.
i^lt/. The head. 2 fig. An
individual, a head : "^X ^T?;^
^^T^^T "^TcfT. 3 An ancestor :
js r ...
vSfl"51^ a. Superior, havnig
influence and weight. 2 Arduous
— a work. 3 Refractory.
^If^l^ f. Wearisome
head-labour (as that of instruct-
ing a fool); any toilsome and
vain exertion.
Sf^n a. (n) Aged or old.
tr^fr, irafi'^ /. A crone.
il^g'r /. ir^t n. The
head.
^m^^ V. i. To poke the
head forwards.
i^l^f /: i'li 71. The head.
^m A hill. 2 Lamp-black
forming in a conical mass.
V.
3'r'TTfl5"?r Mountain-range.
i'm^ r^^^l/. A pass through
hills.
^RT^TR 71. A hilly country.
^R^li rt. Ifdly. Tin
sf'fKr^ oy^'^/j, A recess in a
i'm' f. A little hill. a. Grow-
ing on hills.
^nrsrr a species of large
black ant.
i\^^ f. ^rI ». The head.
^r'T /". 71. A scooped tree as
a trough.
^PTt /: A sort of canoe. 2
A small leaf-boat for ghee. 3 A
small trough.
i'm, im The knee.
1 ^'f^ (h) A low caste. They
are employed about l)urial and
burning grounds. 2 A conflagra-
tion. 3 fig. Sensation of great heat.
¥r^^r
189
S^T^
as ^TTTT^T ^To. 4 A particle
of euhanceraent expressing acri-
tude, as f^ii^if^.
<sm^m^\ A raven.
^f^rfr, ^fin^r a caste of
tumblers and merryAndrews.
i\^ (a) a bucket. 2 A
mast of a ship. 3 Moving from
side to side in walking or sitting.
»\ »-v
^fc^^rsr /. A mast of a ship.
2 The flagstaff at a ^^T.
^r^'T" r. i. To walk nodding
and waggling. See ^^uf.
STc^h'T v. c. To make to
reel, stagger. 2 (with ??T«r,
5T^<!5) To nod (the head).
^\^l The taboot.
3"F?"lTr The swmoring cot
or litter for ^H], &c. when
carried in procession.
^IB^{ /. i\^^ n. The head.
•\ ■
^r?" A deep part in a river.
2 Used as a particle of enhance-
ment to ^To3T when applied
to water, as ^^^^ ^iv\\ ^ra
5"r?^o5T The longini^s of preg-
nant women. 2 Unreasonable
longing after, v. gx:^, 3^.
'STtZT Pulse roughly ground,
(that it may be husked). 2 Grains
or half grains amongst split
pulse of which the husks have
remained. 3 n. Evil surmising, v.
xt^g', ^. 4/. A large fishing net.
»\
^r^^ a. Having eyes or
sight. 2 fig. Sharp, shrewd. 3
fig. Sharp-sighted.
'Sl^\ An eye. 2 fig. Sight,
vision. 3 A little hole ; — as burnt
in a cloth, &c. 4 The eye of the
peacock's fan. 5 The eye (of a
cocoanut, potato, &c.) 6 The eye
of the leg, i. e. the anklebone.
7 The cavity on the side of the
knee. 8 A source of knowledge
or information, i) A scale of a
fish.
^W!V^\^\ The name of a
bird. 2 A large sort of locust.
S[3^5f;gT acl. In the dusk
of the eveuing ; before dark, 2
Plainly, before one s face : g"-
•^ v . >^ .
5|^§ira or '^r /. Feigmng
not to see.
♦- "N "N ,
3T65''Tir^ y. IS arrow nispec-
tion ; pouring over intently and
painfully, a. That strains the
eyes— fine work, &c. 2 That
offends the sight— a disgusting
object.
il^^^ /. The final inter-
view (as of a child with its
dying parents); the partiiir/ look.
2 A mere sight of; a hurried
uiterview. [bli.dvs.
^Jl^pT^^r or -^^r a. That
i{^^^^ f. Winking.
i\^-^\m q^^r A coat or
humor of the eye.
^l^^Rr ^^ Blood -shotten
state of eyes (from drinking,
anger, &c.)
i\^m^\ ^\^ /. The lining
membrane of the eyelids.
ir^^fcT^ ^r^^ ^[T^FT An
ade])t at thievery ; an arrant thief.
i\^^\ \^^ or -^f nd. Be-
fore one's eyes. 2 Witliin one's
personal exjjerience, within one's
own life time.
i'fSEiTfiTr ad. -m^^ To fill
the eyes with ; to satisfy with
seeing,
i'rssq-m M^\k ad. Behind,
the back of; in the absence of.
H^'^r/. Pricking, &c.
fr^ot or tr^ot V. c. To
prick. 2 fig. To prick on, to
incite.
tr?^ (n) Shape, form. 2
Way, manner (of speech, &c.) 3
Signs, indications, v. ^1^,
^T'C. 4 A pompous air ; buck-
ishness. v. ftf^^. .o Empty
display, v. ^^^^, f^^^.
fm^m See tr?5- gig. 3, 4, 5.
fl^^[^ a. Well-shaped.
^\^l a. Pompous, swelhng;
buckish.
'^^I'S" n. A form lying ready
to be filled up as wanted. 2
Space left in a writing to be
filled up.
-^\^^^^, ^l^\^^^{ „, a form-
slieet. 2 A return- ])ai)er drawn
up in form having its columns
vacant.
5" The fourteenth consonant,
S" a. Illiterate, dull, stupid.
S"^ a. Disproportionately
tall, large — man, tree, building.
S"^^ f. Careless, cursory
performance. 2 Putting ofi^' (of a
thing to be done) from day
to dav.
Managing or making shift with ;
driving on of life under difficul-
ties.
Terras for a hasty and heedless
worker ; one tliat slubbers over
(a work).
^^^^ V. c. To push, drive
(onwards, off, away, from). 2
fig. To shuffle off. 3 To drive
on (time). 4 To put off one upon
another (a work to be done), v. i.
To fall away ; to be reduced —
the body. ' 2 To die. 3 To
tumble down — a building.
5-^^=1^, ^^^4^=1 See ^^^-
^^' rs r^ [upon another.
5-*5^q^n^5T[/. Shuffling off
<[WiM--m^€l f. Lavishness,
profuseness. "^ ^ [years, &c.)
S'^^^q'jr f. Driving on (days,
S'^c^r5"^c7 or -^r f. Shoving
and pushing. 2 Driving on (life,
&c.) under difficulties. 3 Pro-
crastinating. 4 Puttmg off by one
upon another.
S"^r^ a. See 5"^-
ST^rST qri?f /. A term for
an excessively tall woman.
S'JT A cloud. 2/. (ii) A step
or pace. v. 31^,
S"^ (n) An unbecoming
course ; licentious practices.
"o^^ a. Large-sized — grains,
seeds, &c. 2 Having masses of
i^t
190
g-^rr
clods over it— i)lou<,'heil ground. To miss. 5 fij;. To pass away—
3 Ot'lurjie expfiiditure. rite, riiU-.
jqr or -^^r a. Loose, licen- |^^ /• P'- Indininj^r, i. e.
tious. 2 Miscliicvotis.
^tn a. Pot-bellied.
affording favoiiral)le measure or
weight ;
3"c^R'r A chip, shaving
usedoffTK:!^, ^51^,
S"'^T"^^r V. i. To rin^r, clank
•i To Hare and swale — a light. -rrTrn-r
Z^^'^^J A polite tenutorai^f.^'^'^f^^^^'")/M>'-o^lama
dunce. Finir.
JT^r ?w. -^r/.A chip or shav-
g'qsjq'qr w. A term for
watery butter-milk ; wislnvasli.
5"qf"Z"JTff f. Profusinn, pro-
digality. 2 Confusion. «. Pro-
fuse.
S'f /'. (n) An imposing: air.
2 \ manner of action. 3 Great-
ness (as bonsted of), v. ^t'T,
tri;^, ffiT^, "^T^?. "^^■^I^ a-
Large, showy — a trinket : of
imposing appearance, gen.; — used
esp. of objects considered as of
little real value.
S"S^ or S^?i or 2"^ A double
])iee. 2 tig. .V gross and bulky
])ers()u, a porpoise. [lent.
Zm^ or -^^r a. Fat, corpu-
S'c^^r A chip or shce (as of
stone, of the jdaster of a wall,
iVc.) 2 See ^tj^i.
S"^^ /. A mess, pickle (of
aiVairs, &c.) 2 or^o ^I^T. m.
E.xposure or disgraceful notoriety.
r. ^T, g. of s.
g'^3:'^ v^ c. To stir up,
about, around (licpiid, &c.) 2
tig. To distiu'I), derange, v. i.
To be (pialniish : fw^
^^^z\^ ^■?53ff. 2 To yearn
witli affection.
S'^^r Confusion, disorder
(of a business, &c.) a. White.
S'^r An hermaphrodite. 2
App. to the musician of a cour-
tesan.
2"*TcS" a. Lavish of money ;
IHofuse. 2 Over abundant.
Zmm y. c. To gulp. 2
witli^^oiTo cry streamingly.
(iaidSTrT (I, Clear, shining —
letters, figures, a boil. 2 Bright
-..light.
Z^'h V. i. To slip aside. 2
To incline. 3 To fail, flinch. 4
tion, notice by the public crier.
S'f'^ «'/. An enhancing par-
ticle affixed to words siguitying
Sour, corresp. with Sharp, biting.
Zm n. (h) a lid, cover. 2 A
blind for a beast's eye.
Z\^^\ f. Covering,hiding,&:c.
ZW\ V. c. To close with a
lid. 2 To cover. 3 To suppress
(a matter). 7i. A lid.
STc7 /-. (H) A shield. 2 The
grand flag of an army directing
its march and encampments.
V. ^.
Z]^^m f. A flag staff. 2
fig. The leading member of a
household or community.
Zm or S"!^/. An obstinatcj
dry cougli.
Z\m, Zlm V. ?:. To cough—
esp. horses and cattle.
ST^^r Shock; heavy and
\Z^\ a. Slack or loose-
jointed— a person.
\Z^\ f. Slowness, dawdling.
fs-^r, rS"^r,^[^ A class of
tishermen.
Zm A large heap. a. Over-
flowing, plentiful.
f^
Z\^ a. Loose, lit. fig.
Z^ ad. With tiie head
poked out — behokling : Vi^
Zr\, ZH^'Z^l]^ n. Tiie but-
tocks. fsack.
f ^fS-fff, ZZ\^^ V. c. To ran-
f^^r /. The bumping with
its head of a calf, &c. against
the udder of its mother : the
butting of a calf, &c. before its
horns are shotten,
Srff or -Wr /. A poke.
ZW^^l f. Poking.
ZBWl V. c. Poke, thrust. 2
To push with the head.
Z^^l f. Poking, &c. 2
Bumping (as of a child in the
W'oml), of a calf in sucking the
mother).
Z^^ f. (Verbal of ^^^)
r(.king, &c. V. % JTT^.
abiding impression, i.. ^r. €, j^^Bj ,,. c. To poke, to drive
"^15331, ^I^: ^T^T«r 3Tri=^T
Zti^f^^v. i. To tumble down,
Z[^ A motion or stool. 2 A
in (a horn or weapon).
Z^ ind. A particle of en-
hancement attixtnl or prefixed to
^To3T, as ^T53T ^W-
purgative. 3 Slope. 4 Lustre (of | ^^^ or S^^ /: m. A belch.
pearls). 5 Cast, mould. 6 Way,
style.
ST<3"^ a. Puriiative.
Z^^ 'or Z^^ n. A clod.
Zm or Z^"^ A bug.
O^ 0\ O
^^/. n. (H) A stride.
STcS"^ V. c. To fall or to be
shed — tears. 2 To wave around Z^^ Z'^ n. A clod : arable
(a fan, &c.) ^ ^,„..^„^.i,
STSrr A sprig. Z\^\ j. A
TZ^K or \ZW: A i)ile,aheap.
\Z^^ or f^^r a. (ii) Loose,
slack,
r^
rS"'^R f. Looseness.
(^■c^i^oT 71. 0. To loosen.
\Z^^.\l\ f. Slack rein. v. ^,
¥1^.
land. 2 f. A lump of il53. 3
A mass (of oil-cake, &c.)
S'T^r A lump of cowdung
kindled or burned to ashes ; as
f^^^T^T-^T'i'-^I %" . 2A clod,
or a mass (as fallen from a wall).
Z^^ n, A clod or any rude
mass of lumped earth.
S"^Tr, Z^J\ a. Large and
1 spreading — a nose. 2 Puffed — a
1 bellv.
'^W'ft
191
rT^^T
1^'fr /. Butting.
S"^ Tlie gummy excretion
of the eyes. 2/. (h) A distended
paunch.
2"^^ -Sf y; (p) A large and
arched doorway : a portico ; the
threshold of a house.
S"r^ n. An old and decayed
tree. 2 fi<^. An aged and infirm
man or woman. ^^^^^^
S"R 71. Hypociisy. 2 Pre-
S'f'N^n Hypocritical and
knavish pretensions.
S"r^ or -^^ a. Sanctimo-
nious. 2 That feigns (a sickness,
&e.)
im -^^l a. Large and
bulky. 2 Ai)p. to a grown u])
male behaving as a child.
im, i\^T V. m. The knee.
ST^TT^fr ad. With the knees
sinking under, v. '^^^, ^.
^mm ^rfr/. The patella.
S'Rrr /. Inflammation at
the knee.
•\
S"R3" -oS\ a. Laroe, coarse.
S'f^ n. The general name
for oxen, cows, &c.; black cattle.
2 An ox, cow, cSic. 3 m. A low
caste. They are curriers.
♦\ .
Srrj^ n. A general term
for black cattle.
"\
STc^J" (h) a large sort of
drum. 2 fig. A huge belly. 3/. A
cavity (in a tree, rock, &c.)
i\^^ 71. Dim of STcT.
^F^TT a. Pot-bellied.
^r^°t V. c. & i. To gulp
large draughts ; to quaff.
iimi, im a blow, lit. fig.
^ The sixteenth consonant.
^t ad. Poet. Then.
^^ n. Metal beaten into a
plate.
rT^ or ^^^*T ad. A particle
used with verbs expressing
Vehemence, promptiliule : ?lo
^^Z^ V. c. To tighten. 2 or
rimZ'f ^^m To stuff or cram
into one's maw. r^^ fence.
cT^J^iTf f. Surrounding with
cT^cT^ or -^f a'L Biilliiiutly.
cT^cl^"^ V. i. To shine, glitter.
cT^cT^T f. Glossiness.
ct^crCrcT a. Bright.
cT^Ur/. (a) a statement in
disproof (as by litigants, &c.) v.
^T, ^. 2 St.-irting objections ;
making difficulties. t*. mK, 'St'T.
3 Contesting.
cT^?:RSTCr /. In law. An
appeal against a lower court's
judgme^it, an appeal, ^^.^^tious.
cT?irR?^R: c. Contentious,
cl^^r^r a. (a) Badly exe-
cuted through indolence or
fraudulent reservation of skill.
^^^r (a) Power, strength.
cr?R"q"cr-l[c7, cr^%cffrc7 (a) a
paper granted by Government
to serve till the formal ^hiSI
can be drawn u|) ; — an assii-
ravce deed.^ [^^S^nr^e, fault.
cT^^R -mi /: (A) An
cT^Ri'^r V. i. To shine brightly.
^r^r /. Refulgence, bril-
liance, r , ,
r, Lwork).
cTJ^r /. Suspension (of a
^15 "■ (a) ^^ a state of
suspension.
^"^ n. (p) A throne.
cTTFqr^r /. a ceiling or floor-
ing of planks. 2 A boarded
house.
^"^r (p) A plank. 2 A sheet
of pa])er : hence a tabular state-
ment, list, &c. drawn ujion it.
cTTFrr'^^KrThe reigning king.
cT^r (p) A pillow.
^^ 71. s Buttermilk.
^^ (p) A girth (esp. of a
horse-saddle), a. Tight. 2 fig.
Pinched.
^iT^f , tn^7\ f. (II) Scar-
city. 2 I'inclied state.
^^ )i. Survey estimate (esp.
of crops). ^ [„,ate (crops, &c.)
cfJTS'^T V. c. To survey or esti-
^T^K a. Tiiiht, ninchin"\
cTiTl^'T" V. c. To make to last.
^m% f. (a) Advances made
out of the public treasury.
^^r^rr (a) Ur'^lnir for p;iy-
ment, dunning, i'. ^R, ^IJI.
^"i?r /; (p) Tightness. 2 fig.
Straitness of circumstances;
scarcity (of articles or money).
cT?Tf?T a. Inflamed with
rage ; furiously staring and
chafing.
cfSf^r or ^fsT^r m.f. Lustre,
brightness. 2 fig. Freshness of
a])pearance.
cTSf^fSf y, (a) Investigating.
2 Considering, arranging. 3
Prudence. 4 Decision.
cTSffT^rr ad. (a) In a scatter-
ed and confused condition ; —
])ers()ns and things.
cf^r^cl ?7.y. (a) Difference or
deviation, v. ^T^» 1«f% ?R^.
2 Fraudful discrepancy.
^ in. 71. (s) A shore, border
(of the sea or river). 2 The wall
of a fort or village. 3 A feiul
in a caste : a faction. 4 Con-
federatcness or factious combi-
nation.
^ -^=T -^l -rcr% -K^r ad.
Imit. of sharp, quick, and light
sounds, e. ^. of a spark issuing,
of cord snapping.
cTT^rcff^-^ or -^rf^T^r^^ To
reply flatly. 2 To settle a dis-
pute.
^J^r V. i. To stop or to wait
for ; to tarry in ex])ectation of.
^Z^ ~Zt See cf J-^^, &c.
didi'T' V. i. To be distended :
to burst with a noise. fened
cTJcTS'rcr a. Stretched, strait-
cTJ^^r/. (p) Fortifications.
^Zfi^ a. a Indifferent, neu-
fTHT
192
FTf^R"
tral. 2 One inliiihitiiiG; the
coast, '.i Stiimling still. 4 Awiiil-
iiijj; intently.
^^r (ii) A qnanel. 2 A
troul)lesonic aiul a necessary
bnsiness.
T?!^ s Tiie lumk of ii river.
or •_' ?t?:t3T II. A small tank.
^I^^'^f r. i. To be excecdlnf/lf/
(listoniU'd.
^^M J. A I'einale of llie ^?
breed.
^i"^r^ (I. Quarrelsome.
cTf , cTT (h) a small breed
of liorses.
^^r ?>liittin<i-.
^^ f. A ^hore. 12 fig. End. 3
Dnnnins, nrt^ing. m. A feud in
caste cansini< dissension and
parties : a party.
cT^^ ad. Smartly, sharply. 2
Rciidily. 3 Full, a;i)od : ^T^Trf^
Straight, right:'?! ^\fT ffo
^TRfj-fT ojT^T. 5 Copiously./.
Continued and vehement effort ;
cT?^*^! /'. i. (ii) To crack or
split; to open in chinks and
fissures.
rTT^TTo"^ a. Prompt, smart.
^?^r A blast of cold. 2
Activitv. fill. Smartly.
m^\TiW.\ ail. in a rapid
manner ; with a pop or snap —
(loin<r. dyinfij, goin<^.
nl^II^'^ V. c. To lay on
smartly ; to whack. '2 To rap out.
'^ To rei)rove.
cl^lfri" /. Frugality, ihrift. 2
See HT^^I^.
c^^cfl^ V. i. To sj)it, sputfer,
crack. 2 To have the sensation
oi stifl'ness— thelimhs, skin, &c.
from cold : to he dry and ron.uh
— lips, &c. from cold. ^ To emit
a sound and t^ive pain — hair
^\lu•n smartly C(iuil)ed.
cTTT.T /. ^TTiT[3: ,jK A
violent tossinu; about or strug-
glinj;. V. '^1^, ^^•
cTI"^^*^ V. i. To loss about
with violent agitation ; to tloun-
<ler. 2 To fume and chate.
cr?r A crack, slit. v. ^\.
cT^r^r -'^[r a sounding
blow. 2 The whack ! whack ! (of a
smart caning, &e.); the down-
dashing (of a heavy shower);
the banging of volleys (from a
cannon); the bustle, din (of an
extensive business) : ^"^^"^l-
Fl^r^ or -^ 8 A tank : a
sHialljKxd. [(jrcatlij.
cf^f^oT V. i. To crack, open
^r^cT f. s I>igbtning.
clfi'^Rr^ a. a Like unto
lightning.
c^^rcfl'T'^r A religious men-
dicant. |-i,,j,|-_
cfJc^T s Rice cleaned from the
^5^r a. Of the coast ; blow-
ing from the land— wind. 2 Dry
so as to split — wind.
•^■^ ti. Grass or straw. 2
Weeds, &c.
cf^rT^Dj y_ I To storm upon.
2 To be strained. 3 To bound
and hop — a liall, ike.
croT?T'J[[cf a. Stretched,
cl^qr^ -qr -^r a. Good
(onlv) for nourishing grass; —
used of light rain.
cl^Jlirr^ J\ The clearing away
of the vegetation in bringing
land under cultivation. 2 Waste
land given, for a term, free of
assessment.
fl^Hlff^ 3-cq^ n. The first
jnodnce of ground reduced
under culture.
^^Rfr or-g"?r /. A stalk
of t:rass. 2 tig. A straw.
^W\^l Runningover the notes
(in ])itehing or tuning the voice).
cT'^r^I Tension, tightness, r.
%. 2 (a) a teut-rope. 3 fig. A
patron.
^^ /'. A thread, string, arl.
Ag'reeingly with; in exact
(quality (with some standard).
V. «r, ^fl^. 2 Brimful. Ji
Exactly, just ; ^l^f rf cf^TSli-
4 Also firirCrf or -f^rl<T Har-
moniously, ill unision.
cfcT^'^ r. c. To lead in blind
confidence.
T^^^\ nd. At that instant.
^5^ (s) A thread ; a chord,
a fibre, a tendril. 2 fig. Con-
nection, tie. V. vfTiT. 3 A
term for the only surviving male
of a race.
cTcTfr^ 11, A stringed n)usi-
cal instrument. [ture
^^ A long thread-like crea-
cfcn^cT a. Correspondent;
exactly equal. 2 Up to the
brim.
rf^^r^ nd. At that time.
cF^Tl^ s (That thing or rea-
lity). A term for God as the
Supreme and distinct substance.
cT^^T^ a. (s) Intent upon;
attending to closely and anxiously.
cTJ^^ s One of the forms
of grammatical composition.
cN" n. (s) A thread; any
string or wire. 2 A course; a
])roeednre. 3 A cause common
to two or more effects. 4 The
line of obedience : ^T^IT^ rf-
^1^ t'^^T-^ '^T^tW. 4 The
mere manual acts in a religious
ceremony — the acts without a
mantra. " 5 A religions treatise
on rites for worshij). (J A branch
of the Yedas. 7 A sectmn of
the Jyotish-shastra.
cT^ir^or-T ad. Neverthe-
less, still.
^^r f. A wire. a. Stringed.
2 Spun. 3 Deep, designing.
^f 71. (s) Truth, reality; as
opp. to what is illusory. 2
Cream, pith, lit. fig. 3 Essential
nature ; the real nature of the
human soul considered as one
and the same with the Divine
spirit animating the universe.
cT^^5f['l n. Knowledge of the
Deitv as Truth.
^^W5lRr, cl^-W a. That
knows truth l^esp. Divine truth,
/. e. reality or substantial
being).
cf^^r'4 Cream, ])ith, lit. fig.
2 Truth or reality.
^'^^^ ad. s pojj. cl^^T'^Tr At
that instant.
T^
193
rTJrrfT
cT^-rr ad. (s) So, like. 2 So be
it. /. Doubt : a ^li^ ^t^ fi^T
cf^rrf^ «c/. Nevertheless, still.
^^r^ ad. So be it ; amen.
cR^T rt. s True, real. ad. In
fact. M. Truth.
cTt^ r/^/. Wholly, utterly.
cT^^ciT ad. (s) Upon that;
nfter that.
cfr^ rt. (s) Of that country ;
foreign. ^ ^ j-^^^^
^r f. s Lassitude. 2 Sleeni-
^JTr jf. Dozing state, v, ^,
wjTiT. 2 Fixedness of attention.
^;.^T'^- [that time.
cT^r r/r/. On that day; at
^•T Z'. n. The body. w. Grass.
2 Weeds and wild grass.
cH^f (p) An assignment on
the revenues. 2 A standard rent-
roll of villages. 3 Claim : con-
nection. V. ^I^, iRl^iT ^I^.
^•THf n. Singing.
cT^'T n. Body and soul; the
whole man.
^^ s A son.
ff^?r /. Healthiness of look.
cTWfr /. (p) Fraudulent
appropriation of money or ar-
ticles received for expenditure
or in deposit ; embezzlement.
^r^r See mm\.
^ /. s The body. a. Small,
little.
^3^^ 8 (Born of the body of)
A son.
cr^/:(s)Thebody. 2fig.The
constitutional wants, v. X\^,
■^«To3. 3 Regard to the bodily
health: '^^T^' ^^T ?T^^^
^^^ a. s Absorbed in.
cT'iT^cir/. s Absorption in.
^T^r^ w. s A subtil rudiment
of any of the five forms of
elementary matter : as jf'^
is of ^«^, ^^ of ^^^. ad.
Merely that.
^7 n. (s) Religious austerity.
25
2 Virtue or moral merit. 3 A
term of 12 years. 4 Duty (as
of Brahmans, &c.)
^7r^n a. SnufF-coloured.
cT^CK or -^/. n. Snuff.
^^^ V. i. To shine, to glow
—the sun, &c. 2 fig. To shine
^a kingdom. 3 To be in a pas-
sion.
cTT-^^ /. (s) Devout aus-
terity; religious mortifieatiofl.
frq^^r^f a. s of austere de-
votion.
crq#rc5^ (a) a detailed ac-
count (as of expenses); a minute
narration. 2 fig. A long yarn ; a
pretext. [^y^.
cTtT^r^^f^ ad. In detail, v.
^^^ft" (s) One engaged in
the exercises of devotioti and
mortification, an ascetic.
cT^r^ (a) Inquiry; investi-
gation of; seeking for.
cftir^qr /. Inquiring, kc. 2
In law. Revision.
cTTrHOT V. c. To inqune (in-
to, about, &c.) ; to examine.
cT^^ n. A culinary utensil.
mm, cTqiRf^ A term of ad-
dress to Gosavis, &c.
m^\^ The sixth of the
seven heareiis.
^ p. (s) Heated ; incensed,
lit- %• [purified) gold.
cTR"^'^ n. s Heated (and
cTR"!^^ n. (s) Fiery ordeal.
cTB"^5:r /. (s) The prints
which the ^wt^ sect burn
into their flesh.
cT'T^r^rT/. (A) Difference. 2
Deviation, variance (as of ac-
counts). 3 Failure, shortcoming.
4 Error. 5 Distance — of time
or Space.
cf^^ n. (a) a platter : a cir-
cular patch of ground.
cTf ^^r /. A small plate. 2
The plate of a metal lamp. 3
The landing place of a stairs.
cT'^^^ V. L To drip or drop.
cT^^^ f. (a) a packet of
papers. 2 The string eucirchng
and confining them.
cT^^TThe beater of a^^^f.
cR^r (a) a musical instru-
ment.
cf^R^ -^ (h) m. f. Tobacco.
cTfl^TcT/. (a) Constitution.
2 Disposition; temper of mind.
3 Humor, fancy. [beating.
^^ /. (a) Chastisement,
^^1^ (a) a physician. A pp.
to a Musalman surgeon.
^jrr (a) a Turkish guitar.
^5^r/. A small guitar.
cTf^ (h) a tent.
^^ (a) a drum.
clWr (a) a stable.
cT&^c^ or ^^^^ a. Com-
plete, full; — used as Good, full in
English. 2/. A collected eff"ort,
a stretch : il^T^^ 'H'C^I'sJ
^^ m. n. (s) Darkness. 2
The third of the qualities inci-
dent to created being, the pro-
perty of darkness ; whence
proceed folly, ignorance, anger,
&c. 3 m. Proud, swelling, v.
JIT, WK, M\^.
cr4^r (ii) A pistol.
^m or cTJTcliTOT v. i. To
rant, yaunt : to swell and fume
with pride and anger.
cPTcpTf^r Raving : ranting.
V. ■^^j ^T^. [pecting.
cTRF f. (a) Care or fear res-
cT^rrif or -^ (a) Tobacco.
cTfiriT«.(A)Completed, finish-
ed, ad. Wholly, entirely.
cfirrK s Poet. The sun.
cfirr^ir^^r /. Business of a
cfirr^fff?: (p) a sport-hunter ;
a seeker of sights and shows :
a spectator. 2 A show-man, buf-
foon.
cffir^Tr (p) a diverting ex-
hibition ; a farce. 2 The trick of
conjurors ; sport, fun. [a bond.
cT^TRHJ (a) a note of hand,
mm SeecTiT, sig 1.
^^\^^ a. Irascible.
rTOtr
cl^lK a. (p) Prepared, made.
2 Ready, waiting (to do, &c.)
cT^Rt/. Readiness. 2 Pre-
paration.
^r /.(s) A ferry-boat : a float.
ad. Then, in that ease. 2 It
occurs variously as an expletive :
irfl^ ^Hf • «"^« An adjunct
to Sanscrit adjectives, denoting
the comparative degree : ^e,
■^2 rJK Bad, worse.
cR^J 71, A fabrication; a
wicked machination, v. ^,
cR^ -S^r r. A fabricator
of stories ; a slanderer.
cR^KF/. (h) An esculent
vegetable.
cf^fn (s) A wave. 2 fig. A
whim, fancy. 3 A thin skin ; a
film (as upon water or over
the eye). 4 A bubble. 5 (For
51^ fTT?l)The musical glasses.
^m V. i. To float. 2 fig.
To be adrift. 3 To hang with-
out decision — a cause, &c. 4
To float in suspense — the mind.
5 To be detained in waiting :
cRJlf^^ V. c. To keep ex-
pectant.
cK'^ ad. Then indeed ; then
only : 1H\^ ^qq f«?HI% cf^^
ci?:^Rr or cR^ffr (a) a
translation. 2 An abstract,
epitome.
cT^^T n. Sackcloth.
cT^'T n. Water in which pulse,
&c. have been boiled. 2 s
Floating. [Adolescent.
^^ a. Young, adult. 2
^^r ciur a. Young and
l"sty. [boat.
cRl^ s The sun. 2/. A ship,
cT^o'r r. i. To float. 2 fig. To
be saved. 3 v. c. To swim or
pass over (a river, &c.) [fuge.
^^RR A resource or re-
^cm». Difierence.^2 Dis-
crimination. V. T^T"^, H"?, ^T^.
cRW^n? Distinction of
194
better and best. v. %K, H^,
ijT^, -^j: g. of o.
cRcR" -^t ad. In a rapid
manner; — used of the running
of ants, spiders, &c. 2 Quickly
and nimble.
cT^cT^ V. i. To swell;— as
lime, &c. on being wetted : to
fill out, to look full, big— plants
with sap, boils, &c. 2 fig. To
look in high glee. 3 To be excit-
ed and eager.
cRcrffcf a. Straight; des-
cending in a direct line — the
nose.
cRcH" p. a. Floatinu or afloat.
2 fig. That is in good hands —
money.
cRcTPt^T The way of safety.
cR^r^r^/. A creek always
navigable.
cR^f n. (a) Ordering,
managing : order or economy
of; the due treatment of. v.
cRcT^ /. (a) Getting ready ;
arranging measures. 2 Caring
for. V. ^K, iTT^, ^1^5, 3^,
g. of o.
T
cR^^oS" n. A householder to
whom advances of money may
be made without risk.
cR^ ^^72. A harbour in
which there is at all times water
sufficient to keep the shipping
afloat. 2 A landing place where
the ship floats along side,
cRIi/. (a) Side, direction,
part, party ; care, custody :
HIT^T r}^'fi'%' ^T^W ; "^T fal^^
:g-»T't rlT'^^ ^I^. 2 A lever.
3 A division of a country. 4 A
division of village-lands. 5 A
stopper (as put to a wheel, door,
&c.) [party of.
cTCT^R a. Of the side or
cT^qr^ /. Partiality ; es-
pousal of a side.
cRTT^^ /. A system of as-
sessment and tenure. [melon
c1<<^iT 7)1. n. (p) A water-
^^^ or "^ or *? a. (a)
Alile, skilled. [fies the soils.
^^*T The officer who classi-
cRirtfr/. Classification of
the soils in connection with the
survey.
cir^Z^ V. i. To be stupidly
intoxicated. 2 To be heavy and
dull— the eyes.
cTT^R/. A sword.
c!<=iK«l^ld< a. (h) Signal-
ized by martial prowess; used
of a hot-headed fellow. 2 fig.
Eminent (in any particular line).
cf^^ ?«.n.The striped Hyena.
cKtl^ V. i. To be exhausted,
wearied ; to be fagged.
^TaS^ a. Flat or dead — sound
of a drum, &c. [morbus.
cT^a-, cRSWr^r /. Cholera
cKe^oj ^, i^ Tq wander idly
— eyes, thoughts : ^fg g^
I'CS ^fil 1). 2 To be affected
with fiXS : to be sated, r^azei.
cRS"4st/. A violent diar-
cRP^/. (p) A balance.
cRTJot V. i. To be distended.
cTn^ n. A ship.
cTH^Fr A raft : a float.
^r /. (p) Way by water. 2
or ?T<1 ^5fl^ /. Watery
grounds, rice-grounds.
^fr or ^n ad. Nevertheless,
still. 2 At least : IJH^ ^T'rt
*T^ ^T^, •qw ^N ?»<1f ^T. 3
Poet. Then.
m-^ See ^^^. [.till.
^fnr'T ad. Nevertheless,
cf^ s A tree.
citjul a. (s) Adult, young.
c1t>"lt^ The meridian sun.
cI^^lR^T /. n. s Cartilage.
cT^r /. A young woman,
cT^tTkr^, cT^T^PTR" A means
of salvation ; a way of escape ;
a refuge.
^^ (s) Logic. 2 Reasoning,
deducing. 3 A deduction, v.
^X, "^t^- 4 A fancy : f^"^T^
^^ ^T»i^ ^f"!^ «T^^ f ^-
W^ 'ilrlT*?. 5 Belief deduced
from data : ^^ 3^T^ ^Tl^^T
rT^^r
195
^m
tHJ-^^^ tlT^B T?^«fT ^^T tio
f^^^T. 6 Reasoning powers :
^T'^f. 7 Used for fifT^ A
wicked or foolish thought; a
wild fancy. ["ing
cTli^5T?^ n. Skill at reason-
Ling-
cT^^f^ a. Inferrible.
cT^ff^ a. Shrewd, penetrat-
cT^f^r s Tlie science of
logic. 2 Acuteness in reasoning.
<T^^R^ n. Logic; or a
logical treatise.
cr5[% f. s. The fore-finger.
^■T n. s Pleasing, grati-
fying. 2 Satiety. 3 Presenting
water to the manes of the
deceased. 4 In medicine. Inject-
ing copiously (ghee, &c.) into
the eyes. [penurious.
W^^r a. Parsimonious,
^PTf A ferryman.
^t ad. In a full and highly
distended manner : ^T^^' ^T-
■^^ rfx ^T^ ^^ err 'il^^.
^-Cr /. (a) a kind. 2 A
way, fashion.
cf-riJof V. i. To be distended,
^fr See ^fr-
rrl^r or cRcT^ a. Of a
particular kind, original, comical,
^ll^'* [chety person.
cT-g^^nf c. A capricious, crot-
cl^^ft^ a. Of a particular
kind; unique.
^^ n. m. (s) Bottom. 2
Ground, the ground-floor. 3 In
comp. Extended surface ; as
^X.vi ?T^. 4 Superficies, sur-
face, o In geometry. Plane, &c.
clc^^ a. (p) Biting, hot. 2
fig. Impetuous*, fiery.
cfc^^wt f. Feverishness,
febrile symptoms. 2 Fervor of
mind. 3 Mental comiuotion.
rT^i^'i^^^r a. Fiery, ardent.
cTc^^r /. (p) Pungency, acri-
tude (as of spices). 2 Fierce-
ness or ardor (as of the sun,
&c.) 3 Feverishness. 4 fig.
Impetuosity.
^^^f. (A) An ill-habit, a bad
way. 2 n. A fold of a door.
^^^ f. (a) Pay, wages. 2
Desire after. 3 An ill-habit. 4
A demand from Government or
other creditor upon the debtor.
5 Summoning. 6 The fee of
a Peou serving a summons.
cr?5"flT See cfr^ir.
cf^fcT^ n. s The fourth divi-
sion of the infernal regions. 2
A manner of fighting — striking
the palms against each others
palms.
cT?5Tf (h) a tank:
^^f^r (h) Leading or walk-
ing about (as of a horse).
cT^^ or -^ (p) Search,
^^^^- [absorbed in.
^i^R a. (s) Intent upon,
^^ pron. s I'hine.
cff «</. Till that time: ^ ^^
^t *I^ "^ ^^- 2 Then, at
that time : ??> i(^ tjT^^T "f T^-
•?; II. 3 Used expletively : 7^
cf^tr^ -€r -*t^ V. Manna
of bamboo. 2 An extract ob-
tained from wheat, &c.
cT^cTW'T V. i. To be vexed
and irritated.
cf^WT ad. Until that time.
^^^\ f. A plant bearing a
large kind of cucumber.
cr?t n. The fruit of ^^^U
fTfr (h) a griddle. 2 fig. A
sheet of rock. 3 The ground of
a garment. 4 App. to a plate
thrown over an aqueduct.
cT^rf /. (p) A fine. v. ^^,
•q^, ^. 2 fig. A blow (as in
trade).
cTfl^For ^^f^r (a) Power,
force. [lity.
cT^r^ /. (a) Attention, civi-
cff fcTR^r A traveller's traps.
'TfR'T V. i. To recover
health and strength after sick-
ness. [Hale, healthy.
^fRF a. (p) Renovated. 2
cTf(^ ad. On that side.
^'^^ 01-^ (a) A fit of roge.
cT^^r -^r a. Passionate.
^5Ttcf ad. (^^r in loc. case)
Under such circumstances ; in
that case.
cT^f^ m. f. (a) Annoy-
ance, harass, v. ^, ^'C-
cf^r^ /. (a) a picture.
cT'ElT/. A moth. 2 A kind
of coarse silk. n. A sum com-
pounded for by Government
with the cultivators in lieu of
part of the payment due in kind.
cT^R^RSrr Exaction of a
fowl for the use of a public of-
ficer on his visitation of a
village.
cTFfffq^ J. (a) Investing with
a splen(lid robe in token of ap-
probation; investing with an
honorary dress.
cl^?5:iT[cT /. (a) Charge or
care of, command over ; use,
enjoyment. 2 Respects, saluta-
tions in the form ?T^?rf\??TfT.
cRT^r a. Of that kind,
fashion.
cT^r a. Of that kind. 2 ad.
So, thus. 3 Immediately upon ;
just as : ^^^t fT'BT 3TT%t. 4
In that way ; 3TT# ^t «lT^t
g"#t <T% «TT. 5 Used exple-
tively : ^I rim m<X^'
era" or ^n^ n. A measure of
length— the twenty-fourth part of
a 3l5r.
cT^^ n. A part of the grain-
assessm.ent commuted for money.
cT^^r a. Of that kind.
^l^T (s) A thief.
cR?;ff/. Theft.
cf^^ n. (p) A metal vessel to
hold water ; an ewer.
cTWRT ad. (s) Therefore,
thence. [of oi)iniou.
cH" (p) Peace. 2 Agreement
crg^FTT (p) A written treaty.
cfCsfr^ or -^r^ /. V. Col-
lection of the revenue. 2 Revenue
collected. [-^1^^ revenue.
cl§:^^?:i^ A collector of
cTeTF or -^\ ad. (h) At that
jilacc, aSfT^l"?{«1^.
^w\^
196
rrrnr
cTFf^T/. Thivst.
cT^^R^f^ f. Stopping- (a man
or animal drinking) before the
thirst is sUiked. 2 Assuaging
the thirst by drinking a httle.
.3 Extinction of desn-e through
the full gratification of it.
^Hr^ a. Thirsty.
cr^t^qrer -^ ad. (p) Until
death. A phrase confined to
grants, bonds, &c.
ffoS" Bottom. 2 Ground (as
iintler a tree). 3 A camp. v.
4 A tract of ground. 5 Tlie sole
of a shoe. 6 The spot which a
body occupies : 3^1^ '^tt^'^
Leave a few behind.
cfS'^ 77, Corn remaining on
the floor upon which it has been
received (from the fields, &c.)
previously to being reposited in
the bin. This is a perquisite of
the Mahars employed in storing
it.
cTS"^ n. A cellar, vault ; a
subierranean room. [tain.
cfo5"^Rr The base of a moiia-
cT^'fTF^r A clean sweep out.
2 A thorough investigation. 3
Devouring all the food set before
one.
rl3^ n. Frying. 2 An article
frying. 3 A frying pan.
cTS'tTT/. A frying pan.
^^*^ V. c. (h) To fi-y. 2 fig.
To oppress cruelly, to roast. 3
To scorcli — sunbeams.
cT^'cT'S" y. Sweltering, r. ^,
^T. 2 Exasperated state, v. ^.
3 Anxious commotion. 4 Pro-
vocation. V. '^.
r{<^^cS^ ^7. i. To be in pain
and restlessness under the
action of heat, 2 To be in an
ajiony of jjain.
tTcZTcTSTT V^ehement j^assion,
intense agony. 2 The curse of
one roused (by oppression) into
fury. V. ^. 3 Violent oppres-
sion. V. asr, siT^, *Tr^, ^].
^^'f^ff^^ 7-. c. To tease,
torment : to vox.
cl^l^ ;/. Ruin, e.\tirpation.
2 Clearance : v^X. ^T^^t^
cT^^oj y^ I Xo swelter. 2
Poet. To shine : ^^^ '^^^
rIo3^^t "^^vTi II. 3 To be bran-
dished or waved about briskly. 4
To hover around.
cTarqrq" The sole of the foot.
cTS'^^ n. The sweepings of
the thrashing fioor. This is one
of the rights of the Mahars.
cTanrS" f\ Restlessness
througli pain. 2 Anxious eager-
ness. 3 Regretting.
cTS-JTS"^ V. i. To roll and
toss through pain. 2 To long
after in impatience and inquie-
tude : to fret and grieve about.
^^^Z n. A plain, wild,
waste. 2 Level expanse at the
base of a mountain. fneath
cTcFfJr prep. Below, under-
^oS^\ The palm (of the
hand) or sole (of the foot).
cro5"^Rr f. A subterranean
passage.
cTS'^f:?" ad. Off or free from
the ground. [hand.
cTS'g'rcr 'Ihe palm of the
cr^?:rcr^r ^r^ (A boil on the
palm.) A term for an object
higlily loved.
cfSiTiT^R or cfSTJr -sr The
stipendiary accountant and re-
gistrar of a villnge. 2 An officer
a])poiuted to act for an officer
suspended or absent.
cT^I^f or -Z\ f. The office
of ffSST^^T^.
cTS"!^ (li) A tank.
cf^jTT'^ V. c. To execute
radically : «T533i;"!T "^TS '^\^.
cf^f/. A slab of a hand-
mill. 2 (/Ocoanut, &e. ])laced
in a dish and w.aved before
?iiT-£!T. V. v^K, ^^^, fIo3"1^
■^TrT ^T^f. 3 A term for rol)-
bery or murder committed by
one village u])()n another. 4
The articles of apjjiircl, &;c. sent
during the ■ffWTI^ by a just-
married l)oy to his wife at her
niother's house, v. ■^, xiral^.
') The Ijcgging vessel, containing
tlowers, &c. carried about by
the JT^^ of a temple. 6 The
frame of wood used in sinking a
well. 7 A pavement of stone-
slabs or of chunam work encir-
cling a well (to prevent muck
and sloj)). 8 The fiat stone or
piece of board which is placed
vmder a ^K.^ to receive the
^l!!""- [rrssl sig. .3.
cTSTiTlT One that connnits
^a5" 77. A tank. 2 A halo.
cT5f^ (s) The name of one
of the serpents of qiflTvl. 2
fig. A vindictive, vengeful per-
son. 3 A carpenter.
cT^FR" f. (p) A share in or
of. 2 A division of people; a
caste.
^\t f. A term of respectfid
mention of a sister or of a fe-
male gen.
c
^FWn (a) An ornament,
worn around the neck or arm,
viewed as an amulet.
^f^ 77. Butter-milk.
cTF^^'^F /. j>l. A term for
])oor fare. [strength.
cFF^cT or -^ /. (a) Power,
cTf^TF% 71. A term for butter-
milk, curds, &e. 2 A term for a
very poor fare. 3 A term an-
swering to Bread and cheese.
cFF^RS^F A term for a C^^F^,
g^Tuft^, &c. that is a mere
smatterer in his business : a
mere sciolist. To IJliuht.
^f^F A whole piece of cloth.
cTF^^FfF /. A sort of shelf
over a window.
^F^l^or -^ /'. (p) Injunction.
crF*f?R"5F /. A letter of in-
junction from Government to an
officer.
^R A kind of hemp-plant:
the hemp obtained from it.
mi^ f. Tieing down, &c.
cFfTT?^ V. c. To tie up by
the legs (a child, &c.) 2 To tie
up ; to bind fast (a man or
animal to a i)ost,&c.) .'> fig- To tie
down ; bind fast. 4 'l"o detain
hiniieringly. 5 To tear and pull
about rudcly:^lVTEI':^Tt|I^TnT
?rrJT^
197
m?p:
6 To use roughly (animals, &c.)
7 To mend ; to patch up (old
clothes, &c.) V. i. To fag, toil.
crmtr /. (h) a light term
for the leg. [-„£ g^ales.
cTRI^r f. A balance or pair
cfrrrrfcT or -^^ prep, (p)
Until; up to.
cTR^r A pair of scales. 2
The cross as a means of proving
a multiplication.
cTF^r fl. (p) Fresli, green,
ne".v ; not stale. 2 fig. Plump,
sleek — a man or beast.
cTrsrf'R^^ n. A postscript.
crrsrrfr^RT, crr^crrsfr a. Fresh
and brisk ; lively and vigorous.
<r[5[Rr^iir^ a lucrative
office or work.
^f^r (p) An Arab horse.
cTltflT /. (a) Treating with
ceremony and respect, v. '^,
cIT?fr ^i^T/. A good mainte-
nance ; a fat service.
cfl^ /• (-^^ A marvel, a.
Wonderful. ^ ^holder.
<Tr5T^S';2,A substantial house-
cTf^^Tiq'r^gq-.rf r ^wr^ifr /. a
parasite; a trencher-fly; a
Slimmer-friend.
^f^T n. A living plant (of
^T^5ST, ^^\^t^, &c.) 2 A
mere stalk of it.
^n^" n. A dining plate (of
silver, gold, &c.) 2 Sackcloth.
<\]Zm^^ V. i. To stiffen — a
person, the body through long
inaction. 2 To become stiffened
and heavy — the eyes from much
reading,
<Wl^^\ m. -cTR^S- or -'^\ f.
Stiffness, &c.
cn?:^r, cni^r^r / a vixen,
virago : a monstrous and hi-
deous woman.
^\^\ /. A, light frame of
bamboos, &c. used as a door,
blind, skreen, &c. 2 A bier. '^
A row (of flowering plants).
^r?^ n. An old or mucli
worn ii\v\<wz.
^f^5' '*• ^ small, line stem ;
a thin part of the stem or cul'"
(of ^l"%?3rT,&c.)2 A little stick.
^rS" a. Stiff, not pliant, lit.
fig. 2 Stiffly maintaining an
attitude. 3 Tight-fitting — a gar-
ment. 4 Tight. 5 Strained —
eyes. 6 Firm, robust. 7 Com-
plete, perfect ; good, full. 8
Strong and stout, m. Stiffness. 2
Deviation from rectitude (of a
balance), v. ^t, "t : fjl »TT5I-
P'ride.
^r5°T V. i. To stiffen, tighten,
— as a limb, a rope. 2 fig. To
swell with pride.
cTrST, cTfHTiT a. Tense — a rope,
&c. : not pliant. 2 Strained —
eyes. 3 Firm, thickset. 4 Strong
and sturdy — plants.
^J^'T" V. i. To become stiff
and rigid — a limb, &c.
^13"! Stiffness, tension, kc.
2 Pride, haughtiness.
^f>3" The Palmyra tree. 2 /.
Straw of «T1'^UTT.
cTf^ -^^ -^ -f^fr -f^^f ad.
Imit. of the sound of smacking,
lashing, &c.
•\.
^r^°T V. c. To strike (as with
a cane, &c.) : to punish. 2 To
try, prove (by comparing with
or inferring from) : '^r ^mi-
^ ^ ^m ?ITf^^ ; rqi^T ^T^-
crr^-cfT^ ad. with 3-^^ To
bound forcibly and quickly.
cir^'T n. (s) Beating : punish-
ing, [palm.
cTF^^^ n. A blade of the Fan-
cTf^q^r /. A kind of ^n^-
2 A kind of ^«IT.
^\^^^ n. A fruit of clK
cfT^iTl^ A variety of cocoa-
nuts, ad. Like to the Palmyra
and Cocoanut, i. e. very deej) —
a well, &c.
cTf^f n. (s) Dancing with
violent gesticulation. 2 Exag-
geration ; great cry and fuss
upon. 3 Amplification (as of a
text, &c.)
^^r A train (as of cattle,
ants, &c.) : a troop, body gen.
cff^FTf^ Breaking up and
selling (of trinkets, &c.) ^^^]^^^i^
cTlf^cT p, (s) Beaten : pun-
^1"SF y. The spirituous exu-
dation of the ffT^ tree.
. »\
cTf^^T The master of a boat :
the commander of a body of
lascars.
^1^ The state of being
stretched, v. '^j ^-^, ^x. 2
fig. Intense anger, v. ^ : ^^l'^
i\m ^TSffN ^^T «TTUI 3TI^T.
3 m. n. Vigorous and unremit-
ting e.Kcrtion. 4 Pressing hard :
dunning rigorously ; galloping
violently ; pressure, stress, v.
^T, ^m, ^^^. 5 Holding up
(of rain), w. t: ^T^^R '^k
r^^^ rTTW f^^T. n. The
exact time : ^^rtl^ rfTiTR^
m¥]\ f. Fulhng tight.
ff[a]-(j]- ^,_ g_ To make tense.
2 To keep on tenter hooks. 3
To keep tight at. v. i. To hold
back, i. e. to dawdle or dally.
^r"Tr The warp. 2 A creep-
ing plant. 3 Breed (esp. of
cattle). 4 A tendril. 5 The
lines of a spider's web.
crf'^lcrfTr/PuUing and haul-
ing. 2 fig. Distraction. [wire.
^f^/. A fibre; a chord or
^fcT (s) Father. 2 App. in
endearment to one's child.
cTR^^^qr (Imit.) Boisterous
merriment.
cft?!^ or cTFcr^y, Urgency, v.
W^, ^^. 2 Urgedness.
cTfcT^'T V. i. To be urged.
mil or mf\ ad. Hastily.
^i^A thread, line, a fibre.
cin^r?5" ad. At that instant.
cTf^^lf^^ a. 8 Relating to
that Ume. ^^^^^^^ ^^.^^
cflrW 71. (s) Intent, design;
Wm'4 (s) Pith, moral.
cTigT^r ad. Expressly,
directl}', positively.
nrf^^
198
mun
^rr^^ a. (s) That follows
the doctrine taught in the
Tantras. 2 Belougin;j; to the
Tantras — a charm, &c. 3 That
has but a su])erticial knowledge
or scanty ability (in his art, &c.)
4 Shortened : «R^T t^J^ cft»
^rf^^ a. (s) Accordant
with reality, real. 2 Versed in or
relating to the tll^ill^. n.
The cream, moral.
tlTTS Rice cleaned from the
husk. 2 Rice parched and
boiled.
^1^ a. (s) Such-like ; like
him, her, or it. 2 Ordinary ; so
and so.
^R /. (s) A tune. 2 Tuning
the voice. 3 A strain, lit. fig. :
4 Thirst. 5 fig. Hankering.
^FFIPTf / A cow, kc. that
conceives again whilst she has
a suckling.
^TR^, ^RcTR See ^1"^^.
cTl'WR Suitableness of cir-
cumstances : ffTo ■m'^^^T^l^
^^f^T. 2 Harmony.
cTR-/. Thirst.
rTF^C^ a. That is yet suck-
ling— a female animal. 2 fig.
Chief, the best (of a number).
<TI'?T a. Sucking — a babe.
2 Suckling — a woman, &c.
cTf^r^^ V. L R To thirst,
^•l"!^ a. Thirsty.
cTFCrafr^ or -^^ f. The
scanty moisture arising (to
fields, &c.) from the first showers
of the monsoon.
cTP^c^r n. Poet. A suckling.
cTF^c^r a. Thirsty.
mT Fever. 2 Heat (of the
sun, &c.) 3 fig. Heat of rage or
lust. 4 Opi)ression (as of credi-
tors, &c.) 5 Hot sunshine in
the rainy season. [fever.
clf^^iU A man afflicted with
mT?: or -^ a. Hot, fiery. 2
Quick, smart, 3 Mettlesome —
a beast.
cTR"^ V. i. To become hot :
to be enraged ; to be excited.
cTiqcTf or cTFFcfr (p) A kind
!f.!^i!^"^^'' [trations.
cTN<1|«iI<1 Angry demons-
cfrT"^ n. (s) The three sorts
of affliction incidental to created
beings, viz.3Tlft?^Tf?r^, ^TtN-
■^f^^, 3n«ITffJI9pi. See fqf^Til-
?Tiq. 2 Ai)p. to the distresses
of p()verty. j-j^^.j^ g^^^ ^
cTRm V. c. To heat (a
cfR^r a. 8 An ascetic,
^rrr (a) a set (of diincing
girls and musicians). 2 A float.
3 A flock of sparrows.
^f?/. Rust of iron. 2 Red-
ness of sky. 3 Red blight
attacking young wheat. 4 The
outer ami coarse bran of wheat.
cTt^S" or cTf^J?^ A caste.
Thov are coppersmiths.
cTi^^/. Red soil.
cfR^^tT or -^ od. (h) On
the instant, quickly.
cTi^^TTftr/. Red earth.
m^^Wf: a. Reddish.
m^\ a. Red.
cfR^lf^^ Red leadwort.
cTR^r^R a. Colour of the
horse, chestnut.
<TR^Rr3" Gum-myrrh.
cTR^r^rc^ a. Of a full and
bright red colour.
cTRl'fllT^r /. A covert name
Ibr^flesh-meat. [-..^^^t
cTR"^ V. i. To contract iron-
^RKF A red blight attacking
wheat, ^f^iloai, &c. 2 Iron-
rust : rust of copper or brass.
cfRrT or -^ (a) a bier, esp.
that which is carried al)out in
the Moliaram by Muhammadans.
ffff ^ See r^^r.
clip" a. Reddish.
^\^ n. Copper.
cTRJIfC*^ //. A pledge in the
possession of the person furnish-
ujg money. [pendent.
^f^^F^ a. (r) Subject, de-
cTTf^n /. Subjection.
mT\ Red blight, a. Affect-
ed with ^\^,
. ..^ ^ {Xem. sellers.
cFr^FSST A caste of betel-
^F®^r A drinking vessel.
cTfiT^ a. (s) j)op. cFFlT^r
Affected by, or pertaining to,
?|iT (the quality of darkness
and vice), viz. Hot, irascible ; —
used of persons : horrible —
actions : heating, inflaming —
drugs, food, &c. 2 Ignorant. 3
Dark lit.
cTF^ n. (s) Copper. 2 Calx
of copper. 3 In comp. Of a cop-
pery-red colour.
cTF^TT m. n. (s) A copper-
plate on which grants, &c. are
inscribed.
cTF^R^ 11. A copper-plate.
cTF^^r^T^iT 71. Calx of copper.
cTF'^^ n. A red muzzled
monkey, a. Redfaced.
cTF^T'T or -•T n. A metal dish.
^F^/. (p) A wire ; a piece
of catgut ; a string of silk. 2
A filament of any viscous
substance. 3 Intoxication : dul-
ness from watching ; dimness
of vision from bile, &c. v.
^^, ^, ^TII. 4 fig. Habi-
tual mind or bearing : fixed
attention. 5 fig. Thread, train.
6 Long continued train (of writ-
ing, singing), [saviour.
(iK=h a. (s) A deliverer,
cTFT^^^^or^^F^F^F or-^F
a. Ikwildered, confounded. 2
Wild with rage.
cTFT^F^f^^F a. Shrewd, saga
cious. 2 Alert: wakefuUy. v.
^W^ n. (s) Preserving ; sal-
vation. 2 A pledge.
^F^^T V. c. To deliver, save;
to extricate from (danger, &c.)
cFFTcF(IF^F or cIF^T^fRF (p) A
privy.
cTF^c[f?I ;;. (s) State of more
or less. 2 Ditforence, disparity.
3 Discrimination, r. xjT^, €^,
Kl^- 4 Civilities, attentions.
^F^^cTF I). That preserves.
mrn
199
F^^rV
dK'^oS" f. Botheration,
afiitation. 2 Distress, exigency.
cTTTf? a. Brought in on
ships.
^mZ^ V. i. To be stupidly
intoxicated. 2 To be heavy
and dull — eyes or countenance
(as from intoxication, wakeful-
ness, &c.) [-Ijoarj
^IT^df a. Imported on ship-
?TR^^t^r A term for a
small share in some extensive
business.
^^r (s) A star. 2 The pupil
of the eye. 3 A meteor, v.
ga. 4 A firework. 5 A term
for a smart, expert fellow : for a
beautiful person.
^nn Fordableness (esp. of
creeks at low water). 2 Floating
(upon water or in the air) ; as
^TTfJI'T" n. (s) The starry court
or firmament. 2 An observatory.
3 fig. Rout, dispersion.
cTRnrcT (s) A star-shoot.
crrrR55- /. See m^C^ST.
cTKR^^ rt. (s) The sidereal
heavens.
^f{^ f. (a) Date.
cTf^nr or -"F / (a) Praise,
applause. [maturity.
m^^T n. (s) Youth aod
^1^ n. A ship or boat.
^FHh* a. (s) Relating to the
science of reasoning. 2 Shrewd
at conjecturing.
cTFRi^^ n. s Shrewdness,
acumen. [ous, sottish.
^r^Fa, A ferryman. 2 Ebri-
^Fc^ s Beating time in music.
V. y^x:. 2 Clapping the hands
together. 3 A sort of cymbal.
4 A story of a house. 5 The
Fan -palm
cTTc^eTf^qT a. A blusterer.
cTI^?^ a. Measured, rhyth-
mical.
^f^^ a. Practised (in wrest-
ling, &c.)
^l^^n a. (8) Palatal.
<1l"^H^r ar^. In time and
tune — singing, &c. v. tit.
cTF^fR" f. Instruction (esp.
in gymnastic exercises, singing,
dancing, &c.): breaking in or
training (of a horse). 2 See
cTF^F^^F^FT (p) A gymna-
sium. 2 (h) a seed of Barleria
longifolia.
cTF^ltcT or rTf^f^F^ a. Afflu-
ent, prosperous. j-^i^.^^
cTr^ftlMH n. The name of a
^F^ w. (s) The palate. 2f.
Sinciput. [shire, &c.
^F^^ or -'^r (a) a district,
^i^ pi. (a) Fortunes, luck.
cTT^tcf -^ a. (p) Opulent.
^{^^R\ f. Opulence.
^F^ (p) Heating to a red
heat (metals, &c.) 2 The appear-
ance induced upon metals by
thus heating them. 3 fig. Taking
the conceit out of. v. ^. 4 A
sheet of paper. 5 A pane of glass.
cTFf ^f^ V. c. To put to or set
at (a work) forcibly; to press ;
to hold fast. 2 To gallop hard
and long (a horse) : to work
hard. v. i. To occupy or keep
one's self laboriously or actively
about or in : ^j ^^JIT ^^K-
m^f\^ ad. Out of the
clutches of. V. ^??, fifg.
cfF?"^/. (P) A fine, mulct.
^\^^ V. c. To heat to a red
heat (metals, &c.) 2 To heat
(water, &c.) v. imp. To strike
hot ; or to be close and sultry.
^FfcT ad. (s) So much ; so
far ; until. [glass.
cTF^^F^T n. (p) A pane of
cFF^^F'T ad. So much or
many. 2 In not astonishing
plenty ; in moderate quantity :
cff^5[o^F^ Testing (gold, &c.)
by boring a hole and heating in
the fire. v. WM, <3ri^, f^ig.
^\^\ {.\) A sort of drum.
^f^ (a) An hour. 2 A gong.
3 n. A furrow dug along by the
plough. 4 The bed of a river. 5
A term for the streams of a river
in the dry season. 6 Turning
over the ground with a i)lough.
^F^ The blue jay.
^F^ Chipping, paring. 2
Chipping-work.
^^F /. Paring, &c. 2 An
adz. 3 fig. Shaving roughly,
scraping. 4 fig. Reviling ; cut-
ting up.
^\^ V. c. To chip. 2 To
scrape. 3 To do with rapidity ;
to knock off. 4 To cut up.
cTF^F? p. Chipped, shaved.
cTF?%^ a. Thirsty.
cTrsr See ^\^, sig. 1 , 2, 3, 4.
5 Tallj'ing (as of accounts, &c.) :
congruity (of speech, conduct),
6 Consistency (as of articles, the
body). V. 3T^, t??:, ti^, El^.
cTF^T Agreement (as of ac-
counts, &c.) V. $, t:it^, q^,
■f«To3 : correspondence (of the
event with the prediction, of a
testimony with personal experi-
ence, &c.) V. ffl3.
^ See ^l^.
c1FcS"^?r An account epitomis-
ed from the ^cfTofTift.
cirar^'^^nTF or cTFa^^^Fifflr /.
The heading including articles
of assessment established after
the completion of the 3I»it^^
settlement.
fIFo5"^?"^F^ f. Outstanding
portions of the fTTS<T^5i»TT.
PcT a. Three : F^JTST^F, TcI^F^.
WIcT /. A triangle.
IcT^ n. A wooden triangle.
2 A tripartite leaf.
fcT^i^^r or -^ a. Relating
to that place.
PcF^f^F ad. Thence.
PcT^^ ad. Thither. 2 Used
for At or to one's house : 3fT-
iT^ f?ro^l^^T^^T?.3 There.
^'hl'S n. The three stars
composing the belt of Orion.
Fn^l'Fr a. Triangular.
RtJ^TH: n. Cliillies, &c. pound-
ed into a mass. «. l*unu;eiit,
hot. 2 iig. Vehement, anient.
3 Sharp, keen — a weapon, a
thorn, &c. 4 Quick, acute. 5
Severe, sarcastic — speech, &c.
RT?I7ff /. Sharpness, &c.
IcTi^oir A boy born after
three successive giils.
Rra" n. Steel. 2 fig. Hard-
ness of front, brass. Hast.
[cHRcT n. The year before
rcTT^cTf „cJ, In or during the
year before last.
or -^ n. pi.) Three ; this dif-
fers from fji^, as it respects
only animate objects, ami of
these human beings esp.
f^'^fT A man in his third
marriage.
fcT^ a. Third.
fcnnl"/. A third share.
fcTsTf?^^ a. c Tliat lias borne
thrice — a cow, &c.
r^tmU -^r a. Tertian (fever) .
FcTsfR 7j. A tertian.
fcTJ^oj ()j. -^f^oy ^^ c. To
treat with scorn.
r?rJ^Rr a. That quickly
contracts disgust.
fcld"! V. c. To twist or double
(a rope, &c.) into curls, v. i. fig.
To slip astride.
f^ •v.
rcT??!'^ V. i. To ache.
fcTI'T' r. r. To confine,
straiten, v.i. To become crooked;
to be drawn and deflected from
its proper shape or jjlaee — a
limb, cot, &c. 2 To feel stiff",
cramped — a limb.
IcT^^frT^OT" V. i. To crack,
sputter. 2 To be angrily troubled.
I^^r (ii) An intertanglc-
ment (in a rope, &c.) 2 fig. A
difference. 3 fig. A hitch, catch ;
somethiug ivrony.
F^ir^ /. A pang. 2 fig.
Care. 3 esp. pi. frf^^I
Throes.
icTcf^r See"^^-
200
[cTcI^^ «. Of that number ;
^to that degree. ^g^ ^^
rcTcTTcT a. To that degree. 2
frTcTq^cT, fef^^f^^r ad. So
far ; so long ; unto that place.
IcTcR The Francoline par-
tridge.
rcTfcr^r /. s Patience, f^-
fcjg a. Patient.
Icl^^r a. Poet, So much,
large. 2 So many.
TcTRl" /■. (s) A lunar day.
Wm^ A term for Holy
days. V. ■qx:, ^\^, htbJ,
r^^rc^, IcfSH, \WA See^^Tt=^.
rcr^<T a. Havino- three
^iii^va. ^ ^ [evening,
r^^f^, \^\^m^ f. The
pcT^fcfrs", rcFffcrrsj pi. The
three worlds.
rfrqrr /. Treble.
Tciq^fr a. Three-fold.
[cf^fST a. That can recite
after the third perusal.
fcTf^^ a. That bears three
annual crops — a soil.
fcT^fr a. Three-jointed.
PcT^T a. Three-fold. /. A
treble quantity.
\^^n. Dripping wet. v. ^^,W\.
[cf^'T V. i. To be thoroughly
wetted. 2 To he well wetted
and mixed by punching and
kneading — vvheaten dougli. v.c.
To wet. 2 To knead
(dough). 3 fig. To pommel and
thump soundly. 4 To sour
(flour, &c.) by exposure to the
"""• [ — a house.
f^R^^^r a. Three-storied
HTI^ 71. s Darkness.
FcTT^^ a. Oblique, slant.
fcR^r a. Oblique. 2 Looking
asquint — eyes. Attrib. Squint-
eyed.
l^r^jZf a. Three-masted.
[^^qfl^?:iir /. SweUing, gas-
R'=rrf
conade. 2 Thee-ing and thou-
ing.
fcf?:3-fq7i^ /. Utter and ruin-
ous dispersion, v. x{^, ^, -^T. 2
Harassed and exhausted state.
refTjr -ilf. A bier. [,„^,
\^l^ V. c. To swim or to
fcf^R (p) An archer.
^m^ or -^^ /. A third of
the produce of a field or garden.
m^q^T V. i. To be sprained
— a limb.
PcT^ir a. Slant.
fcfTtirS" y. Exhaustion : con-
sternation.
rrrrRTT^ V. i. To be affected
with ffrx:f*?<1.
fcT^riTfr /. Vertigo, v. ^•
m^J f. Dizziness, v. ^- 2
Coi/j) de soleil. v. ^T^I, "R^.
TcT^^ a. Squint. 2 Slant.
V^X^Z a. Crabbed, testy.
WlW: (s) The feeling of
disgust ; scorning.
[cT^T^^RfT V. c. To contemn.
fcT'T^^Rr a. Fastidious, dain-
ty ; retentive of a feeling of dis-
rcfr^^o^r /. Pilgrimage to
three holy places — 'S(i^^^, 3i-
^TT, iTiTT. 2 fig. Vexatious
journeying from place to place.
3 Scattered state : dissipation of
mind.
fcr?fq or Mm f. Mild sun-
shine. V. ^, iirT^^. 2 Rays
shining in at a window.
fcfit^^lR (I. s Born of or as
an animal.
p^rq-faaiq- ^^ Ninety-three.
fcT'^i^ a. Eighty-three.
fcr^r?"Tr^ «. Seventy-three.
fcT-ClR^r /. Arbitration, a.
Relating to an umpire.
(cPcr^cT c. An umpire. 2 A
jury. 3 A third person, a
^stranger. [trality.
Icf'^ft^qtirr impartiality, neu-
R-5r
201
rTorq-
1^^ (s) Sesamum- plant. 2
A seed of it. o A mole ; a spot.
fcT^^ See r^HT^.
fcrr^f^^f m. f. A handful of
fw^ ill water poured out
diiily to the manes of a defunct
until the tenth day after his
decease, v. ■^. 2 tin;, llenouuc-
ing, washing the hands of.
V. ^.
\^^i f. A tripod.
In^ST f. A meeting" |)lace of
three roads.
fcTffr or Teller a. TImt bus
borne thrice — a female animal.
fcRfr/ The age of thirty.
ad. At or in the thirtieth
^fz^l of the day.
r^TS"^ V. i. To await.
fcT^'lTK^R A term in ridi-
cule of a pretender to valour
and ])uissauce.
r^'Frn a. (H) Third.
fcflW or Tcfln or-fr a.
Threefold — a rope, &c. 2 Treble
^— a quantity. (-^1^,.^^ ^^^^. ^^^^^
FcToT^r Interest at the rate of
fcf3-r%5?r /: Gh^^slnei^s.
nTaricrSTrrf^. (^lossy, shining.
rcT-^rJjqr n. Good imder-
standiug ; agreement, v. ij',
fcfS"??' n. c Oil of sesamum.
nf j)rnu. Slie. 2 [Tsed cmi-
lemptuously in debignatin": a
male ; as KiT fffrflT <^''A ^i^^.
^m See fPT^rr.
^rJ" /. m. A bend.
^r^ /. A crack, slit. 2
Warpeduess, curvature. '<i A
tangle. 4 fig. A (iilference. b
fi'X' A liitcli. V. Q, q^g-. G A
bliuider.
%^ See rffRT.
^r^frr See Xm^t
m^ a. Three.
^RcTrS" pi. The three grades
of the universe, viz. ^x^, ^"^s
26
^R^rr /-/. Di-persed in every
direction. frant
m^'aOT^r /. pi Bluster^
^R^rfr a. Quarterly.
^IT (p) An arrow. 2 A
crack (in the ground, &c.) 3 A
bar as fixed in a grate. 4 A
prop. 5 A lever, n. (s) Shore,
i^^"'^^- [arrow.
mT^H^r (h) a bow and
^r^ n. (s) A holy place,
es]). particular spots along the
course of sacred streams. 2 A
holy stream, or water brought
from one ; water in which a
Brahman, Sanyasi, &c. has dip-
ped his foot ; holy water. '6 Pil-
grimage to a holy place, v. '<^x,
g^. 4 A term for a sacred
preceptor or Guru. 5 A holy
region or spot.
mmm f. Pilgrimage-go-
ing. Used laxly.
cTr^T^T c. A respectful term
in notes and writings for
one's father or mother, or for
an elder brother, &c.
^r4(1i^ The ceremonies to
be observed at a place of pil-
grimage, viz. |l^, ^T"€, ^^-
^r4^^^q"c. A respectful term
affixed in writings to the name
of any elderly relation or vener-
able person. r ■^ ■
r^ ^^ ' [on pilgrunage.
0(15^12:^ n. s Continual going
^r^ a. (s) Hot, biting. 2
fig. Fierce, ardent — fire, dis-
position : sharp, keen — edge of
a weapon : cutting — speech.
^r^ a. Thirty.
^f^ See r%^-
W^ See m. 2 fig. Zeal-
ous, cntluisiastic.
^^:?iTr^I[r a. A drone.
^^^r (h) a bit. 2 (Esp.
with VTT^^ or TTS^ prefixed)
Bread gen. o fig. A mainte-
nance, bread.
5^'?r /. A small piece, 2
A detachment from a body; a
l)arty.
3^^ V. c. Poet. To wci-h.
2 fig. To estimate. 3 To ponder.
V. i. To nod (m assent). fm^ss
^J^r /. Ruddiness, fresh-
^^^r (p) A button-hole : au
eye-loop.
^^r^^ or f ^rf^^ r, c. To
nod (the head),
^^il^ f. A name of Devi,
^^for -^r (p) A blunt arrow.
2 fig. A covert reproof, v. S'l^,
^T^' ^^- [mean.
^•^3" a. (s) Light, low,
3^\ pro. Thine,
3'^^ a. Broken, lit, fig. 2
Broken off— an account, &c. 3
Weaned. 4 Broken up, ended —
love, friendship.
^2r^r «. Broken. 2Incomp.
as ^Tff ■g'o Having a cut
(severed) hand.
^"t V. i. To break. 2 To de-
crease : ?iT^V-cii -^"er g^^. 3
To break up. 4 (or g'S'.T '^^vi)
To break out uj3on witli abuse.
5 To be passed — ground. 6 To
become bankrupt. 7 To decliuK
in health; — used with s<5^^x:,
^'^m , 8 To be alienated ; —
used with ^■i^, ^svf, &c. 9 To
be concluded — a dispute, &c,
10 To be reduced — pay, &c.
11 To be weaned.
^^^°T ?', i. To crack, spit
— things under parching or
frying.
^-^^^r a. That snaps readily,
^JR?r,^7[^? /: Genei-al
parting and separating.
^JK a. Broken down,
wasted, spent.
^S'K a. That readily snaps
or parts — thread, cord, &c.
^^^[^S"^ f. A geneial and
coulused tram])ling upon. 2
fig. A vehement scuffle.
^^Ff'^ V. c. To tread upon,
to crush under foot, lit. lig.
M^?5I? "^^- I^'i-'Il, quite
full : ^"1 f^^^ g-o *^^#.
^mJ^^ f. The price of
darning.
>5'^^t r. c. To darn.
?FTrr
202
jrfhr
^Trji^ or -4 n. A masical^^^F/. Hemming.
iiustrunicnt of one string,
^oyjajj-f fj ^ player upon
tlu' ■g'org'w. 2 fig. .A pp. to a
witless fellow who takes up the
oi^inion of some other.
3'^f?^^r A player upon the
^^Rf f, A wind instrument.
^^f /. (a) The mulberry tree.
^^ a. Plump and sleek ; —
used of beasts. 2 Puffed up,
complacent. 3 Used adverhially
and enhancin<r!v with verbs of
fillinji; ; as -g"-^ "^K^ To fill
chvck-full.
^'FR n. (a) a storm. 2 By
meton. A tempestuous ocean ; a
violent horse : 3TT31 »r^1 TJo
3fT%. 3 The violent action of
a mettlesome liorse : bavoek. ^
A slander.
^'TJR^K c. A calumniator.
^?^r f. A cupping- instru-
ment. 2 The bowl of mendicants.
.3 .\ stringed musical instrument.
^^ff^l^rr A familiar term
for a itl^w"^.
^^■^T 7.1. i. To accumulate,
swell ; — as a stream dammed up,
marching troops impeded in the
van, business, &c.
^^r Tlie long white gourd.
^^"^ pron. Your.
^R /. (p) Very large or
loose trowsers.
^'^\ /iron. You, ye.
^^^ //. 8 Mingled, tumultu-
ous, and vehement combat.
,J5^ a. s Tumultuf>us and
furious — a battle.
^t^ (Port.) A jail.
^t^ s. A horse.
^^^ a. Astringent.
.^^Fk" /. Astringency.
^^^ f. Alum.
^g^ -^t tuL Imit. of the
sound of ambling or trotting ;
of running with short ami quick
steps.
^m^ i\ c. (h)To hem.
^^'^?7. 7. To ear — wheat, &c.
^rr (a) An ornament for the
turban (of flowers, pearls, &c.);
a plume. 2 The tufted head of
certain flowers and vegetables. 3
A kind of ^T^uft. r^f ^^_
^rrry. The stem or stalk
^r /. (s) A weaver's beam.
^Oq-f or ^frq"f^r4r /. s Tiie
fourth of the four states of hu-
man being, viz. that of simple
consciousness.
^t^T (Port.) A jail.
J^^^ ail. Imit. of the sound
of trotting; of running with
short and quick steps.
^^^ (p) A horse soldier, a
trooper. [ly. 2 Just now.
^^^ od. (n) Smai tly, quick-
^cf[cr§r.?frl"[cTcf ad. In a trice.
cTr^^r See ^^^r.
^o^'^Fjf. (s) A shrub venerat-
ed by the Hindus.
^^^Hlf^^r?: The mnrriage
hetween an image of Vishnu and
the pliuit g^^^, celel)rated
annually on the 12th of the
v>a\ing moon of Kiirtik.
f^mfcrf?=? „. The altar in
which the gvT'ft is planted.
^^'\ /. (s) A balance. 2
Lihra. 3 Weight, weighing. 4
Equality. .5 The rite of weigh-
ing against one's ]>erson gold,
jewels, sugar, &c. to be given
away to Bnihnians. v. ^-T, ■^.
^^ a. (s) Like : ^^^T-^cT-
^T (s) See^^.
JTR (s) Thin rain, drizzle:
spray. 2 Dew.
52" p. s Pleased. ^S"^ v. i.
To be pleased.
5?JSr a. (s Pleased and fed)
Gratified, satisfied.
3^^5T a. Crabbed, churlish.
?^'^/- Chatf remaining in
husked rice. a. Having chaff in it
-dcancd rice. ^^f balance.
^^t f. A beam. 2 A kind
^^^J f. Equality, a match,
2 Comparing.
J^*^ ?-'. c. To weigh or to
measure together, lit. fig. 2 To
compare, v. i. To vie with.
^^ -^ See^^^r.
^ prati. Thou.
^ w. Poet. Weighing. 2
I'oet. The 16th part of a f^R^
or 2.i ^itr. 3 Poet. Weight,
quantity (leterniined by weigh-
ing : fl^ll^ -^^ %\VT ■^5TT
'^ '^i<ff. ("The Lord ponder^
eth the hearts." See Prov. xxi.
2, & Ps. XI. 4.) 5 The fourth
])art of a stanza.
rR: f. Deficiency : ^^f^ ^f"
«r ^DT ^1° ^T^- 2 Intermis-
sion, break. 3 Separation. 4
Rupture.
c^JTslF f. An insiiilicient
capital. 2 a. Carried on with
such a capital — a business.
cfT V. Ghee.
^ f. A pulse. 2 A stalk of
it. 3 A double-jiointed nail, a
toggel. 4 A weaver's beam.
^^ (id. (h) Smartly, quickly.
cT^ n. m. The outer husk
(of rice, Sec.)
cTS" See ^^r.
^^ ??. (s) Grass.
^^^\i\ s Amber.
cTT^ a. Herbivorous or
graminivorous. [kingdom.
g'^iirfcT /. The vcgt-table
^(jjv:jpzj- f^ A iirain een.
growing like grass ; such as
^T'^in't, ^^T:^, <Jtc. 2 App. to
anv wild growing grain.
^"^^3 A term for an in-
expert barber.
^•JTf^f it^ A term for any
thing transient.
^^f^ a. (s) Third.
^^R^ The third eye,— the
eye of Shiva in the centre of the
forehead.
f%^^ A t/ilrd way; yet
different wav.
ffrr^r
203
?fTi-
fffr^r /. The third day of |^^r^/. Date
the luuar fortnight.
ff a. (s) Satisfied.
^IH" y. Siitisfiiction, content.
^^°t V. i. Poet. To thirst,
lit. fig.
5^r/ (s) Thirst, lit. fig.
m^ p. Thirsty, Ht. fig.
^ pron. Poet. She.
^ ;>»ron. It; that (person or
tliinj:^ expressed by a word of
the neuter gender).
fT^r n. (s) Light, lustre. 2
Heat, fierce heat (of the sun or
fire). 3 Majesty, dignity. 4
Virtue, efficacy (as of medicine).
5 Semen virile. 6 Sharpness (as
of tools, &c.) 7 Pungency :
^^^ a. s Luminous.
=^
^^^'^ f. 7i. A common term ^"^rcT /. (a) A military
for the items of a number set charge. 2 Stipend. 3 Custody,
down to be added together. 2 trust.
Tiie summing up and forming rR";Trc?]" ,, / \ Ci-- t o
of a i^rand total of the several "^5^' . «• (a) Stipenoiary. 2
acritude.
cTSf ^sf c. A terra for the sun ;
a learned or virtuous man.
cTSf^^T a. pop. cTSjq"^ Splen-
did, luminous. 2 fig. Majestic,
elorious, honorable.
"^
cfSrr^ a. Luminous.
cTSfF/. Briskness (of trade,
&c.) (p) An Arab horse.
^^\m Dishonoring-: dis-
grace resulting.
cTsTFTq ti. Consisting of, or
filled with, light ; refulgent.
^^r u. (h) Crooked.
^^r^ a. Thirly-three.
"'cTSiT^r, %2Tc^r, m\^ ad. Re-
latino; to that place. r i
" ♦s ' [place.
cTW^^, cT^^ ad. From that
%2Tq#cr,>f§TqRfiadSofar;
rmtil that time,
^^ (id. There.
V:r^t ad. Poet. Then.
^>3"r Commoii balsam.
fT^^f ad. On the third day
past or future (with respect to
the present day).
"^^^ See ^^K€\.
^^r a. Thirteen.
^^it 71. Ptites
for the dead on the
day after the decease.
amounts under one head. 3 v. A
string of distinct or classified
amounts to be added together :
the paper containing it;.
crfmfr /. (ii) Altercation ;
angry thee-iiuj and thoii-w(j. v.
^ with ^^ or ^, or v. ^^.
^^ n. Oil.
^^^ a. Oiled. 2 Oleagin-
ous, r .,, .,
•n V [with oil.
^^^Z^ V, i. To be smeared
\^^^f\ /; Oiledness.
^^^ An inhabitant of the
Carnatic; used esp. of
Brahmans.
%?^iTiTT A Brahman of the
^^JT country. A term for
an impudent intruder at enter-
tainments.
^^^ir a. _^ Relating to the
country ^^'Jiur.
cF?rq-fr y. Cotton steeped in
oil and folded (as applied to a
wound or sore).
'^^^^m An oil mi 11.
'^'^r An oilman.
cTc?!"^ /. A female vender of
oil ; the wife of a #^1.
cf^fcf^fc^r ;;/. A comprehen-
sive term for the people of low
classes.
^<^^r a. Glos.sy, shinino-. 2
or ^^tWt'C a colour of horses,
bay.
%?5Tr§iTrfer a. Chestnut:
atfrib. a chestnut colour.
%^ST a. So much. 2 So
many.
5^^ V. i. To be lit or alight.
^^l^ a. Twenty-three,
Wf ad. Then, ^^^f m^
Thence. r ,
^ ad. Poet. Then.
Placed at the command of or
made over to ; — as a body of
troo|)s by one chief to another :
assigned ; — a town, &c. to a
person for his maiutenance.
^^ n. s Oil.
•nf^^fr^ f, A spreading,
diffusive understanding : of a
ready understanding.
^^mq (s) Inunction.
^^ (a) a fit of passion,
^^r a. Passionate. ,■,,
j^ [thus.
^^r «. Poet. Such. 2 ad. So,
^r pron. He.
^*r ad. See cfq"-
^f^^r a. (h) Short, scant.
^R^ 71. A head of rice. 2
A pendant. 3 fig. An opulent
person.
^r?:^r See ^r^ir.
^rST (h) Loss. 2 Deficiency.
3 A cartridge. 4 A roll of paper
with powder.
^rS'r / (h) a spout.
cTrarrr Pull state of the ear
(esp. of rice), v. ^, or aTlcT
^^^ /. Compromise, adjust-
ment. V. xf]-^, ^T^wr
^. 2 An expedient, v.
m^. 3 An excelling in-
vention, doing : "^T '^JTr^T-
^T^? 4 The account of the
half share of the BTWI^oft
which is entered upon the books
of the ^TrT as due from the
^tf^. 5 A stone smoothed
or» one side. 6 Cut, cast :
7 A notch cut in a stick to
facilitate the breaking of it
asunder : c^JT vlt^^W 'Cjcivr^
^1-^ a. 8 A cut piece (of
timber, &c,)
^r^H. Mouth, 2 The face. 3
^Tfi-^r
204
?rr^
The front. 4 The head (of a
boil, &c.) 5 Aperture, mouth (as
of a bottle, kc.) ('> The sole
entrance or means of access, lit.
iijr. ; the key, — as a city is into a
country. 7 Quarter (as of the
\vin(l). 8 Boldness ;/«ep.
^i?^Tri3-?5r /. Knowledge (of
;i person by sight).
c][T3"^¥r f. Agreement of the
two sides of an account. v.T^-
^\m\ (n) Any wild, magi-
cal device for the removal of
d.;mouiac influence or disease :
an amulet, a charm, v. ^^,
^'fW. 2 Inoculation (for the
s'.n:dl pox). 3 The coming to
•.;;iss of a prediction, v. ^,
^?iK, ^^• Also verification of
.1 prediction.
^' sq-^rr ad. Used with ^^^,
^]^m, and ■^of, &c. To fall
\\]mn the face so as to scratch
■t : Wz. to be left in the lurch.
creditor), v. '^x:,-q'[^, vIT^. 5
Despatch, (i pi. Schemes.
cfr^^^Tr f. Hewing, cutting.
2 Dnnniiic;. r. ^T=T, ^'JT.
cTf^rjicTF 3T[¥r C!o?e corr^-.s-
pondeuce of the supply to the
deinaud. ^^ [abashment.
cTf^f^ ^[oiRsT f. Confusion,
cTi'^'^r V. c. To hrei.k, dis-ic|f^r^ ^k n. Dehate, al-
scver. 2 To wean ; as ^=? fl\- tercation. ad. Face to face.
;^^ : to withdraw the ^^[^,3^^: ad.
breast ; as ^T^ ht^^- 3 To
cut off (a quantity allowed). 4
To retrench, cut. 5 To dissolve ;
brenk up. (i To conclude (a dis-
]uite, &c.) 7 To bite fiercely.
8 Used hyperbolically of the
eager I/itinjr of butrs, &c. ; of the
worrviiit: of duns, beggars, &c.
^f^^r^^fn a. That stops
the mouth (with a bribe).
cfl^'cTIfirr or -^r a. Servilely
conformable with the expressed
judgment of another — a speech,
&c. : ?JT^ %.^^1 ilT? Speech
to please.
^f-jqilJ^^r / Officious and
pert dictation and direction. 2
Before tlie
face of. 2 At the tip of the
tongue: •?! ^iqi M\^\ ^T*
♦^»
c^[^r^ (I. Foul-mouthed,
abusive. 2 Talkative.
cffSTSrq- v, c. To babhie.
^rl'Rrfr /. See m'^-^i;?.
cfr^fc^r^"^r ;?. Any preparation
as sauce or seasoning. 2 tig. A
mere mouthful. 'A fig. Intro-
ductory observations to jilease.
^\^[^ p. Hewn, chopped.
^Rirr€r^?'5^/.A matchlock.
i\^^\ A fabrication. 2 A
counterfeit pretender (to the
throne) ; an iraposter gen.
cTtcITr o. That stammers.
Ironically. Volubility of tongue
cff^^ a. Opposite, contrary I ^ff;g-qf5^ ^ Known bv heart.
— wind, &c. 2 Whose excellence ^ ^. ^ .^. "' ^
consists not in action, but in cTf^T^Tr'^r or cTf^'FST^JT / ] •>
II 1 :^r-=r=T — Trara- Tii f u- 1 nidi (n) A parrot,
t:. Ik only ; as fff^^T <t(T^^^. Idle talk. K. .<;
;^ Conducted, delivered, &c. by ^[.^filsr^ifff r <;qii-.j-int'- ofi^^*^"^'^ ^^^^- Until that time,
oral comuiunication — business, ,•',* ' \ '' ,^ I :^rr- /• / x * xrrr
an account (ot debtor and ere- | qf^ / (jj) A cannon. ?'. *iK.
ditor). I ^
ar-p-m^ r -i-> 1 • a* ] crr'-h<5l [•?[ A park.
q|>^Hli> f. ijreaknig Oil and j ^ •
selling (as of gold and silver i cTF^^F A horse's rnouth-bag.
ornaments. &c. in times of exi- 2 A postman's bag. ,'3 tig. A
geiiey). 2 Couiproniisiug. ^ The crammed mouth with puffed out
settlement of the grain-rent of a \ cheeks. ["1,^^^^ ^^1^1,
field. 4 Broken trinkets, &c. o i ^r-rr * ^ • . i i \i i. '
gen. in /;/. The secret ways and! ^'^'J^ twisted cloti. to
mts(of iHoceeding in any work). ^ cTf^fcTf^r (a) Alas ! AlaS !
cff^^oS'^ j\ Knowledge (ofi would I had not done it !
cTI^ w. s Water.
^K^ n. (s) A lintel. 2
Leafy boughs, &c. hung from it
or about it on festive occasions.
3 A tree and its fruit. 4 That
member of a balance within
which the tongue moves.
&e. 4 ^i^^T ^3^H3 Foul-
mouthed.
crfT^f ^nr The spume npon
the lunnth of a new-born babe.
cfi^^lE^r a. That makes
answer in servile conformity with
the s])"ech of.
^{Z^a5\ Making faces :
spasmodic movements of the
mouth.
miT^^r^: or \ or ■^\ a.
Tliat chides observation.
^il^rlifl ad. Viva voce,
orally.
^l^sf^HF /. (p) <Jral de-
position or communication, ad.
Orally.
cff^irr^ An oral answer.
cTF^'^r^ /. Taking to pieces
and reccHistructing (a machine).
2 OjuiproHiising. r. 'qiT. li
Contriving, managing. 4 Des-
patching the demands (as of a
a i>erson) merely by sight
crr^f57*T^ (I. Of obscene
speech.
m^R"^ n. The delight of
unrestrained speech, ty. ^.
^r^r (ii) A pinse of money
(commoidy of 1,000 pieces). 2
^rn (n) Airs, affectations.
The match of a gun. 3 A piece t^r-^ -.tt . , • n wr • ^ t.
4 A ri,^^ofgold,&c. ^f^ Weiglnng. 2 Weight,
of rope
for the ankle or wrist.
cTf^r^f? or '^r f. General
hewing. 2 Wrenching (as of a of weight, fi
wife from her husband). | power.
quantity measured by the ba-
lance. :l n. A weight. 4 m. Incli-
nation, leaning, lit. fig. 5 Parity
fig. Intluence,
rff^rar
205
^f?
^l^'^ V. c. To Weio-h. 2 fig.
To haltince in the niiiid. .":! To
uphold. V. i. To incline, lean.
^Fo^SrrT a. Em p. la lively
dashing. 2 Weighty.
%^r'T ;;. Weighed, &c.
^i^^ ad. Until that time. 2
.^" '"".'?• [lights.
^1^^ a. s That pleases, de-
^FTT s Pleasini:-, o-ratifviiig.
^r^^ ?;. i. To be delighted.
^?r^R n. (p) A cartridge-
box.
^fC^^ /'. (a) a slander. 2 A
lo'^s (in trade) ; a heavy disiister.
^r^r A weiiibt of gold or
silver amounting to 210 grains.
tiq-^cT, Ifqr ad. Till then.
'^^"^ p. s Left.
^^■^^R a. s (Proper) to be
l^C^-.. [forsake.
cqTslcTf ^,_ (,_ Poet. To leave,
^^1^ (s) Leaving, quitting.
^^FT'^ ?;. c. To forsake, quit.
2 Poet. To drop (the contents of
the houels through fright).
^^rni-TrT (s) CommunicatinL:
and enjo3iiig.
WRfct s rhathas renounced
the world. 2 In conip. That has
^eft. [t(, that man.
"^^l^l vron. IJis: belou'iino-
rq-f^q- s See ^^^^r^.
^^"[^^r or '^m^\ ad. On
thnt ground.
^^r^ ci(/. On that account.
"^^ 71. s A triad. rrp, ■ ,
^ [llurteen.
^?TK^ (s) Thirteenth. 2
^^r^srr /. The thirteenth
(lav of the lunar fortnight.
^l^r Inflicting upon one's
own ])erson some injury in order
to bring evil upon another, v.
^["^ n. (s) Protection. 2
Salvation. 3 A vehement eiFort.
4 Remaining strength (iu a worn
garment or infirm person or
Kiiimal).
^Icrr a. (s) That protects.
^r^ (s) Vexation : disgust. I
^1^^ r/. That annoys,
^f^oj ,,^ f. 'j^Q annoy, vex,
'''^T''^'^- ["orry.
^[^1^^ r. c. To haiass,
^ll€^nC int. (s) Save!
^^'^^■•^ • [r^q^-#T^.
f^ a. (s) Three. In com p.
f"?^^ n. The three acts re-
tnaiiiiiig out of TEf3^s:r to the
^*>Jr^l^l?fTn. [culations.
f^^t^ a. Having three arti-
l^^r^ ])op. -^ The three
times — the past, the present,
tlie future : the three jieriods
of tiie day — morning, noon, and
evening, ad At the three parts
of the day : in the three times —
iu the past, the present, and the
^*'"*"'"^- ^ ^ [niscient.
I^^Fc^^^Tf, l^^^^T a. Om-
l^^[^5fR 71. Acquaintance
with the ])ast, present, and
future.
f^f^J" 7,. s A mountain with
three peaks. 2 A confederacy
of three ; a trio.
tel^T n. A triangle. 2 A
triangular thing gen. a. (s)
Triangular.
'("^m n. (s) The three
qualities incidental to created
beings, a. Three-fold.
f^^rcT s The cube.
r^~'^r/. s A radius.
r^^rq" (s) pi. The three hu-
mors of the body : ^^, fqrl,
^T<T. 2 ?n. or -f^^T^T Disorder
of the three humors.
I^^r s ad. In three ways. 2
See ^^T.
I^'HH a. (s) Trinoculous.
m^ a.Tripedal. 2 Of three
lines — a stanza. 3 Trinomial.
r^q^irpr /. (s) The land of
three steps (taken by Vishnu
in his -gxT^l^rTl^ to defraud
the virtuous king ^T^I'^f^),
viz. heaven, earth, and the re-
gion beneath the earth (x{j-
flT^).
f'^TZT f, s The aggregate of
agent, object, and action ; as
r^q[^ w. n. s Three hori-
zontal lines drawn on the fore-
head with ashes by the
m\r{ sect : three vertical lines
drawn by the "^w^ sect.
r^P^ Ji. (s) The three
worlds ^Ji, ^??7, tlTrrisr.
■J
M^^, V^m n. Poet. Corr.
from fjffjTX:.
r-. r*
'^^^^ (s) 'i'he united form
of M?TT, f^'CDT, and ^^ ; the
Hindu triad.
f^fJf (s) The three classes
or sects : three objects of human
desire, viz. money, women or
pleasure, and virtue : three condi-
tions of a king or state, viz.
prosperity, evenness, decay : the
three qualities of nature, viz.
purity, blindness, depravity. 2
Three persons or individuals :
3iT?f1 f^ >» We three.
r^fRr /: Poet. a promise
or matter thrice-uttered. Hence
a promise sure and certain, ad.
With all certainty or faithful-
ness.
r^^K ad. Thrice.
r^ffrj'J^ n. Merit trans-
ferred after solemnly saying
three times, "I give it."
rC^'^ a. (s) Of three kinds:
rCf'-:reT[q p/. The three
classes as to their origin, seat,
or nature of affection, viz.
ft^'^r^^ Psychical or corpc-
real (as sorrow, sickness, &c.),
physical (as earthquake, storm,
&c.), from the gods or devils or
fate (as injury from lightning,
pestilence, &c.)
^"^^^ "• ^' (^) A three-
ponited pike or spear; esp. the
trident of Shiva.
^^f. s A period of eighteen
fvr^^ or twinklings of the
eye.
|-xJT^
20G
n^
W^r^or^^raST^a. Forty-
.^'"■^■^*- ^ [second ase.
^cTF or ^^fj^ ?z. (» The
'^'^ fid. (s) In ihree ways.
/'. Oppresscil and bnnlened state
(as by multiplicity of engai^e
iiients); distinction: exhausted
^tiite (as from labour).
^7^ u. Fifty-thiee.
^^2" a. Sixty-three.
^?^^^ a. Seventy-three,
%rr[%^ 7/. (s) The rule of
tlirre.
%c^f^q- See r^5f=r.
t^R^rr'WcrRFr a jiarticulm
medicinal preparation. 1' A ca-
thoiicoii.
=^^m^ «. Ninety-three.
^^^[?# a. Eighty-three.
^^r^TTTr a. Seventy-three.
^mik^i (s) Fourth day fever.
^^^/; s The skin.
<^^Ri5r^//. The senscof touch.
^^^r/. (s) Skill, bark.
^^r^ ad. s Bfhjnging- to
three.
^^JT^^T g A metapliysical
term for the soul considered as
derived and distinct from the
Supreme Bein": : wtf^j^ ^i
2 Aflirniatioii or admission of
the personality (real individual
substance) of anotlier.
^^L/' (^^ Quickness ; expe-
dition. 2 Smartness.
'^^f^r\ ad. (Slickly.
%^ See %T.
^ The seventeentli con-
sonant.
^^ V. i. (ii) To tire ; to gel
fatigued. 2 To be knocked U|). '.<
To be at a loss. 4 To become
bankrupt. 5 To be sunk, as
money of bad debts.
^^(JT ITFT^ r. i. To tire and
knock u]).
'^^^ ^^ "• '^ bankrupt
f.unily or person. [Pi.z.ie.l.
2Tr^cT, srr^cf «. Amazed. 2
^2"m jf'.Throng,crowd.>'.^^.
2 Compact or close order, v.
'4F, ^\WT, 2Tf^R See^ST.
^^ /'. !5ank, margin. 2 fig.
End (of a work). 3 A valley.
^3- a. (n) Cold. 2 Cooling
— a medicine. 3 fig. Reserved,
mild : dull. 4 Quiet — a country,
&c. 5 Refreshened — eyes, mind,
&c. (J Remitted, slackened — a
fever, a work. / Free from distur-
bance— a house. fin"'.
^^^/. A knocking, tluunp-
^^^n"^ V. i. To run auainsf
and be arrested in ]>rogress. 2
To dash asjiiiiist — as water, &c.
3 To stop. 4 To arrive.
'45- -^ -^r -f^% -R-^r ad.
Imit. of the sound of a thump.
2 With a shake, quake.
^3-^r A biou'.
'4?rfrr a_ Sharply cold—
wnfcr, &c. : cool, serene.
^"^^T 71. A tomb.
'^1'^^ or -^f ad. Imit. of
the sound of rapidly consecutive
blows or kicks. 2 Tremblinjily.
^ ^' [boded rice.
2T^^?r^ ,/. Ilurdunddry—
^■^rt /. Coldness, lit. fig. 2
Cooling quality.
M"^r?0t ,;. i To cool, lit. fig.
^^rfr (11) Coolness of
weather (after heat).
^^r / (II) Cold (weather,
&c.) 2 Sensation of cold. .'3
Cooling quality. 4 Abatement
or remission (of a disorder):
ease and calmness in conse-
quence.
'4frfr'q"r^ ad. Durln^^ the
prevalence of cold and windy
weather.
'45 V. See ^^'4
4^4^ nd. Slowly — moving.
2 lu the cool (of the night, &c.)
^rirHcR" n. Hocus-pocus. 2
Rppairiug, ])atching.
2T=^ int. Pooh ! Pshaw !
5^7^ 4^?/. A slap.
'^^^^ V. i. To stop short ;
to come suddenly to a stand — a
person or an animal.
m^l-Ti ,„• ST^rr^/. A slap.
§T^3T^q^ ,,. ,-. To drip; ta
leak drop I drop !
5q-^5q-ff^ «. Dripping wet.
4^ (11) A hiyer, stratum : a
coating. 2 A heap (as of fruits,
leaves, &c.).'J .Assortment, class:
^in''8?^— f5j^^ Of the Poona
inassj^T^UT^^Oithe Br/'hrnan
class ; ^3Tl"iT ^K Of the iiead
of marriage ; ^r^«I^, ^^•^T,
Of the black, rose-coloured, &e.
stratum; — used of kinds of
rock.
5R -^^ 'W,i: -K% -f^TijY ad.
Tremblingly, v. BRJT:f, f*f,
^Ui^ V. i. To tremble.
'^T^\Z\ Hair standing on
cud, horripilation, v. ^, <3V?I-
^^f7 Great tremlding. ad.
In a shiver ; alt of a tremor :
mnT -T\ ad. Tvemh]\ng]y.v.
srr^qrot V. i. To tremble.
^^^^3" E.vceeding trem-
bling and quaking.
'^XK^\ V. i. To tremble ex-
ceedingly.
^rnr or" -n nd. With ex-
ceeding treinbliiig. v. «Rtcr, f*T.
4^ /. A share (of the lesser)
in the produce of a field.
2fc7^<T A landed proprietor.
-A^^\'S\ A roll of the field
belonging to a village.
4^r A multitude (of men^
cattle, &c.) ; a group.
4^ V. A plantation (as of
sugarcane, betel, &c. or gen.) 2c
A haunt of evil spirits. 'A A place
or spot. 4 The portion of the
jiroducc due from the ^T"^^
to tlic #T?T, or from an under-
^qr^irr
207
^?^r
tenant to the landlord. 5 The
farm of the grounds collectively
of one tenant or proprietor, (i A
stock or breed.
^^■^\^\ m. ^^^\< ^^^ n.
A roll of the '?J^or grounds
of the contracting farmers or
tenants (of a village, &c.)
^!To5"iT"rfcT 71, Purchasino- and
lading of goods at a place. 2
Duties upon goods at the place
of purchase; duties upon ex-
ports. 3 Used of the place of
purchase, and of the gooils.
^^m]^ J\ Stoppin^i and sell-
ing of goods at a place. 2 Duties
upon imports.
^l^ f. Poet. Perplexed,
nonplussed state. 2 A pause
in music, v. "^"S.
^m V. i. Poet. To be tired,
spent. [The bottom.
^i^ The exact spot. 2 fig.
^12" (h) Fompoas array (of
armies, tents, &c.) ; pomps gen. 2
Body, band, troop, p a. Ol close
and firm texture — cloth, rope,
&c. 2 fig. Tight, well set — man
or animal. 3 Plain, blunt, out-
right.
^^r^"^ V. c. To dispose, array.
^IZmZ Laying out the ap-
])ar,itus. 2 Arrangement (as of
furniture, v. ^T, ^^, '^^■
3 Dressing and decorating (as
for an occasion).
sTfS" -^^ -^r -i^H^r T^ir ad.
Imit. of the sound made by one
body coming violently into con-
tact with another ; whack ! bang!
also of slapping, smacking,
cracking a whip, &e.
^]Z ^i^ ad. Imit. of the
.sound of vehem.ent slaijping,
caning, knocking, &c.
^Tf'T //. (n)A web or piece (of
cloth). 2 A piece, i.e. a unit:
^T'^TT'^ -HcfBcSl^ ^To. 3 A.
place. 4 A woman's breast : a
teat (of a beast).
^TR^^fJT /. A wet nurse.
^R^r, m^^^ a. Weaned :
put away (from its parent) to
a wet nurse.
^^A\^ f. Weaning.
^17/. A tap, pat. r. ^. 2
The dash of a wave. r. '^T^,
■^rf,'^^^, 3 A breakwater. 4 Be-
guiling. V. ^, *ttt:. 5 An
impression (a sense impressed)
of the superiority of. 6 A stroke
in swimming. 7 Tapping of the
hand (in unison with music). ^
Style, fashion. 9 The kneaded
and prepared mass of pot-clay.
'^m f. A slap.
^Tiq^T^T V. c. To tap. 2 fig.
To coax in order to persuade. 3
To harness and get ready (a
horse, &c.)
2T1TS^ 71. A potter's patter.
^lT£i f. A ship. 2 Cowdung
patted into a cake (for fuel). 3
The ferula of schoolmasters. 4
The wooden patter of masons
for i)atting ]daster.
^m V. c. To pat. 2 To
dab (a lump of mortar, &c.
against a wall). 3 To pat and
coax. 4 To establish,
^f^r A wooden implement
to break clods. 2 Cowdung and
straw made into a cake (for fuel).
3 Level ground on the summit
or side of a hill.
m\ f. A kind of trowel. 2
A mason's patter.
^r^'T V. i. To stop : to wait.
2 To be suspended.
^Tf^r^^T V. c. To stop a
while ; to detain.
'AK A restinij place, lit. fig.
2 Consistency (of conduct)
■^T^- 3 Ground, bottom :
^rn Place of staying.
2TR1^K/: Settling, fixing.
mT\\H^ V. c. To settle, fix;
to nndvc to stand or stay still.
^K\(£ n. Tlie cistern of a
draw-well. 2 fig. A pool (of
water, &c.) 3 A hole dug in the
ground to hold fuel and fire.
'^W'\ f. A cooking pot.
^r^ST A metal vessel.
STfSrfcTisqT Names of two
commonly used metal vessels,
the amount generally of the
wealtli of a "^in"^.
\^'m V. i. To congeal. 2 To
settle — eyes in death. 3 fig. To
be absorbed in attention.
RlCfot „. r. To freeze.
m^TUr RT^rffr/. A spark.
nrnVi V. i. To stop; to
rest (at, in, on).
V^Tl^^^ V. c. To stay, steady,
settle ; to make still, quiet, per-
manent.
PTe^J a. Slow, dilatory. 2
Of loose texture — cloth. 3 Light,
low.
V^^^ ??.(,s) A pond. 2 fig. A
shallow understanding.
^^cl^/. Drizzling (of rain).
«rf.Spittinglv. ^^^t 2 To spit.
m^ or '^m V. c. To spit
^r^or ^i^r Spittle.
^^m-^\ a. That assents
servilely and flatteringly to the
words of, a catch-spittle.
'^^m^ ^r^IS" n. A term for
any thing unsubstantial and
worthless.
¥f /• Floutincr with fie !
hoot ! V. ^r, sTJ^g".
J^/. n. Spittle.
^3r a. (h) Genuine, pure.
nd. Exactly. 2 Directly,
^^, ^ST^^f .Zl A drop.
^^■^r a. Haggard, worn out.
^^K Tumultuous mirth;
dancing, singing.
"^■t,^tq"r ad. Noisily, merri-
ly. V. mx, -ffT^.
^^r (H) A sack. 2 A case
to be stuffed (as of a pillow).
^^r/ A bag.
^rr n. A stump (of a tree,
arm, &c.) 2 A stalk (as of
corn) deprived of its head.
^ra: or '4k a. Kascally and
rude.
sfrHTF or '4\Z\ a. Deprived of
arms or legs, fingers or toes :
deprived of its crop or boughs—
a tree, corn-stalk, &c.
^RTlt, 5f[2:r^/. Baseness.
^r^'^r a. Little, few; not
much.
^frr^
208
5Tsr
5!Tr3-?raf cT See STF^r^^^.
STf^^icT ad. In a little; ii)
!i short time or s|);u'e Tscanty.
^fTF a. (h) Little, few,
afr^RH^^ a. Hather little.
sfrS'f^fcT a. A litlle, some-
what.
sfrcTFS" H. A feigned story ; a
shimk'r ; an invention to deceive
or injure, v. X^, '*Tt^«
8T[^f55TcT V. A heresy, v.
iTT«l^, ^^3^. ^1^^> ^T^> ^^'
STfclil'f, ^l^i^S^TT a. False, ly-
ing; dealing in fabrication.
sffT/. State of being stop-
])ed and brought up (as of a
boat): the dashing against (of
water) : anv erection to receive
and break' this dash, a break-
water. 2 Stopping, a rest; a
jilace to rest : ^T iilf^t??
cri?j. 3 A dam across a
stream, or a rock, &c. within it.
4 fig. .A terminus, v. ^T^, ■^-
Standing fast; hohling on;
maintaining one's gronnd. V.
K\^, H^, "^J^. ^"^153, g. of 0. ;
also "^^^ or ^^ in the sense
of Ruining or of being ruined .
^^To3T : keeping one's ])lace
or preserving one's credit: ^^-
^T?;^ V. c. To tap or ])at
liglitly. 2 To coax, to stroke down.
JiTf'l'^ t'. c. To stop : to pup-
])ort or stay. 2 To help. 3 To
set down (a ])alunquin). 4 To
iiat lightly.
^f^ri" 71. A side of the face,
ii cheek; use! always witii impli-
cation of reproach for bugeuess,
filthincss, &c.
'4r^ri^ V. c. To slap the
face. 2 fig. To foil.
sfn: a. Great, large. 2 fig.
A'cncrablc. fid. ^Inch : highly,
greatly : ^| ^1^«?:^1 ^T^ II
Elder, senior. ^^ ^^-^^^ ^hop.
STR:^?: 7). Applied to a jail,
'^rrtr, srifr /. Greatness. 2
Respectability from age. 3 Glo-
riousuess.
%T^ a. Great, large. 2 , ^^^^r^r,^r^r%. Roguery ;
dishonest doings.
^nT(p)Deceit,fraud. 2 Ground
for apprehension. 3 A pp. to
^j^,fg^, -^3, &c. 4 Suspicion
of deceit : "gr'H'^T T^ta
^o ir^T.
^^r (ii) Tumult and confu-
sion (as of a mutiny or an in-
surrection). 2 The ravages (of
an epidemic) ; the bellowing (of
a child): outrageous auger.
^m^rqr Uproar, tumult.
^^r^°T V. i. To be entrapped
and be destroyed. 2 To be des-
troyed, damaged through some
accident.
^ The eighteenth consonant
^^'^ i\ i. (h) To run.
^^^f. A run. V. ^TR.
^STcT f. (a) An inkstand.
^^^ a. (a) Arrived. 2 En-
tered (into an account, &c.) 3
Familiar to — a matter.
?"^^rW /, Acquaintance.
2 Looking after, v. Xl'^, H^.
3 Reporting, v. ^K, ^.
t^ a. (u) Surprised, aston-
ished. 2 Satisfied (with impli-
cation of reproach). 3 Engros-
sedly.
cT^^r^c. A knave ; dishonest.
^fj^R- See ^JJc^^r^.
^^^ p. s. Burned. 2 fig.
Blasted.
^^^'■-Ic^T a. Unfortunate or
luckless — a person.
^"^f.^ V. i. To start or be
startled. 2 To be taken aback.
^'^r A sudden shock. i\ ^^.
[stone, i^pifcffr y, ^m<JJ f lutimi-
^n^ A stone. 2 /. A large | ^^^-^^^ ^^
^iT^f^r a. Epithet of aij^.r^^ .p ^ .
, , ^ '<i\n^\ V. c. lo menace; to
rude workman. I •• , .
mtniiidiite.
^f r, ^qr A cork. 2 fig. A
scolding. V. ■^.
^^ (s) A stick, a staff. 2
Beating, fining. ])nnishment. 3
Money raised by a fine. -1 The
arm from the slionlder to tlie
elljovv. 5 A ridge in fields mark-
ing the divisions. 6 A long
measure — a pole of four cid)its.
7 A certain exercise of Atldetic.
r. ^51^, ^^^. H Standing
upright. 9 Subduing. 10 Fine or
amercement, a. Headstrong,
violent.
^■^"^ f. 71. A hiding place ;
cover or shelter.
^^^ V. i. To lie hid, to
lurk : to hide one's self.
?:^^ r. c. To punish. 2 To
fine. 3 To mortify (appetites).
^Z^'S or -^\ ad. Imit. of the
])atttring of feet in running or
(puck walking, v. ^^]^, "m^.
^IT^q^r^" a. Difficult or
arduous. 2 Strenuous. 3 Violent, j
hard. 4 Peltmg— rain or had./. 1
Hard work.
?IT¥[^1 Eir^r/. A term for a
daring person. 2 Intrepidity :
fortitude, i;. ^K- [stones.
STI^fST a. Abounding in
^^tr a. Of the nature of
stone. 2 Stony./. A stone-trough
or other vessel.
^^irr a. Heavy, doltish.
^n^H f. Bother, fuss. v.^\^.
2 Anxiety or concern for or
about. r^f
?"1Tn^ r. i. To be wearied
^^^^\ (I') Awfulness.
S-n^ f. (A) Trick, fraud.
?:JIc^qT^^ /. Deceit and
knavery.
?iT^^r^, ^iTf^r^ (p) Kna-
I vish; treacherous.
TSt
209
TIT
^ST^T^^ V. i. To run, trot, or
walk with a pattering noise.
^•^'l n. s Punishing, &c.
2r5'"^(cry. 8 Moral philoso-
phy ; ethics.
t^\^ a. Punishable. 2
Amerceable, 3 Proper to be
mortified.
^^^ n. A weight placed to
press down. 2 fig. Curb, check.
3 fis;. A load upon the mind.
c["3"qiTf y_ p 'Pq press down,
to compress. 2 To keep under ;
to bring into subjection. 3 fig.
To sinotlier(an atFair,failings,&c.)
^^^ n. A prostration of
the body (in worship or in salu-
t^*^J^> ^ [hide.
^S'n'^ y. c. To conceal or
^^ A stoppage, lit. fig. (of
the nose,ear,&c.in cold ; over the
mouth of a spring under ground,
&c). 2 Confidence, conviction. 3
Lying in ambush, v. M'\'^ : also
a troop or band in ambushment.
^^r /. Lurking, lying in
concealment, v. fi^K, %.
?^r All order of the Sanyasi
carrying a staff.
t??r, ^rir^r a stout stick,
a cudgel ; a short piece of wood.
^^"^ or "^r a. Rude, vio-
lent.
^3^ y. Violent, overbearing-
demeanour (esp. of one re-
sisting a demand of payment).
^^ a. s Punishable. 2
Finable.
'^T'^^r A blow, esp. a sound-
ing one. 2 A busy, lively, noisy
scene. 3 Public rumor.
^oT^rff^ y. c. To beat
(soundingly) : to celebrate with
^ tumultuous festivities (a marri-
age, &c.) : to scold.
^q^of ,y_ c. To emit the
sound ^v\ ^TTT : to roar in
loud peals — a cannon.
t^ VI. « (s) A tooth, 2 An
elephant's tusk. 3 A peak of a
mountfun.
^^^r f. A popular story ;
au iuiiuthentie tradition.
27
TcT'^f^^ n. Cleaning the
teeth.
^cTqfrF /. A row of teeth.
^^ p. {j>) Given, presented.
2 (Given to be) received in adop-
tion—a son. 3 n. Fortune, fate.
^"^^ A boy (given to be)
received in adoption, v. ■^, W .
STffi^q" The son of the ^fq"
3Tf% ; he comprises in him-
self the triad l{^\, f^^, and
^^ a. (s) Dental.
?2rrcT, ST'^cT, ?^fr/. Great
straitness of circumstances ; in-
digence. V. ^'S, ^TH^T, ^T,
iriJI. 2 Painful efforts.
?"n-T n. (s) Curds.
?"^^2" (Common ^mZ) a.
Coarse. 2 fig. Sturdy.
^ -?i=f -^ -\^\ -r^# ad.
Iinit. of the sound of the fall of
heavy and soft bodies, v.
T^^, ^^x, •^T«r.
^Z\T\t\ / (P) A violent or
greedy snatching and seizing.
^^"T" V. c. To cram. 2 fig.
To despatch (a man, horse, &c.)
3 To scold. 4 To seize violently
and appropriate (another's pro-
perty, &c.) ; to ravish (a woman).
^TTT^rgT -^r Vehement
rating; setting doion. v. '^. 2
Press (as of business), v. ^^^,
^T^, ^T^ ; any violent driving,
pressing: gr^T^T ^o ^T^^T.
^^Z^\ a. That stuffs, gorges.
2 That snatches up and makes
off with.
?7tTr m. n. (s) pop. ^^T^ n. A
married pair.
^'+'(;i< (p) An officer of ca-
valry in a Native army. 2 A
superior officer in the peon de-
])artment.
^"^^ n. (a) a record, re-
gister; a bundle of records. 2
A sciiool boy's bundle of books,
&c. 3 A record-office.
^^cir^R (p) An ancient
]nd)lic officer; now he is the
head Native revenue officer of ."
coUectorate, &c.
^^crr^'ffr /. The business of
1 v>
^^^'T V. i. To yield or give
way. 2 To lie in wait : to lie close
to the ground. [qH^ ^c.)
^^^r A leathern vessel (for
^^^ V. i. (H) To yield. 2
To succumb. 3 To crouch. 4
To lurk.
^^^^ (a) Fear, awe, re-
verence. V. '^^^, ^'W, vjT^, •^.
2 Dignity, imperativeness.
?^^frcT a. Soft, mashy. 2
ad. Used of the belly when fill-
ed with such food. v. ^^. 3
Used of the ground when wetted
suital)ly for sowing.
^f^*^ V. c. To force down.
2 fig. To repress,
^^r A crouching or lying
close in readiness to spring :
lying hid. v, 5TTT:, '61^.
^^li^'^r V. c. To menace.
?^ (s) Hypocrisy; fraudu-
lent assumption and display.
^^rrW or ■'Frr a camel-drlver.
^^r «. Hypocritical.
^ (p) Breath, and fig. life.
2 Increased respiration ; panting ;
gasping. 3 fig. High opinion of
self; haughty notions, conceit :
ambition. 4 A moment. 6 Ener-
gy, vigour, mettle. 6 Strength,
spirit (as of drugs). 7 Power of
suspending respiration. 8 Fixed
humidity (of a soil). 9 The wind
(confined air) of a musical in-
strument. 10 Streaming (a pot
of victuals over a slow fire). 11
(prop. -q-iT) The bass end of
the xi^u^iai, &c. 12 Allied
senses, or applications of the
general sense vitality or
VIGOR are numerous and com-
mon, VIZ. Patience : inciting,
inspiring influence (of riches,
office) : hicrativeness (in atrade) :
possessing of funds (in a trader) :
su]ierior succulency (of certain
kinds of grain) ; quality of en-
during long without being fully
digested and disposed of (par-
ticidar articles of food, &c.) ; re-
maining substance and strength
(in worn things) : capacity of
holding out under ignition (of
ceriaui ihi;>\orks), or of bearing
^^
210
ilischarges without heatiiitj (of
certain fire-arms, &c.) 13 A
draw or pull (of a ir^ir^). v.
?^ (s) Self-restraint.
?^TT, cTR^ a. Damp, moist.
2 Green — a stiek.
^"?r /. A piece of money ;
the fourth part of apysa.
?JTot r. i. To tire. 2 To be-
come tamed.
^^^^[Z A loud beating of
drums. 2 A combination of
strong and sweet odors.
^iT^hT^ a. Strong and dif-
fusive— an odor. 2 Satisfying;
substantial — an article of food.
^fl^R: «. Moist— a soil. 2
Green — wood. 3 Energetic, re-
solute. 4 Patient. 5 Having
stock — a banker. 6 Having yet
substance, goodness, soundness,
strength — clothes or things.
^^ n. (s) Subduing. 2 An
agent or a power that subdues.
2"q"^nT r/. (Suitable, possible,
^;c.) to be tamed or subdued.
^^f^ V. c. To subdue. 2 To
weary out.
^^^T a. Damp. [,iawn.
?5T^ flf/. At the peep of
^r^(p) Asthma, r.^r^, ^2:,
*l^, ^T^- 2 Hurried respi-
ration I from running, &c.)
^^^l\ A man afflicted with
asthma. [mercy.
^^r f. (s) Tenderness, pity,
^r'-^ff A term for the
moral and religious duties of
man. ?). ^X, ?T. [sion.
^<TnT^ a. Full of cnmpas-
?^[^R n. -pop. -^^ -^r^ -^
(element, compassionate, [ance.
^ Rate, price. 2 An allow-
2rr (p) A particle expressive
of scveralness, per, by ; as
ble ap]>lication (in law matter) ;
a motion.
^m\ (p) A Muhammadan
place of worship.
^^ /. A bank, whether a
steep acclivity or a high piece
of ground.
^^ f. m. (p) Ailment, dis-
ease. 2 fig. Care, regard (for,
about, in). 3 fig. The point,
bi^auty (of a speech, &c.)
^5T^ V. i. To froth up; to
swell and i)uff — curdled milk in
churning it. Hour on sprinkling it,
&c. ; to sweat profusely — the
body : to effloresce or break out,
&c.
?T?^r Awe; impression pro-
duced by authoritativeness :
danger. ^f^^_
?T?:t?r a. (p) Careful ; heed-
^^f^ A term for tlie price
and all the particulars concern-
ing a thing to be bought.
?r<rr a. Caring about.
^^rC m. n. (p) A royal
court ; a hall of amlience. 2 fig.
The people assembled. 3 Holding
a levee, v. t^X-
^^RF a. I V elating to royal
courts. 2 fig. Hollow, insincere.
^TH^\ or -^r?r (p) Monthly
])av. ad. ^lontidy.
^r^3T See ^r^rr.
^^Rf (p) A gate or door.
to prevent the removal of the
produce from the fields previ-
ously to the ])ayment of the
laiul' assessment. [robbers.
cT^^r^^r A man of a band of
^n^r An attack of a band ot
robbers, v. *ITC, m^. 2 A
b^ind of robbers. [exception.
^R^cT a. (p) All without
^^r (a) a rank, order; a
dignity or a post in a govern-
ment.
?^r (p) A tailor.
^tf (s) Pride. 2 Boldness. 3
71. A strong and full odor. 4
Awe.
^^ n. (s) A mirror.
^H" (s) A grass used in sa-
crifices. 2 fig. A burnt cro]).
?:^^f The officiating Brah-
man at funeral rites. 2 fig.
A luckless person.
^f^R (p) A go-between, a
security, ad. (Doing any thing)
of one's self, without consulting
him of whom the consent is
necessary.
?5fr m.f. (p) The sea.
??T'rcr^^?^?r a term for a
little thing swallowed up and
lost in some great thing.
?:5Tte, ?Jt1^%/. (p) Inves-
titjation.
2 A gate-way. 3 fig. A ^^^^^.^^ .
I. 4 A vc"nt of ^^^^^^ '^ seaman.
means of ingress
the body : an orifice gen.
^T^R(p) A doorkeeper.
5:f^^r (p) A class of strol-
ling mendicants among Muliam-
madans.
^T^r m. f. (s) Any gorge,
recess among hills : a deep
ravine. 2 fig. 'I'he belly.
^m See ^^l^-
<<KI A vehement scolding.
2 /\we : awlulness. v. '^T'a^,
■^''^> "^^^ [s Poverty. 2 Want.
Srr^ (A) A common term for ^J'^^ "• (^) '''^'^••' "^^^^^y- ^-
the hiirber hereditary imblif Tfrjf fj^ Poor, needy. 2
[or tilings, j Mean. 3 Scanty, meagre.
offices.
^^ s The day of new moon.
?^'^ a. (s) That exhibits. 2
In algebra. Index. 3 One con-
versant with any science. 4
Tliat sees.
^■^f^r ». (s) Sisiht: looking. 2
A dream or vision. 3 A common
term for six philoso])liical sys-
tems. 4 Visiting any idol.
^^JTJ?, ^?r%H^r^ a. Sa-
tisfied siinply with the sight of.
?^% a. Relating to seeing,
2 Sightly, ])retty. 3 Showy :
^o g'^1 Tlie u{)per fold : ^o
2r^n:/. (P) Need of person I ^ffjlf ^^^ -^^^^ headman of i^Si^r^^l/. A bill payable
^■rJirRcT or -^ f. (P) A hum- I an oinec. 2 An ofliccr empUiyed ' at sight.
^Rr
211
^rta^
^^TRt^ V. c. To show. With
implication always of faintness
or imperfectness, 2 To hint ; to
sitrnify faintly.
?"r?T^ p. Seen.
^€\ a. That sees ; as t\^ ^^.
?"^ w. (s) A leaf. 2 A petal
of a flower. 3 A half. 4 An
army.
^r^^'TS'a. Powerful, strono- —
man or animal ; tirm — a building.
?rc^c55" or-^/. (h) a boo-.
2 Marshiness. 3 Shaking tremu-
^o"^ly-^ ^ [lously.
^c^^c^^T y. i. To shake trerau-
?"<^ C cTFcT a. Boogy — ground.
2 fig. Flabby — flesh.
^c^y^TR The whole army;
the host. 2 Infantry.
^c^R^ (a) a broker.
?"?rfc^r y. The business of a
broker. 2 Brokerage. 3 Duty paid
for having goods measured or
weighed.
^^ n. Dew. 2 Exudation
from damp ground.
^^^ See f'r^.
2r^i'ot(H) V. I To run. v. c. To
urge violently : to despatch
quickly. 2 To let go ; to squan-
der. 3 fig. To destroy (a good
name, &c.): to put to flight — as
medicine does a disease.
^^^•f^f :§• -f r /. General des-
patching or starting ofi'.
^t^f y. (h) The drum beaten
by the public crier; a proclama-
tion, celebrity.
^mmX /. The great tendon
above the heel, teudo Achillis.
^^'^r Southernwood,
^^r/. (Aj Medicine.
^^T'ET'T n. The fore-ropes of
a horse.
^5T (s) Stinging. 2 A bite.
3 fig. The point (of a speech, &c.)
4 fig. Spite. 5 A gadfly. 6 fig. A
perplexing passage (in a book).
?"5r a. (s) Ten, as ^^fcT^r.
?5T^ (s) An aggregate often.
^T^^^ pi (s) The ten books
of the ^^^. ■^¥TTf^'^ a. That
has read the ■2"9T?f^.
^^f^5Tf ad. In the ten di-
rections ; towards every quarter
of the heavens — people fleeing.
V. •qsj, ■qif^. -^nv^Tij f. pi.
The ten regions, i. e. the whole
region in every direction.
^W /. (s) The tenth lunar
day. 2 A sort of cake. 3 The
tenth or last stage of human
life.
^m^^ a. Often kinds.
^2jr /. (s) Condition. 2 A
period of life, as youth, manhood,
&c. 3 A plight. 4 The aspect of
the planets considered as in-
fluencing the fortunes of man. 5
(The plural of '^sft) The
unwoven ends of a cloth, the
thrum.
^STf^TcTKr (s) A performer
of the ten incarnations of Vishnu.
2 A sort of playing cards.
^^r^^^r% a. Capable of
attending to many matters at
"°'^^- .^ [fraction.
^^[51 ^m\^ A decimal
^?Tr f. An end or unwoven
thread of a cloth.
^5Tr^^ n. The ten organs
of sense and action.
^^ a. (h) Ten. [signature.
^^^^ /. Handwriting. 2
^^f\ f. See cTiJf.
^^^r The tenth of Ashwin
Shudha ; the day on which Ram
marched against Rawan.
^"^^ m. n. (p) A tax. 2 fig.
Authority. 3 A hand at cards. 4
^ \^'"^- [a bond.
^^crcrfir(p) a note of hand ;
T^^^ n. (p) A pass.
^^r (p) A quire of paper.
2 The stock of a musket. 3 A
divison of an army. 4 A pestle. 5
A hand at cards.
?"^J^r/'.(H) A perquisite,a fee.
^^^5 (^) Custom, fashion.
2 A tax. 3 A law, rule. 4 n.
Handwriting. 5 The signature
oftlie amanuensis. 6 A form (as
of an official paper).
^?*T n. s Burning,
^^rq" «. Combustible.
^K\ (p) ind. The place of
tens in numeration.
?"?"^cf /. (p) Fear, dread.
^Cr a. Ten.
^r Burning.
^T^m n. Dew.
v^Cr 77. Curds.
?Cr^r?5T A mixture of curds
and a preparation of ^l^oSI,
suspended in particular festivals
in an earthen vessel, and thence,
on the breaking of the vessel,
scattered over the multitude
assembled.
^T^//. An army. 2 Substances,
pulp, kernel, lit. fig. 3 The soft
substance lining the rind of
certain fruits. [3 r Intercourse.
?o5"CT fi. Grinding. 2 Grist.
cT^oT^S'aT;?. Intercourse with.
^^"^T V. c. To grind.
^^"^K a. Thick, solid-
paper, &c. : full, pulpy.
^^ a. (s) Clever, capable :
expert.
^m a. (s) Right, not left.
2 Southern. 3 fig. Clever. /.
The south wind.
^T^'^rK n. The southern
gate. 2 The southern mansion of
Yama.
^Y^^l f. (s) Money given
to Brahmans upon occasions.
2 The south.
^T^^rq"^ 71. The southing or
southerly declination of the sun,
^r^^r a. Southerly, south-
^^"•^ [and south.
^r^'TlTTr a. Lying north
^r, ?r ind. A particle signi-
fying time or times, as ^^^T.
r
cTFC /. (h or p) A wetnurse.
2 A midwife.
^%^ c. One entitled to
share in a heritage : a kinsman.
2 fig. An ill-wisher.
?f^^ a. (a) Arrived at. 2
Entered (as upon an account).
3 Known — an aff'air. 4 As ; as
good as : f T ^T¥l ^^T^i^ ^'^T
Tnarar
212
^m^ An illustration. 2
tlxperience : :5'T^T 51"^^ Tf-
gfr^l^^T^STT^T. 3 (i rounds
for a reasonii'^; : 'UT '^'[^^
^ ^TT3rri«T. 4 A token, proof;
a certificate. 5 Ritrht or title.
?(<^^f5^r^c^r Evidence ; an
:ittcstation.
^T^^r Affording a glimpse
of one's self or itself, v. ^T^W.
^"P.^h'^i-. c. To show, lit. fig.
^f"^ ti. Thick — a liquid sub-
stance. 2 Not tliin — a paper. 3
( If close texture — cloth. 1 Tiglit —
as a garment. 5 Close, crowded
towt'thcr — trees, men. &c. () fij^.
Close — IVieudsliip. 7 fig. Public-
ly rumored — an affair.
2"R^ f. Crowdiness. 2
Thickness.
5"r?-'^[ /. See ^27'^. 2 Strap
or hiucHugcordof a hale, bundle,
2"f2"'T' V. i. To thicken —
liquid substances. 2 To crowd.
3 To ))inch or be tight — a gar-
ment. 4 fig. To be oppressed ;
to choke ; — used of Jiaai or
'^^^^. 5 To be filled with :
^\Z^^ ad. Determinedly,
forcingly.
^r^r A plug, cork. V. JTR,
^fTt /. Crowdedness : a
crowd. 2 fig. Close fricndsliip. ,3
Tliicknoss (as of darkness)
^tlTfa. Sturdy, lusty : rode,
l)old, saucy. 2 Huge, dense,
weigh ry.
^FTiirf /; -?r m. ^n. Rough,
overbearing speech or demeanour.
2 lleadiness.
^FIT A tliickish and shortish
stick. 2 A handle (as of a spoon,
l)ickax, &c.); tlie staff of any
tliiiiii-. 'A The backbone: the
I'l-ulge of the nose : the stem
(as of a plantain-leaf). 4 A raised
channel for water.
«ri^r /. The pole of a pt\lan-
qnin : the pole of a ])lough : a line,
rod, or stick stretched along in
the air to hang clothes : the
bar on some ]iieces of copper
monev : the bisam of a Ijalance :
t!ie stick of an umbrella, a strip
of land ruiming out into the
sea ; a billow.
<rf^^ n. A short piece of
wood ; as a stout stick or cudgel:
a roller, &c.
^^RT (ii) A public notice
by the crier, v. f^^, fqi^qf.
^S" /. A molar tooth, a
grinder. 2 A jaw.
^\^\ f. The beard.
^m Grain. 2 A single
i!;rain, a single pearl, a seed, &c.
'A A sort of sugar. 4 A piece or
single article (of a bale of cloths,
&e.) G A s(inare of the coating
of the custard-apple.
?:r'^r a. (?) Wise, shrewd. 2
Excellent, capital.
^f^r^R f. Uoiiting, dispers-
ino; ecHifiisedly : route.
ivelihood.
4
Thickness (of liipiids, &c.) 5 j ^(OTFTf^r n. A
'J'ightness. G General prevalence
(of a report, &c.)
^^ ^^^' Whether or no;
with fullness of design and l)ent
of purpose.
^\ZX^ V. i. To become hnrd
— a mango, &c. without ripening ;
a boil without sui)pnrating.
STR^f^ (I. Containing corns
— an ear.
^tcT A tooth. 2 lig. A tooth
of a eoinl). saw, ike. .'^ fig. Spite,
grudge : <?T ^ffl Kina?f T.
^\^p. s Subdued, subjected.
^r^r^^r, ^r^^^ /. a lock-
?"t^ A long bamboo stick. 2 i jaw. v. ^¥, ffl^, Nags', ^tt.
X practising stick of fencers. .'?
The raised l)oiuidary line of
afield; tlie ridi^e of a hill: a
raised water-course : a raised
sr-am on a garment. 4 Aching
5>tifTnosR. r. «^ : qi^^sjl ^{^
'Kvlt '^^^ 5^^.
?Tfrr€f^r a dentifrice.
^■r^TT^ir J[\ a. Toothless.
'Ticrn^k? /. a gap in the
teeth.
?f?R"r, ^TcT^r A tooth or jagg-
^fcRF -'^TT a. Having teeth
projecting over the lip.
^^^'T n. A fibrous stick used
to brush the teeth. 2 A denti-
frice.
^FcfS'ur j;. c. cTo denticulate.
^FcTF a. (s) That gives, a
donor; hence generous, chari-
table.
^\^\ A tooth, a cog. V. ^^,
^T^, ^X. 2 A sort of rake. 3
A term for the plantains that
hang from the "^roTT or fruit-
stalk, r
V, r^ [curse.
^fcTr=^ 1^^ 71. Execration,
^^rs- a. See ^frRf.
^rcfrS"OT V. c. To gnaw, nib-
^^^- [berality.
^f^^ n. (s) Generosity, li-
?K /. (p) A complaint, v.
^Hi ^TT. 2 Redress of griev-
ances. V. ^. 3 Equity,
justice.
^r^ /. Ringworm.
^r^ A shutter over a stair-
case. 2 n. Herpetic eruptions : a
blind tumor. 3 A bridge.
^K^r, ?"K53Tr A husband.
^f^r A respectful term of
address for one's elder brother,
for one's master, or for an
elderly person gen.
?r?T ind. The utterance in
urging on a bullock.
^R n. (s) Giving : a gift.
?(=f^ /. (a) Liberality.
^R'-^it (s) A term for chari-
table acts and works : alms-giv-
ing, building temi)les, &c.
^R^^ II. (s) A deed of gift.
^R? (s) A demon, a titan.
^T'TSTfc^c/. Liberal, generous.
^R^5" a. Lavish of gifts ;
])r()(usely munificient.
^m^^ 11. s. The state of a
newly-married couple.
2"R (h) Intimidation, repres-
sion. 2 Awfulncss.
^^^ V. c. To press. 2 To
menace. 3 fig. To conceal. 4 To
embezzle. fbinf.
^R?"^r/. Repressing, snub-
TTfT^T
213
R^^
^f^r^r^ /. Pressing down,
ooncealiiig.
^fiT^T m. n. A pack needle.
?fiTr^ n. A jaw.
^\m^ n. (s) Hypocritical,
sanctimonious, n. Hypocrisy.
^^ (H) Money.
5"R2: «. Moist, damp,
^\^Z^ IK c. To despatch,
impel (a man, horse, &c.) '2 To
scold. 3 To wear or use roughly
and injuriously (beasts or
articles). [a dewlap.
?"R2T A huge cake ; hence
^Rfr /. A small cake of
bread; a pat of cowdung or
earth.
^fJTjqS" /. A principal
doubled by accumulated interest.
^"(lT^?5"cT /. (a) Opulence.
^T^r^rr^cT Money considered
as a ])ersonage, Squire cash.
^Hl^li j. (h) Division
amongst the creditors of the
money of a bankrupt.
^f^RT a. Rich, opulent.
cTf^ s Property to be divid-
ed amongst heirs, an inheri-
tance.
ST^lir, ?r#r a. s That uives,
bestows, yields ; incomp. ^?i-
^T». 2 An heir.
cTR^r c. One entitled to
share in a heritage; hence a
kinsman.
^^^^\^, ^r^rr^irnT (s) Por-
tioning or a portion of inheri-
tance.
?T^r A claim in a property.
^r?TR" (s) An heir.
^rrr a door : a gateway. 2
An outlet.
?K a. (p) That holds, car-
ries, has, possesses : 'im^i^
^T^I^T^^. [frame.
^R^^/. A jamb of a door-
^'^^5^ w. A door-tenon.
■^r^^r a. Of one's door, i. e.
of one's own yard or garden ; of
domestic growth or rai.sing —
fruits, &c.
^TRf^^f -qr A dentifrice,
^rrf^rr Scaldhead.
^\mZ\, ^\t^Z\ The ground
under the door, the threshold.
2 The upper cross-piece of a
door.
^nrr/. s A wife, the wife of.
^ntSJ" n. s Poverty.
^f^*^ a. (s) Ferocious, sa-
vage: horril)le : harsh, furious;
— used of men, battles, speech,
^^- ['i Gunpowder.
^t*?^ /'. (p) Spirituous liquoi .
^^^^re^r /: Distillation of
si)iiits : the tax thereon.
?"f¥^^flT V. Fireworks.
^r*F^Rr A powder-maga-
zine. 2 A spirit shop.
^[^JTrST (h) Ammunition.
STf^^ \^ n. Neat spirit.
^f^^R c. A tippler, sot.
5"r?^[^'T(r /, Cinnamon.
^\^^ J^f_ A rope stretched
along, and secured at the ends,
unto which cattle are tied up
by means of the ^j?- - The
])ickfted cattle ; fiy;. a string of
prisoners or convicts.
^\^'h V. c. To how.
?rfr (ai Enmity : spite. 2 A
right. 3 lu law. A suit.
^\^\\^ s Conflagration.
^r^ n. The tie-rope pi'oceed-
ing from tlie neck of a beast, h\
which it is fastened to the
^f5"frf /. Possession of
right, a. That bears spite
against.
^rsr n. Sour, churlish.
^1^ (s) A slave or a servant.
2 A Shudra affix or appellation.
.'3 A sage or philosopher.
?"r^^^r^ Slave of a slave.
^\'^[ f. A female slave or
servant. 2 The wife of a Shudra.
^\l^\H n. (p) Hoarding
(grain, &c.) 2 The store laid
up. 3 A granary. 4 The hold of
a ship. 5 The burden of a siiip.
G Charge, custody, r. ^j^, %^.
^\^^ n s Service.
^1^ (s) Burning. 2 Ardor
(esp. morbid animal heat).
^C^ a. s That burns. 2 dv.
Poet. Fire.
^rST a. Ten.
^r^^f'^r A rate of ten per cent
interest. 2 A rate of selling
articles — giving ten over the
hundred.
?"r^ n. s Combustible.
^f^/: Split pulse. r Ml
r^ rv [mild,
TTSriqiS^rr a. Soft, culpably
^fcS^rS" n. Ordinary fare. v.
t, ^T^, ^\W3> ffTSa^.
^fsr^ See STfS-^. , , ...^
^ [aouity.
^ir^'^^ n. s Cleverness,
f^^ s (Inflection of l^"^^
Region, quarter)Ia comp. f^-
K^cT, r^^ / (a) a mis-
^giving. 2 Doubt, &c. [-^p^j^^^
1^^ a. (a) Exhausted,
K^cT^irc, A carper, caviler.
2 (A rujjee, &c.) objectionable
r^Wc7 (s) A regent of a
quarter.
K^^^Xr^ /^. Slight direction
or indication ; mere pointing out
of the way or manner.
r^-Trf s The visible horizon.
'2 The end of the earth.
K^cTr n. A distant country.
i^lcT^r ad. To the uttermost
borders of the earth.
\^MX a. Naked. 2 A name
of Mahiideva.
r^Tr ad. (p) Also; addi-
tionally; further; besides; in
the next place. 2 Used of a
village given in Inam.
K^^sf (s) An elephant of a
quarter ; hence app. to a large,
fine, handsome man, or to one
raightv in knowledge : to a huge,
monstrous man, a collossus.
(cT^^^ n. The whole world.
f^r^vJT^ 71. Charming the
quarters.
r^>^
214
RsT
K^^^ Wanderin^j; over the
earth ; turniti|j^ from (iiiarter to
quarter; as one lost.
Kf^sT^T Universal conquest.
2 A course of wild, mail, and
riotous i)rocee(!in;rs.
\k^ V. A bale of cloth. 2 /.
A wicket. 3 A dish dressed on
^mxT^vil.
[a measure.
T^?^r E.xceedinp; by a hall
[^?^r /. A piece of money.
K^^ n. ]},, or any single
multiple of it.
fkf\ f. A wicket. 2 A f)ar-
ticular musical instrument. 3 A
picture (as of '^^hT'T) drawn
and stuck upon a cloth which
floats from a pole carried in pro-
cessions (of an idol, &c. ) r.
^T^, ffl^^, ffW, ■=^1^, f^^.
|?^r f. A quantity told once
and a lialf.
\^\^K -?3fr -m: /. Reve-
nue terms. Remission of one-
third.
K-T m. 71. (s) A day.
r^^^r The sun.
pT'T^T^r f. The passing on
of the dav somehow or other. 2
/» "5''"'^ journal. [-.^j^^ ^^^^_
K^^Tl^ A poetical name of
f^^R n. The length of day.
RtT^, r^^r^^ V. i. To be
dazzled. 2 To feel blinded as
by a sudden extinction of a
p;laring lijrht. 3 To he eclipsed
bv the superior splendor of.
r^Tf^r ^^^r A term f(M- a
uieafjre man or for an impotent
master of a family.
^^^\^^^l f, A row of laiiqjs.
\THm (a) ITaughtines.s, in-
llation, airs of consequence.
KiTr^^^rr «. Pompous, dis-
dainful. 2 fig. Superlatively fine.
KJiTcT /. (a) Charc:p, trust;
control over (things, &:c.)
K^'^r a. That is under the
control, care of.
r^JT, KI^JT (p) Dilatoriness.
t^^ in. 11. (p) The heart:
the mind.
f^'r^rntr f. Sorrowfulness.
"k^m a. Sad, afflicted.
r^^rfr^r o. Having fresh
and lively affection.
K^^RT n. A term for the
heart or mind considered as a
record ; "the tablets of memory."
r?"r=^^rr n. intrepid.
r^^rfr /. Courage.
r?c^r?"c=5T^r (ii) Encourage-
inent. v. ■^.
K^r^r (h) Encouiasement
or assiu'ance as afforded to or as
yielded by. v. % 2 Mind,
^i"^^"*- * [sort of lamp.
K^ff /. (II) A torch. 2 A
f?"W3iTr A link boy, a torch-
bearer.
r?^57r ?r^ A leopard.
f^fS-DT -?r^ n. The place
where the main light of the
house is suspended.
RT^^ n. m. A serpent of a
large but harndess species.
r?^ff (s> A naturnl day (of
24 hours). 2 An artificial day (of
12 hours). 3 Daytime. 4 The
R"f^^7/. Lapse of time, v^
T^^^^i f. A himp-match.
f^^^rr ad. By day ; in the
jl^.vtime.^ ' [dav.
K^^rS'^oo'^r ad. K In open
r^^mf^^r^r /. Profuse liv-
iiig.
r^^m^f^f^, r?"^er?^Fr ad.
Day after day — augmenting or
decreasing.
k^^m'^{^\ a. Relating to
the whole day; (that has been,
is, &e.) througli the livelong
day : li1 f^0N3qT^.«(/. Fur the
whole day.
r^'^g-'isT^H", k^mk^^ ad.
Day after day.
f^^r A lamp. 2 A sfnnd for
a lamp. 3 The floiu* lamp-stand
in marriages. 4 A preparation of
rice-flour in the form of a saucer :
made and eaten on occasions. 5
Ap|). ironically to an absolute
ignoramus.
K^fOT, fST^^tr (P) A prime-
minister. 2 Under the Mogids.
The officer in charge of the re-
venue-administration of a dis-
trict. ■^■^m n. f^^fmmiTm
A royal hall ; a court of justice ;
a council-chamber. 2 Drawing-
room. 3 f^^TUT is further
Any assessment of government.
The suvkar or Goverunieut.
f^^Rmfr /. The office or
business of a f^^mr.
Rr^fT?"^^!^ 7n. n. A general
term for a royal court, &c. 2
Investigation l)y a royal tribunal :
"^T iri^^l f^' Ui^T. 3 fig.
^Publicity. [-^^gg_
\^^m a. Civil— a court, a
r^T^Rr^^rc^T^/.A civil court.
\K^\^ a. (s) Blind by day.
2 s An owl.
far^RI a. (p) Mad. 2 Foolish.
f^?rifR s An owl, a thief,
&c. ; a bashful person.
\K^\^ f. (p) A wall. .;;x ;
fcr^f3'?3Tr c. A prodigal,
r^^isri^f?: mxm^ a term
for a speiulthrift : a profusely
liberal person.
r?^r3r^[n /: Prodigality.
Kfrs'r /. A festival with
nocturnal illuminations, feast-
ings, gambling, &c., held diu'ing
the concluding day of 3Tlf%'*T.
and tiie two first days of
?STf^^- 2 .\ festival held on
the 1st of ^Tifsff^. 3 fig.
Luxurious reveling. 4 fig. Over-
flowing abundance (of good
things at a feast): 3TT5T f?TT^
i^^fS" -^ n. Bankruptcy, v.
f%^, ^'[m g. of s., q»i^ g. of o.
KV?T3rr,K%^s'r/. A match.
K^ir n. (s) Ordeal, v. W,T ^
fts^TT
215
TTq-
^, ^I^. a. Divine. 2 Beauti-
ful, fine. ^^^,g phenomena.
r^oq"3'^qfcf A term for meteor-
f5:5Jr^3T / Tonsils.
1^°^^^ n. (s) Supernatural
jjowers of vision, a. Beantiful-
eved.
f^^^^ A celestial body, —
the body of the dwellers in
svvarg. 2 fig. Ap|i. to any body
glowing with health and beauty.
f?"'=Wf'T ?«, Divine, preterna-
tural knowledge.
r?W /. (s) A region: a
point of the compass.
K^'T V. i. To api^ear; to be
visible. 2 To look. 3 To seem.
4 To promise ; to hold out — a
show. 5 To be clear, (i To think :
HI ^fTt3fn?Tt-^n:rlt-f^^7I =IT^'t
I don't think he will come, &c.
rs_ • r^
i<^<m ad. Day after day
— augmenting or decreasing.
K^J^^^m ad. [noi)en day.
^F'S" a. One and a half.
^T^^^T a. A wiseacre.
ff^-STftr /. A name for a
false balance.
f"R a. (s) Humble. 2 Pite-
ous— looks, &c. s 3 Poor. rf„:.u
'^f'T (a) The Aluharamadan
^f'T^^r^ a. Compassionate
to the afflicted and indigent.
CT^I^ (s) Protector and re-
liever of the wretclied.
?f'7^'^?5' (/. Gracious or pro-
pitious to, or esponser of the
cause of, the poor and lowly.
^R^^ a. Humble: sup-
P^^^"*- ^ [tiablo.
fR^Rr -iir a. Humble: pi-
t'Rf^f^ Salvation of the
meek and humble : saviour of
the meek and humble.
ftT (s) A lamp. 2 A lamp-
^stand. 3 fig. A light. ^,^i,^^^j^^_
^m^ s A lamp. a. That
f\^^\^ f. A row of lamps. 2
A stone-jjiliar in front of a tem-
ple, to support lamps on festive
occasions. 3 App. to a tall, skn-
der, unsightly woman.
f'rqfRf^ /: A row of l;impS.
2 See f^^TSl sig. 1,2.
^\m\ f. s A stand for a
lamp. 2 A sort of lamp.
^FR" p. s Kindled. 2 Blaz-
ing : fine, excellent.
^\T^ f. s Lioht, lustre.
^K A husband's brother,
esp. a younger brother.
5"f^ fi. (s) Long- ; — whetlier
in space or time. 2 Long — a
vowel. 3 Deei), grave — a de-
liberation, &c.
^■[^^^^^ 7?. s A parcillelo-
gram. a. Quadrangular but not
square, ])arallelogramical.
'<N^f\ a. (s) That long
retains his hankering.
fl^^lfr a. Long-lived.
^^€l a. Provident, far-
seeing into futurity.
^r^fgr a. Shrewd, far-
siehted. 2 Prudent.
ff#qt a. Implacable.
frtR^r /. Death.
^[^•^"^'T Strenuous exertion.
fR-TJ^ a. s Cyhndrical.
fRW /. (Great shame)
Discharge of the bowels.
ff^^'-^HF a. Of a compre-
hensive mind : far-aiming,
aspiring.
fR^^ n. Prolixity, v. ^Tf .
a. Also ^^^^1 Dilatory.
fife?: A lolig vowel. 2 A
long note.
STRFJ a. Long-lived.
^1^ A day.
^F^F /. (s) A course of aus-
terities. V. ^. 2 fig. Conduct,
practice. 3 fig. Engagement in
a great undertaking. «'. ^.
4 fig. Initiation in the mysteries
of any art or sect. v. ^K, "fT
?F?^cr (s) One that has con-
ducted a sacrifice : any des-
cendant of such jierson. 2
nies ; and fig. of arts, schemes,
&c. 3 fig. Exjjcrt.
f^^Fa. Another: ^ ^^JF^
^f><^ A lamine. 2 Scanti-
^^F^ 71. f. (p) A shop. 2 A
sujithy, or other workshop ; fig.
any display of means, materials,
&c. 3 'I'he im])lements and tools
collectively (of a smith, &c.)
^^>\^^R c. A shojikeeper.
51nF=F?lfF /. The art or busi-
ness of shopkeeping.
.J^F'TF a. Having t^o touch-
holes — a musket. 2 Having two
ears or liandles — a vessel.
^^^^\ a. Applicable to two
uses. 2 Having two em])loy-
nients, &c.
^\^ SeeJ-^^.
^•.^ 71. (s) Fain, sorrow. 2
A difficulty, trouble. 3 Lues
Venerea.
5"?^^ ad. In two pieces. 2
As cut into two pieces, v.
^T, 'It.
J^^[t^ a. Sick, ill.
^■^^ i\ i. To pnin. n. A
disease, sickness : "^^iti^T:!
A sick nian.
^^n a. Tender, sensible —
a limb, meml)er.
?"'^f JF Condolence with the
family of a deceased person ;
giving them clothes, &c. : tiiu
dotlies thus given, v. eaX, "if,
^^^^, J<5[i?iot V. i. To take
hurt; to receive injur} — a lindj.
T?3R^,^^Fi^^ V. c. To
bruise, scrach : to injine slightly
the surface (of fruits, &c.) 2
To pain, alHict, lit. fig.
T-m^l q"PTF A child of
sorroiv.
^^N^ f. A hurt ; a cut.
^^F^ a. That is ever sick.
^■•Fi^^p. Pained, afflicted.
^■JFF'^T /. A half pice.
?r!-:r ri, (s> Milk. 2 The
milky sap of plants.
2rT<Tr
216
THT
l^r/. m. Duiibt. V. ^^,^^^,
f^^. 2 Suspense, cd. Dubi-
ously.
^^[ //. Another. 2 Sonje, be-
sides. 3 Ditt'crent.
?"^rin^ Duplicity. 2 The
distinction of nieuni and tuum :
the lioldins; of this distinction.
3 Difference of scntiuieut.
^jcqf -cqr a. Of double
l)c:irin>,', two sided, ambiguous
— speech or action : that uses
such sjieech, &c. — a ])erson. 2
llavinir two members — a tent.
5'^cTr -^r a. Doubled or
5"*^^ (I. Double, vague, i. e.
by implication, bad, vile; — used
of men, aninuds, speocli.
conduct, &c.
jqT% ^FcT pi. The teeth of
infancy, v. ^, f«?g, &c.
J^TT -f\ a. Two-edoed. 2
Comjiosed of two rings —
S'tJftS' -^a. That ordinnrily
yields much milk— a milch ani-
mal.
J^r /. Malabar nightshade.
J^^r.f r^qT/. (p) The world,
folded over — a cloth.
______r -g-i. , I •, r xi mankind.
^TT^ .^\ fid. I nut. of the I ^
^l)aTtenng of feet in quick run- J JR^KF^ F /. Holding secula
11 mg.
^ST^F^^" (A fanc-iful fnrma-
tioM from ^^«1 A double
pice, 31[T'^T^ '"^ learned man,
&c. entitled to a double ^-
fguTT.) A term for a swag-
gerer or swelllug professor (esp.
of learning).
^TO J Doubling, folding
over. 2 Doubling; plougluiig
crosswise, &c.
^Wi V. c. To double. 2 'I'o
multiply by two. '.i To plough
crosswise.
5^cTT a. Doul)led.
^ a. Double.
^^F^^ V. i. To double, to
increa.se in severity — diseases,
wind, rain, &c. 2 To dtmble gen.
^qf[qTJ7 y c. Tiy do auiiin;
to repeat, esp. to plough ag;;in.
2 To told over. i< 'I'o inulti|ily
by two. -1 To do\;Me i:i ([uauti-
ty. ^ To ftdil to and conlirai
(tidinsrs, n tcstiinon} I.
r
,^cT"Ff a. iiid. Having two
rulers— a countrv : co:istitnted of
two distinct heads— a govern-
ment: ap])licable, rclsting alike
to both sides, partic, c.:c.
liusinesso;- dwelling in the wuil
V. ^X. [quantitv
^^Z a. Double. /. A double
l^^\ f. Double.
^^^\ n. INlilch.
Z^^\ iJl^T/. A milch cow. 2
fig. One fi-om whom something
is always to be got ; an open
mi ■ e.
JH'^ V. A general natue for
milch i'.nimals : their proihice —
milk, &c. 2 Dairy-business.
^m^^ j Xoon. '
jqFr^f^r^Ff. The noontide
meal. V. ^, ■<•
^-qiT-Tr ^r^-^r/. a term foi
rielies, viewed :is short lived. \
fi"-ure expressive ol'transitoriness.
J^TifinTTFn ad. About noon;
during t!ie heat of the day.
fq^^c^r a. That prodncis
two annual crops— ground.
jqrST f, A schism.
f^srr'a. Poor, helpless. 2
"'Thin.
^^'^ V. Poverty
^cir^ A rude and insistnig | ^^ . . ,, .,,
^ ^ TiT^Jf r,z. lo Yield nnlk on
messenger. j^, . ,, , i i- r,, i i ;»
.,. ^ "^ lieiir.; milked. 2 hg. 1 o yield its
.^^F'^r -^m n. That has two
inontlis— certain worms. 2 fi
Doublc-dcaliii
sides — a st<>ne
e.\udatu)n — a palm. 3 fig. To
run— a sore, its pus, a business,
3 Having two j its jirofit.
[sides. l^^iirii^T -tR f, A niilch
^'4^\ iid. On boll, banks or ; cuw. 2 f.g. A liberal person.
3^iTfn a. Divided into two
sides bv a line or a body running
along through the middle.
^^F1 a. Divided into two por-
'^'°"^;:, [into two parts.
^mn^ V. c. ^ i. To divide
^^m V. c. 6f i. To divide-
as a boat divides the water.
^m^See^^rr^Ti^.
^iTfq'r -^F a. That speaks
two languages; an interpreter.
^^"^r /. (p) A crupper.
^J^sfc^r -c^ «. Of two stories
— a house : of two decks — a
s'lip.
c-^d'^r f. Folding.
Z^Z^, 5'JT^crr r. c. To fold,
t 1 double over.
^^TfT a. (p) Having a tail.
l^TH^ V. i. To echo. 2 To
spread and swell — an odor. 3
Poet. To storm, rage vehe-
ni 'iitly.
J^TT^FcT n. Distended— a
b^ ilv. &c. 2 Filled out, plump — a
hillock, &c. 3 fig. Having some
wealth. 4 Strongly and ditfu-
siscly smelling.
^^iTF A double fire. 2 fig.
A '• strait betwixt two," a di-
Ic'-mia.
JiTf^r (p) The hinder part.
2 lij;. Supporting, v. ^, and,
wii'.i g. of 0., ^"^^j 3^:^,
^']]q5' «• Reversionary. 2
Tii;it has two proprietors — a
tow .:. &e. 3 That has a long back
— ■• T^^T, ^T^-
^'^^ a. Second in quality.
He" 'C, 2 A second in command,
a dcjaity.
^f\l a. Coloured differently
on it^ two sides.
?T^R /'. (p) A telescope.
J^fiTflK (s) Unfounded and
offensive pride.
^^^F /; j)L A kind of grass,
sacred to Ganpati.
^Ur\ a. (s) Right, fit.
^^^^F ad. Along both sides
of the road.
.?Tr!T
217
.Tf^'i"
3Tr?T?" (s) Obstinate reten-
tion of an opinion, v. "5^^.
?"rr5rCr «. obstinate.
^rr^^'T n. Evil practices.
^^^■^r, 5"TRTfr a. Loose,
licentious, libertine.
5"^Rr^ w. s Poet. Evil-
niindedness, wickedness.
?"^n^f Evil-minded, male-
volent.
^mi^ -qRcT a. Improbable.
^T\T\^^ a. Difficnlt to be pro-
pitiated, persuaded, prevailed
^^'^"'JL; _ [from.
^R'T" V. i. To be removed
^f^lf.(s) Groundless hope.
^r?^r /. (h) An exclamation
used in prohibiting in the name
of the Raja or other high au-
thority ; implying an impre-
cation of his vengeance in case
of disobedience.
^KcT n. (s) Sin. a. Sinful.
^frc^T a. Distant.
^^tIT n. s Obscene or other-
wise unbecoming speech.
^^iW f. s Bad language ;
abuse, sauciness.
^^•T ad. From a distance.
f ^^^ See ^Ur{, 2 In law.
Amended, v. ^^.
^r^r a. That points in two
directions. 2 fig. App. to a fellow
ready to espouse both or either
indifferently of two sides ; a turn-
coat, time server.
r
^^ n. m. {s) A fort.
^r^ /. App. to anv dis-
graceful condition ; a plight. 2 s
Hell.
Jifi-T m.-^l f. An offensive
smell; attrib. ill-smellins.
«■ »
^^^ a. Difficult of access;
unpassable.
^^\ f. (s) The wife of Shiva.
^^ An evil quahty : a
vicious propensity, v. ^TI^'T-
^nofr a. Full of vices and
tricks; having evil properties
and propensities.
28
J^J" a. S Difficult of oc-
currence or of performance.
^^'I a. Wicked, vile.
5"^^ a. s Invincible. 2
Insurmountable.
5"^^ a. s Difficult of diges-
tion or solution.
^^\ f. (s) A troublous con-
dition, plight, pickle.
5^^ n. An unlucky destiny :
attrib. unlucky.
J^^ a. s Difficult of seizure,
attainment, or apprehension. 2
Difficult.
J"1W n. A bad name.
r
^^c^ -3" a. Weak. 2 Poor.
Tff^ /. Malignity. 2 Fa-
tuity ; attrib. evil-minded or
fatuous. [hension, occult.
5^^r^ a. Difficult of compre-
5"iW n. A famine. 2 Hard-
ness of the times (as respects
the necessaries of life).
J^^ a. s Difficult to be di-
^ijje^l- [tainraent.
^iTr?5- -37 a. Difficult of ob-
^W^ O" Of a sullen coun-
tenance or temper. 2 Foul-
mouthed, scurrilous.
^■^JtJr a^ Hard to be crossed
— a river. 2 Not to be trans-
gressed with impunity — an order,
o Difficult to be surmounted —
a calamity.
T^iT See ^■^S".
^^^ a. Absent in mind, in-
attentive. 2 Inapprehensible by
the sight or understanding, n.
Inadvertence. j-^ ^j^^
Jc^5T"T n. An evil point. 2
?"c^rte (s) Infamy.
^'^r^'TF f. An evil desire.
^^AW\ n. An evil habit. 2
attrib. and pop. ■^^€«ft Of
evil propensities, habtis, prac-
tices.
^5l^^rtr, Difficult to be known.
^^^r, f ^=^1 /. pi. Kick-
ing behind— a horse, &c.
^^r (a) a benediction, an
invocation of blessing.
^:^J'^ An ill omen.
?"?R^ (P) An enemy. 2
The public foe.
^■^T^'T^r /. Enmity : enimi-
cal acts. V. ^T, ^X, "^T^JV.
^W55"r (h) a double shawl.
7-tei"!-, ^mt ad. c On
both sides.
^'^\^ (s) a. Ill-natured.
^^^ a. Difficult of going,
lit. fig.
^f^^ a. Sad, dejected.
^^^•(fl'T s A dire malediction.
^5511^^ a. s Difficult of
government or management.
^^^r n. (S) Difficult of per-
formance. 2 That works evil.
^^^^ n A sinful action.
^'^W a. Sinful, wicked.
^^^Wi A famine.
JST a. (s) Bad, wicked. 2
Noxious ; — used of air, &c.
^^\if. Wickedness. 2 Bad-
"•^f^- [connection.
^•^^ Bad company : evil
S'^n a. A second. 2 Other.
3 Some besides. 4 Moreover :
^^^ ir^T.
^W-'^m -^ ad. Again.
J:^C a. s Intolerable.
J:^r^^ a. (s) Difficult of cure,
hard to overcome — a disease, an
evil, an enemy. 2 Difficult of
performance. ^^^.^ j.^^rs.
^m^\ -^r a. (p) Relating to
^^^ a. s Hard to get over,
lit. fig.
^\k^\ f. (s) A daughter.
?■?? fr -Irr -fr a. Doubled. 2
Double — a work. 3 Consisting
of two. ^ [entry-book.
?"r?TRrC^?:^r /. Double
^■rcfr^^cr /. In arithmetic.
Double fellowship.
jfcft^^TPT A double set.
.3f|-r^
218
Wrt
^fcfrcr^r^r a. Fat, fleshy. k9"frcr^ a. Adduced in illus-
^cf (s) A messenger. |trutmn.
_cv rf /• A r 1 i^S"f<2r /. An interview.
^fcT^^r, Tcir y. a female mes- ] "^ % ■'
sender; a coufuknte. jl^STf^ (s) An object of siuht.
^'■"T 72. Milk. 2 The milky 2 Any object of oue"s enjoyment
"^ai) of i)laiits. ' ''^ ^'"^ present life. 3 ad. For the
3-.T'j rr /-ii -I T 1 r i. ' siil'it' fif present reward,
^^^r Cluldish from pet- ^ . '
ting and jjanipering; a milksop, I'i '"^^''^ 1 he maiiifenance
mamma's darlinci. \ of the reality of that which is
cognisable bv the senses.
^ (p) A tail.
^ a. (s) Distant. 2 fi^r. Tm-
I"'o''a'>'". [distant.
^^FTT ad. Unto or at a
^^m n. (s) Foresight. 2
Lonnr-sightedness.
^r^?Tf r/. Discerning-. 2
Provi<lcnt. 3 Long-siglited.
^^rfgr /, Penetration or
discernment. 2 Carefulness for,
or prndent consideration of,
futurity; provitlence.
^^^ ad. A long way, far,
deeply, v. ^^■^, ft^T^ ^^, ■^-
^?^'4 (s) a. Distant.
^^ a. (s) That which
blames ; or which sullies, deliles,
injures.
l^\m, fgr^^DT V. i. To be
blasted or aflfected by an evil
eye.
.^'|"rS"y. (s) Sight or seeing
— the faculty ; tlie exercise of it
or the apprehension by it. 2
Aim. 3 Regard : 3T^t^^ 7?ir-
^ "^o f^^^. 4 An eye. 5
A blast from an evil eye. v. %T,
^T^. a. That sees. In comp.
ffg-% a. Sly, subtle.
f fS"'^'^^ -cTf ad. Before one's
siG^ht.
fS'Rq^W ad. Under per-
sonal observation : "^ iTig
^^t «!■$■ 5," ^t^ ^^j ^^.
m^, T^^. 2 Ocular deception
^gen. [-^i^e order.
^?=fcT?^:iT «£/. At sight of
^"flcTr prep. Whilst seeing- or
looking at, seeing : jzjT <?IT^
•^o fr?^ Ht^T^'C ^TT^. 2
Whilst living or alive, living.
^^3^^r -^r a. Envious.
^^T^ f. Supervision, su-
perintendence.
^^^, ^\m A glimpse
given. 2 Sight, view. 3 Prospect.
^'^F'Sr a. Showy, gaudy ; —
used esp. of an object attractive
to the sight but worthless.
^•f^fcT -^ ad. Even ; so much
as. 2 Even, also.
??^^ot J^y be pos&ible
to be viewed by ; to be borne by.
2 To regard with envious eye :
f^JT^ ^TJf Jr\"«^'?»T^^ ^^. See
Prov. XXX. 17.
?"?irT<^ -'fr ad. Emulously.
^^KC?r, "^T^Wr /. Immi-
vieing with.
^'^ n. (s) Blamin--. 2 |2-S"irTTRr «. Invisible.
Blame. 3 Corrupting. 4 Violat-
ing(agirl). [surable.
?5^R a. Culpable, cen-
^fTrT p. Blamed. 2 Defiled,
lit. fig.
^ a. (s) Firm, solid, lit. fig.
2 Confirmed. 3 Mature — a deli-
5,'2"5Tr ad. s With, by, or in
the eye, look, view of : qiTfl-
•^i^ -^m To With the eye
^oflust,anger, &c. ^ [a temple.
^■JTcS" 7?. An idoi-house :
ad. Emu-
?<r}^r a. Sightly, comely.
beration. 4 Tenacious, fast-hold- \ ^'^'^f^T a. Showy, g'audy.
ing. In comp. To f^^^ -f*T- j^?^^ y. c. (ii) To see. 2 To
'^]X Firm of resolve or pur- behold. 3 To look for : to explore
pose ; "^o ^^(^ Hard or endur- ! or look over.
ing m exertion.
^^mW^ a. s That divides
without leaving a remainder.
f^^fl. (s) Visible. fWiTR
p. pr. s .\pi)earing, being now
visible unto or under the vision
of.
^3"/. (s) Sight or seeing. 2
/). Seen, perceived.
?^^ prep. Seeing : ^R ^•TF-
% ^qg iTT'^- -^ o grj%. 2 fig.
Living. a(/. Evidently : ^T"^"
f T?:t ^]fvT rqi^ ^q^ t^'T
'^^fTcrr^fr -^^ ad. At the in-
stant of seeing the note :
fSTcI (s) An illustration, .
par..ble. 2 Personal observation : i ^'^^^c^f, Sr^cTlJ^/. Fasci-
fJJI'^T 'SI'^l'^T ■^'o '3?HT. 3 A nation of the sight (as effected
vision. "^ I by conjurers, &c.) v. cR^,
tation,
louslv.
•\
^'^ f. (p) A large metal pot
(culinary or for holding water).
^^ f. Lending and borrow-
^T, ?j:-JAstem. 2fig.Sup-
port, basis : f^c^ q^r€t if^^t
^^l^'^^l A term for u
fresh person ; a tyro.
"^iTr /. A reward, a gift.
•\
^CTT^^ J. Money for service
rendered; wages, hire.
ST"^ V. c. To give, grant, tn.
Money due. 2 A thing to be
^^;i"'"- [<htor.
-^^^ c. A debtor. 2 A cre-
^ojET'ij ji^ Lenfling and bor-
rowing ; mercantile transactions.
^^r p. a. Generous, muni-
ficent.
Wq'^r ad. On the actual
discussion of the terms ; at the
concluding of the bargain.
tR-c^t
219
8 Brilliant,
splendid.
"^ /. (h) Delay, v. ^\^, ^An.
\^ (s) A deity. 2 God. 3 An
idol. 4 A demon. 5 In the
drama. A king.
ST^ n. A term for the
deity or deities worshiped at
marriages, &c.
\^^\A n. Worship of the
Penates. 2 Any act of worship ;
a religious rite gen.
^^%[ f. Business with gods
and demons ; raising, injecting
them, &c.
^^^"^ Expenses of the
idol-worship.
Vf TcT, "^^f Jiff /. The rolling
on of the wheel of Fortune : fate.
2 fig. Death.
^#^ m.f. Trade, traffic.
^^f[ -Z\ /. A porch : the
threshold ; a raised terrace in
front of the door.
\^^ n. A god. 2 fig. A
^darling, pet. ^j^i^y_
^fcrr f. (s) A god. 2 Uivi-
2'^crr^=T n. Worship of a
god or idol. 2 The vessels, &c.
of worshijj.
5^^^ n. The condition, posi-
tion, function, &c. of a god ;
godship.
Z^A^'l n. The visit to an
idol (esp. of a married couple
^short^y after marriage), j-^^.^^^j
^■^^r^r a. Relating to fire-
ST^^r^ m. n. (s) A species
of Pine. r,i „ ,
.,, Ltne gods.
^^^^ (^) A messenger of
^^^^ Religious offices or
exercises. 2 God of gods.
^^rfS" A kind of reed.
\^^m[ / The Sanskrit
character.
•\
^^^^ n. Ceremonies, &c. in
propitiation of a god. 2 Deity-
shij); divine nature or essence.
?"^f7^r a. Religiously mad.
^^r^^ n. Wild eagernes>^
about idol-rites and religious
ordinances and forms.
??J^r/. Worship of a god
or an idol. 2 The vessels and
other necessaries of worship.
\^mm\f. (s) The ceremony
of exalting a newl3'-made image
into an idol, and establishing it
in a temple.
cT^^r c. A term for one rather
disposed to give than to beg or
receive.
•^ r-.
?"^lTrTir f. (s) Religion or
])iety. 2 c Business with de-
mons ; viz. raising, exorcising,
injecting them, &c.
^^^TtF^F a. A dealer with
gods and devils.
'^^^r^ /. Holy ground ;
places where are sacred rivers,
mightv idols, &c.
^?iTfc3T a. Simple, credulous.
?^=[JTrPT^ A term for a sim-
i)le, harmless fellow.
•\
^^ (s) A husband's bro-
ther, esp. a younger brother.
'^q-^err -^r See "^^^iT^^rr.
?^5*ry. Inquiry before an
idol. 2 See t^^f^ sig. 2.
^^^^r^T n. A sacred place. 2
The revenue or the land which
is dedicated to the su])port of
^the temple. [dowraent.
^^^ n. (s) A religious en-
?=r^r/. A niche.
?"^^f A son of a w^oman
devoted to an idol.
\^\V-i^^ God of gods.
"?"^r^fm: (Beloved of the
gods.) A terra for an idiot ; an
ascetic.
5:^rp-^r^^,'2r^r5s-B:?A term
for a superlative blockhead.
cr^r?7q" n. (s) An idol-house.
^^FsTf f. A polite name for
death, v. ^T, ^.
^f r /. (s) A goddess. 2 jt;/.
Tlie small j)ox.
'kwm ad. In or for the
rites and ceremonies and matters
of icligioa : qi^i^ ^T^l^I t '
^T:i^T3it ■q^fi ■^^■^. 2 Of, at,
or in the gods and the various
lights and directions furnished
by religion ;— consulting, &c. :
^^ tJT^T. Thus -^o f^^I^OI
is to consult the oracles.
\^a^ See ?^r^3T.
^^€"1?^^^ ??. R The room
appro])riated to the lares or
images of the household gods.
^°CRr A shrine. 2 Osten-
tatious worship.
Wr^ V. See ^srrrr sig. 2.
V. v\^, 3?T«?qr. 2 A thing loved
to adoration, an idol. 3 Present
numen or divinity (in an idol or
a person).
^^ (.s) A country, a tract. 2
A place : -^^i^ ^^ ^sff ^^T
^^ ^UT^ ■^■^ -^o "^ ^q^^'1
^rr1. 3 The suitable place :
^o T^\^ ^\^^^ ^\^ ^x\^. 4
The middle country. 5 Space.
() Country in the largest sense :
^'^T'CTS %.° ; any division
OF A COUNTRY : JUI ^9T.
^^T^^fJT Emigration.
?^^fr -¥ ad. In the state
of wandering from country to
^ country, v. ^\J\, ^T, fff^^.
^^iqi^qr An hereditary offi-
cer of a Mahal.
^'^^WH n. Peregrination.
^5^ An hereditary offi-
cer ; the head of a tj^JTWr.
\^^m f. The office of '^-
5"^^ (s) A tribe of Brah-
mans. a. Resident in a country.
'k^l^\ a. Relating to the
Deshasth Brahman.
^'Srr^f'T The customs and
manners of a country.
•\
?"5Tr3H n. Travelling abroad.
2 Journeying.
f^Tfcrr V. A foreign country.
2 Longitude.
•\
?5J|'^ Wandering from
country to country begging alms.
2 n. Alms so obtained. 3
rureign countries. 4 Imports.
?TfhT
220
^^^
5 Commercial intelligence of
foreign countries.
?3Jf^ a. s Relating to a
country : ilcl^^^.
S:? (s) The body.
^C^^ m. -t^^ n. Mortifi- .,
cation of the body by austerities, ^^^^^f'^ The intervention ol
2 Corporal punishment.
^I'^ltr a. Incarnate.
^^ n. (s) Fate. 2 The caste
collectively, a. Relating to divi-
nity, divine. [darling.
'^^cT n. A god. 2 tig. A
^??"^r/. Fortune. 2 One's
fortunes. [destiny.
^^"fe" f. Consciousness of
(tUvelling iii) the body : ^^^-
"^J^ "^TS^ ?IUT^ "^o "S^^- ~
Poet. Possession of one's
(bodily) senses; corporeal con-
sciousness ; presence of mind.
^c^FI n. Corporeal consci-
ousness.
^Q"iTr=r Being of the body ;
i. e. consciousness of being in
the body.
^r^rr^r /. s The going on or
subsisting of the body ; support
of Ufe. V. ^T^, *? T, f*T«. -'
Journey of the body, i. e. death.
^■g^^^iTrf Natural tempera-
^mcnt. [j. p. death.
\^\^ The end of the body,
"^t^JTPrN'cr n. Atonement
made through such severities
intlicted on the body as usually
terminate in death.
^f*^ n. Another form of
existence, v. ^^, g.
^Rl^ a. Disembodied.
'^?"frJT^(2r Materialism.
er^FT^f^r a. A materialist.
^rrfir^n^ Worldly affections;
regard for the body.
\m^ n. Death. ^^^^^^^^
^{ a. (s) Corporeal. 2 In-
^^ (s) The titan or giant
of Hindu mythology.
<•?, ^R=h a. 3 Relating to a
day, diurnal.
^ n. (s) Miserable and
piteous condition, v. ^tT, %ITr.
1r=TTRr, ^^^m a. llumble,
submissive. [Poverty.
t7^ ri. (s) Humbleness. 2
?^ n. Dew.
?^^r f. The writing sup-
posed to be on the forehead,
detaUing the destiny of the
sid'ject. ["tj.oi of fate.
?"^^5J a. Subject to the con-
^^^^Icf ad. (s) pop. ^^^^
Fortuitously.
^^K Fatalism.
<^1H a. Lucky.
?^5r a. Knowing the desti-
nies ; a diviner.
^fl^TfTT /. Divine opulence,
i. e. heavenly miudedness, mercy,
piety, &c.
<;rsr^ o. s Predestinarian. 2
Destined.
'IrS'^fr^ The doctrine of
predestiaarianism.
?"l^=fj a. Corporeal.
iNa. m. pi. -fr ox-^mf.jd.
-g or -iff n. pi. Two.
fr^ a. Vile, bad.
^f^r A young and hard fruit.
2 The fruit of the Cotton-tree.
^^ n. A pot-belly, v. ^,^\J,
^^. 2 fig. Opulence.
^R o. Two.
?Rr?"f^ pi. A short season.
i\H^K^ Mid-day.
^\'i\ a. ind. Both.
^\T (h) a rope. 2 (r)
Stringiness.
^1?^^ n. A thick rope. 2
A bit of rope.
^Rf (II) Thread. 2 fig. A
flaw. .'J fig. A rillet : "^T f^-
The track of some slimy animal.
'^\T\^ a. Ropy.
?[fF f. A small rope. 2 A
land-measure — twenty ^T3t or
measuring rods strung together.
?"T^r s A swinging seat;
a i)ensile bed. y^^_ Wavering.
^r^^Tl'T p. pr. Swinging. 2
^r^ (s) Fault; defect. 2
Sin : culpability. 3 Disorder of
the humors of the body.
^IT^"!?" f. Censoriousness.
^r^["Cr7 Blaming, impeach-
ing : a charge or an accusation.
^f^r u. Guilty. 2 Faulty.
^m c. (p) A friend. 2 A
gallant.
^(^cf^r^ /. Friendly terms.
^m f. Friendship. 2
I Amorous footing or bearing ;
I illicit love. [To milk.
f^rC s Milking. ^'rfoT V. c.
?^f^^r (h) a couplet in the
Hindustani language.
A terra for a pregnant woman.
?r?"f^r Interest at the rate of
two per cent per mensem.
^\i\ ^fj^T gTcT \mT] A
term for a Trimmer, turncoat.
■^T'^T'^Tm'^l a. Of an adulter-
ous mother.
^frki^^i^^r T-^\f^ a term
for an unprincipled fellow.
frs f. (u) A race. v. ^^. 2
An exjiedition. 3 or ^T^^I^
A iiuce of the horse — the gallop.
^f^'^ v. i. To run.
ffcf f. (a) An inkstand.
^f^RT 71. s Wickedness.
^R?^ 71. Weakness,
fffiF^ n. 8 Difficulty of
procuring.
!j^*^ n. Rarity. ^^^^^^^^^
€i^^ f. (a) Wealth: af-
fr^cTJ?Tr?:r (a) a phrase
used in invoking blessings. May
your wealth and dignity be in-
creased ! 2 Used as s. /. mT^\
^To ^T^ He has been ad-
vanced to affluence and honour.
^5f «. (s) Dice-playing.
^r^*iM p, pr. s Shining.
5"? (s) Juice. 2 Oozing
out. 3 Fusion. 4 fig. The melt-
ing of pity.
5^^ n. s Dissolving, &c.
5"^^ r. i. To melt. 2 fig.
To melt in pity.
5^^ «. (s) Wealth. 2 Sub-
stance of thing. 3 Elementary
substance. 4 A drug. 5 In gram-
mar. A word. 6 An ingredient.
^^^\\a. Rich.
JT^JTCR a. Poor.
STK^ a class of Brahmans.
^\\k^ ^m^\^ (s) fig. a
devious mode of speaking,
ambages, 2 A roundabout wa\
to a place : a long, tedious, and
fruitless journey; Journey to
Jericho.
JTRT, cTRT /. Tlie vine. 2 n.
Grapes or a grape.
sTT^r /. (s) See STf^.
S^r^r f. The vine.
5^ s A tree, shrub, or
plant.
^5" a. Vile, hateful.
sTf^ A vessel made of leaves
to hold ghee and other liquid
substances ; a hutter-boat.
^rC (s) Malice.
STfT a. Spiteful.
?T n. s A couple of animals,
male and female. 2 Strife, con-
tention. ^i,,^
S.S.^'?" n. s A duel or duel-
?:5T /I. s A pair. [mischief,
rr^" a. Vile, wicked ; full of
^\^^\^ a. Vile, wicked;
hateful on account of mischiev-
ousness. 2 Bad and good ;
perverse and docile.
?:r^^ a.(s)Twe]ve or twelfth.
rrr^fr /. The twelfth day of
the half-month. [^jtt
CffTR The third of the four
?"K n. (s) A door. 2 A
ground, an occasion. 3 A means.
4 Any of the vents of the human
body.
221
CfT^Fc^ A door-keeper.
^K\ prep. By the means,
through ; g^-fiT^-^frT %\o.
off/, (h) Seeder.
\^m a. (s) Double.
Tr^^ a. s Biped.
K^, T^^rm a. (s) Twice-
born. 2 s. m. A Brahman or
Kshatriya or a Vyshya. 3 Any
oviparous animal. 4 A tooth.
Hr^^ n. The feathered
race.
R'f^fog'a. Double-tongued.
ft'cfr^ n. Second.
riT^r^ ^^^ The second mar-
riage of a male.
rCcff^r f. Cs) The second day
of the half-month.
l?"Tf a. Doubled — a letter.
rs.<rt V. A general name for
the pulses and vetches. 2
Bipetalous.
fS'^r ad. (s) Of two kinds. 2
In two ways. 3 Into two pieces
— divided./. Variance. rmial
K^^ a. (s) Biped. 2 Bino-
fl"^^H n. s The dual.
iSU'Ti a. S Bisulcous, clo-
ven-hoofed.
^7 n. (s) An island.
\^ (s) Spite. 2 Hatred, v.
^^ g. of 0.
i"^r a. Hostile.
^ST a. Malicious.
\^'^ a. Hateful, detestable.
T^ n. (s) Diversity. 2 Dis-
like. 3 The doctrine of the
duality of the Deity and the
universe.
?r^^f^Donbledness of mind;
i. e. diversity of judgment ; dis-
agreement. 2 also ^fiTJcl n.
The doctrine of the distinctness
of the Deity and the universe.
^m^ ^^^^ a. s That has
two meanings ; ambiguous. 2
That has a double use or effect.
ST^IliS* a. s That has two
exacerbations daily — a fever ;
^rnn
that returns every third day. 2
Relating to the period of two
days, biduan.
^ The nineteenth consonant.
^^'^^f. Palpitation.
5^^^^^ V. i. To palpitate.
'^I'^r (h) a sudden push. v.
^TT> ^T^- 2 fig. A loss in
trade, v. ^j^, ^jjj. 3 A
wharf. 4 A parapet wall (as
edging to roads, &c.)
*=T^^^/. Rapid palpitation.
2 Chance of harm. 3 Toilsome
labour ; fag and pains viewed as
fruitless.
^m^l f. A scuffle.
^^^^ V. i. To receive a
shock, lit. fig. 2 fig. To fail,
sink.
denly ; to shove along.
^^ a. Steady (as under mis-
fortune): hale]^ stout, firm — cloth.
^^ n. A sudden impression
of terror, ad. With a shock.
^^^ a. Stout.
^^r See ^^r.
^fl^ (A) A gallant. 2 A
husband. 3TAe master, the match :
"-^mn f. The glowing of a
fire, 2 fig. The glow of chillies,
&c. on the application (to the
tongue, &c.)
"^n^m V. i. To beat— the
heart. 2 To glow fiercely — a fire.
3 To be hot and burning — the
body in fever,
"^imm a. Glowing.
^^RTf A large, roaring fire.
2 Fierce glow.
^m, trsrm v. l To press
through. 2 To apply sedulously.
3 To come forward for any
work,
^^Sf^TT a. Large and fine — a
person, thing, &c, 2 fig. Liberal :
Ijold-hearted,
^m, >^fim, ^Tii] (h) a.
Sturdy and overbearing.
^
D09
vjqjTTT
^r=r f. Forwardness, ini-
])ii(lence.
^II^JJ -m^a. Male, hearty.
■J Stout, lusty. [the trunk.
"■^^ 72. (h) a headless trunk :
^^ n. Weal, welfare, n.
Unbroken ; whole, lit. fij;. 2 Sub-
stantial, ad. Plainly, dcciiledly
— sjieaking, telling : clearly —
reading: straijjhtly, tiimly —
•walkinj^ : completely : "^T g'^^
•y^ ^^ "51% '^•^ ^T'^uix ^%
^3" f, A side or face.
^^^ f. A striking^ dashing
(against) ; a shock, lit. fig. r.
^^^ flrZ. A formation ex-
])ressing rapidity and animation
of action : il^T«T^''f ^o «T-
'^^^^ r. i. To blaze rip : to
burn glowingly — fire, a lamp. 2
lig. To lie intensely hot — the
l)ody in I'ever. 3 To palpitate. -1
To ])roceed rapidly. 5 To dash
against with a shock.
^^m or -JTtr /. A hope-
ful, promising condition : ''^T
v^TI^I^ r. i. To beat high,
to i)alpitate. 2 To emit the sound
■«»■:? '. ■y^ I — stairs, a floor,from
the quick moving of many feet.
'.i To fall with a crash — a tree,
Skc. 1 To blaze up fiercely— lire.
v:[?v:Ttr^ ad. Downright,
flat: 5«7fr '^o ^TTTTfr ^i^T
"^T ■^T^'SIT ^^T. '-' Plainly :
^m\iz -^a. Whole, sound.
2 Ilcalthv, hale.
tr^¥, ^ZT,-? f. Furious
.storming and stamjiing ; frantic.
2 A headlong l)lunderiiig through
(any business). .'J Violent strug-
gling. 4 Noisy bustle.
^^qTot V. i. To kick and
caper about. 2 To roll about in
pain. 3 To struggle violently.
^^r A lesson. 2 Direction
for guidance. 3 (n) A weight of
' ten sher. 4 A weight put into
the opposite side to counterba-
lance the receiving vessel.
Confidence, assurance. 6 Calm
reliance : ^ap fq«?t^T g^-ir
^J^^^^ 7 A share or a [lortion
of a i)icce of land divided amongst
its joint proprietors.
'■^^f^r (h) An explosion or a
])eal. 2 A vivid, hurried, and
tumultuous scene ; the ravage
of an epidemic.
^^m^\ See ^l\^ll
J-T^T^^ V. }. To roar, crash ;
to resotnid deeply. 2 To tumble
with a loud crash.
'^^r'^^ -^f ad. Imit. of
brisk, smart, closely consecutive
sounds ; as of buildings tumbling,
of quickly rei)eateJ slaps or
strokes, &c.
'^^r /. The border of clolh.
2 A large weight made up, &c.
Sec tl^l sig. 4.
^itm^tf f, A comprehensive
term for the articles of apparel
for public occasions.
'^T^FcT n. An article of ap-
jiarel for daily wear.
'^^mr a. Stiong, stout— an
article of clothing, f. Clothes
strong and stout, and thus fit for
daily wear,
^■^ a. Rude, rough.
'"T'^ f. A casual enrichment :
Tt^l -^o ^T<s1- 2 Desire
after, r. :5t:.
5^"^^? -^Z a. Coarse — paper,
cloth. &c. 2 fig. Stout.
5-:fJ|Tja]' ^^ { '\^^y revel on ; to
glut one's self with.
'^'^I^ See ^T^^.
mm"^ V. i. To burn fierce-
ly, to roar— jffire.
'■-T'^s-J'^rcT a. Burning fiercely,
blazing — fire.
"■^t^rr Coriander.
'^'^ f. Desire, earnest long-
i"g' I'- S^. H';^- - Satiety.
'"4^^^ 71. Hocus pocus,
jugglerv.
^^l ^!I^f ^'«>i,nicry, kna-
very, v. -i?!^^, '<.
'-T'fJ^ (s) The thorn- ai)ple.
"4^^^ V. c. To befool, bub-
ble. ■^■^^T a. Confused,
blundering ; a blunderer.
'"^'^r (n) Trade or employ-
ment.
^^ ^rsiTK Trade or service^
or means of maintenance com-
prehensively.
^ n. (s) Riches. 2 Learn-
ing, art, any means of wealth. 3
A swell of good fortune. 4 In
algebra. Plus. 5 In arithmetic.
Addendum, m. (^'^^ s) A
bow: the sign Sagittarius.
^H^I, HT^ri^r a. Coarse and
thick — paper, cloth. 2 fig. Stout,
lusty.
^4=l^rRt^r n. The relation
of money-lender and money-
borrower.
^•T^"^ V. i. To blaze up —
fire. 2 See "siiTf^iin.
'■^^^^ A caste of Shi'idras.
They are shepherds and herds-
men and weavers in wool.
'•^^T^I^^r /. The occupation
ofa^^tlcriT^. [people -N-cfji^.
^4^W a. Relating to the
^^T^f^ Madness occasioned
by the loss of property. 2
Madness after riches.
^'TtT^ a. Immense, huge,
vast. 2 Rich, great. 3 Clever,
expert. 4 S[)aeious — a country.
^^^f^^K^fr /. (s) The thir-
teenth day of the waning moon
in ^Tif^^f. On this day
shroffs, &c. worship mone}'.
^'I'^^r^T a. Covetous, money-
seeking.
«^fR , '"T^RT a. s po/;. ^^t^
Wealthy, rich.
^T'lt'^ (7. Ijlinded by riches.
^=rr^r/. Avarice.
^X'W (s) A owner; a master,
ruler ; the responsible man.
^^m^ a. Payable to the
jurson who purchases it —
a^nuidi. ^,.^,1^,.. ^ „ii.,tress.
'^'il^ /. A female owner or
^^
223
^rr%
^5 (s) A bow. 2 The sign
Sagittarius. 3 An arc. 4 The bow
for cleaning cotton. j-^^ -x
^^^ V. c. To comb (cotton,
'^^o^r f. A cotton cleaner's
bow. 2 A pellet-bow.
-tH'^k, WKF a. (s) A bow-
man. 2 fig. Supereminently
skilful (in any science or art);
bearing the palm.
c
^5^r^ The period during
which the sun is in Sagittarius.
^^^\^ Titiinus.
^^\k^\ f. Archery.
^55T „. (s) A bow. 2 The
rain-bow. '6 An arc.
W''^ a. (s) Blessed, happy.
Interj. Bravo ! noble If. Blessed-
ness.
^^TcTtr (s) The physician of
the gods : a skilful ])hysician. 2
A n)e<licine-case which doctors
carry about.
m -^^ -^^ Tcr% -f^^r ad.
Imit. of the sound in the fall of
heavy and soft bodies ; Plump !
whop ! V. -q^, ^T«T, ^T^.
^^^\ A slap : a Sound in<j;
stroke with a stick. 2 A shock.
V. ■H^, ^^.
^^^l A chip or shaving, Sec.
m\m -^\ od. Imit. of dull
or Hat, and closely consecutive
sounds ; as that of soft and
heavy bodies falling, that of a
smart slapi)ing and cuffing.
'=I'^r A slap or smack.
^^^^r A cascade or fall of
water.
^^tTf -^r ad. Imit. of the
sound of water dashing down
from a height; of heavy bodies
falling rapidly and in numbers.
^^^f. (h) Spirit, courage. 2
Strength, vigour. 3 Shooting
pain (in the back, &c.) v.
The glow of fire. 5 The j)reva-
leiice of any odors ; as '^VStI'^
'^o, U{x,-^\^ -61 o. G Lustre
(as of gold, &c.)
^^ ad. An enhancing ad-
junct to the words fq^o3Ta,nd
iri?;T. 2 Sturdy.
'^R^HT a. Strong, lusty.
^^^^ V. I. To throb, beat.
2 To thump. 3 To blow (the
fire) with a bellows.
'^TiTqFff ^Jfr /. Chiding, scold-
'"&• ^ [chide.
qiT^rfl^ V. c. (ii) To scoldi
^^^r f. Threatening, scold-
ing. 2 Feverishness.
':TiT':T^r -JTF (p) A mound in
gen. : a battery ; an elevated
cistern to receive and suffer to
accumulate (flowing water).
^^^\^ ad. See «^R^.
'^^•rr /, s Any tabular vessel
of the body.
^^ Power of holding lit. fig.,
hold : -^T^ ^^" 'f TfTI'^T "Kf^
irsiT ; rqi B^f^T^IT '^^ TtTT,
^T%TT: iat^ ■q^^T. 2 Power
of upholding. 3 Power of suspen-
sion (of the animal functions). 4
Fortitude. 5 Congruity : TijT'^
ij^^ TI3T "q;^ ^1^^, 6 In
comp. That holds ; as 5T«»"*?^,
'=^^'61^. [river.
^^°T V. (s) A bank across a
^C^^fr A dogged sitter in
restraint.
^% / Style, fashion. 2
(s) The earth or the ground. 3
The terraqueous globe.
^^l^\ f. A party (of consta-
bles, &c.) desimtched to ajjpre-
hend ; a posse coniitatus.
m^\m (s) An earthquake.
'^^fCr ^^^r /. A girl vio-
lently captured and set as a
bride.
''T^'T V. c. To have in the
hand ; to hold. 2 To keep, retain
lit. fig. : -qi^ ^T^T-sf ^^clt^
^mi^ qi^I^T^Ir '^T^t 3TTf ?T.
3 To catch, seize. 4 To conceive
in the mind : "^iTcrtrT ^T ^m
tiT^^ ^r ivt ^tJi?iT, o To
turn to ; take to : cJjT^ srT?T*
;^I«T -SfTi^' BTT%. n To hold,
reckon, view. 7 To apply, put to :
To take, form (a fondness, a
fancy). 9 To take possession of
(a place). 10 To mind, regard :
«T^T- 1 1 To assume (a posi-
tion, an attitude). 12 To make
or use (speed, delay): «efK:T
"SiT^. 13 To acquire, receive
(strength, &c.) 14 To find out
(a theft, &c.) 15 To include:
To take up, to observe (a fast, a
rite). 17 To take into one's
affections : 3IT^ '^T^TTH ''^^fl
^^^'T V. i. To sit upon ; to
stick to : fJJT f^wl^ fJI^I^T
■«il^tT ^TTf- 2 To come —
blossoms, fruit : to arise or to be
formed : ^"^fT 3^t^ 5^3?
■«J^#r ; fif^^T ^^% ^'^%. 3
To bear fruit : ^g^fri'fT^ ^T^
'^'^oS ^T.r{jff ; to conceive and
bear — an animal. 4 To be
caught, effected : WT"^ ^TcT xjl^
^T^l^ ■q'^fTTrr. 5 To enga2;e
the mind, and remain in remem-
brance : g-gfl iris ^ffJTrl^, XI-
Tg- '^^T ■'^^^ STTTf- 'J To be
fixed upon : ^^T^ ^g^ -5?^^
^T%. 7 To be warded off:
^■^^ n. An armed party
sent to seize an offender. 2 The
sitting in restraint at the door of
a debtor by the creditor (to en-
force payment of his dues): such
dogged sitting and fasting at the
door of a temple (to extort
favours from the idol), v. ^'^.
m'k^^ c. See ^^"^^^1-
'-^T^l f. The earth. 2 A
region. 3 Way, style.
^m^^ f. Catching and
seizing (as of thieves). 2 fig.
Laying hold (of errors in an
account).
'^Cq^fr^r a. Entrapping.
Hir^^-'-T A law, rule. 2
Consistency, congruity. 3 A
measure of restraint.
'"T^R'^R/. Pressing people
to carry burdens.
tJTlT
224
*T^T^
^^TJT^r Unprofitable kicks
and knocks ; cares, crosses, &c.
for another. 2 A block or an
erection of masonry by tlie way-
side to assist carriers of burdens
in relieving; themselves.
^^rr^oy Consistency (of
speech or action).
^^^f. Vacillation.
^^R" /. Flnctuctting-. 2
Considerate and conforming pro-
f'^'^"'"'^- [the ground.
^n, mflf. s The earth;
^n^T-fr/. A violent and
hurried seizing and apprehending
(as of offenders).
^=r^^ prep. (Vulp;ar) From
or since : ^T^^'^^'T Since
yesterday. ^^^izes.
^^r p. pr. s That catches or
^H (s) The religious prac-
tice ; the customary observance
of caste, sect, &c. ; a system of
divine faith and worship. 2 A
sacred duty. 'S Alms-giving. 4
Virtue. 5 Nature, character :
^TT%. () A property or ap-
pertaining quality. 7 Any pe-
culiar practice or duty, as
'^H^H n. Conduct, proce-
dure, 2 Pious and religious
deeds and observances.
^^PT n. A religious or a
moral act. 2 Any religious
ceremony.
^AT^lk n. The branch (of
accounts) under which charities
are written. 2 A charitable ins-
titution.
trffTlff^^ n. A term for one
(a servant, &c.) that stands in
the way of eleemosynaries.
^R^'^sT Ostentation of reli-
giousness. V. ^T^, ■gvjT?:,
^Vf^, ^^. 2 A forward pro-
fe^ssor of religion. ^,^j,j^,
'^nT^T^f^ /. s Discharge of
^••^r^ Justice, equity, im-
partiality.
^4q^r /. (s) A duly-con-
stituted wife (i. e. the first wife)
of a man of any of the classes.
MhJJ^ One who, assuming
for the season the name and
office of son to a defunct with-
out a son, performs his funeral
solemnities.
"^^fl"/. The giving of vic-
tuals and water to wayfarers or
to ])aupers or strangers gen. 2
The booth, &c. erected for the
piu-jjose.
"^^^ n. Fair or equitable
battle, as between equal num-
bers or between parties simi-
larly armed, &c.
'^T^m^ n. A kingdom of
just laws and equitable govern-
ment.
r •n
'iPTc^PT Irreligion; general
impiety and profaneness.
W^R a. Religious, pious.
Wr^r /. An inclination
towards the i)erformance of
beneficent deeds.
'^H^rr^r /. a building erected
for the accommodation of tra-
vellers. 2 s A court of justice.
t-H^R^ n. The code or body
of Hindu law ; the laws and in-
stitutes of Manu. 2 A code of
laws gen. 3 The science, system,
or law of piety and religion.
'-T^^TR^f Acquainted with
the -^^JiTf?-
s^^rsT, ^^r5?r/. See^-
^T^T sig. 1 . 2 App. of late
to a Poor-asylum.
'■T^f^irr/. A court of justice.
2 An assembly for the regulation
and ordering of matters of re-
ligion.
qTffe^^m^r n. The establish-
ment of religion or a religion.
'■W'r^r^ j;^ n. a term for a
malignant fellow that opposes
beneficent endeavours.
^T^Wnrra/. a charity-cow:
Pr.^ii^l^ JII^ c^tfTSTT ^T^T A
charity-article or a gratuitous
service is seldom good or well
])erformed. 2 A term for a
(laughter.
^T^FTF A pious man; one
abounding in works of piety and
goodness.
^WT^rq" An alms or a gift
in charity. 2 An endowment of
revenue for a religious purpose.
ad. In charity or as a religious
gift.
f-JTifr'-riT ad By the contribu-
tions of the charitable or pious.
^^Rfterr The office of
censor. 2 A justice or magistrate.
^ftorfr A public censor.
2 An administrator of the law.
c
'«Wr^^^ A conservator or
administrator of religion, morals,
and the laws.
TTT '^
H^r^T ad. In charity; as a
religious gift or act.
W^^K A term for an ex-
ceedingly correct and e.\cellent
person ; Justice herself.
^m^ nd. A word corres-
ponding in use to " For heaven's
sake."
mm^ n. s The throne of
justice; the 6ene/i. [good.
^r*Tg" a. Virtuous, pious,
^*TR^^ Religious and moral
iiistmction. j-^^p^^^^
«^r^R^?: A spiritual pre-
^^2" n. A chip.
^^^\ m. ^^^f/. A shaving:
a chip (of a stone, &c.)
^^ (s) A husband : '^Fcirq?.
'iTf^^frcT ad. An enhancing
adjunct to the words fxt^^T,
JTTTl, and ^\^X^ : ^o ir^^j
E.xceedingly fair.
^^^ a. spop.-^, ^^ White.
^^m See "^m.
^^J .5^ a. Rough, rude—
a workman, &c. 2 Rapid and
heedless; one that /ears through.
^T\VF^\ ad. (Imit.) In a
hurried and heedless, or in a
rough and rude manner — writ-
ing, working, &c.
(^W a. (Low) Rude,
rough ; of brutish manners.
^^, W^^ a. Sturdy, lusty.
^^ A sudden impression
of grief or terror, v. ^T.
^tl+i a. Thick or coarse.
^m^
225
^rrrfft
«<tl*l A sudden impression
of terror or grief, a shock. 2 A
sounding stroke with a stick or
sword. 3 A sudden catch.
^^^ /. Palpitation. 2
Alarm : Wt (^^ ^T^^ ofT^T^T
tl o ^T^<ft. [—thread, grass.
'^^F^T a. Coarse and thick
^^ (h) Awe, dread, habi-
tual fear. v. "^ToS^, ^^, ^T^a.
^f^Jr, ^5^r a. Lower,
shorter. 2 tJTo in fonnection
\^dth ^^^^^[ and fl'Sl^T ex-
presses the third degree (of age
aBiongst children).
^f^^ a. p Coarse — cloth :
rudely large— man or beast.
^Ff J^ n. -^r jji. Poet. 1 n-
ferioritv in age, size, &c.
W5Zr, i^^^T Poet. See ^-
^iTf¥ /■. A term for a rude,
boisterous girl ; a romp.
^rn^mr (h) Wild, boister-
ous leaping and capering.
^iT5[ m. ^RTtr /. Horse-
play ; romps. 2 A tomboy.
^m\ (H) Thread.
^RTlfrn Connection (of af-
finity, friendship).
^^l, '^\t\ / Way, style.
2 Cast, make.
^iTRF^r a. Bio-,fat. 2 Coarse,
gross — cloth, rice, &c.
^r^ f. (h) An impetuous,
desolating assault, v. ^]^,
■ffIX, ^¥. 2 Used fig. as the
English Swarra, of a consuming
host of strangers, &c.
tir^ -^ -^ T?^r -r^^r «^-
Imit. of the sound in falling of
some heavy body, of the report
of a cannon, &c.
[patch.
^R'T V. c. To send, des
Vfi;?3rot, trtf^ ?7. c. To
search narrowly ; to ransack.
^\f\ or ^^^r /. Brother's
daughter or husband's brother's
daughter. ^ [by a crier.
qi^r^Fj ^i^rn Pubhc notice
^[^ y. i. To be filled, satiated.
^^ f. Seaieii virile.
29
'^FcTT s A title of God
Cherisher, preserver, &c. 2 That
has.
^^ /. Semen virile. 2 m.
A metal or mineral. 3 The root
of a verb. 4 A priuci])le or
humor of the body ; as ()hk'gm,
&c. 5 A constituent part of the
body. 6 A primary substance. 7
A property of a primary clement
— odor, flavour, colour, touch,
and sound.
'^rrj'TFT 71. s A verbal noun.
^(JJS'a. Nutritive— an arlicle
of diet.
^npT^T a. Metallic.
*=TMHii Seminul gleet : urine
having mingled semen.
cTR'^^ n. A form of a verb.
'■TIJ^IT s Mineralogy.
'^fj^fl'^cr a. In grammar.
Formed from the root, derived.
71. A derivative.
'"TT^r /. s A mother or nurse.
^^^°t V. L To be terrified.
2 To rub along or against with
abrasion.
^\^^, ^^^m^ f. (H)
Disorder, confusion (of things, of
affairs, &c.) : distraction (of
mind): tumult, disturbance. 2
Ciiicanery. v. ^T, ^m-
m^\ -^m a. Wild, tumul-
tuous.
'^ITFcf Private opinion;
[jersonal observation : ^ifTT^
1J^^ %^t?f «#T, ^Ml ^T<?i
't^T'^jrll^^ ^TS^Vtr. ad. Plaink,
manifesily: '^T >iTo '^T^- 3
Downright, outright.
^KR^, ^^R^ V. i. To be
after ; to crave eagerly.
'-^RT^f a. One who, dis-
regarding the sacred writings,
directs himself by reason or ex-
perience ; a rationalist.
'^F^ n. (s) Corn or grain
gen. ; and, by ])re-eminence, rice
(rice in its husk).
•"^FT /. (ii) Quickened res-
piration, panting. 2 Impeded
respiration.
m^t\, m'^\ a. A man
afflicted with asthma.
^\^aS -^F /. c A sort of
woollen cloth. 2 A dove-cot.
^\^ n. A flat roof of earth.
2 A house so roofed.
^\^ f. Epidemic disease. 2
Used fig. as the words Itch,
rage, mania. [o The body.
^l^ n. s A house, a place.
vjRCTF -^fOT /. A species of
Coluber. [hurrv-skurry.
^^^'^f- (h) Uproar,'tumult,
^^, ^l^^m /: A loud
lamentation; a wild outcry, v.
^^ f. The edge of a weapon
or tool ; the edge of a precipice :
a sword; a fierce disposition. 2
Stream — in most of its applica-
tions in English. 3 The sensible
horizon : f^¥ -^l^^ ^T^T.
4 Milking : "EfiT ^T^- 5 A
line or chain of hills,
^f^^ a. (s) In comp. Holder,
keeper : 3^t^t t^K^, t^ m-
^R^^ -YWU a. Propitious,
favouring — a god, a king, &c.
^\Tm, ^itim n. Propi-
tiousness.
'^I^"!/. Rate, market price.
n. (s) Holding, lit. fig.
m^uf A religious observance,
viz. that of eating and fasting
on alternate days.
^\^^l f. (8) Mental reten-
tion ; memory.
''^F^^n^ A Hector, a Gascon.
^K^^ %\Z\ A pp. to any
correct deaUng or procedure.
^ir^TFf /. Boundary (of a
village, &e.) according to the
line of a river (which may varj-).
^^ (s) General course (in
points of business). 2 The set-
tled assessment on fields, &c. 3
/. Edge (of a weapon or tool). 4
The riowing of a liquid : a
stream of rain, &c. 5 fig. Pro-
geny.
^\im^ n. (s) Death in
battle by the edge of the sword.
^JTTT
226
':TrrT IT^IoST The regular rate
or rule (in dealinor, &c.) 2 Tra-
ditional custom. 3 Line of des-
<^ent of. [-ness
^^fftS" 71. (s) Fortitude, firm-
^PTS"^^ a. Firm, daring.
^lt\ f. A narrow border or
coloured strip along a cloth.
'^^r a. 8 That assumes. In
com p. as ^^"^iCt.
m^'^ f. Fixing of the
terms, tax, or rate. a. Held on
fixed (not fluctuating) terras —
land.
^m^K ad. Brimful.
Wr^^ n. (s) Milk warm
from the udder. r- ^^^^
'^FFT^ a. Virtuous, good,
^r^r (p.y^r. of ^r^) Satisfied
or sated (esp. with food).
trr^f^^THiTr «. Small-sized and
pretty ; little and neat — a child,
cow, &c. 2 Small yet snut;;, of
easy circumstances — a family.
^r^/. m. A certain soft red
stone.
^^ or '^f^ /. Running, u
run. V. ^\x, ^*, W{^, fm^,
^^, Tixj. 2 The extent of a
run : ij^i^ ^' ^^ t=(U^K ^T%.
.S The iron hand of a wheel, the
strake. 4 The inclined jdanc at
II draw-well. 5 fi». Extent of in-
clination or ability : "^r ^IflfJ
"^IW ^T%- (i Ke()airing to for
refuge : ^?:^r^ t^]^ ^quTT-
tf^fT. 7 A burrow (of rats,
*-*^''- ) [smelters of iron.
^^'^ A class. They are
trf^ot,«^r^^y.i.Torun.n. See
"^^ sig. 1. 2 A running.
^r^^fff^T, ^miT\ A running
stitrh-
>:T[^^R^?r / A rapid or
ready sight.
fcir^%fqT n. Running water.
2 Swift-flouing water.
"-^mi f. Pains, toil, ado.
^^ n. B Running. 2
Washing, cleaning,
'^r^^r a. Fleet, swift. 2 One
always running with a rapid
pace.
^RT, ^ifT (ii) Calling upon
(a god, &c.) for instant aid, in-
vocation : ^r€f ^TS"! "t^T^T
^f^^^T ^TTiPf D. 2 A song in
which a deity is invoked.
'^Ifr^iTf^^^V A tiger appear-
ing at a village whilst on his
run elsewhere : opp. to a con-
stant prowler.
'^t^r*^t^/. Wild and hurried
running hither and thither.
^^r^cT See m.^\-
^^^^^ f' Trepidation, v.
«ri'5r ^W- 2 Alaim.t'.^is, %t.
^^r^rn Shock. V. ^, ^l.
t^RTaTot, ^moS^ V. i. To
give way and tumble in or down
— a wall, &c. 2 To fall to pieces
— a machine, &c. 3 To dash
down violently — rain, &c. : to he
confounded, blasted — a project.
trT^rr,tTr^tr/.(A) Dread, awe.
r. -qi^, ^rraJl, T^^. 2 Anxi-
ous apprehension. 3 A deep
abiding impression of terror or
r^^^^ ' -^[tion of reproach.
N^ (s) j)op. mH^ An intcrjec-
T^^l^ (s) Contemptuous
treatment; hooting.
f^^^l^"^ V. c. To treat scorn-
ful! v.
f^^C^iT .qr ad. Used with
fm^i To drag on life in
])shawiug and pishing, hooting;
to live discontentedly and
wretehediv. r
^ • ^ [romps.
f^lTf -"^r, imj Horse-play,
mm^\ f. (n) Violent
bullying. 2 Mad frolics.
tot f. (h) Boldness. 2
Impudence.
I^f a. Impudently bold.
P"T^ /'. Public exposure (of
an offond(M). v. mj^, f*i<:^,
Ml^^, fqi^w g- of o. 2 Ex-
posure gen. ; any openly uisulted
State. V. m^ g. of o.
N^^^, [^^FTT Exposing
publicly. 2 Infamous notoriety .r.
f T, -^{m : c^^■It'[i\^^-^^v\m'^^
fef^ V. i. To go about.
Used angrily and revilingly of
the going about of one who
should have stayed at home :
^^T^T't' ^\rU^ ^^^^^^^ SRTTIT-
'^^T^ ? Where hast been
gadding? Where showing about
thycarciiss? j-j^f^^.^
m\^, mr^ a. Tall, high,
f^^r, Wh\ a. (ii) Slow, de-
liberate. 2 Cool, patient. 3
Dull, heavy. 4 Slow — reading,
singing, &c.
mit, r^fiTft /. Slowness,
deliberateness. 2 Gentleness. 3
Dullness.
PT^r Spirit, courage : firm-
ness : ardor in daring or stout-
ness in bearing, v. "Sf^, '^j ^,
WS, ^^, -§1^.
1*^^^ V. i. To forbear; to
stop patiently.
R^ A prop. 2 fig. Support.
3 An upright (post) of a draw-
well.
l^m, mr or T^tNt int.
Slowly ! gently !
m\m See r^^f sig. i , 2.
r^^ int. Hiss! hoot! off!
«"^! [mind,
nf f. 8 Understanding,
tRT a. (h) Bold, daring,
saucy, irajjudcut.
^K (s) Patience, cahmiess,
resolution, v- "t^'T, ^, W£, '^^,
■J
■^T^, ■^T^, «T^. 2 Hold ; as
?fT^l'»ji -feiK- 3 Peinianiiice,
abiding. 1 (Quality of la.^tiiig.
^K See RU sig. 1, 2.
^^^ (s) A caste. They are
fishermen. ^^^^^
"jt /. 5*^ n. A fog ; hazi-
^^ c Smoke, ad. Dimly.
^T^^^of V. i. See ^W^-
^5^ ad. With palpitation,
pit-a-pat. V. ^jz, sTt^ ^^ifl.
^^^m V. i. To palpitate. 2
V. imp. VJ-^ ^T^rW '^^■^'T^^
There is a fluttering, &c.
^iTffir, ^ryf JT (H) /. Feeble
pulsation. 2 Palpitation. 3 The
hollow below Adam's apple.
^^^, ^^rSTot V. c. (h) To
search for (esp. to search by
ransaking and rummaging).
^^o5T An active search.
^Wr^ST f. The price of wash-
ing clothes. 2 The act of wash-
ing.
^^r /. Washing-, lit. fig. 2
A washing place. 3 (h) The
smoke-fire of the Gosavi. 4
The pit containing it.
5^ V. c. To wash. 2 fig.
To strip, purge.
^cT^Kot, ^^^(T^q- V. c. To
flout, to scout (man); to. drive
off" with a hoot, &c. (fowls or
beasts).
«:^?:r Thorn-apple.
^cT^55T^crq- A term of
double entendre for a person
frightfully black.
^cTK^T V. c. To deceive and
rob ; to gull. [viner, a wizard.
^^Rf An imposter ; a di-
^?^K (s) Hissinij or hiss
(as of serpents). 2 Flouting,
hooting.
^^^m, ^^m^ V. c. To
drive or send away.
^ a. (h) Of dimmed vision
(as through liquor or sickness) :
TI'^^T'^'^'o ■^T*tJT. 2 Bereft
of sense(frora intoxicating drugs,
&c.) 3 fig. Blinded (by riches,
&c.) 4 Absorbed in. 5 Dim,
hazy — the heavens.
^i f. $^ n. 5?"r^ m.
Blind, mad proceedings (as in
tyranny and anarchy) : general
confusion, commotion and
tumult.
^I^r A dim perception,
reasonable conjunction.
^^r /. Dimness of sight, v.
^. See \^^i..
51^» W^^^ ad. Dimly,
obscurely.
227
3^^>5^/- -^ smack,savour.
2 A faint sound (as from a dis-
tance), r. gi^. 3 A popular
whisper, v. f^^. 4 A falut
acquaintance with.
^rfr V. c. (h) To card
(cotton, &c.) V. i. To be irradi-
cated by the advancing dawn —
f«[?IT the heavens. 2 To re-
sound (as from discharged
guns)— f^m -JI3T5T -3iri^T3J-
TT»T -'^M- 3 To be reported
or rumored — ■^TiiTT«T -itj'Z. 4
To be under incipient ignition,
lit. fig. — a substance, a quarrel.
5 To begin to clear — a cloudy
skv.
3"^^ a. Washed, i. e. that
has lost its %i^tii;iT or new-
ness. 2 Washed, i. e. that is re-
posited clean and ready for use.
3 Washed simply.
57^r /. Menorrhagia, v.
^T3T. 2 Fluor albus. v. ^IJI.
3 fig. A despoiling.
V,
^^ V. i. To be washed,
scoured — as land by a flood, the
body by dysentery, a village by
marauders. 2 To pine away — the
body from grief, &c. 3 To
smoulder. 4 To hang upon ; to
linger — a disorder. 5 To waste
away — grain, sugar, &c. 6 c To
be washed. [Perfuming, &c.
^TffJir/. Scouring-, &c. 2
W[[^^ n. A censer.
^^rCcTF f. Waving around
(an idol, &c.) of a pot of incense
with lamps, &c. : the pot so
waved. 2 A censer.
^JTT /. Wild, tumultuous
action. 2 Profusion : ^T«I^T-
W^ V. I. To smoulder. 2
fig. See -^^T^uf.
5IT^iT//(h) Uproar,turault;
hurry-skurry ; noisy and glaring
pageantry.
^^^11 Boisterous merriment.
2 Rout (of an army). 3 Busy
bustling ; fussy ado. v, %, g.
of 0.
^^T^TB w.--^f^/.Overflowing
abundance : wild, tumultuous
merriment, v. ^^, ^T^, «Tt^.
.^J^^^ V. i. To smoulder. 2
fig. To be rising and working;
to be brewing — a feud : to be kind-
ling into anger; to be fuming
and chafing repressedly — aperson.
V. c. See JT'^^ui' and ^^ojuf.
^"'^i^r /. Confusion, com-
motion (as of an invasion, &c.) :
boisterous frolics : wasteful feast-
5*T n. Smoke.
^^^3" n. Smoked, n. Soot
and dirt deposited by smoke. 2
Haziness.
^V^ a.(s Bearing a burden.)
Fig. Clever, proficient, dab, capi-
tal. App. laxly in the sense of
fine, superb, grand, to beasts,
buildings, crops, soil, &c.
JT^r -o5T Dust; esp. as
flying in clouds or as lying thick
upon a road.
^T^^ V. c. To dust; to
sprinkle (dust, &c.)
^r p The boundary of a
village or field. 2 App. to the
object marking it. 3 fig. Term,
period : tTTtfiT'gT "^^T The last
instalment.
^r^ n. An aperture (m the
roof, &c.) as vent for the smoke,
louver.
>^/. (f^s) The instep. 2
The instep-part of a shoe. 3 The
shaft of a cart, plough, &c. 4
(^X) Fumigation, v. ■^.
^^ a. Washed, &:c. See
^'^ n. Water in which
corn has been washed.
f ^ V. c. Poet. To wash,
^^r a. ind. Washed and
cleaned : t^* ^TT§^-5S.ff.
^e^^^ V. i. To beat, throb
— a wound, &c. 2 To mutter,
murmur. 3 To hiss or spit at
angrily. 4 To burn or chafe in-
wardly.
5f^5^ /. Muttering, mur-
muring. 2 Bickering.
^m See ^\^.
y«z'*
228
^rqr
^^^^, ^pS^^ «. Dusty.
^^ -fr /. The day of
throwius: (lust after the burning
of the '^To3t. 2 The throwing
of dust on the thii-il da}-. 3 A
•lusty place.
'•T3"TTr Dust, esp. as flying
in clouds, &c.
:3^T^5C 71. The letters which
children draw upon the sand-
hoard in learning to write.
5^^^ FTIT^'^ n. A figure
expressing Instability.
^ (s) Common frank-
incense. 2/. (h) Sunshine.
^ f- A run, a rnce. v. ^1^,
BT^. 2 fig. Sf)irit, ardor. 3
The roar of a cannonading, &c.
4 Used to express overflowing
abundance or extravagance of
notion : as Bft^T'^^ "yvr, JllWJ-
^ "STET. ad. Impetuously.
^^^C^) Smoke.
f^^J (s) A comet.
•■^^^T^ ad. Boldly, dashing-
ly — going, doing, &:c.
WT^r^r -^\ Impetuous
action ; roaring, jiealing, boom-
ing noise, v. ^X, ^T^, fs\^,
'f^ 8 Smoke. ^. Of a smoky,
i. e. dusty, dark-red colour.
^'^TR n. (s) Inhalinir of
smoke whilst hanging, head
d;)\vnwards, over a fire. A mode
of austere devotion. 2 Pipe-
smoking.
fj^ifj (s)The way t-.hell.
^J f. The pole of a cnrt. 2
The thillers of a team.
^J^ Smoke. 2 An overlay or
wash (of gold or silver). 3 tig.
Absorption ; as 7?TT'^T 7^^ ^T-
?Tt?T 'y?: ^IT?. 4 fig. Blinding
influence of; as JTql'^T-f^iCj'^T
vr. f) Haze. V. n33, f*;^, ^i.
^S^^^ n- (n) A l^ind of
gauze.
»JT^fr The shaftsman, the
driver. 2 A term for the hinder
animals of a team.
^ a. (s) Shrewd, sharp. 2
Crafty, subtle. ^f^X /■
Shrewdness. ^
'fl^/. 3 Dust.
''Tf /. A daughter.
^f. Dust^ 2 fig. Confu-
sion
tion.
discomfiture : destruc-
^J^^m, ^^il f. Discom-
fiture, rout (as of an array) :
confusion, disgrace (as of a dis-
putant) : failure (of plans, &c.) :
devastation (of a country).
qiS'Cfgf f Scoldino; vehement-
ly. V. ^T'S, ^^^, 5Rx^, ^x
g. of 0.
^"T p. s Seized, caught.
^cTTFS A term for one born
^^'"'■'- [tude. 2 Holding.
^^ /. H Steadiness, forti-
^■S" n. A term for a huge
person. 2 A term for a man of
high renown ; a prodigy of learn-
ing ; a puissant hero.
^T?^r^^f Violent and voci-
ferous quarreling.
^^Ft"^! The raven or
wholly black crow.
'^^TJsfuy. A lingua franca,
a barbarous mixture of languages.
%^qT^i The quarter of the
Dlier caste. 2 fig. Clamorous
squ.ilihling. v. TJT5T, '^t^.
"\ I-.
'-45-H^r f. Grain brought to
market and sold off hand by the
^^'S caste from the yet un-
reaped fields. 2 fig. Extraordi-
nary cheapness for a little season.
W^r The little child which,
at marriages, is appointed to be
the associate of the bridegroom :
^■g=?ji^T f*r^^T ^T3r -^^t
% /. (s) A cow.
^T^ n. (s) Patience, calm-
ness, fortitude.
q'^fR a. (s) Firm, steady.
'^1 f. The iron band of a
wheel.
■■Jf^r f. A barber s case.
2 (11) A sort of bag having two
pockets.
TO (H) Danger, peril. 2
An.xious apprehension, v- sfT-
S1T. 3 A perilous event. 4
A loss in trade.
^12^^ V. c. c To gulp eager-
ly and in great quantity. ^T^T
Gulping eagerly and largely.
v.v.
^1^ n. A drenching horn for
cattle.
*^
^A\^ f. A large mass of stone
or rock. 2 fig. A heavy loss (a&
in trade) : a heavy calamity.
^r^r^^^ The natural day
on which occurs none of the
ceremonies commanded for the
lunar days.
^f^^ /. The tricking out
of one's person with if'Sf, "^m,
&c., to appear as having perform-
ed ablution when it has been
«™'"^f^- [month,
'^r^jqjf^ All intercalary
^If^m /. Tendo A chill is.
'^r^ A stone. 2 See '^P?
Tf'^vn. 3 fig. App. to a hard-
hearted man. [stones.
'':?r3"r^ o. Abounding in
^l^ 77. The stump of a tree ;
^ rude block. [-^f nionkevs.
'^^r Tlie leader o( a troop
•\
'"-If^ A cascade. 2 A sheet
of fire.
'"TTcIT n. A garment of
males worn around the waist,
passing under and tucked in
behind, v. 'ST'?.
^FcR^rST A couple of
dhotars w oven together.
m^^\ Thorn-apple.
^\^^ a. Profuse in spending:,
open handed. 2 Of loose tongue
or lawless ways; libertine.
^r^ See '^IcTT.
'-^['^r, '^Rf^lr ad. Imit. of
the dash ! dash ! of a cataract,
or of heavy rain, &c./. The dash
or roar of a cataract, &c.
^l^ a. Straight, direct, high
—a road. ad. Straightforvvards.
qHTuT V. c. To strike with a
stick ; to thrash.
>jm^
229
^r^^
^:rTTrJTm A Btraio-htforward
course, lit. fig. 2 A high, mucli
frequented road.
vTPTJiTrnt -r^rr a. Blunt,
simple ; a plain dealer.
^m^ V. I. (ii) To be over-
cottie by licnt and fatigue. 2 fig.
To desire anxiously.
^R'3' a. c Coarse, thick, and
clumsy — a thing; rude — work-
nianslii]).
'^r^r (ti) a washerman.
'^r^F'^y. A wa^^hervvoman.
^rr'T n. Front, direction,
aim : bent, tendency, attention,
regard : ^iT^i^'-^To f^'SJT^T
^<T «TTTf- 2 Manner, style :
^ ^VIT'^ ^f?l5ffT, -qfrT^rt^
^[3 fsT?:!^. 3 Ways, course:
■?^^^i^'=^ "^To. 4 Established
manner ; as f^f^o^IT'W' '^To-
q'lT'^^S' a. Of correct man-
^ner^course. ^j^^^ inferring.
^IT^r a. Shrewd at guess-
^rar -^r, ^m (h) a large
♦iT^rT or kettledrum. 2 fig.
Noising abroad, v. 3TT5T^, ^T-
3 fig. An impetuous attack, lit.
fig. V. ^TT. 4 A flag of
triumphant display. .5 Rude,
overbearing demeanour towards :
Tgj^I ^T53[T g^ fr\^ ^1? f^^T-
See W^I^T.
'^r^rn Shock, heavy im-
presslon. v. k ^^. ^^^^^
'^^OT y. c_ Poet. To niedi-
t'^fcT/;. s Thought, meditated.
^'^FcTo^ a. 8 (Possible, pur-
posed, &c.) to be thought upon,
meditated, &c. ["reflects.
^Wr a. (s) That meditates^
'^^R ?^.(8) M editation,esp.that
profound and abstract contem-
plation, the favourite religious
exercise of Brahmans. 2 Mind,
understanding : '^ irT^^Hfw
^<T ■sri^'^. 3 Attention, heed :
f^^i- •sJJT'sr H?. 4 Memory :
"^ JUS '°gi^t?T '^T. 5 Presence
of the sense and faculties : ift
^MT^t: 3TT%f ■5rr#T. 6 Liking,
approval : m^ ^X^ Tm'^J V3T-
■5fT¥ ^rT «rTTf- 7 Form,
figure, air ; — esp. of the images
of the deities : ^ '^I«T ^TT ;
style, fashion : 3TT5T^ 3ITMt'^
'=5T^ fsTTT^'- S The piece of
poetry describing any Wlo or
representation of a sod. 9 App.
to a crazy person or to a mis-
cliievous child.
^-^R^R-^ / Countenance
and form ; general aspect and
figure. 2 Contemplation and
meditation.
^:^Rr% a. Contemplative.
'■^^TR^rxr /. The prescribed
attitude in which to meditate
upon the deity. 2 The air of
abstraction.
^-^R^^ a. Absorbed in medi-
tation (esp. upon the deity). 2
Lost ill thought.
'^'Tf?r a. Meditative.
'-:^7R[3T^r ad. In tlie mind
or remembrance ; in the head :
BTT5i tfT^g xjir^ ^ ^T^T ^To
■sr^^. 2 In all the thoughts :
'^T'^ -Egio -q-i-^] %53,
"<^^W (s) A close, intent,
mental contemplation : trTTT"^
^if^T VJTtT HfTvIT; a fond
or anxious dwelling upon : ^if
*\
^^ a. B Fit for contem-
plation; to be thought upon.
^"7^ 71. (s) A kind of song.
2 The introductory stanza of a
song.
9"^ (s) The Polar star.
^^^ ji. The position of the
Polar star. 2 fig. An abiding
position. [an ensign.
^^^ m. (s) '^^^ f. A flag,
^^sr^^iT The flagstafF.
^'f^ 71. s Sounding, a sound.
2 Implying; inculcating tacitly.
^■^"^ m.f.(B) Sound. 2 An
obscure rumor.
^"^Rcf p. Sounded. 2 Ira-
plied, involved. n..-
'. [htion,
'"-^^ (s) Destruction, demo-
^^^^ i\ c. To destroy.
'^^f^ry. Brother's daughter,
or husband's brother's daughter.
•T The twentieth consonant.
'F od. No, not, nor. 2 core/.
By, with, after : trs^j^ ^^t —
^?T^lvr ^^#t (^T^rTT -ffr-
^fg^r) ; WT^T^ •gi^ (fetjH
f^^TfT-ST f^g^, 3 coiij. (con-
tracted from ^ifuT through
^1) And : gT^^ rr^^T^, ^T TJ
^1. 4 ^ often has the sense of
"?T^T Dont : sr ^TST H^ 5f ^f If
you wont come, dont come.
'F'Sr a. Nine.
^^^r «. (h) Nose-cut. 2
That has a snub nose.
^^rt/. A forfeit levied on
a dishonoured bill.
^^^/. (A) A copy ; imitation,
mimicry. 2 A story, anecdote :
a ludicrous incident : ^-[^
^^T5?^T?r^Tst»ro^T^'1. 3 fig.
Extinction of a race : ?qT ^T-
a!T^ 7^o i[T^. 4 Used loos-
ly in the sense of original (as
the word Copy amongst printers):
^IT^T^'C 5fi"v7^^ Wmi^t rElT-
^^^r a. Copied, imitated.
2 Diverting— a story or a story-
teller.
^^?^r o. Full of diverting
tales and anecdotes; a romancer.
2 A mimic.
^^W (A) A picture gen. ; a
drawing, map, plan. 2 Orna-
mental representation ; figured
work. 3 fig. Pompousness ; eclat,
lustre, glory: cSJT^rlf ^^TST^TT'^T
^^^ /. (h) Ornamental
representation ; carved or sclup-
tured work ; engraving, embroi-
dery.
q-^^fl*
230
^TsTT
5I?^r?T^ a. Carved, kc.
•7^^^ V. r.. Sc i. To carve or
engrave.
'I^r ad. No ! dont ! forbear !
'iWJT Denyiiii; ; denial. 2
The rejectiun of a I)ill. i-. *^.
^^^Rf^r/. Denying.
•T^K'T r. c. To deny, decline.
^^m See =T^^r sig. 1 .
^^m a. Carved, kc. 2
That executes carving.
-)^r -^ a. (a) l^xact, just ;
— used of weights, measures,
&c. : fixed — price, &c. : true — an
neeount.
•i^f^ (a) a person in the
train of a great man ; he who
proclaims the titles, introduces
visitors, &c. [goose.
•TJ^y s The Beng;il niun-
^^\ u'L No! dont! 2 It is
used also as an adverl) of re-
fusal implying di.slike : ^^j
^mrn'fr -q^i^ ^*t. It
implies also the absence of de-
mand : ^' ^g^T^ig ^T^T^
■?I"*T.
•i^r See '^f'
^iTFj^^TlTiTrsT^T 7l(s)A religious
observance, eating only at night
for a period.
•T^ s A crocodile.
'^ 71. m. (s) A nail of a
linger or toe. -' A claw or talon
(of birds or beasts). 'A n. (for
•I^f^^j Poison of the nails.
^M-rr (p) Arts of display,
coquetry : lofty and disdainful
airs.
^^T'?rT c. A coquettish,
prudish person. r^p
^iciV^r'^f /. Coquetry, airs,
"T^l^ 11. Poison of the nails.
V. ^m, viTii, T^i^.
^l^feiq^fcf (ul (8) From
headjo foot. [-g,^,!^
^^irr ad. At one's finger-
^m^ %T f. The delicately
sensible region around the roots
of the nails.
'^^ f. The ring of wire
which players upon stringed
instruments wear upon their
finger, and with which they
touch the strings. Hence, sharp
or high pitch in singing; as
^^Irf TIUJ or glUTUI. 2 A
fine and narrow border to a
dhotar, &c. o A claw. 4 The
clasp of a tendril, a The fore
part of the hoof (of calves, &c.)
projecting like a daw : a division
of a cloven hoof. (3 Washed
silk. 7 The corneous excres-
cence or member at the beel (of
cattle, cocks, &c.)
•ra"^S" V. A whitlow,
'J'^irr A scratch with a nail.
•n (s) An ornament. 2 An
article, a piece. 3 A string of
raw silk. 4 Used in stating the
number of a body of ele|)hants :
'^fl^ •fJT '^\m Ten head ol
elephants.
'IT?" 11. (a) Ready money or
cash. 2 Choice, prime.
^TT?:f^^fr /. Sale for ready
money. 2 Proceeds of sale on
terms of cash.
=iiT^RJT^ ad. Cashwise.
'{^^"RT^r a. Prime, choice.
-TT^r /'. Heady money, (p) a.
Fiscal, financial. ^^^^..^ ^j^^j.^
=IiT<riTU^c7 n. Stock in
^rn^W^^r n. Relating to
the business of the revenue and
to the general affairs of a coun-
try ; fiscal and civil.
=fTlfff5T?:fc[r The land-as-
sessment im})osed in money.
^JJT^'f^WR n. Ready money.
^^^m\ m. or -w^ n.
Trinkets and traps.
^q^HTTr^'^ A ludicrous term
for a fat fellow naked.
^JK n. (s) A city or town.
^Jl^^f^^ The head-banker
of a town. [wench ; a trollop.
=liRiT^% /. A gad-about
•T^Rr/. (s) A small town or
city. a. Relating to Ahmednug-
K""*- [Penniless.
M\ a. (h) Naked. 2 fig.
=lJTKi§T=rr (p) The place
in which the drums and other
instiiiments of a band are kept.
^fr=fr-^r (H> The beater
of a kettle-drum.
^f^irr (A) A kettle-drum.
^jfr^TiriR /. A term for a
beautiful woman.
'Rr^r in. -2r n. a jewel.
=nT a. (s) Naked. 2 fig.
Destitute. [naked.
=15rf^fi^, =fJTKJTkr a. Stark
^^/. (a) Sight, vision. 2
fig. Regard, favourable look. \i
A present to a superior : pre-
sents made and received amongst
people of rank when they visit.
V. ^^. Hence, An interview.
^5ir3f^fs[r (p & A) Esti-
mation by inspection (as of a
crop).
/T3T^^^<^Hr The monopoly
of cutting wood in the jungle
near the Ghats in the Rajapur
taluka.
'T^^TR^^cT;?, A tax on boats.
^^IJsTRery. A mutual passing
of looks.
'T^^Mf 7J. An exaction of
ghee for the use of public
oflicers.
^^^K'^\ ^55", =T^^^r ^s- a
work that can be ])crformed at
first sight ; an easy matter. 2 A
matter pertaining to the sight;
an fine writing, drawing, &c. 3
A matter demanding good sight.
^5r?:^er^ /; An error of the
^'a'l^' [seeing.
=13n:^ qiq n. Sin of actual
=?^^R c. One that art-
fully eludes observation.
^3f?::T5I^iqr (p) A term for
presents made to superiors.
=i5r^tTi?"'^r /. Eye-survey.
See iT5iT^3CT5lT-
■T^<«1^ A juggler.
TJf^^^^f f. Fascination and
deception of the sight. 2 Restraint
by sight ; confinement answering
to Arrest.
-TST^R A prospect-garden.
q-^lT
231
^
^r^r^ c. A person of keen
sisjht. 2 A person that ogles.
^^T^ f. Ocular deception.
^^IV[^ f. The ^^^ made
(to an officer, &c.) on being fii-st
introduced to his presence. 2
The offering of one Rupee made
to Government by each Patil at
the 3IiTT«f^;
=I5f r^SfT, =f^?"5lT ad. In the
immediate presence or {the
Raja, &c.) [superior.
^■sITCTr (p) A present to a
•TsTn-l^/. An interview.
uigh.
^ (s) A class who employ
themselves in rope-dancing,
acting, &c.; a tumbler, a buffoon ;
hence, Rogue, cheat.
^J'H" V. i. To dress finely.
2 To affect airs. 3 To assume a
dramatic dress. 4 To decline,
refuse: '^T ^N ^Tqi^T^T
•T^^T' [beau.
^J^r See =T2:. 2 fig. A fop,
^zV^^ V. c. To trick out
finely ; to attire gaily. 2 To
])lay (a dramatic character).
•T^ft f. A woman of airs
and affectation. 2 An actress.
•I'H^T^af/. Finely,garnishly :
anily, pompously,
-urn a. Useless, refuse, bad.
•T^y. An impediment, let.
2 Annoyance, plague.
^^% /. Clearing a field of
corn of its grass and weeds. 2
The material gathered.
'T^'T V. i. To fit or move
stiffly, hard ; to hitch, rub ; to
(/o hard. 2 To be obstructed, lit.
fig. 3 To be restive — a horse. 4
To be ])osed ; to stick. 5 To be
offensive unto, [one's husband.
^"^ST, ^^^ f. The sister of
^frf^r The husband of a
husband's sister.
^cT .;q-[ff, ^err?! s in ast.o-
nomy. Zenith-distance.
•T^ ad. Afterwards, then.
2 prep. After, upon.
^^/. A nose-jewel. 2 Me-
dicine administered through
the nose, errhine. v. «T^.
"^ (s) A river.
^ (s) Red lines, &c. drawn
on the ^f?i:tf^ or cloth which,
at marriages, is held between
the bride and bridegroom. 2
Vertigo incidental to puerperal
women.
•1? c. A drone or lumber-
log : an egregious fool.
•T? A covert term amongst
dealers and brokers for the fees
of brokerage.
^^ (s) A son.
^RKPT A light kept night
and day before an idol.
^?^r /. 8 A daughter.
^^r /. (s) A river.
•T^r (s) The bull on which
Mahadeva rides. 2 A term for
a blockhead.
'T^nrf^ s The ocean.
=tfrq-^ A dolt.
^fr^rar An illiterate lout.
^r^^ A bull taught to obey
commands, to make certain
anwers, &c., and led about from
door to door.
=rfRI^^ a. Watered by
rivers — a country ; opp. to
=1 =r m.^lf. INo ! No ! Pro-
hibiting : denying, v. <BT, ^f",
^Rjtr A phrase imply-
ing Dubiously, questionably.
•TJ^ni n. m. One neither
male nor female. 2 An impo-
tent person, a. In grammar.
Neuter.
'TTT^ (a) a servant for low
work. 2 Used in stating the
number of a body of camels :
^^• ^o ^T=5T. 3 Au indivi-
dual, a poll.
=l^^r (a) Profit, gain.
RT^^irr ad. By way of gain.
•I^ST a. Feeble, infirm; —
used of living creatures.
•T^" s The skv. 2 A cloud.
W^r^cT a. Very lofty.
=iiT^rcr ^^^^ (s ^i^TcTr ^-
wfgxqfff.) It never has been
and it never will be.
•TiTR^^ 8 The canopy of
clouds. r., , ,
•\ . [the clouds.
^^\^^^ n. The sphere of
'W (s) Bending, bowing,
yielding, v. g, ^t, V, mj.
^^T^ V. i. To bend. 2 fig.
To bow to; to render homage.
3 To become humbled before,
^^^fp./jr. Falling, abating,
^^r (p) A sort of woollen
stuff. 2 A stuffed carpet; a
floor-rug, &c.
^^^ n. (s) Bowing. 2 fig.
Rendering homage unto. 3 TJie
lines in jjraise of the Deity at
the commencement of a Piiran,
&c.
=T^l'^^ V. c. To bow, bend.
2 fig. To humble.
^^^^K ,„. (s) ^m^ s /.
Worship, respectful salutation.
It is performed by joinmg the
palms, inclining the head, and
pronouncing the word "Jo. y.
'JIR^K'T V. c. To worship.
^Wr^/. (P) M^orship or di-
vine service, v. ^^, ^x
(among Muhanirr.adans). 2 fiw.
A sore burden ; a pest.
'IJ'Tr (p) A specimen, sam-
ple : a model : a copy.
"T^ a, (p) Represented, de-
clared : recorded : settled.
=WRJT: int. 8 pop. ^^\^^\f.
Salutation, v. ^^ g. of o. & s.
^rtTRT^rJl'JT A form of salu-
tation used b\' Gosavis.
'^ a. (s) Crooked, curved.
2 fig. Humble, lowly.
•T^ n. (s) An eye. 2 s
Leading, guiding.
'HT ad. A particle mildly
expressive of prohibition on
account of impropriety or in-
1 expediency : 7^-[W ^ giTW ^^-
232
^H"
m: (s) Man gen. 2 1 he
male of any species ; ftiul, laxly,
the better oue of nuv pair (ot
things). 3 fig. The sp>ke j>hich
lilsinto the ring (^t;^) ot
the other portiou ; forumig to-
gether a hinge (^J^^T^^I) ' a
niale screw. 4 A horse, o fhe
aiviue male or spint pervadmg
the universe. 6 The sine of the
altitude of a heavenly body. 7 R
A hangnail: ^^^T^^T^T^^
^^Di To break up (the image)
of man and make (the image ot)
God. See Jev. xvni.3, 4.
m^ (s) Hell. 2 fig. A mass
of filth.
^T^i{T n. A common term
for^the eiuhty-six pits i.repared
in hell for the damned. 2 An
opprol.ious term for the womb,
^^^'^r ». Filthy and stink-
ing water. .in j
^^^^tT Abiding in hell ; and
fi., in the womb or other place
considered as filthy and vile.
=r:^^ ^imf/. A term for
wicked deeds. ^ ^_
=n:^(^ 531^^ -OT^w. Terms
for debt, a ruined biisiness, any
dishonour, &c. «. ^, ^^, il-
:|^^ if, &C. ["oraure and filth.
^T:^^ -^r /. A place of
m:i\ f. A skull. 2 The hol-
lowed shell or the half of a
cocoanut.
mt\ f. ^^ "• The throat
or gidlet. 2 The trachea.
m^ /"• (^) '^^^ human body.
^^^ s A king.
^??" (s) The human body.
m^^ Human sacrifice.
m^ f. s India.
m^ a. (v) Soft. 2 hg. Gentle,
easy : imbecile. 3 Lukewarm-
water : dull of edge— a tool.
^T^\^\ f. (p) The relation of
male and female in the figurative
sense ; as between the riglit and
left hands or feet, or gloves,
shoes, &c.
5RJTT^^ V. i. To soften. 2
fig. To become gentle.
m^^^. (s) Human sacrifice.
=n:^ a. (h) Inferior, lower
in goodness.
WBK (s) Vishnu in his
fourth Avatar. 2 A man ofi
valour.
^ITfer^cfT?: The Avatar of
Vishnii as the man-lion to des-
troy f^^a?i^igg an infidel
prince.
^€\^\ A familiar appella-
tion for •T^f^'?-
qriT"^^^! ^\^^ f. A term
for a work for the performance
of which there are no appointed
persons,but which dejieuds whol-
I ly upon fortuitous agency.
=RRr f. An instrument for
l)aring nails.
HT\Z\ f. -3" n. See ^^^T-
^[^rjifff^ A phrase ex-
pressTve of utter ignorance of or
unconcern about a matter asked.
^t!^ a. B That dances, &c. ;
a tumbler, actor.
^^ n. s Dancing.
^c^ff ad. It is not needed. 2
It is not cf)nsistent, reasonable.
=T^ a. (s) New. 2 Nine.
^{f^I^^f^r^r^ A Crcesiis, Plu-
tus, millionaire.
^^^K (s) The nine planets.
2 A term for a band of persons ;
answering to Crew, pack, gang.
^^^^ a. Newly-forged.
^^'^^ f. n. A polc-sling.
=f^T^(v^) A fever of a certain
ty])e.
H^Z a. Newish. 2 Just
hewn — wood. 3 jSew. [^^;.
^fJi^ 71. The eighth of a
aT=|3II'C ^l^. Also changing
cue's agreement or terms.
^^^\ f. Youth. 2 The
sprouting of the plants at spring-
time. [Recently.
^T^r a. Recent, late. od.
^C?rnC n. f. (p) An official
term. Change for the worse :
perverse objecting or disputing.
V. ^iX, W^, *lt^. ^^' '
In bonds and notes : W*!
^1^1 'lo ^^1^ ^^?RT^%
R^fft n. pi The nine vents
in the human body. [youth,
rf^^^ /. The prime of
=f?^rcr n. (s) Fresh butter.
^^^\ f. (s) The ninth day
of the lunar fortnight.
qqtr^ f. B A young
woman.
^^T^.^ An honorary ap-
])ellation, at marriages, of the
bridegroom.
^^T\ c A bridegroom. 2 A
boy nubile. 3 The husband of.
^I^^Ffyi. Ground just reduced
under cultivation.
^^^\ f. c A bride. 2 A girl
nubile. 3 The wife.
^^c7 n. A wonder. 2 Sur-
prise. V. WT^.
q^Tc^^^^cT, ^^r^r#^ a. New
and wonderful; new and particu-
lar. Phrases used in inquiries and
in answers concerning news. ».
A strange thing, a marvel.
=I^c^TCr /. Poet. A wonder.
a. Wonderful, ad. Newly, oddly.
^W'lk f. See =I^^-
^^c^^I^s^ir a.Exceedingly rich.
=If ^r f. Freshness, bloom,
r. ^m■^, f^^ with g. ofs.
^^\^%\ A learner, a begin-
=r^'^ A vow : ^^^ ^rmer^
^■^^^K ^\^- '"^'-lid when a
thing insistingly prayed for
proves to be one's bane. (ben.
XXX. 1. with XXXV. IS.)
I =[f ^^ I", c. To vow.
I q^r a. Recent. arf. Recently .
=R€r^T (s) Sal ammoniac,
rf^ u. New.
H^I^^tl^ a. Brand new.
mending, applauding. [extol.
^^\^^ v. c To praise,
R^fcRtrff a. Young, youthful.
^IH^^'r, =I^R'^^H ad.
233
^rr^wr
Throuo'li many prayers and vows
— a child, &c. obtained : with
2;reat difficulty — au object at-
tained.
^fRcT^ a. Brand new.
•T'7[^ n. (s) New coin (of the
year). '2 The first dressinjj of it.
•T^rr f. (h) Coarse and
broad tape.
=I^f^r /. The first fruit of
the season, annats. 2 fig. The
prime of youth. 3 Any novel
thins.
oil. 4 A tube. 5 A drenching
tnl)e. 6 The bone of tiie lej;',
tibia.
=^^R a. (s) New.
[youth.
•TS" p. (s) Lost, ruined; as rTcST A pantile. 2 A kind of
.„ c-^ jv^^ _.^ » firework. 3 A vessel for huldina:
=TPrft/. Vileness.
•7^ (a) I'he ascendint; or
descending j)()rtion of the colon.
2 A vein. 3 (h) Snuff. 4 Any
thing administered medicinally
through the nose, an errliine.
wot V. i. Not to be.
•TcfcTr p. pr. Noi existent :
not real : «rg?ft^ q^'ST ^'^ i
^o3l||. 2 Uncalled for: s^o
^TTVFTT Meddlino' ; "•?!' ^"^
'T'^Sf y. A pi fie
gun-barrei. 2 Th
niisiil canal.
^^R^crr /. The spring of Uncalled for expense. 3 Unpro-
fitable ;«ro"M^^I. 4 Used jocose-
ly in the vocative (b^t
^^R^^r/. A term ap|). in
rebuke to a jierson ignorant,
or pretending to be ignorant,
of wiiat he ought to kuovvj
dear Johnny simple.
•T^R^r^ f. The new corn
and fruits, annats. 2 The fea=;t,
or the first tasting, of the annats.
3 fig. Any thing just come into
season,
v»
•f^ n. The feast of annats
(corresponding with Harvest-
home).
^szTi^^TR, =T5q-R ad. Newly.
^sq-faqq- ^^_ Ninety-nine.
^-qrwr, ^-m^\ «. Eighty-
nine.
^^'7^ a. Ninety.
^^^r a. Ninth.
^=^ Abridged from =T tm.
As the persons of this tense
are perplexing, we insert them:
^^ »r£f or ^c^ I am not ; ■g^
^#¥ or Si-^-q ; ^T, rPt, or ^
♦r^ or «T^?T ; rf, Fyi, or ?ff
^s^rf or ^^-^■i\ : and it re-
spects, not the being or the local
relation of its subject, but its
nature, ])roperties, class, kind,
&c. ; as ^T ttcI^'^ v;^\ ht
^T^r "slTTf (not -iT'^); ^T r^r
^':t ^Tff (not -51^) ; ^T tiT^TCT
^•^<f (not -m^l).
^^r/. (a) Intoxicated state.
2 Intoxicating drugs. ^^^^^_
=JraCcr35^eT/. (A) Chastise-
^^^< o. (s) Peiishable.
30
•ifTl?EjT Ho ! Mr. No body,
ho !) when a poor man is boast-
ing to his visitors of his wealtli
and numerous attendants. r> p.
a. Penndess, i. e. to whom there
is not.
^fT^W^^r a. That cannot
bear another's company or
another's prosperity; dissociid,
morose.
Wf? n. (a) Fortune, lot.
=n<fR^"cT -^R a. Fortunate.
"TfcT n. The Hne acioi^s the
mouth of a river.
^^"fT n. (p) A hmcet.
"T^^ a. s Nasal.
=TC*' See ^l^^.
^^T^T n. Ablution. 2 The
first appearing of the menses.
^Crfr A barber.
Tf r /. A river.
•7^ The ascending ))ortiou
of the colon. 2 Au aqueduct, a
sewer.
^ra^J'j ^S'^F'i', -ToS"^? 72.
^o3^t^t ./'. A tube.
q^f ff, q-sr^fr /. The bone
of the leg, the tibia.
'^'^^^ -? 71. Swelling of the
body commencing at the navel,
anasarca.
^'^^\'^ -STR Relaxing of the
bowels accompanied with fla-
tulence. ■ V e <.\ 1
. rs L'^f t''6 colon.
^3r^fJr?:o]f / Infiammatioji
a spoilt, a
tibia. 3 The
[ mansion.
^^^ n. (s) A star. 2 A lunar
'V'il^'m The moon.
"T^^f^r ? .; An asterism.
^r rial Not : ^\^\^ ^ ^F ^f-
^irT ^<7. 2 Not : -^iTq-SIT^T ">, «.
e. if not {that) then (//<i.s} :
^Nl" "SfT ^Sr^y^- 3 An adverb of
negation, Not: ^f ■S;i^r
^i«71. 4 A particle implying
surprise at some supposition
which has called it forth : ix^
Srfrtf«Tr? You are coming, arCt
you? 5 A redundant particle
occurring after the present parti-
ciple : 3T'3Sf^r, ^IrfT"5TT. t)
(p) A particle of negation :
^1^31, ^rqT^. 7 /. Negativ.
iiig. V. ^^, ^tJT, gfT^ ; and -SfT
^f W<m -fjoiffi, &c. To d.Qv.Y
of: en or much.
H\%^'\^ a. Destitute of help.
5. Kemedilessness or helplessness.
^rt"^ A chief; the head man
of a body. 2 The master of au
establishm.ent of horses, &c. to
be hired out. 3 A corporal. 4 Au
nifix to the names of Brahmans
who are shroffs ; as f--H^^ «i i o .
^rt^T (^) \ deputy..
'i^^ n. A barber.
^f^ n. The nose. 2 fig. The
sj)ot at which a grain, S:c. ger-
minates, the eye. 3 The eye of a
needle. 4 The principal person
(as of a family or an assemblyj;
the chief town or fort (of a
country). .5 The bore made for
nose-rings. (') JJoIdness, brazen-
fficedness : ^w M\ ^ITrr?gr -sfr-
^\-^ ofi^i ? With what face,
&c. 7 Fair repuiatiou : ;ri-^
•TTo 7f^. 8 An affix of cour-
tesv to the names of Mahars :
^r^=^f -=?R:r-7r ^r^ (The
hair within the nostrils.) A term
for a person or thing esteemed
very precious ; apple of one's eye.
5TT^=:f^
234
5Tr^^
•[raN«lf a. Snub-nosed.
5?r^3:r a. Naked.
•Tf^cfT^T A sort of locust ;
Gaffer Ion* legs.
m^Tf:t-TUt-mX f. Grind-
ing the nose ngainst the ground
in expression of penitence. 2 tig.
Al)ject iulreaty. v. ^TS.
^Tf^jlr /. A nostril.
HT^J'c^f /. (p) Denial, non-
consent.
Sff^cT a. Unwiilino".
•TRiflfS" /. Turning up the
nose ; contemptuous refusal.
•TT^tIT a. Incapable.
=rr^^ a. Unskilful.
•IRJ^ pi. Breath proceed-
ing through the nostrils. V,
•ir^r (h) a point where
several roads meet: the extre-
mity of a road. 2 A custom-
station. -iflHRT ^fiT^T'^T or tn^l
iloSJT^T %^ See t"^.
^r?iRr^f?r-^rmThe bridge
of the nose.
or fHf? /. The septum of the
nose.
The tip of the nose,
•ff^r^ n. A snout, a probos-
cis. 2 A point (of a hill). 3 A
cape. 4 Tiie protuberance on a
mango near the stem.
'{J^IT Refusing, rejecting.
=ir^r^^ V. c. To disallow,
decline.
-jr^l^r a. (h) Bad, useless.
^rf^R"C 'TS" n. Readiness to
cry. [bility.
^r^f^^ Xm Excessive irrita-
^\C^i', ^ifK a. (p) Unculti-
vated. 2 Uncultivable. /. Tallow
state.
^[^ 7?. See ^rnir.
•Il^^^r /. Blocking up roads
or avenues, v. ^K, %T.
^r^^r, ^m\^\ (?) The
punster of a ship, the captain,
^r^ a. (p) Displeased. km^pft /. (s) The betel-
^R (s) A sprpent, esp. the ' P^^nt.
Col)n» de capello. 2 A demigod -IR^r a. Naked. 2 Poor,
60 called. 3 A poisonous root
4 s An elephant.
^imr^ f. A fabulous
race of females of serjientine
extraction and very beautiful. 2
fig. A beautiful woman.
^^"^T^r V. (s) A small tree,
Mesua ferrea : also its flower (un-
cx|)anded), Cassia buds.
m^\, ^r^^r a. Naked. 2
fig. Unsheathed — a sword: un-
threaded— a needle : leafless — a
tree ; roofless — a house ; un-
adorned— ear, wrist.
^rn^r m. -^\f. The tail or
sting of a scorpion : the claw of a
crab, &c.
^rnq^Hf /. (s) a festival ;
the fifth of ^T^tiT^l : ou
this day the Nag is worshiped.
•TPT^f^ f. An ornament
twisted like a v^TlJI. 2 Sj)iral
lines, t'. ^T^, ^t^-
^tWtr a. Convoluted after
the manner of a «Il?r — a brace-
let. &c.
^m^trfr ^m-?:^cT[.^[T a ser-
])entine or zig-zag road.
^'m, ^m A plough. 2 An
anchor. 3 fig. A pen with a
coarse, broad nib.
=Tf^ A tribe of the n^F^
^T^T'Jl- «. Kelating to the city ;
urban.
^fiR'^r / Ploughing.
^m^oif / Ploughing. 2
Briniring to anchor.
H\m^\ V. c. To plough. 2 To
anchor. 3 fig. To harrow.
qjTjcot ^m V. C. To plough
and replough. ^^■^^, . ^^ban.
^fnlt^ a. 8 Relating to a
•lin^r a. Employed in
plough-work. 2 fig. A boor. 3
Arrived at the fit age for field-
work.
^m^ -m /. Plundering,
stripping, v. V, ^T^. 2 Plun-
dered state. [spoil.
/TRf^^ r. c. To plunder,
destitute. 3 Bankrupt.
^R^I^rs:^ Rain during sun-
^^i?^- [defenceless point.
'im^ n. A want; an open,
^R^3Tr3- V. Nakedness,
matters exposed to censure.
^m^ See ^rJTw§fr.
"TRF (p) Intermission, sus-
pension (in a w ork) : a break,
a gap.
^Rl n. Naked.
^rPT% /. s pop. =rf^or. See
=ff'Tr /. See ^rn^r. 2 a
spike (of the milk bush, &c.) :
a tender sprout.
•TrJi n. The furcation of
a forked stick.
•if^ A dance, dancing.
=n=^^f/. A quarrel. 2 Dis-
grace. [ quette, wanton.
=ir^^, =m?"Wfi<r /. A CO-
^\^^\ m. =Tf^qr / A grain.
^\'A^ V. i. To dance. 2 fiii.
To ski]) and caper about — a
child, horse, &c. 3 To speak
loftily. 4 To sjjcak in a
glowing strain : ^*T^ ^^"SI
'ir'^n a. Disposed to danc-
ing. 2 Frisky ; forward, offici-
ous— a person. [ness.
^r^n See =Tr=^'T. 2 Fidgeti-
^["^r^"^ IK c. To dance (per-
sons, jjuppets, &c.) 2 To make
to prance (a horse).
=l[^r, ^r^I%'^r a boy that
dances in girl's attire.
^2l^[f j-^ Delicacy : thin-
ness : fig. niceness, daintiness.
•rr^ a. (p) Delicate, soft :
thin, light ; fig. affected.
^^^^Rn. A delicate affair.
2 Secret wenching. 3 Bribe-
taking.
^r^^^ Secret expenses;
weuch-money. 2 Bribery-costs.
^m^
235
^^f^
=rf^*5rRr /: a tender place
Ajip. to Vital parts and the
pudenda. [court.
^\m A The Sheriff'of a law-
^rr n. Evil fortune, v. ^f^ :
^\^ -STIZ ^TJT^ ■^ ^«^1T- 2
A ])lay with cowries, a. Bank-
rnpt, or scampish ; indisposed to
pay — a dehtor. 2 Inauspicious —
a time, &c. ad. Clean lost or
perished ; absconded or non-in-
ventus. 2 Out of one's depth j
in a state of bewilderment, help-
lessness. 3 Out to sea : iT^-
•IK* n, m. (s) A drama.
^irH^TTr^r /. a play-lmuse.
2 A seraglio : the concubines
collectively.
•fr?*r a. That acts, dances.
2 fig. Deep, artful. 3 also iTT-
ZsrIsej Drau)atic : histrionic :
theatrical.
'TIT, 'ff^r/. Any tubular or-
gan of the body ; an artery. 2
The pulse. «. x^j'?. 3 The tape
(of drawers, &c.) 4 n. A tube.
^^1^/. Robbing. 2 Cheat-
in;jr. 3 Straitening.
^r^of V. c. To rob. 2 fig.
To cheat excessively. 3 i'o
straiten, pinch, v. t. To suffer
pillage, loss, &c. : fJi^o3^'^r
•rr^??" Continent.
•Tf^r A rope or cord. 2 A
strap. 3 A drenching tube. 4
Standing on the head.
^rfr See =rr?.
=T[ffq?^r^r/. (s) Feeling the
pulse. V. m^, m%.
"ir'^IfrR n. Knowledge (of a
malady) through feeling the
pulse : power of discerning
through the pulse.
^f^iTRnr -^^ n. Rope-
dancing or funarabulation.
^R^d]"-§^r A money-changer.
2 /. The business of a shroff.
'^r^ /. A grand-daughter.
grand-child.
*nrIc^l[a.Connected(by blood
or marriage) ; — used of kindred
some what remote.
^rrcRH/. The wife of one's
grand-son.
''Hir A grand-son.
'Tf^ n. Relationship. 2 Con-
nection; as l)etween master and
servant: ^^^TT-^T^^l^T'!fT» •
*Iffir3" ji, A grand-child.
•Tl^ (s) A lord; in comp.
"SfT^T^, *T^-5IT^. 2 The nose-
rope of a bullock.
•n^ (s) Sound or noise.
^nr^lT c. One that is taken
up by (any object of desire), 2
App. to one who holds others
in servile attendance and wait-
ing.
'^^^'^f- Dwelling, residing.
=TCT r. I. To dwell, abide. 2
To continue (with, at, in) happily,
thrivingly. 3 To be inhabited
— a house, &c. 4 To serve, an-
swer: cflT^ ^f^ ^t^eXTK
•TT'ff. 5 To suit, fit : <qi^ ^
^TT^' Tt^fT ^T^T. a To
consent : ^t ^^'ff\ ^iJJTT^' ■*lt-
•Ti^cir p. f)r. Inhabited —
village, house, &c. : not lying
fallow— land : thrivino;.
*■•
'TR'cr^//. A thriving family.
=rf^^^rrsR^f '^^^%/. a term
for a fellow who is obsequiously
forward in serving those who
nre capable of benefiting him.
^TR^JSwf a. Riveted by musi-
cal sounds.
=fr^^2TR, ^R"R?T4R n. s In
Hindu metaphysics. The crown
of the head. [9 Ignorant.
^ITRa. (p) Weak, feeble.
^KK a. (p) Insolvent. 2 In
law. A pauper. rn „ •
r^ ' ^ ["^"P^rism.
'ir?"Ki f. Insolvency. 2
^RT^^ V. L To emit a
cracked sound— a cracked vessel.
2 To be cracked ; to have a
flaw. 3 To be divulged and
blabbed abroad. 4 To be addict-
ed to. 5 To become infamously
notorious.
^RI No! No! prohibiting.
V. ^T. a. ind. (s) Many,
various: «?I«TT^q-T^-f^"V.(H)
A respectful terra of mention :
N^TT?*?T ^I'^T- [varieties.
^RfST^r^ pi Divers kinds,
'H^S^r A species of Coluber.
^fTcT/. Bad credit ; want of
credit. G. Of bad character.
^q^cT, ^[m^ a. (P) Dis-
approved.
•rr^r^ «. (p) impure, vile.
^\m s A barber.
'frrr^ v. Failure of the crop.
a. Sterile, poor — a soil.
•71^ a. (p) Incapable.
•Tff^ ad, (p) In the state of
destruction; lost.
^iPiT / m. (s) The navel. 2
The nave of a wheel. 3 The
central point.
^rtefr55-„. Poet. The navel.
^\^W: Utterance of Fear
not ; forbidding to fear ; com-
manding composure and assur-
ance. V. ■^.
^riiTEJ?^ n. s Omphalotomy,
^nr n. (s) A name. 2 A
noun. 3 m. T!ie perpendicular
mark on the forehead; liencc app.
to a vertical streak upon the
forehead of a horse. &c.
^m^iK'^ See ^RR'--IR.
'Tf^^K a. (p) Renowned,
''^^U,'^'^- [sumed by tailors.
'IR'^^ A general name as-
^fiTS^K^ a. (s) One that
seeks salvation by constant reci-
tation of the names or name of
the Deity. 2 also •Tlflt^lT'Cl
llenowned. 3 Titular, having
only the name (of a possession
enjoyed or a business conducted
by others). 4 Having the same
name as (another). 3 Having
only the name and character of:
^n^T^^r^rcT a. That surpasses
all name and form ; — used of
God. r ,.
r., [cowardice.
^PT?"r /. (p) Unmanlinesa,
^fiTR'-:if=r n. J. The rite of
naming (a child).
qriT^jr
236
qT^^ri*
^r^T^i]?:"^ V. Bearing in or
.■.I'.IniLr up into the niiml the
uiinn's or name of a god.
^r»lif^^'^ n. Renowned.
-i'FrrW-TR a. s A name.
-TnT[C?5" /: pop. -^"f A list oi
iiiiirics. I
^fTf a. Celebrated for ex-
cellence; superb, capital. j
^]^[^ -e" m.f. (a) Disrepute, !
i)iul name. v. ^.
'.[^^ (s) A cliief, bead :
^«7T'5iTo, ^^^T". 2 la drama-
tic composition. The man; the
lover. 3 The hero of a drania.
=TR^r /. The office of ^f^^'^.
^r^TOT/.The wife of a ^F^T^.
2 A woman that has command.
.'S A danoinsi' girl.
^I'^TF ivingwoim.
^^? See ^rt^-
^r^^] The female of a ^P^;
a conductress, a mistress.
•T T f. A woman, m. The
core of wood. 2 The core of a
horn. 3 The heart or inside
gen. [Orange tree and fruit.
T\t^ s pop. ^Tt^\ f. The
^]TZ, ^F^rSrjPT One of the
t^n original ^f^T. Tie dcligiited
in exciting quarrels, llencc a
make-bate.
^F^ST A cocoanut. 2 f. Co-
coanut-tree. 3 m. Cant. Pate,
noddle, cranium.
^\T(S*^\1 A cocf^annt-tree
kept for fruit. 2 A cocoanut-tree.
^f^T^f^ ^f^/- A cocoiinut-
shcll.
^IT^'F f. Cocoanut-tree. '2 A
lialf of a cocoanut-shell (used as
51 vessel).
=^!Tf^r a. (p) Discontented.
^FO^''^(s) A name of Vishnu.
2 A cant word among S.myasis
lor money. 3 A cant term for
tlie Guinea-worm.
^FFTt /. The orange tree. n.
An orange. [- ^nd fruit.
^FFl'^tJTF /: The orange tree
'IJ^i f. (s) A woniiin.
»iF"5"^[^ INon-cousent, dis-
aliiiwal. V. ^. I
"^F^ (h) Guinea-worm. '
mF^ (a) a hi)rse-.*.hoe. i
^F^f /. (h) a sort of:
P'^'K^"- [horses.
m^^'^ (p) A shoer of
^Fc^t^F /. The price of
shoeing a horse. 2 Horse-shoe-
ing.
"TF^F (h) a rivulet, a rude,
irregular stream or its dry bed.
2 A drain, a guttei'.
^FiWqT-^cF .l%f, (p) A com-
plaint. V. '^fih 2 Evil (;is
sjiokcn or known concerning) ;
faults and delinqtienees (as
viewed as grounds of blame).
^F^F/: A boat.
•^It n. A niinie: 2 A noun.
3 iig. Renown, credit. 4 A
Rtigrna, H blot. v. ^qf.
=7F^3"/. m. Dislike.
•TF^^^ V. i. To be disagree-
i ftb'e nnto.
^\^^^], ^f^^F «. Disliked.
^RR^TF^^ V. (p) Name and
}>articul!irs.
^F^R^JF /. A roll of names :
I a name borne upon it : as
! TT^7 "?!to ^TS-
; 'FF^^^ ?/. Fame, alory :
I credit. 2 Name and form ; ])er-
; ^:'''"i'^^'- [ritv.
i^f^^f^^ Popularity, celeb-
' ^\m^^\, ^,i^^^ See ^^F-
1 ^^2- [helmsman.
j =Fr^f'-^F -^F A boatman, esp.a
j^FWFF'^TF^F a. Clear from a
i (!md) name. p,y^^_
! -FFF^^ a. s Relating to a
i "TF^'T a. s Navioable. 2 Naval.
HhcLlj^ A mere shaver.
. =FF^ (s) Ruin. 2 Damage. 3
I In arithmetic. Elimination.
i "TFiT^ a. That ruins ; in comp.
•ib'l'^ V. c. To spoil, damage,
=iF5T^cT a. Destructible.
^Il%tcr a. Perishable.
=FF^ See ^1^./. (h) Snuff.
•TF^^F a. Spoiled, injured. 2
Perishable.
=7F?T^^^ n. Perishable o;oods,
2 A corri!]>ted article, o fig. A
sorry article (as a rip of a horse
offered for sale).
'iF^'T" V. r 'Vo spoil, corrupt.
V. i. To spoil.
i^FH^F, =TF^f5T/. 7n. Demo-
I lished state : loss in trade.
I
r. g.
|^?TI71T, ^^^^^f?- a. Un-
wise, foolish : of dull understand-
ing.
rfF^T^SF -STFfF / Lack of
t wisdom or sense. [nose.
Rr?FF?T ??. s The tip of the
'^^:g"- ^F /. -S'F w. Utter
destruction, excessive loss.
RF^I^^F, =iF^F^ a. Tliat
occasions great loss.
Hf^F^^ V. i. To miscarrv.
"IfF^cr ad. s It is not; there is
not. r,- 1 1
^FF^cf^ (s) An atheist or in-
^nfFRcFWcf ri. The dogmas of
a^^lfv?^. [bfiaelity.
^FRl^^ n. s Atheism or
•^FRcFfF^ Nonness or non-
being (of a thing required). 2
Denying, r. -yr, y, ^jlll^t^.
3 The last hard resource.
^F§:^, ^F^T^ arl. (p) Unjust-
ly, wrongfully.
^IK^^ V. c. To bathe (an-
other). 2 Cant. To plunge, i. e.
to cheat : «? ^55 ^I^T ^^^t-
^FF^t^iTFtJif^ 71. Ablution and
inunction ; esp. that of women
and children.
•TF^°T?c?f f. A woman under
menstruation for the first time,
'FF^'^F f. A cbannel to carry
off water. 2 .V place for ablu-
tion.
:Tr^^
237
f^g^
^\^^ V. i. To bathe. 2 To
have her courses, v. c. To hathe
(another).
^f?"^r5^f f. A woman re-
gularly uiulerfjoing the men-
strual flux ; or a woman arrived
nt ])uberty.
^[^fr, ^\^\^i A barber.
=irf r arl. No ; not.
•TlQ"fcr<Cf ad. Even if we say
none or not — still ; at the least :
•TnT^"^ r<r/. Impossible, alto-
gether improyjcr : «ri'^1r ^"^
^[f h^f -"^'^r ad. I n the second
place ; at the least,
•rr^ ??. The stalk of the lotus.
2 The umbilical cord. 3 f. The
))ro\v of a vessel. 4 A cannon. 5
Old metal vessels.
^FcciT'T -^ n. Swellincr of the
body eomraeucing at the navel,
anasarca.
H^iS" ad. (s) Near, nigh.
I'T^H''^ V. i. To so away.
Used of one whose departure is
desired or rejoiced in. 2 To draw
nigh.
i-T^Z'^Tir a. s Near, nigh,
R^^^. Urging, pressing.
r^^'^ a. Void of corn —
tin-ashed. 2 Free from bits —
cleaned rice. 3 Wantuio; (rranules
ihee.
r<co.
R^cTF ad. Lately, a while a
R^^r a. Doggedly obstinate.
f^^^^ ad. Positively.
R^^ m. Bpop. R^r m. f.
Excess or excessiveness; blind
deterraineduess of purpose or
action: fcf^TT^ ^of. Also
^T f^^TT^ ^TT, and some
times fsf^^ mxivi. Also 'C^-
JWT^T-^n^TTjjT^T, &c.f«fr^?:Ex-
. treme headiness and violence of
any action ; and, by eminence,
the violence of oppression or
injustice ; as f^]^ fff^K ^^r
^m-^\. Also ^i^qi'wi-'sn^T^T
f«l*^ Excessive plentifulness
^ofanvthinn;. [decline.
r^5[^^r<^ The season of
H^ao% a. Spotless, lit. fig.
H^f (a) An inferior sort of
marriage (amongst Muhain-
niadans). a. Pure, holy : exact,
just. 2 Positively.
R:^f^^ a. (s) Penniless.
li^rS"r A second decoction
of medicinal herljs.
f^:^fq" ff^ (g^ Disinterested.
H":^|iTffl" /. Disinteresfed-
ncss ; aflrib. disinterested. 2 ad.
Uusi'Itishly.
R^iRF a. Useless.
R:^Rq- ad. Causelessly,
needlessly.
r-f^r^ (k) Vent, issne (i. e.
the flowing forth or the channel)
of water. 2 fig. Settlement (as
of affairs).
R^l^Sjff/. A petition de-
termined upon (decided by the
authority).
m,\^^^, ]^^\m^^ n. The
periodical return sent in by the
irm^lT^T^ to the collector;
showing how he has executed
orders, disposed of eases, &c. 5
also called '^t^T'?'^. 2 A roll
of cases furnished to be investi-
gated.
H^Tc^^^iT The final sen-
fence or decision (of a court).
R^fs-?r, Ri^r^^r «. Un-
solicitous, careless about.
RfcR n. (s) Cnttino-. 2 fig.
Slaughtering, cultivg up.
R^?" a. (s) Low, vile, base.
[•T^S'^Fc^ The period of de-
r.^*^ ^"^' \_ad. At least.
Hf 5"^^ (s) The last degree.
R^PT -q'r a. Exempt from
fault, flay/; sound, Arm — an
article. 2 Free from disease or
defect — the bodv, a person, an
animal. 3 Poet. Clear or void of
blemish or badness, whether of
excess or of deficiency: Fqj^
^T"<f%'ll.
f^^T^ Corrupt for X^t^^^
R^^ '/?,. s A hundred thou-
sand millions.
f^<^^ot V. c. & i. To unscrew,
break up : to loosen. 2 fig. To
hoist out.
R^r^r a. That is without
^onebreak-a period. ^^^^^^^
l^W^ffr^r a. Regular, cons-
R?irn A live coal.
TwicTfr a. (h) Plain, blunt,
open — a person, speech, &c. 2
Separate, other. 3 ad. Certainly.
4 Purely, merely.
rv ■^ rx. •x rs' [sound.
R<^f^, H'.4r^r a. Faultless;
RT^ (s) A common term
for the four Vedas as inscrutable.
2 In this sense, God. 3 End.
r-fSW^f^qr n. A term for^'TtrT
y^^^ ad. Poet. Lately. /.
Skdl, tact. 2 Care, iieed :
K^ifTy^.s Restrained,cnrbed.
R^TC (s) Restraint; bind-
ing. 2 Firmness (of purpose or
opinion). 3 Capture, arrest.
R?f?T55r?e-JTV^ a. Powerful
to restrain (the wicked) and to
confer favours (upon the good).
See 2 Pet. 11., 9.
R^Tf cT p. Curbed.
R^of a. Determined, firm.
H'hZ s a vocabulary of
the words peculiar to the Vedas.
2 A vocabulary gen.
i^^^ V. i. To get or go out,
forth, from. 2 To come off or
away from ; to be detached
from. 3 To issue, result, spring
from. 4 To turnout; to prove
to be; to be developed. 5 To
turn up ; to take place. 6 To get
out ; to run at speed — a horse,
&c. 7 To be produced ; to come
into being or appearance :
IJT 911^^ ^^^ ^tn^ fffW^".
8 To pass away or cease :
'^l^rt f?igT^. 9 imp. or in
com}). To be vomited up : cqi'^T
f^Wf^ or r?iT^T 3?^ fs?sri??f".
It) In combination with other
r^^
238
r^R?r
Terbs, it signifies To set about ;
to fall to; to begin: 5Tr^-'^^-
R«rr/. (p) Care in looking
after ; regard to. t'. ^^, "s^,
^^^r /. Oozing out or
Jromjrunniu-. [-^^.^^^
H^*^ V. i. To ooze out : to
n^r Exudation. rg^m
j^^c7 -aS a. Motionless, ad.
R^^ a. Tasteless.
R^r^"T V. i. To sink, go
down — a buikling, &c.
r^r^cT See f^f^cT.
H'^cT^, R^cT a. Insensible,
iinconscious.
M^? a. Devoid of motion or
performance of the vital functions.
rr^rS"cT p. Swooned.
Rsf a. (s) Own, peculiar.
Rsf^N n. One's own (pecu-
linr) business. 2 Soul-business;
business of knowing self or the
Supreme spirit.
H^sf=IT^^ o. s Protector of
bis people. A title of God.
RsfJqTr One's own stock.
App. esp. to one's stock of
■<JUJI and ^'[^.
pT^rq ^;. I To sleep. 2 To
recline. .3 To lie sick. 4 To die.
5 To ]ierish, sink — money, &c. 6
To sleep — one's luck : to be
languid — i^lory ; to be desolate—
a village, a house.
Rsl*ifr^ 71. One's own house,
home : tjf-^^ ir^ f5Tol"m*n^'^.
2 fi". The peculiar abiding place
of.
Pn^"^^ Corrupt from RR"-
Pl^^F'-T Self-knowledge.
Pt^i'tT a. Self-existent.
RsI^T n. (s) One's veryself.
y^Jff^oT J, f, To jay down (a
person). 2 To lay along; to set
horizontally.
f^^rgrr a. Half -asleep.
RsffSy , l^fSTf^ a. Sleepy.
f^^RT, r=l^l^r a. Weak.
r=T?Rof See PH^i^T. ,
^ |_ness.
R^K /. Straiglitness ; neat-
tof^Tr/. Putting to rights.
I'lJF^'T V. i. To become
good, correct. 2 To fall to ; to
set to. 3 Poet. To go on
straight. 4 To advance upon.
6 To become adept.
r=ITr^r Straightness. 2 fiir.
llightiiess. '6 A prop. v. '^.
\^\\m V. c. To put to
riglits ; to do accurately.
I'TS'oS" ri. The forehead (as
having man's destiny written on
It).
r^S-S-t, R^r^ n. Earned
by the sweat of the brow.
H<jaiOT V. i. To give way.
RcT See R^^-
Rcf^K The ^ th of a cake of
J3read, &c. [woman).
(•Tcf^ (s) Buttocks (esp. of a
RcfR% f, (s) A woman
with large and handsome pos-
teriors.
f^cT^f^r/rZ. (s) In the superla-
tive degree. Used only of rogues,
thieves, &c. 2 .Altogether, neg.
cim. Not at all, or none at all.
RcfcZ" a. Clear, pure — oil,
water, &c. 2 Uright, glossy, n.
The name of a hell.
f^cIoS'tT" V. i. To become
clear and shining — eyes, &c. : to
get fresh-looking — crops, &c. :
to clear off^elouds. V. c. To
polish by rubbing.
RcfT^ a. That has not been
heated ; unassayed by fire —
gold, &c.
f^ a. (s) Perpetual. 2 Of
regular and close recurrence, ad.
Alwavs ; ever.
R^^4 n. Constant busi-
ness ; esp. used of the daily
rites, &c. of the Brahmans.
l^r^T^T^ a. Ever new; evei
coming t& the knowledge of." 2
Ever fresh. ^ . ,
P ».r^ r> [occasional.
R^^T^FTlTf^ a. Constant and
ITr^T^: ad. Always : con-
tinually.
r^^r^:^ a. Eternal.
R^^rPlW a. Constant and
occasional. 2 Permanent and
transitory.
Hr^TlfS- /. The daily meal-
row of Brahmans. 2 Invitation
to one's daily board, ti. ^x:,
RSTS* See R?r^-
R^r^ot V. i. (H) To drip,
trickle, v. c. To drain or draw
off the liquid portion of: to
strain.
R3T^ -R2T^ (H) The liquid
portion of a thiu^f drained or
drawn off or settled clear, the
drainings or the pure sediment.
R^^ o. (s) 'i'hat reproaches,
blames : that reviles.
R?'^ -^ n. Weeding (of a
cornfield). 2 Grass and weed
growing amidst corn.
R?-oTr /. WeediniT. pfi in
^ V. -^ ^ [field).
I-R^T V. c. To weed (a eoru-
R?*^ V. c. To reproach,
blame : to revile.
[•T?^!^ a. s Censurable, &c.
R^S'rr a. Half-asleep.
R^r f. (s) Reproaching ;
reviling.
RTf'^ir c. A reviler, scofFer,
\'\^\'\ n. (s) A first cause. 2
The state of extremity : ^ ^q^
fil^i^T^ ^^^\^ ^«ft^. 3 The
highest or lowest extremity; the
uttermost (snm, &c.) 4 Ascer-
taining the causes of disease;
pathology, ad. At the least ; after
all : ^lil^T^lfsTo «tW^ ^R^
^ [at the lowest.
R^^^ ad. At the least;
Rl?^ p. (s) Reproached :
reviled. 2 Condemned (esp.
raw; "one ever learning without ' by the Sh^strasl
f^tf^^
239
r^JTT
Pff^^TW s Deep and reiter-
ate consideration of : particular
and intent contemplation of.
r. yjK. g. of 0.
J%?^ s Older, command. 2
Direction.
n?'5T'T" V. c. To order, &c.
^'i^ a. s (Proper, possible)
to be reproved.
R5:r /. (s) Sleep.
HSTI^sjoo^. -^a. Sleepily in-
clined : sleejn-headcd.
Hi3:^ -^cf -m a. Asleep,
sleeping.
Th^^^ ad. Boldly, fearlessly.
r>T«fr f. Weeding.
R'^'T^ V. c. 'I'o weed (a corn-
field). 2 p To heat by exposure
to the sun or a tire. v. i. To
contraet(heator iflowj — the body,
the j^round, victuals.
Th^J^ n. s Death. 2 Loss.
H^ Glow (of a heated
thing, &c.) 2 Steamy heat of
the soil : «jr*T»rl^t f^To ^*13f(I
^m^ "^TiiT^Toft^ V^^T. 3
The swift spinning (of a top)
upon one spot, sleeping, v. "^K-
r-_ f
H'iTfC /". Great fuss or loud
cry about. Used with: ^icf,
^T^, ^TH, ^^t and in con-
tempt.
r\'^^\H n. (s) A treasure of
^'^'C. 2 A natural treasure, a
mine. .3 X hidden treasure. 4 A
rece])tacle.
1'1'll^r a. Nameless.
['TT^cT a. Still from exhaus-
tion ; lying senseless, v. xj^,
n^^ Produce, profits.
T^^'m v. l To spring or
proceed from ; to be born. 2
To turnout: ^T ^l^T f^^-
f^^ ad. (H) Very, wholly :
f5T» ^TJI?T 5/flr/c naked ; f^»
^NsT 5^o«e blind; f^o «^
A proper fool. 2 Absolutely.
R'T3'°T V. c. To scrape or
wi[)e up or off, esp. with tiie hand
(any liquid or moist substance).
2 or f%q^^ ^T*uf To set
down by scoffing. 3 To perform
the remnant (of a work); to
finish lip. 4 tig. To emaciate.
f^TJR^sf^T c. A perfectly pure
and holy person. Hence, fiice-
tiouslv. A perfect and jJin'e ras-
cal ; a genuine scamp.
RtTTf^r a. (h) Vile, wretch-
ed, I. e. mere scrapings and
off-scouriugs.
[^TSTl^FT^r The scrapings
and wipings of the dish.
Rqqsrr The grandfather of
ji grandfather. [grand-son.
RT^The grand-son of one's
\^^W^ V. c. To unsheath. 2
To pluck out (hair, &c.) 'A To
jlraw forth. [arid— soil.
Vl^aS^Z a. Not holdnig water
Rir'^r a. Scantily supplied
with water — a place. 2 Not re-
quiring rain ; sustained b}' the
humidity of the soil — sugar-
cane, &c. 3 Unmixed with water
— milk, &c.
R^IcT s Falling; in comp. as
T^r^JRiff. 2 Death. 3 In
grammar. Exce|)tion. r^-
rT [tion.
R:^rcT (s) Complete desiruc-
HJ"^ a. (s) Conversant with.
H^^ -fr -^Tl^ a. Wanting
male offspring.
I'lJ^ f. Deficiency.
R^'^^IclS- Mere rock.
l-T^S"/;. s Fastened, confined.
R^'^ s A treatise, a compo-
sition. 2 See f^^^.
R^^ a. Old and tough ; dry
and stiff — a plant, &c. n. Sun-
shme.
R^^r"Ti v. Leaves of the
Nimb with salt, &c. waved
around the face of a person to
counteract the influence of an
evil eye. v. ^riXy ^X..
R^r a.(H) Unmarried; — used
of UR adult.
r^^r^r a. One whose father
is not known ; a foundhng.
R?^^ a. (s) p<ip. PT^^"
Thick — darkness: close, dense
— a wood: heavy — rain ; sound —
sleej).
Rf oTr / The lime-tree.
Rf; n. A lime. ^ [mature.
R^ Ears of ^l^^-f nearly
R^P?)- /. The lime-tree. 2
A seed of the Nimb-tree.
RiT'^ V. i. (H) To get through
or over ; to endure ; to stand out
(a danger, a service). 2 To suc-
ceed : -^ ^T*T 7^1=^1'? I'll;-*? f*r-
^^. 2 To be well conversant
with (as having gone through) :
'^T f^f-^nzil^r ^Tflffl fsfiTntiT.
R^I^ Success ; happy pro-
gress and end (of things and
persons). ro
FWI^oTry^. Carrying through^
H^m See m^.
^^^n^^\ V. c. To carry
through (a danger, a trial).
I^^^R See R'^R.
PT5T^ (p) Salt.
RiT?;?TriT a. Ungrateful.
RiT^?:?:mr/. ingratitude.
R3T^?:??l?r a. Grateful,
faithful.
r'iiT€?-?=rrc?T /. Faithfulness.
RWn a. Of rather fair
complexion.
RlT^Tr?'' A hemispherical
form a. Hemispherical.
I'1^51"„,(s) Drowned, sunken.
2 fig. Absorbed iu.
RiT^r (p) A kind of sword.
RJTvrSI^ ;j. s Immersion.
TW V. i. Poet. To cease,
rest : to abate : ^^'^ f^*IT^
^T^^JI 0- 2 fig. To die: ?fW-
?fr »nfi^W fsi^TT^T. 3 To be
absorbed in.
r^^r
240
r^r?rr
RiTcrrCffl /. (p) Receiving H^^ a. Free from any hid-
01- dismissing (a visitor) without den vent — a riZS, "^t"^. &'c. 2
rising, but iiiiikingau inclination Exempt from crack. 3 Expeiul-
to rise. v. "ij, ^. 0pp. to ^il^T- ed. 4 r>cruft of sense or consci-
_-v„ ousncss.
ri. . „ ^f. „ i R^ f. (p) A half. a. Half.
few hantlfuls of a crop from dif- j K5TR3T, llJTff'IIT ad. By
[ ferent parts of a field ; in order, j l,rdvos.
bv measuring the corn con- r-r^r-r-;-^ 7 • 7 a i *. 1 if
tamed ni tliem, to calculate tlie i ^ ^ ^
wiiole produce, v. m^, i, j I^^TT See Rl'H^.
^x:. 2 Remeasuring-, re-ex- f'lffroS'crr o. Ta})er, conical,
aniining. ?;. 9, ^^, xii^. j R^f^ ^;. (g) Fixed, seitled.
f^W^^T n (s) Invitino- - Positive. 3 Self-governed, ud.
, ^. °' Certainly, fixedly.
r=TR^'^ 1-. c. To invite; toi fifjjeTf «. s That ooveins.
R^f^cf p, (s) Invited.
m'-!^ f. A half of the pro-
duce of a field ; esp. a half-
share, whether of the lessor or
lessee.
mTT /. The half.
RJT3TIC, \^mX f. Halving, v.
^X. 2 A moiety.
I'^^rra a half-assessment.
mr^ /. See ^=^r^.
HWff //. (s) Object, pur-
pose, aim : VT3«^T«iT^T f^-
fflxiTJr •^t^tI ^^ ^i^T. 2
Cause: ^T ^T<1^ fvif«=f]T^
■qiTjft ilSfT- 3 Instrumental
cause. 4 A false plea : ^T?-
■^'al'^T fsffflTlTH ^<t ^Tf%^T.
[) False imfjutalion. r. ?i, »iTJI,
r^^^Fir a. Of subdued spirit.
f°T?i^^^ 71. Ride, restraint:
^abij^v to govern. [senses.
mcrrs:^ «. Of subdue, i
m^ (s) A rule, law. '2 A
regular practice. 3 Estal)lished
order. 4 Any religious obser-
vance voluntarily practised : any
obligatory religious observance.
5 An engagement. r:
R^jq"^ 71. s Ruling, regulat-
R^TITRS" a. (s) Reuular and
sti'ict in the observance of reli-
gious rites and w'orUs.
R?TW^q" s Restraint and
govenuiient botli or ^m^^
and of ■^T^fs^. 2 Certain
observances towards the power
of government, v, ^T,.
fqiJ-iTI^r a. Regufar, 01 derly :
sober, steady, ud. Regularly.
Tm^K %T<t'^ fsT" ^Tsi. prep. \ R^TjT^ p. (s) Appointed. 2
On accouut of: ^'T'Cl f^fflfj
RR^^^"[r c. One that feigns
excuses. 2 One that seeks occa-
sions to blame.
Ruled. 3 Regulated.
r^m\, R^q^r?y, R^riTS" a.
Regular and strict m tlio obser-
vance of religious rites. 2 That
adheres to rule and method;
stea<ly, sober. [-^1,3^ fj^es.
r^RTTI^f q% A term for a f^^I^^ a. s That restrains ;
j)ersonmadetobeartheblameof. ip^q-^ ^^_ ^^^ Appointed.
RR^^ See fnR^- [eye. ! p^^^, jj ^ Appointment.
Mm (s; A Uviuklingof the i^^i^f^-^^ ^,^ ^_ -^,^ ^^^ig„. ^^
R^tS^cTl a. Taper, conical. order.
f^JTJ a,7. Silently, mutely :: W^R «. ^ac/.(l'^r^^) Mis-
still, quietly. " .1 used in the sense of Pure, mere ;
purely. 2 Quite, altogether:
R^5^ «. (.•?) Uncontrolled.
RT33" (p) Market- rate.
r^m^ V. c. To behold in-
tently. 2 To inspect closely.
I^C?T,R^^r Tile regulator
of the ju-ice-current of a market.
2 fig. App. to a shrewd person.
[^^^•T a. (s Exempt from
^tsjifor fig. darkness) Light ;
all-knowing and all-good — the
Deity. 1 John i. 5.
Rt5[^ 71. A metal lamp-
dish to be set before an idol.
RtcT^" </(/. (s) Cnnsiantly :
continuously, a. Constant ; con-
tinuous. 2 Having contact with.
I'iTT'^ 7}. Sciapinii's and wip-
ings of a dish of food.
R^^fT^r /'. Scraping or wijj-
ing up or off, &c.
R^^f^ i\ c. To wipe u[). 2
fig. To repair (a fault) by suffer-
ing ; to pay for. 3 To draw
roughlv (a sword from its scab-
bard, a leafy twig). 4 To get
I'uriotisly angry with.
Rrq^riq- a. (s) Faultless. «(/.
Faultlessly.
iR^<??r a. (s) Free from desire.
f^TpiT^R a. pop. P^T^JTRF
Lowly, humble.
Hi^ a. Cloudless, n. Un-
elondedness.
R^<ij^ a. Devoid of ^icnse —
a word. 2 ^^'auting profit —
labour. 3 Vain, empty. 4
Uncalled for.
f-f^Tc^^ a. s Active, busy.
R^^^i^T a. (.Si) That is with-
out leisure. 2 That is without
anv time remaining. 3 That is
without space.
RT^'^r/. Consigning over.
r^^^^^ a. (s) Wanting limbs.
R^^^f a. (s) Destitute of
support. 2 Independent, abso-
lute.
f=T?:^rf^^f /. Committing (as
on setting out upon a journey)
f^R"
241
r^th"
the children to the care of one,
the cattle to the care of another,
^"^^^ ^, [the keeping of.
nH^'T V. c. To cotumit to
R^5T'T n. (s) Fasting utterly :
such a fast. njj,
R^"Fr a. Of secondary qua-
FR^^ V. c. To pass otF; to
flie away.
r-R^r a. Neither scalded
nor mixed with water; — used of
milk ill the neuter form fsj-
?;^. [ Humble, lowly.
^k^K a. (s) poj,. v-Ktmi
i^X^X a. Illiterate.
[•Rr o. (h) Pure, simple, m,
Theunferniented exudation from
the Palmyra tree.
rRf^^'T n. s Removing, re-
jecting. 2 Denying.
R^r?:iT a. (s) Formless.
Rrr^f^rTa. Free from desire.
R^P^R a. Void of foun-
dation or support ; — used Ijoth of
thiujzs destitute of it and of God
as exempt from the need of it.
[•RfT'iT a. Free from desire.
[Hxmm a. 3 Void of empty
semblance; void of illusion. An
attribute of God. '2 Incapable
of beiiit^ represented by any
similitude or of being ai)])reheiid-
ed by any fancy or mental con-
ception—the Deity.
W\^^ a. (s) Free from
sickness ; healthy. 2 Free from
diseases — a place. '6 pop. Un-
anxious, tranquil — a person,
sleep : free from disturbance —
a place, service, business.
f^X\^^ See f^rc^e-.
r^U^T a. (s) Despondent,
hopeless. 2 Uudesirons.
r=Rr^ /. Despair. 2 Free-
dom from desire. tr^ n
p [lit. fig.
I'KV^^ a. Devoid of shelter,
TOf^-T^ a. Unsheltered.
f^fB" /. (Vulgar) Despair.
^f^^R (s) Fasting. 2
Abstinence from the usual solid
food. a. s pop. felTT^K^
31
That observes the fast termed
f'f^T^T'^ or that fasts gen.
RTFS- }i. Poet. The sky.
f^RFo^T a. Separate, distinct.
2 Different. 3 Disjoined ; diverse
from.
riR^£5" a.s Void of desire.
Rfr^3T /. Absence of desire.
HRfST^ a. s Impotent, im-
becile.
Rff /. A fold of the frerr or
^iri. 2 A phut gen.
l^m m. n. Ballast.
M^f^^T n.^ Beholding closely
and attentively.
F^fr^T^r V. c. To beliold mi-
nutely ; to scrutinize.
F'R'Tn p. s Described by
statement of its projierties and
circumstances ; defined.
F'T^FtR" f, s Defining; de-
^^"'*''"V. [verily.
R'^'cfF-cf ad. Poet. Certainly,
PT^Tir a. (s) That is at a
loss for an answer ; silenced.
['=7^^^F?' a. Dispirited. 2
Heartless.
R^^ (t. Narrow.
R^^R (,.{-,) pop. R^^r^Tr
Destitute of employment. 2
Living in idleness.
rWCF^Fn n. Ungrateful. 2
Ungracious.
F'^'^^JT^ a. Free from moles-
tation. 2 Harmless.
Fn^W a. Incomparable.
P{^^im a. pop. F'^^qtFJIF
Unsuitaljle. 2 Useless.
PF^fTffq", F^^TF'^f^ a. Free
from trouble.
\^^^\^ a. pop. R^C[[ft Help-
less. 2 Irremediable.
FH^F^ Remedilessness, &c.
F'l'^^ a. Pure, unadulterate.
m. Fine litne jirepared with ma-
sala to rub over and finish a
chunam work.
R^^T^ a. s That describe.^
2 That narrates.
F^T^T'T n. Describing. 2
Telling.
per) to be described ; also to be
^*°''^- ^ [To tell.
m^m V. c. To describe. 2
F^^fqcf p, (s) Described. 2^
J^Ji [quarter.
F^^fcf /. 8 The south-west
r=R?^^F V. c. To behold. 2
To inspect (gold, &c.) r^^.^jj
R^IT, RU% a. Healthy ;
F-nH'^ (s) Restraining : re-
^stramt. j-^i^j^^ obstructs.
mU'^^^ a. That controls:
mm V. c. To control.
[•T^TR^ n. s Restraining,
confining.
M^F^ A message. 2 Honor-
able dismissal, v. ^_. 3 Per-
mission to depart, v. ^, ^.
R^FTFRfl'fr ad. By means
of message.
M^C^iJF a. A messenger. 2
One charged with instructions
to communicate.
|^}]aj^(- ^j Incapable, incom-
petent. Used with gfT^^«T-
m^f. (RJTR s) Success. 2
riai)py issue or exit out of; —
used of persons. 3f.n. An ex-
port : impost on exports, p. s
Passed by ; come out of or from.
R-TR (s) Happy issue out of.
2 End. 3 Going out or forth.
F'Ti'lFc^cT p. s Well strained.
2 fig. Purified of guile.
mfSf. A fast or firm knot ;
the holding knot (whether reef-
knot or grannain's knot).
R^S" f, A shrub. The leaves
are used in fumigations.
FHJ^ a. (s)Thcit is without at-
tributes ;— used of God. 2 That
is without good quahties.
pF^'^e"F^F^^F^ s Spiritual
manifestation afforded of him-
self bv God. r, J
., - [tude.
n^\X a. Free from solici-
(•T^^ a. (s) Immortal.
Mc7 a. (s)^ Wholly want-
ing or having but little water —
a country. 2 In which water
even is not to be drunk — a fast.
R^f a. Lifeless. 2 Weak.
3 fig. Flimsy.
rf°T^ (s) Determination ;
decision. 2 In law. Sentence,
decree.
Ht^TcT -?-(^rcr a. That is in
easy circumstances.
rKT a. Pure, unalloyed :
simple. [Merciless.
f^^q" a. (s) pop. f^tf
l^c7=T w. r^t"^^r /. s pop.
r^^o?W «. Demolishing. 2
Slubbering over.
R^fcTrf p.s Utterly destroyed.
R^W y. c. To demolish. 2
To slubber over.
f^I^S" p. (s) Described. 2
Oi-dered, directed. ftion
R?5T Description. 2 Direc-
RTf a. Luckless.
I'^^fT fl. Free from fault.
R?T 7i. s Absence of strife.
2 The doctrine of the Oneness
(of God and of the universe); or
of Oneness of all things.
f^'-'R a. (s) Poor.
toR Certainty; settled-
nessofmind. 2 A resolution. 3
Detcnnineduess (of a sul)ject).
R^TK'^ 7?. s Ascertaining,
_^"V''">'- [determined, fi.\ed.
mf^'^r^ a. (Proper) to be
R'-^R'i' V. c. To determine,
r^'-'^l^^- [tained.
R'-^FRcT p. s Settled, ascer-
f^'^f^^' a. 8 (Possible, pur-
posed, &c.) to be settled ; deter-
uiinablc.
Rt-fe a. That is without
aw e ; utterly regardless.
R'^f^fl. Exempt from danger
— a place, work, &c.
I'Ri^^ a. 3 JXameless,
242
f^'lf^^ fl.(s) Wanting a ruler.
I^kll /. s Anarchy.
pT^rf^^ a. Noseless.
f^TTS" a. Destitute of fruit,
lit_. fig.
R^^ (s) Determination. 2
A rule, an ordinance. '3 Cou-
^ti-ol. ^less.
R^c7 a. pop. R*^^ Povver-
R^W a. That has quitted
^hous^, family, &c. j-^j^j dangers).
R^I'TF a. Daring, forward
H^RT a. Blameless.
r^^f'sT a. Devoid of seed —
fruits. 2 fig. Extirpated. 3
Groundless — a report, n. Utter
extirpation and extinction of.
f^ff^ a. Stupid, dull.
1^4^ a. Fearless. 2 Safe.
n. Freedom from danger or
ground for apprehension.
F=Tif^ a. Filled with.
[^4^ Intent and pertinaci-
ous pursuit or purpose ; fuUness
of delight in. v. f^X, ^^, Kl^.
2 Complete conversancy with.
3 Trnst.
R^T^^FT V. c. To revile, abuse.
\^4'<B^ 71. 8 R^^e"^r /. (s)
Treating with contumely and
indignity; reviling.
Riff^^cT p. s Reviled.
f^m^ a. Destitute of for-
*"^^* [rudely forward.
rWI^ a. Wanting deference;
RiT?Icrr/.(s) I mpenetrability.
J'l^c^ a. Pure, simple,
homogeneous.
l=l»^R -#^r /. Certainty, con-
viction.
n*^(^ a. Certain, sure. ad.
Certainly. 2 Unhesitatingly.
PlH^K a. Loose, unbridled :
fig. unbounded.
R^ a. pop. -^ Clean,
lit. fig. ; unalloyed, &c.
r^^lH p. 6 Created : made.
R-f^^
l-THF^ n. m. Flow'ers and
other articles of an ofi'ering now
become stale. 2 A person fallen
in estimation.
Rm V. c. To create. 2
Poet. To cause. 3 To predes-
tine.
I^RcT p. Created, &c.
RJtF" p. Set free gen., dis-
joined.
RH^T a. (s) pop. "^ That is
without its roots or without
root. 2 Eradicated, lit. fig. 3
Unfounded, inauthentic.
R^T^^ n. s Liberating,
freeing.
f^^h n. s Setting forth (on
a journey). 2 Going out.
Rc^^sf 11^ (s) Shameless, in-
decent.
RFc^R" a. s Unsmeared. 2 fig.
and pep. Uncontaminated.
(•T^W" a. Uncovetous. 2
Unselfish.
[•rt^ Extinction of a race
or family, a. Childless.
f^^W V. (s) Extremity. 2
fig. Death. 3 The ultimatum of
man, — emancipation from mat-
ter and re -union with God.
R^fT a. s Departed, gone, lit.
mit^^r, R^C^r^r a. Reserv-
ed for, or appropriate to, the
end (to the last degree, &c.) ; as
f^T^Tufl'^T -^TW ; fsffTTifl^T
RfR a. Calm. n. A calm.
R^[C (s) Conducting, car-
rying on ; conduct. 2 Support-
ing. 3 Carrying oflT; removing,
J. e. by implication, lightening
and rendering bearable (hunger,
cold, &c.)
Rf=f^?"T a. Of unchangmg
purpose; being "without vari-
ableness or shadow of turning" —
the Deity.
f^r^^R" n. That is without
variableness. 2 Of unchanged
form or quality. 3 fig. Unmoved
— the mind.
fqrR-ar
Rn?r a. (s) Free from ob-
structions, ad. Unobstructedly.
nr^?r?" a. Indisputable, ad.
Without contention.
Rr^f ^ a. s Undiscriminating.
H^i fr /". 8 Final emancipa-
tion. 2 Completion. 3 Ceasing
from.
rl^ a. That is without an-
xiety. 2 Free from disturbance.
Rc^^f^r n. Shameless.
Rc^TfiT n. (ii) An auction.
f^^W 71. m. Ballast.
f^f^rq- V. i. To look full and
as ready to burst — certain fruits,
pustules. 2 To become cons-
picuous (for good or evil attain-
ments or quaiities); to turn out.
3 To come out clear and deter-
minate— a counsel, a matter.
V. c. (Poet. f^W'fliT s) To kill.
V. c. To clean (cotton by extract-
ing its seeds). ^^^^^
Rf^ f. Choosing, picking
(^^^ /. Dislike.
r^f^ or 1^^^^ o. Select,
choice. 2 (Wrongly) Refuse,
l^^in -fliT - j^ n. m. Cactus
Indicus. r„
R^^°T'r,r^^?aT5/. Picking^
R^^^ i\c. To choose, select.
2 fig. To decide.
R^^^ V. i. See f^^"^.
R^Tf j;. t. To cool — any
thing heated. 2 fig. To abate : to
become co(d and calm, o To be
spent — a cannon-ball.
r^^TT^ V. i. To turn back or
from. 2 fig. To die.
243
r^r^f^
f^f^^ V. i. To become
clear — water, &c. : to become
clear and bright — eyes or counte-
nance, the sky, a dark night, &c.
2 fig. To become cool, gentle :
to become sober — a wild youth.
3 To become proficient (in arts
science, &c.)
f^^SJl'^flar a. Clean and ^^i^table) to an idol.
H^^-T n. (s) Stating, telling
(to a superior). 2 Giving.
r=fe:%^ a. s (Fit) to be pre-
sented, &c.
RtK^;?.(s) Represented,&c.
RW n. An offering (of some
limpid ; cool and calm.
f^^S'Sf^ A significant term
for Water pure and pellucid.
Hence fig. a pure Ignoramus : a
wretch unsoiled by the possession
of a single copper-piece.
Rfl^^ n. In law. The re-
cord of a decision ; a decree.
R^r^r Settlement, decision.
RffcTrt. Still, quiet — a place.
^^R arl. Quietly, still.
r^^R^ a. s Thut turns back;
fig. that prevents, averts.
R^^'^ w. (s) Turning back;
fig. prohibition, averting.
Rf ff^ V. c. To turn back, kc.
T^wm, Rfr?:5rr^,R^rfr^a.
That is without heir.
pTf f^^iTr?5- Property without
an heir.
R^5T (s) Entrance. 2 In-
serting. 3 fig. Insight; profi-
ciency.
R^r /. (p) Confidence, v.
^^> ^T, 3^?. 2 Testimony of
credit, v. "^j % tf^^, g^^. 3
Satiety, (a) Intoxication, s
Night.
f=f^f^r (That makes the
night.) The moon.
R3Tr=^r (That goes by night.)
A goblin, a thief.
R^Tf'T V. (p) An ensign,
a flag. 2 A butt. 3 Any object
set or taken up as a mark.
F=f^R?Tr A stnndard-bearer.
T^^m f. (p) A mark, badge.
2 A sign, emblem, symptom.
R^R s Poet. Close of the
night. r i. J
^ ^ . [cated.
i=7::irrr o. , ^ T^R^ fl. Stuoidly iutoxi-
l=f^n:r shelter (from rain, r^r^r^ , , ^, ^
Hrn\. SK«u„ro,i cfnf.. nHimiq (s) 1 he moon.
i'T^^'T n. s Turning back
or from. r^r i. ^
r^ rv V. [lo abate.
R^R"^ V. c. To cool. 2 fig.
f^^^/. The clear liquid of
any mixture which remains after
settlement. 2 The net amount.
n. Clean, limpid — water, &c. ad.
Clearly : candidly.
r=I^anTiJ /. A calm and
quiet juncture: a meeting with
leisure and freedom of spirit.
&c.) : Sheltered state
f'ffr^s An abode, residence.
2 Abiding.
R^Wr a. 6 That resides. In
couip. as ^a^T fi[<>.
R^rS-^ ^m^ n, A term for
a hale and hearty old man.
RjrTT/ (s) pop. r^f^ Turn-
ing back or from ; stopping ;
bringing to a stand : ■^r^-'qm-
■j^fiT-pffo. 2 Turning from
(all effects, products, and creat-
ed things to the original cause
or God). 3 Cessation from
worldly concerns and engage-
ments, death : or absorption :
(or fifo fijv- m.) Retired and
contemplative life; disregard alike
of the business of the World and
of the ordinances of Religion.
R^^ V. c. To address, re-
present. 2 To give, offer.
R^rTf^ (Poet. Ruler of the
night. Hen. i. 16.) The moon.
Ri%r?H[ -fR od. By night
and da}'.
R^r jnep. Together with ;
along with, as 5iJTUlf«r?ff.
l^:^rJT a. Boundless.
R^'^c^ a. Unmoving, still.
R-^q" (s) Determination. 2
Sfttlement. 3 Confidence. 4
Certainty.
R-^^J" (s) pop. -3" a. Fixed,
firm, lit. fig. ad. Still.
RT-^cT a. Settled, fixed.
Rf-^cf a. Free from anxiety.
Rf^cTT^f A fixed matter. 2
A certainty.
Rr-^FcI f. Freedom from so-
licitude (esp.respecting the belly).
fw#g
244
r^:^r^
nT%2" a. s Unmoving, still. jf^'^f'T a. {s) pop. f^l'^ Sin-|[^fr a. Uncircumcised.
FT^f^ (s) Expiration^or an
expiration, v. %, ^T^. '^T^.
PtW^ a. (s) Confident, af/.
Boldly.
f^5^^ rt. (s) That is without
a reniainder ; complete, whole.
ad. Wholly, quite.
Pff^S" p. s Prohibited, for-
bidden. 2 Denied, negatived.
Rq^ (s) Prohibition. 2
Penial : refusing.
^W V. c. To forbid. 2 To
deny. ."5 To negative. j
R^^ n. (s) Void of thorns, j
inermis. 2 fig. Free from danger j
— a road, &c.
\¥^^^ a. Candid.
l¥^^ s Extraction of the
essence (of a substance, of a dis-
course, &c.) 2 Essence, sum. >i
A touch-stone.
R^^^ a. (s) pop. R^^S-^
Free from spot, lit. ; fig. immacu-
late, ])iu'e.
f^^f^^ o. Poor.
f^'^^m a. Free from desire;
disinterested.
^^R'^r nd. Causelessly, o.
Uncaused. 2 That is without a
use.
R"^?i|c6"strr,_Pi-ee from anxiety.
f^2''T ?;. i. To slip (aside,
from, out of, &c.)
RS"^;. (s) Fixed in, inherent.
PlST/. (s) Fixed iifFection
or attention ; dcvotcdness. 2
Reliance, '.i Ordinary and uni-
form practice, 4 Inherence. 5
Conclusion. 6 Poet. Condition.
r-l^T a. (s) Cruel. 2 Har^^h
— language, &c.
f^'^^R a. (s) Versed in, con-
versant with.
TV-'^l^ f. s Completion.
R^T^ ;>. Produced.
r^^qr^TCrrcr (s) impartiality.
n. Impartial.
pT^IT'^ V. c. To produce.
fsftqi^T n s Producing.
less. j
R^q'4'^ a. Free from secu-
lar doings — a devotee, &c. 2
Void of guile.
R^c7 a. Fruitless, lit. fig.
R^2:at See fe^- 2 fig. To
slip out of (a troublesome affair,
&c.)
T^^'n f. A ladder.
R^^T n. Picking and clean-
ing (of grain, &c.)
P\E^\ A whet-stone.
R^°T V. c. To pii-k ; to clean
by picking out or off the bad
portion (grain, &e.) 2 To peel.
]^^^ a. Shumeles«.
R^cTR n. (s) Extiiiftion of
a race or family : childless. 2
fig. Eating all u}) ; clearing the
decks.
T^^^Z^ See R^S^r.
Pr^^^ /. (a) Custody or
charge of. ad. In connection with;
on the p<art of; as ^^^T^
hT^^cf^R c.(pjOne that holds
or exercises charge, control, &c.
f^^'^rf^iT^ a. That belongs
to, is connected with, or is un-
der the control or custody of. ud.
In the order of the names of.
R^^ a. Slippery.
Rtir:?, R^T^T, Th^TZ f. A
slippery place. 2 Slippcriness.
RFT^'^ }i. i. To slip or slide.
Pl^?:m^/. Suftering to slip
from the memory, v. ^'^.
pf^f^^r /. The shooting out
of corn into the ear, shootinrj
hnse.
R^^^t y, I Xo shoot the
hose — corn. 2 fig. To launch
forth shamelessly into vice and
folly.
R^S* nd. Purely, merely.
f^^W -m Expiration, v.
Rfrr^rar ,;. /:. To pant. 2 fig.
To draw a deep sigh (as under a
heavy work).
l^TOT a. Free from all con-
cern.
R^cRot V. c. To complete (a
work done) ; viz. to go over
again rectifying blunders. 2 To
carry through.
R^cTf a. Mere, bare, simple.
R^^ ad. Wholly, totally :
tll^^ fiT» TT^T- 2 Altogether :
j f»ro -^^l -wi^T^, &c. 3 Only,
nothiiig but : "fl f^o "^f^^.
i'R^^ a. (s) Wanting bril-
liancy, lit. fig.
R^^JTl^r, P^'^m^ ad. For the
dry food, as sauce, &c. : 3TT^
f^o efiT'^T #^' 1 — ^^ '<^^^-
R^-TC a. s Ts^ot unctuous.
FR^ n. (s) pop. R^fr
Exempt from desire. 2 Free fi ora
favour; impartial. 3 (Vulgar) Dis-
tinct.
R^^T a. (s) Single; — used
of ascetics, &c. : that is without a
partner— God. 2 fig. Freed from
all ties and bounds ; — used both
in praise and dispraise, often
implying Shameless, loose.
f^^^f a. Pithless, sapless.
2 Unreal, unsound.
f^^^l^^'i-T a. Certain.
FR^^^«.Undoubting.2 Un-
^doiOited. [travagant.
[•Titfi^ a. Excessive, ex-
Vm^T\ a. Ilalf'-asleep.
rR"g:R (a) This word is
attached to territorial designa-
tion, as iT^Trfl f^-* Through-
out the Mahals.
[=f?rs?at V. c. (Ti) To be-
hold closely and attentively.
r-TcS"^r f. Indigo-plant.
l"^^! a. Dark blue ; indigo
l)lue. 2 Of a white colour; — used
of liorses. 3 Green, young—
CIV)])S, &c.
RS" n. Green grass.
F^*^"^ n. .s Extinction of
the military tribe, a. That is
without the military tribe— a
oouiitrv.
f^r^TT
245
^Wf^
Pt^oT -=r ad. Positively,
pliiinlv : peremptorily.
f^^^^f V. c. To throw, fling.
2 To place.
•rr conj. And.
^f"^ a. (s) Low, not fall. 2
Low (in place, conilition, iirice,
&c.) 3 Mean. 4 (In music) Deep
or bass.
HR /. Sleep. [;fai,s.
^f^ n.f. (s) One's own aC-
%r cf. Straight, direct. 2
ficr. Right, fit.
')f3"^J^r a. Proper, neat,
handsome : tidy.
=^ricr/, is) pop. "^l^ Moral
philosophy, ethics. 2 Propriety,
equity. 3 The fitness of things,
the course of nature. 4 Political
ethics. 5 (Freely.) Law, limit:
%'cWR a. pop. -^FI -^*^ Just,
moral.
^f^ n. s Water.
'iK Result, determination
(as of an investigation), r.
^R^ET a. s Destitute of juice;
dry, vapid, lit. fig.
^ro5" a. (s) Dark blue.
ftc?r, ^r^^'^fcT (s) A sapphire.
'W'^^S A name of Shiva.
^FwJTR /. (P or II) White-
footed antelope.
^'^r (.s) Blueness; the
colour of indigo.
^rwT /. (s) Indigo-plant.
"TW Sum, essence; the good
fortune picked out. v. m\'S,
TiiH. 2 Scrutiny, o. ^^, q\T«,
•rr^ /. Indigo-plant. 2 In-
digo. 3 w. A species of monkey.
4 A sapphire. 5 /. The green
matter of stagnant water, a.
Dark blue.
nrS'^nr y. m. fig. a ground-
less rumor ; a long bow.
^^^^ a. Greenish. 2 Blu-
ish./. Green grass: a verdant
spot : fresh vegetation : greenish-
ness.
5^^r=r n. /. 5^fTr%/. (a)
Loss : damage, hurt. m. Li law.
Damages. fl. (Laxly)Slight,flimsy.
J'^r (a) a pretty fancy ; a
conceit. 2 The bridle of a camel.
.3 An impeachment; a blame
laid.r.H^. ftrf. Lately, just ago.
^q^ot,5^m V. c. Poet.
Not to disregard, overlook, v. i.
Not to be disregardful of.
^T^Tf y, ^Mindfulness, heed.
^^^ V. i. Poet. Not to remain
^''^'■- [parrot kind.
5^r /. (h) a bird of the
^^ a. (s) New, fresh, od.
Lately.
^^ (A Light) The dignity and
majesty, or the clearness, fresh-
ness (of look, mien).
^^ 71. (s) Dancing: acting,
^i^STf^r/.A dancing-school,
a play-house.
JT, ^tPcT (s) a king.
^Tf^^ rt. s A tlirone.
ffl^ A king.
^rer See ^^r^?".
% ^l^^ /. Pieiterated or
fruitless and wearisome carrying
away and bringing back : carry-
ing about.
•T^ a. (p) Virtuous, honest.
•T^, "T^r f. Probity, integ-
rity. 2 Also ^^^Tsfl /.
Uniform and good conduct ;
upright walk.
^^W! f. Kindly regard.
'i^'TT^^fr a. Virtuous and
famous.
^fr /. See ^^•
^"^r (p) A hukka-snake. 2
The "^^T- 3 Sitting fast (as
in dunning, &c.) v. ^^"Sf g^,
•Tf^T m. n. Exertion, effort. 2
Strain, stress. 3 fig. Press (of
dunners, &c.) 4 fig. Determined-
ness and vigourof purpose. r.^.
•17^r a. Neat, handsome.
2 Becoming,right. 3 Straight gen.
4 Esp. in poetry. Sound, healthy,
whole; as-^TrlT^^T -^^■■^T^o.
ud. Lately : just now.
•TcOT V. i. To strive, strain.
2 To be close at one's heels ; to
])ress hard upon.
»\
•TJ^K a. Robust and hardy.
'RT^r^pcj'r a. Pressing, urgent.
^Zm'^l V. i. To set to
with vigour and alacrity.
^121^ A prop, support, v.
% ^iqf. 2 A strong effort.
V. \.
'f^ 'S" n. The eye of a
needle; the hole for the handle
of an ax, &c. 2 fig. Support,
patronage.
'^'T°T V. c. Not to know.
;^(j[cfqcF|- ^_ State of ignorance.
2 State of unintelligence and inex-
perience belonging to childhood.
'7'^cl'r ;?. a. R Ignorant, in-
experienced.
^'^f^ /. Poet. Ignorance.
•T"^ i\ c. To take away ; to
remove. 2 To lead.
»\
•7^/. (a) Probity, honesty.
2 Uniform good conduct.
•T^ m. n. (s) An eye.
-I^f^f^T A leer, a glance.
^^mr^T 77. Food only for
the eyes; pleasure merely of the
^sight.^ [eyes ; winking.
^=^q§5"^r /. Language of the
^^^cT Signal with the
.'^'V . [eye.
•T^f-rrr^^ n. s Opening the
•T'lST J. A pop-gun.
•TT^ f. Dry ground.
•Nfc^ s pop. -S" Pu rota-
tive nut-plant-
=fiT^^2r A contemptuous
term for a slovenly Brahman.
%lTaT a. Flat and flabby ;
loose and slack, 2 Slovenly, un-
tidy— dress, doings, things. 3
Lnpotent.
^
246
^rrsfi-
=W See f^nr^. 2 Aim. r.Jf^,
■'Jk:, wIT^. 3 Measure, v. ^, %.
•T^ w. 71. A bole duo- in order
to ])lant (a post, tree, &c.)
"^iT^r, ^?;R ad. Exactly
as aimed ; ami fig., as designed ;
opjiortunely.
•^^T"^ ./• Allowance, stipend.
2 Appointment (as to a post).
^^^ V. c. To appoint, fix, lay
down (a rule.) 2 To nominate.
3 To aim. 4 To fix in the ground.
'FT'"^H A term for religious
restrictions and observances.
'm^ a. Middling, ordinary ;
moderate, temperate.
•T?r^r Bits of gold amongst
the ashes and rubbish of a gold-
smitli's laboratory.
•R^r ad. On the fourth day
or on the fifth day past or to
^corae. ^ [smith's shop.
•TCr The rubbish of a gold-
•T^r n. VI. The ankle of a
horse, r. ^m. 2 The contri-
vance bound over these joints to
prevent their rubbing together.
V. ^{y^.
•I^TT a. White — a leg or
hoof of a horse, cow, &c. : the
animal having such a leg.
H=f<f /. A puff or cake.
•T?^ An ofTering (of some
eatable) to an idol.
"^^t^-otn. The dress of the
middle region of the body. 2
Putting oil of clothes, v. mK.
'i^^ r. c. To put onftlie gar-
ments which pertain to the mid-
dle part of tlie body) the
■^TfTr, xi^T, ^Jri', Sec.
"I^r^ V. c. To dress or
clothe (another). 2 fig. To enter
under a head (in an account) :
TUT ?:^flT TI^T ^t^T«slT^Tr ^-
"^KZ^, YtZ^ See V^. 2
To crowd together ; as ^^TJff
=r?#r, >?m ad. Constantly,
regularly. 2 Laxly. For ever,
altogether.
^?73"°T V. c. To behold close-
ly and attentively.
^'irrxT^ a. (s) Incidental,
occasional.
^J^rte a. s That follows the
Nyaya philosophy,
•T^cff f, s The south-west
quarter.
%'^ See f^nV.
^%?T n. m. (s) See ^^
V. •^T^^, 3T^, "HM^. 2
The ))reparing of this offering.
3 fig. Making a meal (i. e. of-
fc'rin<; to one's belly), v. ^^.
^>?j%^^^ A term for a
bribe, a sop.
n^^ a. Perishable.
•T*"?^ 71. s Perishableness.
'frS'iJ n. s Regular in and
devoted to (the observance of
religious rites, ceremonies, and
works) : of fi.\cd afl^ection or at-
tachment ; devoted, intent. 2 or
-€^0 ^?i^T^>H.A Brahman who
continues with his spiritual pre-
ceptor, and remains in the order
and condition of the religious
-v' f^ ' [constitutional.
T^i^^ a. Natural, native,
•rr ind. A vocative particle
plural : ^?Tf^$' »T5l^ ^^t ||
'ir^ /. (p) fig. Point, beauty,
sting, moral (of a tale, speech,
&c.) 2 A hint. V. "^T^^, i?K,
^r^^r^, =ff^ifi^ /. (II) Con-
ceit, stinging allusions. 2 Any
smartness of manner (of walk-
ing, dressing, &c.) v. ^«I53.
3 Brawling : a scuffle. 4 A
glimpse. V. '^t^W.
^
•TT^^r a. (p) Pointed, sharp
— a speech, &c. : having some
remarkable feature — a thing.
'TK /". The official or com-
mercial copy-book.
^^^ /. Copying oflf into
the book (a hundi or any official
paper).
^\^^ V. c. To copy a hundi
on accepting it : to copy and
enter an official document gen.
'^nr (h) Fare, naulage: freight.
•\rv
"Ifn a. Freighted.
%WTr Poet. See ^^H.
'ff a. Nine.
%, %^r f. (s) A boat.
^f^^/. (a) a large kind of
kettledrum.
'^rrf)-/. A breakf.st. [ed.
'TCr^«. (p) Exalted, emerg-
=^g"Rot See %?T3^.
'^l^f. Caste, kind.
•^r^ (s) Fitness, propriety;
justice. 2 Logical philosophy. 3
A maxim, a rule. 4 In logic. A
syllogism.
^1^^: ad. Justly, rightly.
^^rf^Sr a. Just, equitable.
-m^riT^Wf r /. A case (civi!
or criminal) before the judge :
judicial investigation of a case.
V. sRx, m"^. ["tjpg.
'^l^W^\f. A court of jus-
'^r^Tir^sTr /. The office of
^r^lT^^f^ A judge.
'^rm^^ n. The bench.
'^RF a. Just, upright.
'^Kf a.(n) Separate,distinct.
2 Dissimilar, other.
'^r^ Poet. Justice.
-^['FT s Placing, fixing; esp.
the setting down of the figures
of a calculation to be made. 2
Certain religious ceremonies
consisting in putting the fin-
gers in various forms. 3 Re-
nouncing.
'^\^t\ See ^^WlTf.
'^ a. (s) Le.ss. 2 Deficient.
li Lower (in price).
=?"roT See =r?rf^.
^KF A barber. 2 The name
of a bird.
247
^T^rr
^ The twenty-first conso-
"j^"*- [wrestler.
tI^^?R (h) An athlete, a
4^ Syrup. 2 s Mud.
^^^ n. s A lotus.
T^^ /. (h) In speech. A
flaw or faulty ])art ; a part fur-
nishini^ a hold to the adversary :
g'Ttjn^. Luke xi., 53, 54.
[^ fig. An ambiguous expression
(iu a promise, apology, &c.)
^^^l f. Grasping.
^^^'H V. c. To catch, seize,
lit. fig.
^^5^PTR V. An imperative
summons; an issue of arrest.
^^IT -^r A covert term for
a quarter of a rupee.
fl^r a. Mature, lit. fig. 2
Cooked. 3 Ready : well-concoct-
ed—counsels. 4 Baked — bricks,
tiles, &c. 5 Strong — a colour. 6
Perfect, adept — men and things.
^^r^^r rt. Ripe and raw;
ready and ])artly ready ; — used
freely, but esp. with ^'^-'q'tsR-
5fT?T?5^-x:JT, &c.
q^r^r^r The regular ac-
count compiled from the diary.
qCr^fff/. In law. Attach-
ment after judgment.
q^5^^/- A'l expired term
(of a hundi, &c.)
qf^ /. (s) A line, row,
range. 2 A row of peo|)le sitting
down at a meal : fellowship,
brotherhood ; a body, a sodality.
^I'^qR'f a. Pure for the com-
mon board ; fit for intercourse.
qirF^rq-q" Partiality in serv-
ing guests.
^IxF^irrsr a messmate.
qpTlTsq-f^rr (s) The custom
of sitting at meals in a row. 2
Fellowship of table, messing.
W«. (s) Mature, ripe, ht.
fig. 2 Cooked. 3 Digested.
q^T^ n. Sweetmeat ; any
dainty dish. 2 A dish gen.
q^ A wing. 2 A feather
of a wing. 3 Class, head :
^^^\^ (h) a sort of tabor,
q^ A large fan.
q?^r^/. (n) A double water-
skin carried on a bullock. 2 fig.
A huge, capacious belly.
q^r^r^fr/. a term for a
flabby, bulky woman ; a Hot-
tentot-Venus.
q^ //. The foot. 2 fig. The
basis (of a science or an art).
q^^^^ One who subsists by
binding turbans.
q^^f A mark on a die. 2
The foot, fig., i. e. access, foot-
ing. V. 'ETT^, tj^ : '^t^ q¥
q^^r /. (H) A turban.
^^^ /. See qr%.
qn^^cfr a. fig. Immovable
— a determination, promise. 2
Cautious, wary (in speech) :
that entraps (one in speech).
qn^ Irregular or excessive
menstruation, v. ^lar.
q^K (Port.) Pi.y, salary,
q^rc A well-finished canoe.
qj ft. (s) pop. qn^ Lame,
halt : deformed. 2 Maimed, de-
fective : ^T SlsaiT^ xjo ^1^.
3 fig. Penniless, halt.
q^T^ a. Roomy, spacious. 2
fig. Diffuse— speech, ad. Roomi-
]y:Tlo ^^T-*Tt^T. f-j^g,
q^^"jfl"/. Dissolving, melt-
q^^"^ V. i. (h) To dissolve.
2 fig. To melt tenderly. 3 To
widen ; to stretch and open out
— a tight shoe, &c.
q^ a. (s) Five.
q^ A member of an assemb-
ly of arbitration:^/, the assembly.
,-^J"'"y- [five.
q^^ n. (s) An aggregate of
q^^'3T/. An aggregate of
five (sheets of paper, bundles of
grass, &c.)
q=q^R -^r T^r T^^r ad.
Imit. of the sound in spitting,
in treading upon a muddy spot.
q^^^^ V. c. To grsisp ; esp.
with the expanded hand loose
substances such as bran, meal,
sugar, &c.
q^^ST a. Light, silly— ac-
tions, speech. [Pentangular.
q^?iR (s) A pentagon, a.
qqij^q" „. Five things de-
rived from the cow — milk, curds,
ghe^, urine, dung. [„estiou.
7^°Tr/. Undergoing of di-
q^^ V. i. To undergo di-
gestion. 2 fig. To be not only
devoured, but digested — pecula-
tions, &c. ; to have been so en-
joyed. 3 To linger; to waste
under protracted sickness.
q^^^ n. s Death. 2 The
state or being of five.
Q^cl<:^ n. The five elements.
q"^^ n. (s) Digestion. 2
Cooking ; maturing.
^'^^^ -=^r see q^iinr, &c.
q^^y. The sound proceed-
ing from walking in mud, &c.
q^q^FcT a. Watery, washy-
fruits, &c. 2 fig. Vapid, tame —
singing, speech : languid — action.
q^qf^ n. -^l f. A kind of
metal vessel.
i^m^ The five vital airs
constituting animal life.
i^^'^ A name of ^f^^^.
q^ij^ //. pi. The five ele-
ments.
q^^ a. (s) Fifth.
q^iTCiqicll n. pi. The five
heinous sins : ^^^rJIT, ^^T-
q^q^-fif^ n. pi. The five
gross elements.
q^ffr/ (s) The fifth day of
either half-month* 2 In gram-
mar. The fifth case.
q^-T^" a. Foul-smelling; —
used of urine. 2 Light, silly.
q^ii%^ (s) pop. q^nf^ /.
The double rule of three.
T=^r^
248
«T3Tr^
q^f^^ v. c. To digest. 2 To
^ook. [twentv-five.
^Mr /. The age of
'f^ff^ fl. (h) Twenty-five.
^^ An article of dress.
q^fcT /. (H) See "5^. 2 The
investiijation by the tf^ of
the matter of dispute. 3 The
matter of disimte. 4 The judj:;-
ment of the assembly, o Freely.
A state of exisiency : 'ai^T'^
xjo ^^c^^. G lUiibbing abroad
(of a matter), v. ^x:g. ofo.
7 Vain (liscussin£j and oljject-
ins;. V. ^i^, ^l^, WI^. 8
Disputinp;. v. ^ff-
^^rt^^rr^r a written verdict
of a ti'^Ttri.
't^fJT n. (s) A Hindu alma-
nac. 2 The five departments of
devotion, — silent prayer, burnt-
ofFerin<r, libation, idol-ablution,
and Br<ihman-feedin<r. '6 Any
aggregate of five members or
])arts or of five things. 4 Rever-
ence by extending the hands,
bending the knees ami head,
and by speech and look. a.
Having five members, parts,
divisions.
T^rf^ ;)/. (s) The five fires
amidst which a devotee performs
penance or devotion. 2 Tiie five
mystic fires of the body.
7^'1'T (s) A name for Shiva,
a tiger, a lion. 2 fig. A furiously
passionate person.
q^f^cT n. (s) The five nec-
torious substances — v(^, '^f^,
^j=f, ff^, ^^^T. 2 A season-
ing conii)Osed of chillies, &c. 3
Dainties, cates.
q^r^^ a. Fifty five.
q'^oS" A term for five castes
— ^HT^, "^JrlTT, ^T^K, ^t"
q^fS" a. Talkative and gad-
about— a female.
q'^r^fr c. An exerciser.
q^r^fR^ A mystic formula
for the dispossession of demons.
'qtrffS- -^r^W ccTf^f^ a.
Forty-five.
q'^rj"^ n. (s) The five senses.
q^fcRr Interest at the rate
of 5 per cent. 2 also tf^T?IT^
/. A surplus five thrown into
the hundred (in selling bundles
of ^■^■^T, or mangoes, &c.) 3
Allowances ('^^) at the rate
of 5 percent, of the collections
(of revenue, &c.) 4 Service-land
at the rate of 5 bighas granted,
assignment free, to the Patil for
every hundred cultivated on ac-
count of Government.
q^r nd. Fast, firmly — bind-
ing, fixing.
q%r /". Disgracing, jeering.
q^r^^r, q'-^ri^ «. Eighty-
q^P'^? a. Ninety-five.
q^^Tf?^ a. Seventy-five.
q^r^^r /. Throwing in
wrestling.
m5\^^ r. c. in) To throw
in wrestling, to floor. 2 fig. To
defeat in argument. 3 To
catch (in sjieech, &c.) : to seize
and overpower: — as a fever, a
fiend, a trouble, &c. [horse.
q-^ft. Of five years of nge — a
q^r (s) A cage. 2 fig.
Skeleton (of man or animal).
q^r a. (p) The hand as spread
or opened out. 2 A claw (of a
cat, &c) ; the hand of a monkey ;
the iron liand of Muhamniad.'ms
representing their five holy per-
sonages. 3 A glove. A See
■qnsjT.
qi" III. f. A cliequered board
or cloth (to ])lay at cliess, &c.)
2 A roll, list (as of names):
a record : a schedule. 3 A very
large sli]) of land. 4 f. In conip.
With a numeral ])refix. The state
of a quantity taken as often as
the prefixed numeral denotes:
q^T'^ fl^tfH- ig-1^1.
q^ ind. An adjunct assimied
by the numerals and adverbs of
quantity, corresponding to Fold,
as -^Vi^.
qr^ -^ -K% -f^rjT ad.
luiit. of the sound Put ! fancied
ou the fall of bodies : hence
transferred to express an instant
or a mere ])oint of time; as
qo ii -qi?: Come in a trice;
do outright.
q^^r A doth about a span
in breadth worn round the waist,
a girdle.
^Z^\V^^ V. c. To seize
smartly ; to dart upon ; to nab,
catch.
q^*r /. Epidemic disease,
esp. the epidemic cholera : a
murrain : the dropping dead (of
men or beasts) in great num-
bers. V. ^TJT, ^, %T.
qS"^^ n. A contemptuous
term for a cloth of a single
l)readth.
q^^*^ ?i. A broad court or
an extensive plain.
q2^°T V. i. To be accepted —
a bill : to be passed — money : to
please, suit— persons tendering
service, things offered for pur-
chase; to turn out true — a
rumor,&c.; to agree v.ith tlief;ict
— the deposition of an evidence.
^ZqZ -Z\ ad. Imit. ofcjuiek,
sharp sounds occurring in rapid
succession ; as of drops, fruits,
&c. falling. Used fig. as
q2''?5" ;/. (f^j An integument;
a membrane. 2 A coat of the
eye. 3 A film over the eve. 4
fig. A film over the understand-
ing : ^^T^ qs<??.
q^^q'^ry; stringing upon a
wire or thread. 2 Honouring (of
a bill, &c.) [&(.. of'siii,.
qS'qr (h) a maker of Irinue,
qin°T V. c. To .<;trino; upon
a wire or thread (gems, &c.) 2 To
honour (a bill, &c.)
qjq-^r -q^r See ^z^\,
r
^^I^ /. (ii) Layin<x a floor
of planks. 2 A boarded floor.
^z\m n. See ^tm.
"^m See ^^^^.
^m^K The right of the
"m: or original commission, a
grant, deed of investiture.
or
249
Tl^
^3" a. (s) Clever, able. 2
Smart, apt.
qfCTf _q|-=f ,j_ g ^ (.jty (),. (own.
q^r'^r /. The head-wife of
the wives of a Raja, — the queen.
^fr (h) a kind of sword. 2
A stripe, line. 3 A slip of
jjrouiul. 4 A strip (as of lace,
&c.) 5 A cincture (of silver or
gold) for the waist : a girdle gen.
6 A deed of lease.
TffCcT a. (h) a player with
the qfT. 2 fig. A person jier-
fect, proficient in gen.
t
Q'frC^ n. Striped — a tiger.
qfrtrf ^r^ Royal tiger.
m\\^^K (s) The chief offi<'e
of the state. 2 The right of the
investing deed or Mfr.
^fr'^^ /. Complete over-
throw, rout (an of an army) : ut-
ter demolition (of buildings, &c.):
extreme dishonour : blasting (of
counsels): total Ioss(of pro|)ert\)
qiTWrq-^ a. s Formally in-
stalled — a king, &c.
7?"fm^ (s) Formal inaugu-
ration ; coronation (of a king or
queen).
7?r/, (s) A strip, slip; a
narrow and long piece (of cloth,
metal, wood, &c.) 2 A slip (of
land), o A clamp. 4 A rull of a
general collection, as by Govern-
ment from a village; of a gene-
ral contribution, for a charitable
or other purpose ; of an assess-
ment in gen. 5 The paper con-
taining the list of a general
assessment, collection, or contri-
bution, (i A fold, i)lait (as of a
turban). 7 A roll (of the betel-
leaf), 8 A division of a village.
y The border (of a garment). U>
With ^i"\, ill a hmnorously
figurative application of the
fourth sense, very numerous
compounds occur, all bearing the
general import of Vehement vitu-
peration or .scolding. See tfo^
^ft, -g-T^^fr, &c. 1 1 A hue
(of the doctors and literati) in a
^«T, as assembled to chant
tlie Veda, &c.
%f. A kind of
^^^r A belled
beadle, a peon. &c.
32
[stuff.
woollen
man, a
^^^ V. c. Poet. To read : to
recite.
'TJ'T 72. (s) Reading; reciting
''•^'^- [table!
^^■^R a. s Readable, re'i-
^^M u. A broad and flr:t
tile. m. (h) A Pathan, tjs-mfl
a. Relating to the Pathans.
qSPrrr^^fcT ,>. a term for a
Icgur kept in a disoderly manner.
'^S'lT f. The girth of a pack-
sadd'le. 2 n. Table-land. 3 The
bottom of a ship. 4 tig. The
arrangements, prep,arations of. v.
girl: rUjif ^K ^t^I^T^ ^o
5TW%. 5 The back revilingly.
H'Jr^r a. Of a broad back. '
TJRl Elevated table- land.
Tf^Jir, m^\ A supporter,
backer.
^•^ f. The sinking and sit-
ting (of a l)ullock,&c.) in refusing
the load : declining; vvitiihold-
ing one's power (in argument,
fight, &c.) 2 Mangoes fallen. 3
Fallow grounds. 4 A falling
sick (of numerous persons) : a
becoming desolate (of several
villages). 5 /n. A pocket, j)artition,
shelf, &c. of a housewife, &c. (i
Prefixed to certain names and
titles, it expresses subordinancy :
T^^^ /;/. A disease of the
eyelids, — hair growing on the
inside. r,. , ,
^'?^^\'Z The outer wall of a
^^^\ -?r /. The base of a
vessel.
^I^JT -W n. The frame of a
efJIKT- 2 A small kind ot
canoe.
7^^ n. A drum.
^"^^^R /■ Fallow ground.
q^CJRf j: Shadow.
"i^m^f. The uvula.
^^^T-S" /; Bits of\:rass, leaves,
stalks, &e., straws, ashes, &e. ;
• — as lying upon u thrashing-
floor, &e.
'75"°T II. A halting place ; a
jilaec of encampment (for herds
of cattle). 2 An appointed spot
A regularly recurring period '■
•iTTTr<T.
^^^ V. i. To fall, drop. 2
fig. To cease, stop : ^^^^ «iT'€t
5(71 sf ^T^^T^'l ^^^^^. 3 V.
imp. To fall, hold, lie : f^^^
^TR' ^^^ '^^'^r -^jfi- 4
V. i. To happen to he : ^?Tt
g?l^" ^T «^N T^t^!^- 5 To set
upon : ^T ^iTfiHT f^f^t^ai^^
if^^T ^f^. 0 T(i take place
or come on — heat, cold, dark-
ness, light. 7 To abate — wind,
&c. : to become lower — a rate.
8 To lie indolent and idle :
"^j^K 5iT. 9 To remain (un-
emplo3'ed, uncultivated, unused.
&c.) — persons, things, lands. 10
To die by violence (in battle, &c.)
1 1 To engage in ; to have con-,
cern with ; f?JT eRT^tw W ^^
«f^T- 12 To become necessary,
expedient : ^ ^^xig'il ^^j^Mfj^
tA^ ; ^TT ^^ ?f^ g^ ■£lt'<i5T^TW
tri''??. 13 To happen, occur.
14 To turn out ; to prove to be.
15 To be beaten (in play, &c.)
16 To befall — trouble. 17 To
become; to enter into some state
from some other ; "^Trf 'm^
3IT^ ^^^ ; '^T ^JT qiT^r qi^.
1 8 To arise, result : g^rffrf
^R^T xj^fjlwi. iy To sink
(into poverty, &c.) "JO To lie
faintjhoarse — the voice. 21 To be
])ut afoot or set up ; to begin a
course — a fashion, business. 22
To be vomited,
TS'cT jf'. In the customs. Re-
mission of duty (from a number
or a (]uautit\).
T^cr3"if n, An animal no
sooner born than able to stand
and shift for itself; — used of
calves, &c. ; and hence of sucf
cessful measures, &c.
fT^cTy^^ nd. la a dropping
or time (as for a mtieting). 3 ! and littcriug manner.
T^
250
^^mm f. (p) Privacy: .W^^f^;^-'./. c Echo,
retired place.^ \^J^m^^'\ f. Shadow.
qTcfSJOT -cTra"*'^ V. c. To make q^^JT^T /. An ofF-house. 2
trial; to review, compare: to a buildinp; coutiguous to a tem-
meas'ure, weigh. 2 To grasp ; to ,,k- for travellers, &c.
TtTT
q^ An affix corresponding
^•ith nes.s,Iiood,s/iip r^fJI^qiT.
2 71. Ase : ^^.vj ■qurt'f ^T^l-
m^m See ^'^^. [father.
qi^sir A jiatnual great^raud-
put on in readiness ; to gird. ^> q:j5C|-[^ j-^ Evidence cor- qq^f ^yj'l^g ^^,;f(. of a paternal
To repay (abuse, &c.) : rqn rohorative of evidence, m. A com- ^^eat c^randfatlier : a paternal
piirgator.
T^^ffis^. jq^^ 71. A common cold.
q:?cT^r -^r^r Reducing to I ^^^ ^ ^j^^^j ^^ l^^^^^t_
experiment, i'.
qP^cT {s)A learned Biahraan,
a doctor. 2 Used in notes after
the name of a great personage
great grandmother.
qt^cT /. A great-grand-
daughter.
q^^T /: An earthen snucer-
form receptacle for the oil and
wick of a lamp. 2 See tiUTrt.
[Raja's court. „y^^^^ o-randehild.
qR'crrT^ The ^f^^ of a iqoTcr A gieat grandson
q^rnqr^rr Decline, decrease.
.. . I iDe name ui u ^ic<n/ ^^i ^^••••p"- i ^^ ,
^'S^\ (p) A curtain, veil : the ^ ^^,_ ^ person skilful at a thing qq^:!"^ q^cTf^, qi^cT^^ n. A
privacy thereby produced: shame. 1 ^^.j^' vt^a-.a^ ^ 1 --• , , •, ,
2 A coating, 'stratum, layer (as
of oni(ms, stone, w ood, &c.) 3 A
film over the eye. 4 A parting
membrane. 5 The front-piece ot
nn a^irjnrkha. (! A board or cloth
dividin'j; a box or bag into com-
partmenls. 7 Mental reservation.
r. %^, ''T'sl. H (Concealment:
qT^if a. A nickname. m^^ "^f (") A neighbour
q?qar/. The origin and ftdl qil^ Neighbourhood. 2 fig
account of. v. m^, ^^^, ^T>^, Nearness, likeness. _
«,m:^^T^"t ^- -qrijr g;;iJi1 p^fa.DuU, heavy, sluggish,
^tCT. [outer wall. qsqT (n) A tribe of Hindu-
q^fiTcT f. An additional or stani Brahmans.
^^r?;\^^^\ <i. Fallen and q^^ n. Putting new iion to
qf[cr fl. Lying fallow.
q|^ The jaundice. 2 The
luune of the father of the
^t^W- [beast.
q'^ n. Tiie carcass of a
dropped ; littered about
a worn tool. v. 'EII^, ^^•
q?^qH n. (Fallen leaf, i. e. q^oj ^,^ c. (ii) To read. 2
To aflinn. n. Knowledge, learn
ing. [fool.
■ IqSrrr^^"^ -T^ c. a learned ass,
the sole riijht of picking up n
fallen leaf.) A term for all the
ottices of a village as held by
one person : ^TSllqiJTT, f 3 , ^ ^ ^
^^W, 'i^T^^r>;f3iTr mj^^^ q^fr^f ^tn/. The periodical
qi^q'iq'??^! nd. As fallen
as qo fn^ TTfjiffi To talk la-
zily, V,o foT^^'-^'i:^ To over-
come, &:c. with case.
q:?f 3" /".Snake-gourd, n. The
fruit of it.
q^qr f. The veranda of a
house. 2 A shed against a u all.
q?^^ Echo.
q"?57r^r/. An out-house,
q?^ /. A double packsack
having its opening in the rai<l-
dle.
?qT'^ I procession to Paudharpur
q^^Rl^ A name of the idol
f«''5'^' [scholar
q^l^ a. Learned, erudite ; a
q"^ (s) A promi.-c. 2 A bet.
P. -^X, ^T^. 3 The .stake or
sum played for (at dice).
m conj. But, yet. 2 Also,
qcT A prefix of honour be-
fore each of the designations of
the ^^qtlT-sr. '-^ An affix to
the name of a Brahman who
emidoys himself in writing and
accounts.
qcf / Credit, reputation.
qc[^ -^R -^^r Agreeing to,
taking up. v- ^, '^rl'SK-
qcl^^ot V. c. To agree to ; to
undertake (a work) : to admit.
2 To please : ^ ^1'^ ^^1 ^^f'
^^^ (8) A tnoth. 2 A sort
of paperkitc. .i Sappan-wood.
qcT^ n. (si Falling.
qcT^^ n. Argument of the
latitude.
qcfm /■. A small flag. 2 An
emblem carried as an ensign, a
symbol. [A husband.
kici (s) A lord, master. 2
,' qr?r^ p. (s) Fallon. 2 fig.
■ Fidlen from caste, virtue,
qf^^qi^^ (s) Pm-ifier and
restorer of the fallen,
qf^^lcrr /. (s) a chaste and
dutiful wife. [sailing vessel.
too. 3 Used redundantly, or ex- q^irifr/. A sort of swiit-
pletively, with much of the im- q^|-^f ^ Briihman or Hindu
puvt and power of ^ or of schoolmaster.
>1T : 5lT#t qw, ii^'l ^'^- ^'Sed
also with the power ot the parti-
cle Even : V^^^ ^UT ^ if^^I ^^
q^T (11) Tidings, trace, v.
^T^, ^T«. 2 Uew, guine ; a
person's address. 3 A green to-
bacco-leaf.
flTT[^R:r Trace >,i\ [flenc:".
TrTWCr A free term for evi-
^Tif y. Heni|)-leaves.
fIF4^(ii) A ^tone; fig. a block-
head, (lult.
Tt^\ f. (s) A wife, lady.
^^ ri. (s) A letter, note : a
written paper or deed. 2 A leaf.
3 A petal of a flower. 4 A lesif
of a book. 6 Any thin sheet of
metal.
^^^ )).{») A leaf of a book ;
a pajier of aecouuts : a list, roll.
T^r A thin plate, leaf ((-<
metal, &c.)
q=^fiT -5Fr /'. (ronceit ; super-
cilious airs and uiiys.
q^rfr-^fr/. inflated, vain; a
sirrll. [leaves.
q^r^S"/. A pbite formed of
qf^^r /. The paper on which
are recorded the year, lunar day,
Ike. of a birth : the tablet of tlie
fortunes through life composed
from these particulars.
^% f. (s) Mace. 2 A col-
lection of the leaves of several
trees as an offering to Vishnu, kc.
q^r A road, lit. fio^. 2 A reli-
gious order : W^K V[o.
q^ s A road, path.
Q^r^r a. Flat, sqaat.
^^\f\ f. (n) Any thin-,^
spread' as a seat; any matting. "^
fig. Outlay or out- spread state
(as of one's baggage, &c.)
qf^^ c. s A traveller.
T4f c. A disciple or follower
of any leader in religion : *fl??-
^^^ n. (s) Diet. 2 Dietetics.
3 The meal of a person under a
regimen, n. Dietary. - Fit for :
^•afi^ '^T =^T^Tg ^o. [to.
fp^^r a. Fit for ; suitable
T^^TI'^r //. Diet and regimen.
q^ n. (s) A foot. 2 A foot-
step. 3 An office or a post. 4 A
word. 5 An inflected word, (i A
varietj' of metrical composition.
7 A qii.adrant. S Place, spot. 9
In arithmetic. The number of the
terms of a series. 10 A factor or
term. U Tiie square root.
251
q^^ n. An ornament hang-
ing over the breast like a medal.
2 A sort of sweetmeat.
q^^^cT a. (s) Degraded;
fallen from raidi.
TT^fSf^r /. (s) Composition.
T^^ An end of a cloth. 2 An
ornamental border. 3 A fold (of
cloth, rope, &c.) 4 Affinity. 5
Lap; hence fig. the state of
possessing, or of having concern
and business with : ^ WTff
g^ ^^^^\ q^<t^T ; ^T ^TT^
giT'^T tt^^T T?^^'. <5 A coat-
ing; a film (as over the eye). 7
Tiie ceremony of changing the
mode of attiring a girl on her
attaining to puberty, v. ^T^,
^T'g'. 8 The tirst appearing of
tiie menstrual discharge, r. ij.
^^^\^ f. One's private
purse.
q^^rS" f. Living u]ion one's
stock, not u])on wages or ])rofits
resulting from serviceor business.
T^^H'^cT^ Remote relation
through marriage.
T^fr/. (s) A rank, post.
T^3T: ad. s Step by step,
q^n'cr s A f(>ot-?oIdier.
q^fSsf n. s The lotus of the
foot, i. e. the foot.
V<\^ (s) A thing. 2 A nice
dish ; a confection. 3 Meaning of
a sentence. 4 A category. 5 Used
(as thivg in English) of whatever
\\\\\ admit affirmation or de-
nial. G Ap]). contemptuously,
as thing, creature : '^^I^ ^o
^?"R^r ad. At every word
or foot. 2 At every step.
^^cT^K ad. Regularly.
q^l% /. (s) pop. q^cT Way,
mode. 2 A ritual, a manual. 3 A
line, row.
W 71. (s) A lotus. 2 Ten
])illions. 3 The figure of ten
fancied in the form of the hood
of snakes.
^^^i^ a. pop. mWl^l For-
tunate, successful.
q?rf^*T n. (s) A posture in
religious meditation ;— that in
which the ^i^ statutes are
represented.
q^ 71. (s) Metre. 2 A piece
of metrical composition.
q^^rf^r A fortnight.
q'-^U a. Fifteen.
q^r, q^fr /. (p) cheese.
q^W «. Fifty, q^rar /. An
aggregate of fifty. 2 The age
of fifty.
q^^ A pipe; the channel
of a tile, &c. 2 fig.The lateral hol-
low along the backbone of beas'ts
when very plump, v. x?^, ■^T,
Vv =^ [raised edges.
^'^'^\W,l^ n. A flat tile with
q-^T (p) The breadth of cloth.
qq^^ -=Tfr -%^ (/.its plant.
America.) A pompelmoose.
qq w. s Milk. 2 Water.
q^^ A side. 2 A facet or
face (of a cut gem).
q-qR^ s A woman's breast
or the udder of a beast ; a cloud.
q^/. Way, style (of speech
or action) : kind, sort.
q^ a. (s) Strange, foreign:
other, different : q^-=gs5i ■i.vi.
2 In comp. Appertaining to;
following after ; attached to :
q^ ad. Beyond. Conj. But,
yet.
qr (p) A feather, [little girls).
q^^^ A sort of gown (of
^TW>^l (P) A kind of cloth.
2 A strip of cloth. 3 fig.
pi. Pickle, plight {shreds) :
q^f -^\ a. Other, foreign
— persons: strange, new — things.
q^^r «,Other,strange; — used
of persons.
q^^R a. Relating to
another.
^T^^\ (p) A district : fig, an
extensive business.
q?:iIiT^«. (s) Adultery (of a
woman).
qi^'T n. Adultery (vvhotlier
of a man with another swife, or
TT^
252
qrjfi"
of a wife withiiaother'slmslj.iiul).
2 Another's house; — with re-
ference to its perferal)leness :
1]l¥ ^o ^r^^'STT'^f- Oh! Ui
Sir, this man, oj'.ulent from
birtli, has never been driven
from home to learn the cliarac-
tcr of the house of another.
^^"^^ n. (s) An invadiii;:
armv. 2 Invasion, ii Foreign
swav.
T^Cr^ See W^.
Tr^T'T n. Rupees of vai ions
currencies. 2 Ohi, battered.
Iii'oken. ;:i Sundries.
Tr^ A busket-hilt (as of a
sword) : the handle of a shield.
^^^^ V. c. To brandish (a
sword, &c.)
m'il^ /". A washer- woman.
2 A bird, the Indian wagtail.
T^^r f. A circular bamboo
basket. 2 An offering to '^^
or to the fx??!;!^ at the inga-
thering of tiie corn-harvest, that
the corn may ])rove abundant at
f he measuring of it.
^^"S" n. A scale of a balance.
2 The l)owl of a spoon. 3 A
wooden platter. 4 An enclosure
around a bouse, f) See •q^'^l
SI". 2. r e ■
[oi \\\ marriage.
fTT^I^ V. r. To tuke the hand
^X^^ n. Choosing a sjjouse.
^<T /. Return (of a thing
given or an act done) ; recom-
pense. 2 Monies returned, as ob-
jectionable, from the treasury. 3
Turning back to. 4 Return:
^TrT ^T*»n. ad. Back.
^^^^ V. c. To turn on the
other side. 2 To sliift. 3 To re-
verse. 4 To return. 5 (To give
n turn of the oven). To cook
liastily and imperfec:ly. v. i. To
turn : to go or come hack : to
revolve or roll round — the years,
signs, &c. : to pass over — noon,
ninhiight : to l)e changed (as in
dis|)ositioii, ])nr[)osc) : to recede
or retract : to conceive again
shortly after delivery — a cow,&c. ;
to leturn to the former state.
^^^"^ <i. (s) Subject to an-
other.
^^^cf^S" j\ 'WxQ afiernoou.
T^cf^irry. A rejected hundi.
'TTcTF a. Farther, yon.
^T^'\ ad. Bevond. 2 Used
as an an expletive corresponding
to Then or Well : Sij q^ffl
Go then ; ?ruTTR^<TT Well, but
grant it for the present. cony. Than.
jrreji. Besides, w ithout, save :
^^1 ^=^1 qirarlT 11 ^5f ^o
■fl^f^ II Is. xlv. 7, Deu',.
.xxxii. 39. ^ever.
'^tJ co"j. (s) But, yet, how-
T'T^ ad. Back again. 2
Again. [The other world.
^^ ad. s Otherwise, n. (s)
^X'^^ prep. By virtue of;
through the induence, sway of;
by, through, from : ^rf^^T^-
'R^'PT/. s The wife of an-
other. 2 Also qT^TT31«"?if n.
.\dulterv with ancther's wife.
^^^ITlf. See Ti'^K sig. 1.
^^^'M^ ?";fecr a. s Pained
w ith the pain of another ; " weep-
ing with them that weep."
^^51 A remote country, 2
Travelling abroad.
m^^[ A foreigner. 2 App.
to the Rajputs.
^^rr 71. Carnal connection
with any woman (married or un-
married, yet not a harlot) other
than one's own wife. fman
T^Kf /. (h) A strange wo-
'TTR^«.(s") Heavenly minded.
2 That strictly adheres to truth.
3 Piiilanthropic.
^R^r J. See the adjective.
T'CTTf f. (s) Continuous ar-
rangement ; regular succession.
2 Race, lineage.
q^q^R^ a. Descended in
regular succession.
Tmrots-T (s) Connection
with through a medium.
'Kqr^^'^ c. A parasite, a
sj)onger, a love-feast.
^J^T (s) A strange man ;
any man, with reference to a
woman, not her husband, brother,
or near relation. 2 s A name of
God.
^l^^ f, A tliird hundi given
to supply a lost ^"3 (a renew»
ed hundi). 2 Another town.
^^ff^ a. (s) That servilely
follows the counsel of another.
q?:iTFq[qtr% «. s That lives
upon the fortunes of others.
q^mn-Tr-fr-^-> ad. with
the pretermission of some per-
son or object claiming regard ; the
omi.-^sion of some ))oint ordinarily
ol).served ; elsewise ; in, through,
or by some other (way, manner,
means): ^wiT "iT ^t^fft rqt^xfo
q^^A caste of Hindus.
q^ <i. (s) Fiest, superior.
Chief, uttermost : •q'C'T fl^I <!;t.
q?:3Tq^q- g The most excel-
lent male or being. A name
of God (,or of Vishnu as God).
qr^C^" s An order of de-
votees. 2 A name of God.
q^^r Gleet. r • •
^^jic^L. [mission.
q^^r^^jfr, q^^TR^r /. Per-
q^^TfiJ (s) An atom.
q^JT^JTr (s) The Supreme
Being considered as the soul of
the universe. 2 The highest
soul of animated beings — the
Divine emanation quickening
and sustaining the subject.
^^W4 The highest and
most excellent object or end of
man, viz. the attainment and en-
joyment of the Divine nature.
Pr. siq^T^T"^^,'^' ^^Ii3- For
the present lil'e. riches; but for
the fiuition of ( Jod, siurituality.
I. John i. 7. 2 Truth, pure trutli,
as ojip. to all manner of error
and illusion.
^J^Rfll: /. (s) Divine
Idvc; sanctitied aft'ections.
q^Rl^'r n.{s) Studious of di-
vine truth. 2 True, honest.
q^^rr^r^ (s) The extremity.
q'^Hf^ f. n. Measure, mag-
nitude.
IT^
253
Trr^r
^T^ n. A gleet.
qr^^r (s) The Supreme
Being; often app. with particular
re'ert'iice, some times to JJl'^,
some times to f^^. fcroocL
fT^JTft|9" a. s Superlatively
^T^\^l^f. s In astronomy.
Culmination.
qTc^a^qRRI^T'JT A term for ii
person sv.af;gerinu; upon a
Vjorrowed or bestowed wealth.
^T^\^ The other world.
^^^f The eveninii-recit-
Jition of scholars, v. ^1"^. 2
fiij. A heavy, prosini^ narration
of one's goings and doings.
^^^ /. A kind or sort;
Varied |)reparations of victuals.
2 A way, manner (with impli-
cation of oddness) ; as '^t ^T"*;
^^■^^t^ ^'^WT; or (with im-
plication of confounding) ;
^'^T'CI^ Mo Jl\^^. 3 Re-
gular succession : ^It:^^^
4 A make- shift. 5 A layer, a
stratum. 6 Wearisome detail, v.
^I^, ITTT. iTt^. r .,
V,. I suit.
^^^OT V. i. To please or
^^T The floor of a house.
2 fig. Corn remaining upon the
•thrashing floor after tlie removal
ofthexil'g or heap. 3 The
terrace made around a well, &c.
4 The face of a stratum under
ground.
«Tr^^§r, ^T^T^\ /. (p)
NouHshing, supporting.
^'r^^rt.(s)SuI)ject to another.
T^^r /. (p) Care, concern
about; regard, heed. v. ^]-ES^.
2 Anxiety.
q^^f ad. On the day before-
yesterday, or on the (hiy after to-
morrow. 2 n. f. fig. Used to
express a short space of time
past or future.
^^R'Tr/. Permission.
q^^Rr (p) An order, a pass.
2 A commission, a sealed paper
of authority. 3 Account, story.
^^tKF An individual of a
h)w caste people.
'7?^'='§"r The sickenintj; and
declining of an infant from suck-
ing the l)rcasts of its mother
under pregnancy.
q^?12^r/. s HoldiniT adul-
teronsintfrcourse with a strange
womuii in his lu)use.
TT5J paj). ^T^ An axe.
T^n^f A hero a!Kl demi-
god ; an incarnation of Vishnu.
"7?^ n. A compound or yard ;
esp. the l)ack part. conj. Than.
^IB^H n. The back-door.
q^g-l^:i--i--i^,,fZ. Used with
STTtn To go to disburden na-
tuie ; or with '^'iiTi'. 2 7i.f.
Pressure to stool: tf^T ^°
q^^ n. See TW.
^TmT a. (s) -Mutual: that
acts in return of or corresjio -
deuce with : ^ tfo ^^ ^TI^rT,
^TW: -r\ -r a,-/. Mutually. 2
S(^e T^^WT^T sig. 1.
T^^'HT n. (s) Foreign pro-
p6'"ty. t.j
■qT^^rWR a. Subject to ano-
T^rC^cTJjcT a. Alienated.
q^^ n. A sort of earthen
platter.
^^f. s Speech in the first
of its four stages, — the first stir-
rings of the breath.
q^l"/. A term for the two
portions which compose human
life, — the advance to maturity
and the decline into age :
^T[^)l'S\f. Excessiveness, su-
perlativencss ; as tfl^^T^ xjo
^Tlifi^ (s) Power, might.
2 Proneness.
^n^JTr a. Powerful, mighty,
7?:^ (s) The pollen of a
flower.
^n^r a. (p) Errant, vagrant,
absconded. 2 Dispersed.
^Tm\ ^m /. Lands of an
absentee who lias lost the tenure.
fT^r^^ a. (s) Turning away ;
having the face averted,
q^^r'^lf^rMnch ado made
out of nothing ; a mountain out
of a mole hill. v. eff^, ^7.
^n^rc^rai^r An express let-
ter (a letter bearing a feather
on it).
7?"rWr/. A scaffold.
Tn^^ (sj Defeat, overthrow.
qrf^^-S- a. Pure, guileless.
^Tjf^^ p. Defeated.
^Tm f.Agond. [dish.
^^R/. A circular and edged
^^r4< a. (s) Most high, su-
lireme ;— used of God,
qxmj See qTmm
rs [ther.
W-^R a. Subject to ano-
TO^ n. The food of another :
living at another's table : dining
""'^- [fat by sponging.
TO^JS- c. A fellow grown
^^f*T^ (s) Defeat, overthrow.
^Tm^^ V. c. To defeat.
TOlTcTp. Defeated.
TTR^T (s) Kindly inquiring
into, and relieving the wants, &c.
of the poor, sick, &c. : inquiring
into the healtli and welfare of
friends, v. ^, ^^.
^n^rq-o. (s) Following after,
devoted to; subject to: bear-
ing relation, respect to : '^r
c
TU^ (s) The property, busi-
ness of another, ud. For the sake
of another.
m'4m a. Public-spirited,
philanthropic. 2 App. to one ear-
nest and profuse of recommen-
dations to others to give avvav
their jiroperty, but careful and
close with his own.
^^I^tTm. -^/^.s Turning back.
2 Reversal (of a sentence).
W^r «.(n) Other, foreign;—
used of persons : strange, new ;
— used of things.
qrrf
cfTTf tT p. s Turned back or
from. 2 Reversed. 3 Given back.
q^rffxT/. s Return. 2 Rever-
salT ."3 Restoration (of property).
^rriCcT /A s Stricken back or
('own, lit. fig.
T-Tc" 11. s The afternoon.
^<\'^ II. Rice-straw. [-i„g
254
^\l^f\ p. (s) Quite full, read >■ :
con.plete.l. [tisfaction.
qR'Ti^/-. s Fulhiess. 2 Sa-
qpTrnf^r/. A technicality. 2
A list of definitions : the intro-
ductory ch!i|)ter; prolej^oniena.
3 fig. The first points (of a bu-
siness). 4 In medicine. Prog-
nosis.
qP^^^ «.s Culling. 2 Count- Lp^^OT,. ^^^ Wandering,
qR:ri^%5T a. (Fit) to be cull-
ed. '2 Fit to be counted.
qiTtT (s) An enclosing wall.
qiT"^^ (s"i Acquaintancp, in-
timacy (witli persons, subjects,
&:c.) '2 Experience.
qKf^cT a. (s) Familiar to or
known. 2 That knows.
qprf^5r «. Separated from,
bounded ; marked off. 2 ncL
Positivolv, absolutely : f^\ tjo
"^^i ^^«T fl^t '^^•T. 3 Ex-
pressly— sayiuL', telling. 4 By
no means ; never.
qpRR (s) End, result : Tiqr-
'gi qo «rT:^. 2 Happy com-
pletion (of a work, &c.) ^
li Chanj.re of form : ^^^T^^T
^R'^ffrT ;^». s Taken in mar-
riage ; — used of the woman.
mT^7 p. Delighted.
qPT^fT s Delight. [quitted.
qf^^^TTTT p. s Abandoned,
qft^^n Abandonment.
qTr^l'^T n. s Protecting,
guarding. 2 Making whole.
^it^^ n. (s) Wearing ; put-
ting on (of a garment).
^IkT-^ s A circumference. 2 A
balo. 3 An ejjicycle.
^F.W a. (s) Perfectly ripe;
ready, lit. fig.
qfrqf^ (s) Perfect maturity,
lit. fig. : the result (of misdeeds,
&c.) 2 Digestion.
qRqr? (s) Custom, practice
roaming. 2 Revolving.
qK»f^^ V. i. To wiinder.
qi^ff^ s pop. -^' Ex-
quisitejragranee. [perfumed.
qR^S-OT V, i. To be highly
qiT^l"^ n. (.s) Measure, quan-
tity. 2 The standard by which
a thing is determined. 3 A mea-
sure gen. 4 Magnitude.
qlXiTf^=fn.sWashing,cleans-
ing. 2 fig. Appeasing.
qRirri'^^ p. s Cleansed,
waslu-d. [justed. 2 .Aloderate.
qiriffcT p. (s) Measured : ad-
^\t\^Tr{ f, s pop. n\tH\^
Measure, &c. [,^g measured.
mm^ a. s (Possible, fit) to
qprW^ v.c. Poet. To listen,
attend to : to hear. [^5,^^,^
qr^qrr (s) Dependents, re-
qi^q^q-u]- ^^ g Encompassing.
qR:C?cf p. Environed.
qrT^TC a. s Clean, pure.
^[V^'^ (s) Laborious exer-
tion. 2 Fatigue.
qrt^icT p, s Overcome with
distress or fatigue.
qfrgrs:/. s Divulging: pub-
licity, a. Clear, plaiu — speecli.
^\TJ:%YZ s Ex])an(ling (as of
a bud, &c.) 2 fig. Divulging:
notoriety. 3 Explication. r-^^„
qK^TT (s) Removing, avert-
qffgr^ n. That removes,
averts, remedies.
qiT^R^ V. c. To remove,
rlear nway (troubles, &c.)
2 Prevalence. 3 Fashion, rule. qK?^!^^. a (Possible, fit) to
wnv. r. ^iffl.
be removed.
qftgTtT s Laughing and jok-
ing : laughing at.
qjWR //. s Thorough know-
ledge of; eonvei'sancy and
skill in.
q*^!/'. Poet. Kiiiu, sort, prrp,
111 the way ot ; according 10 :
^=?}TqKl ^^^T ^^-^J. 2 also
tj^ Like unto. canj. Poet-
But, yet.
q^r /■. (p) A fa!)uh)us monster
with a human face, body of a
horse, and winged. 2 fig. App.
to a beantifid woman, a fairy.
^m See ^l^T^^ s;g. 1 .
qtfJ" (h) a caste. They aie
washermen.
q^r^ 2Vie ph}losopfier\s stoite.
App. fig. to a beautiful boy,
&c. ; to a rich man ; to a liighly,
excellent person.
^l\^^ a. (ft) That investi-
gates accurately ; a critic. 2 An
assayer. 3 A tester.
qtl^t^ u. s Trying.
qfl^'^ V. c. To try ; to bring
to test. 2 To examine. 3 To ex-
perience.
qflWr f. Examination, trial.
2 Knowledge, skill : ^^]^t
^IJTl=g1 T?o 3^^lgT. 3 Expe-
rience, [enced.
qffl"^^ ;;. Tried. 2 Experi-
q'^e- n. See ^^
qaq^ir (s) A favour. 2 Be-
nevolence.
qrrq^rr a. Beneficent.
q^iq'^^^jqr^cT (s) a term for
a mail ]n()fuse of advise and ad-
monition, but backward at ex-
hil)iting an exami)le.
q^rqfr ad. in various ways.
qn^ ad. Behind one's back ;
in the absence of. Used by ihe
ignorant in the sense In the
]U'esencc of.
qU<;T5TR V. s Knowledge of
things unseen. The word may
serve to exi)ress Clairvoyance.
tf^'^
255
^m:
^5[^ (s) Kuin.
^^ u. (s) A leaf. [grass.
qt^jSl" /•. A hut of leaves and
^'^Z'{ 1). s Wandering about,
roftniiMg.
^^^ prep, (s) Until — time
or space. 2 Throughout : ^^^
q>[?T. 3 To the Hmit of: f«-
mi^ ^:^ f?rK:T ^o ; ^Kfi-
End ; the bounding Hue.
^^^^m^ n. (s) End, issue.
CT^rk p. Fitted, lit. fig., sa-
*''*^*"''- [iiciency.
^q"flt /. Satisfaction. 2 Suf-
^^f^ (s) A way, method ; a
mode of procedure : aT^^^Tfl'T-
■^ 5!T^ f^i^T Mm ^T^^ ^T#
% :^T5r tfo ^iiirr. 2 Style,
form : riJT'^ %TTi''<lT'qT M'» f^-
TTo3T. 3 A course through :
ijSTrT •IT^t; a single perform-
ance : <ftsr ^o ^^ja" H^t
■^ff 'lli^- 4 A secondary
tiling, matter, measure: ^;^T'^-
t:io ^'CT^T. 5 A stage, degree;
() A paltry excuse : %'\^
f^"^T "siTTf W\'^ ^tJlT^', ^T
'^^T^ '^o ^fl^T. 7 A sy-
noiiiinous n'ord. 8 Order,
method. 9 A minor and included
affair : HJT ^T*fT W^ tfo g^Z3
^^ n. (s) A holy day or fes-
tival. 2 A conjuncture. 3 fig. The
time of any very general prac-
tice, of overflowing ainu\dauce ;
the reigu, meridian, zenith. 4
A joint or articulation. 5 A
division of a book containing
several chapters.
^i^\ /. See ^4 sig. 1 ,
T^ n. (s) The sixtieth pait
of a gfg^T. Two and a hall
are one minute.
T^^ M m. II. (p) A twink-
lin;; of the eye (as a measure
of time) ; a moment.
q?7^5?'rf (p) A sudden and
inundating fall of rain ; a deluge
of ram. j-&p_
Tc^iy (p) A bedstead, couch,
qpfiyfr f, A small or an old
bedstead.
qc^nqr^T (p) a coverlet.
q^.Z^ -^ n. f. (h) a batta-
lion.
q^^q'^RT Flourishing, thriv-
ing. 2 Rank, growth. 3 Ex-
tensive ))revalence (as of rob-
bers, locusts, rats, &'C.)
qc^[3^ n. Wandering about.
2 also H^fzl /. A turn, a
short walk about, v, «n^.
T^r^ (s) An onion.
^^\^^ n. (s) Fleeing, fligh t
^^^ a. s Gray-haired, n.
Hoariness.
qi^Tcir -^r (p) A circular wick
of cloth fur a pan of oil. 2 The
match of a great gun. v,
^T^, ^, 3W. 3 Tinder steeped
in gunpowder to serve as a
match. 4 A volley round (of the
cannon or fire-arms), v. '^T^,
^[^l^ n. (p) A devil, a
plague, a pest.
qc^'^^^r -o^r -^cT a. Relat-
ing to the place or time beyond;
of the remote da-te.
qc^l^^ ad. From the far-
ther side : from a date prior.
qc^l'R^ ad. Yonder : previ-
ously.
T^^ (s) Sprouting, v. ^,
^TT, ^ ; esp. in _^j^. 2 The
extremity of a branch bearing
new leaves ; a foliage. 3 fig. An
embellishment. 4 An end of a
^4:3.,, , ~ . piece of cloth. 5 A skirt, tail.
M^n (s) A mountain. 2 Ann, n-prr ^ x * c
^ ^ ^ \ , i-^, q^l (11) A measure ot capa-
fig. ; as ^TflT'^T ^'> k load ol - ■ - - '
business.
"Tf^f^ a. s pop. q^cTf Relat-
in«; to mountains.
city of thirty xij?!^. 2 A
measure of weight of 120 Sher.
3 The sack iu which a 'q^j
of grain is carried. 4 (p) Length,
extent : ■?! Mmi ^\'^ ^T^. 5
A dislanee, a sjiacc : a period, a
term: ^T^T^T ^^T ; ^[^^T
'^^T- tj fig. Reach, range : a
line, cord. 7 A bevy (of birds). 8
A sort of pin-money.
qieT f. s The house-lizard,
Tf -1 (s) Air or wind.
«T?^^:i€t /. (h) a windmill.
q'^^RF A term at dice. A
throw with three dice, two turn-
ing u]) 6, and the third 1, making
a throw of 13 : q* ^Tifi -^fUTPif
To run way ; to make olF.
i^ n. Coral.
^^\^\ -m^\ a panegyric
or encomiastic piece in a kind of
recounting the achievements of a
warrior, the talents of a scholar,
the virtues of a person.
Tlf^ a. (s) Pure, clean —
ceremonially. 2 Sinless, holy —
morally. '6 Hallowed — a thing,
&c.
^it^ n. (s) The Biahmanical
string. 2 also -qf^^^ n. s A
ring of ^M" or of gold worn
on the forefinger at worship, &c.
'^^ (s) A beast, a biute.
^Tfcf A name of Shiva.
^^JfcTor/. (s) After, behind.
2 Westward. [morse.
q-^fTlfq' s Repentance, re-
q^[Tg:R37l#r s a sodomite.
^[^^ /. (s) The west. 2 The
west wind, a. West, western.
2 Posterior
qf^JT^:[[^5r n. (s) A term fur
the grains which ripen late in
the year : the late crops.
qi'^^^r^ /. (s) After-wit;
after- thought.
q'^^cfry. s Speech in the se-
cond of its four stages from the
first stirring of the air.
qg"cr -^ a. (p) Approved,
admitted. 2 Agreeing unto. v.
fl^^W a. Thirty-five.
^mz a. Opened out ; spread
abroad, lit. fig.
mi^[f. Opening out.
I^TT
256
m^
^m^ V. c. ^" i. To open out :
to expand (the baud, &c.) : to
stretcli along (the feet, &c.) : to
dispcise.
^m^^ V. c. To bring- forth
yount: ; — used of the maie and
the ass. l2 To shoot out its
^T^T — lilt" Plantain.
^^r The p-.iliii hollowed and
the lingers compressed (to take
II]) water, &c.)
^mX (Port.) Taking- a few
turns for exereise. a. Past :
3TT3: iq^T^ Past eis^ht
(o'clock).
HtiKi Spread out, scattered
state, lit. lij^. (of tilings, &c.) :
publicity (ot any facts). 2 Tiiii.gs
Iving scattered about ; any out-
lav. 3 The grazing of cattle at
night. 4 Prostration of a puer-
peral woman under the case
3f"§^ (the tcetusiu utero com-
ing athwart). 5 A sort of tray
to hold the measures, &c. of a
shop. [ing.
TH^ f. A mare kc|)t for breed-
^l^ ad. Utterly, totally;—
used Avith ^zoi To pill ;
with '^T^PJ To steal every
item ; Avith c^To3^ To bum
to allies; with ^jj\ To
eat up ; witli ^K^\ To destroy.
m'^\mif. Regretting; sor-
rONvin^^over. [sorrow.
m^n^ v. i. To regret; to
fRcfr^r, q^^r^ Repentance,
remorse ; regret. j-j^^^^
q^Tfs'ffT n. (Vulgar) Foriy-
m^i^ (t. Thirty-five.
qcr?/. The dawn.
^^\mZ\ad. R At early mora.
^^\^ (II) A hill.
q^(^ c. f. A crowbar.
W.\^ {^^1 s) A i^eriod of
three hours ; a watch.
TCRF (u) A watch or a
guard. 2 The business of a
guard : the state of guarding.
qnV^fr A sentinel.
qCfS- /; A shower. 2 A
mountain-stream. .'i .\ trench
dug around a tree for the recep-
tion of Mater.
qfCoT^R (h) a professional
wrestler.
qfrr^fR^r /. 'I'he busine.^s
ofaqf^^qT^. [At first.
qi%^f a. (h) The first, ad.
^r€^mm^\ a. (Jfa former
husliand ;■ — said of a child of a
\\idow entering into a second
marriage.
qfl"?^R ad. At, in, or for
the first time, ii In the earlv
t™^^- [for a guest.
q^iqrf^r a careless term
^f^I^ ./• (ii) ''"'if^ «'rist. '2
An ornament for the wrist (of
males).
♦-*
7^^^ V, i. To recline (in
order to repose).
q^ n. The sixteenth part of a
'^[3'^T or the sixteenth part ol
an hour.
q^ A general flight (as of
the people of a town, &c.) v.
^^. 2 f. A run. V. ^.
q2"^r a. Fleet, swift. 2 Of
a runaway disposition.
qs-OT „. ^^^Z f. qs^FTSS-/. A
ijeneral fliu:l)t. r
■ V, ^ [yww gen.
qS"5T -ji^ 'Po ,mi away. 2 'i'o
q^-ciqf^ ,/. The list bearing
(of fruit-trees). 2 fig. Tlie last
and closing profits (reaped from
a business. &;e.)
q^qET .Zm a. Of a rumiway
disposition.
q^qSTfT Prosperity, preva-
lence. 2 Rank growth, o
(leneral fleeing.
^^^\ Dried and preserved
"^^"m V. c. To make to
flee ; to put to flight. 2 To make
away will) : ^rl^T^ *TT*^
R5jf"i^1. 3 To elfcct the
escape of.
q^5Tr A caste of Hindus.
qtr (s) A wing. 2 A half of
a lunar month. 3 The shradh
performed in the dark fortnight
of «T?^^ to the inaues of a!)
one's male ancestors. 4 A side,
part (iu fight, argumentation.
religion, &c.) 5 A way or man-
ner. () A side. 7 An argument,
a thesis. 8 The subject of au
inference.
q^q"f^ -^r^ Heniiplegy.
q^qr^ (s) Espousing a side;
partiality. 2 Espousing a ciuse.
q^qffr a. a partisan. 2
Tliat espouses one's cause ;
an avenger.
q^T^Ra. (s) Winged.
q^rm^ s In law. A f^dse
plaint. 2 In logic. A fallacy,
sophism.
qf^'^r /: s a female bird. 2
One night and two days; or
two nights and one da}'.
q^r (s) A bird.
q^rr ad. in one view; under
one form of the case,
mU /. A quarter. 2 .A pie. 3
A trench around a tent.
qr?"^ Poet. An armed atten-
dant ; a peon.
qr^f^^ ,1. One |th or any
multiple of it.
qrTc^ff A footprint. 2 'ihe
dance-ste|).
m^S f. w A trip. 2 A turn :
qf^^OT a. Of the quantity of
one quarter less ; as RT^iT
qr3:DTa-[cfr?r / Old woman,
dotard, driveler.
qr3r(J[^i2:r Tlu-ee fourths. 2
The greater number or quantity,
the majoiity.
m^^ n. The foot. 2 Space
measured by the foot. 3 A foot-
mark. 4 Au ordinary step or
space.
qr3r^JT5" /. (A mind at
every step.) Capriciousuess.
qr3r^ h'ain. 2 A shower of
rain. 3 fig. An overflow of j)rofits :
a sh()iri'i\ a slrciim.
m^^^^\o^ .^l^[ The rainy
season. j-jji^^^
qrST^qm Rain and such
qf^ (s) Cooking ; ripening.
2 Matuntv. 3 Digestion.
trr^
257
irar
Suppuration. 5 Decoction. 6
Syrup. 7 Victuals. 8 fig. Or-
nateness: ^if^^T^T^T ^T^jT^^T
^f^ a. (p) Pure, clean. 2 fi":.
Pure of heart ; free from guile,
^r^ Syrup.
Tf^l'r/. That division of a
bees' comb in which the bees
dwell.
qr^^'Rfr/. Platonic affection.
^r^R^% /. (s) Cooking. 2
Culinary skill.
m^^m/. A kitchen.
m^^l, m^^\ f. A petal of
a flower. 2 A slice (as of an or-
ange, &c.) ; a cluve of garlic.
^r^JS'r a. Coroled : >T^ TFo
Having one corol.
^rj^ot, qr^V.^ v. c. To be-
come flaccid ; to relax ; to lose
consistence — a living creature,
a flower, &c.
^r^r^r /. a bat. 2 See
qixF a. (s) Relatino- to Tf%
or line, linear. 2 Fit to sit in
the general row of meals.
^m, ^m a wimr. 2
(Vulgar) A half of a lunar month.
3 71. A side of a roof.
qri^V -?3f J «.(s) Denial of the
authority of the Vedas ; hetero-
doxy. 2 A calumny : an im-
posture.
qra^^ V. c. To sift grain
by^shaking it in a fan. rheretic.
TF^^r a. (s) Heterodox,
m^'^ f. The sheltering by a
bird of her young under her
wings- V. ^j^. 2 fig. Shield-
ing. 3 A side. 4 Half of the
^^T^. 5 A slope of a hill.
7f?I^?^r2r /. Depredations
(upon a garden, &c.) of birds.
m^W, ^m¥ n. A bird. 2
A term of endearment for a
beautiful woman, answering to
Dove, duck. 3 App. freely
to Butterflies, moths, &c.
^r^ n. A side of a roof. 2 A
side of the udder.
'Tl^ Intense craving;; long-
33
ing for. V. v^Z, v^^, fiJ^-[K- 2
Wants, exigencies ; vised pi. 3
A sense of crippledness, i. e.
re])ression (as before a creditor) :
TR c The rope by which a
boat is secured astern, the
•painter. 2 A casting net. 3 /Toll
]jaid by ships on clearing out of
a port.
^\m\ f. Dispersing.
^\W^ V. I. To disperse.
qTJT=fr?r The writer attached
to a qjJIT.
m'^\ a. Crippled, halt,
lame. m. See qt""oJ sig. 1.
^fir/ (h) a body of horse
under one commander. 2 The
stable in which the horses are
kept. 3 A stable in general for
many horses. 4 A body of horses
under one master, a stud.
mmm or -*fr /. General dis-
persing.
mK\ Indian Coral tree.
qfiJFJoy ^_ i^ Xo be lame,
halt. 2 fig. To be tied to a ]dace
(as from love, &c.) : <^5q SjT^'ST
qfJJ^ a. See\f^3T.
^\^ A class of mendicants
wlio go their rounds al)Out day-
break. 2 p A class of mendicants
who go about with a •f'^t ^^.
3 or tft^oS f*^T A kind of
betel. 4 Little, spotted owl.
qi'T^^rjr/. A crutch. 2 fig.
A friend of the halt and crippled.
qriTcS-iTI^r A child's go-cart.
m^mi -qr?:r a company
of halt, decre|)it persons. 2 A])p.
to a travelling band of women
and children.
^\^^^^ The learned bull of
the mendicants termed qjir^.
qRl^T n. (h) a turban, v.
qmiJiTRr^^ a term for a
man of commercial credit.
^\^{U A rope (as of an
erected pole) ; the lash of a whip ;
a tie (of fishing net). 2 A shoot
of a root. 3 A tendril. 4 The
after-sprouting of corn, &c. 5 A
spur of a mountain, (i A branch
of a river, &c. 7 fig. Connection
with. 8 fig. A digression of speech.
qrnr^^r /. The eaves of a
house. 2 A stream of rain de-
scending from them.
^\i^\ The commander of a
TilTJiT, &c.
mX^ V. c. To throw on;
to cast loosely around the body
(a shawl, cloak, &c.)
qfq-^of ^_ ^ clotii in general
to throw over or to wear loosely
around the body, — as a shawl,
sheet, &c. 2 pi. Clothes, dress.
3 fig. App. to one's parents, pa-
tron, &c. : 3TT^ ■?:^l^'^t».
qr^^ Ooze, exudation.
qr^S-ofr j. Melting: drip-
1''"^--^. [drip : to let run.
qrq"5J0T V. i. To melt. 2 To
qr^ /". »?. An aromatic plant
m. (s) An emerald,
qf^ a. Five. 2 Used for a
moderate quantity or number :
qf^€ a. s That cooks, ma-
tures. 2 Digestive. 3 Suppura-
tive.
qr^^S" «.Light,empty,vapid.
qi^^srsrr A caste.
qf^5i=zr (s) The conch of
Vishnu. 2 App. fig. to the strik-
ing of the hand against the
mouth in loud plaints.
qr^3: n. Dry blades of the
sugarcane.
'^\^'{ n. s Resolving of gas-
tric crudities. 2 Cooking. 3 Di-
gestion. 4 An infusion of several
simples together.
qf^qrqwr f. The setting out
(at a time when it is inconvenient
to ])roceed to the whole dis-
tance) aud proceeding a few
miles in the direction of a place
to which the jierson is bound,
by a vow, &c., to repair at some
time or other.
qf^^ f. n. (h) a werlge : a
chip (as driven in to tighten a
post, to plug up a hole, &c.)
trr^grrJ'
258
qrr^Hr
qr^tr f. The ^^■oxA^\y of
Dnrga and certain divinities on
the rifth day after parturition. 2
A term for Durjra as worshiped
on this occasion.
qr^^"^ n. CiiUing, inviting.
^f^IT^ r. c. To call, invite.
n. .V callinjr, an invitation. 2 In-
quirin<; after the health and wel-
fare of.
qf^r^ spop.-^The company
of five trades, — carpenter,weaver,
barber, washerman, and shoe-
maker : any one of these five.
TT^^r An aggregate of five
bundles (of grass, &c.)
Tf^/. An emerald.
qF3"[f ,fTr-3"R, qFi^r^TcT See
qr^TOT f, n. The warp-paste.
mm\^ qtW /. Giving to
drink. 2 Whetting, if Applying
the xiT^nn.
RT^'T V. c. To make or give
to drink. 2 To whet.
qi^TIS' An asylum for su-
perannuated animals, &c.
^\^X[ A cage. 2 The crop of
a Palm. 3 The skeleton (as of a
house, &c.)
^fsTf^'^f V. c. To cause to
give or to give to drink. 2 To
whet. ^ti„g_
^\^^^\ f. Kindling. 2 Whet-
^\^oS^\ V. c. To kindle (a
lamp, &c.) 2 fig. To shai])en.
^RF a. (ii) Low, mean. c.
A scrub, sorry fellow.
^\^ An oozin"-: a sweating
(as from suj^ar, &c.)
qr?TPTr j\ Oozing, &c.
inr^^ V. i. To ooze, trickle.
2 fig. To dissolve iu pity ; to
relent.
^\Z A stool. 2 An elevated
water-course (to convey water
through a plantation). 3 \ second i
and an inferior sort of marriage, I
esp. among the widows of the I
lower classes, v. ^TW, ^^, witii |
^"l of 0. 4 A breadth of cloth. ,
5 A line formed by the razor
alonj; the hair of tiie head. v. ,
^IS. (i The breadth of a river. 1
7 n. The springing of the bull or
buffalo in covering the female.
Sy". or TUff A female kid.
WA\ f. Laying a floor of
Pl'i;>^^^- [i.lanks.
^\Z^ V. c. To lay a floor of
^\Z^M n. The furnishinu"
(a visitor, &c.) with a seat and
with water to wash and drink.
Hence, civilities and courtesies;
polite attentions, v. ^.
qrJf^r /. A bracelet of gold,
pearls, &c. 2 A tongue-scraper
of this form.
^\Z\ The slab upon which are
ground the ingredients of con-
diments, &c. 2 fig. Table-land.
^\Z\m n. See ^Z\m.
^\Z\^X^\ The slab and the
midler. 2 fig. Ruin, demolition :
■^TiTi^T -'eit:t^t ■qyo • r.^^,^T.
qri'H:?^^ /: The business of
Tl^r /. The sand-board of
schoolboys. 2 The board of a
native book. 3 A slip of ground.
q[?r, qifr /. a broad basket.
TF^rcT^iTr^w. A contemptuous
term for a helpless and worthless
fellow.
^\€\^l: ^\^^ ^^^x -m a
phrase expressive of Bombast,
fustian, or rhapsody; tioo (jrits
and a gallon.
qr?f^ (ii) The head man-
aging officer of a village. 2
App. as a title of courtesy to a
Shi'ulra.
qrS" (s) Reading the Vedas,
considered as one of the five great
sacraments. Ii Reading gen. 3
A lesson. 4 A reading, a variation
of copies : a form of spelling of
a word.
qr?/. The back. 2 fig. 'I'he
back of a thing gen. 3 fig. Aid,
sup{)ort. V. '<. 4 fig. Sur-
face (as of the earth, &c.) 5
Rind, the back, coat. 6 A female
l^i'l- [committed to memory.
qr? a. (s) That has been
"Tr5=fi (s) A lecturer, a public
reader of the Furans. 2 A spiri- j
tuid i)receptor. 3 A title of
Brahmaas. '
Trjjr^^^r, qrsf c^r^ ad. On the
back, pick-back — carrying, set-
ting, &e. V. 'g, ^T^, B^TW, ■^^-
•\
qrj^rrr a. Blank or unwritten
at the back.
qrj^sr Sorrow for (the
death, &c. of) a younger brother
or sister.
qrSR^r «. a refugee of.
qrJJCr^ Supporting, aiding,
backing.
TTjqr^ ad. On both sides—
a paper written or read.
qrJ^oS" n. Strength consist-
ing in the backing of friends.
^\Z^\Z j. Hard labour (in
carrying, writing, &c.)
^\zm\ a. Having the back
turned towards. 2 fig. Averse
to : \^K "^Trn m»ll ^^rpf^
mzTi'^m See qr^i^^r.
'^\Z^m Pursuing closely ;
tracing.
^\Zm\, mZm^f. A gift (to
a visitor) on sending him away.
V. ^. 2 The sending away (of
a visitor) with gifts or honour, v.
^r e;. of o.
qrjR^ V. c. To send.
qrJSjirF f. (s) Power of read-
ing : power of committing to
memory. [school.
mZ^\^'\ f. (s) A college,
qrJF Detail of; lengthy story
of.
TrsicT^ n. (s) Another read-
ing. 2 Another reading (of a
book) ; a variation of copies. 3
A book, legend, or story known
by heart. 4 Knowledge by heart :
^\Z\oS 11. A carrying beast.
mZ\oS a. Having a large
back. 2 Having a good back— a
horse, &c. 3 Of burden— a beast.
qf^RF-^r A supportefjiac/ier.
^\Z\ a. That, on reading,
soon acquires by heart. 2 That
can repeat from memory.
qrdf^F a. Of burden ; that
carries (loads, &c.) oa the back.
TT^
259
qrtTrgr
7r5R:r??r -^^r^A. That backs.
mt^^i See ^r?f s'r.
^\m\S -?r ad. immediately
after ; in close succession.
^R^r^n. A beast of burden.
^\^ Market rate. "2 fio. Worth,
weiglit : rqi^WI "qi" m^?
3 Ripeness and readiness to he
gathered (fruits) : ^TJ^T^
T?T» ^TJT^T. 4 A mango that
has attained this state. 5 Scaf-
fohhng. [rods.
^f'5" A land measure — twenty
'Tr?'^r /. Felling.
m^^ V. c. (h) To make to
fall ; to fell. 2 To defeat. 3 To
la)' down or lay, i. e. to make,
cast, strike out ; as ^TTi^
f'a^^t tTTo ; ^^T qTo ; f^'^\T.
lav down a road ; To sink a well;
To find out; To draw lines.
^i^^ A descendant of ^fj.
2 An aggregate of five (rnpees>
&c.)
^r^^r The first lunnr day
of either half-month. 2 App.
to ^^ ^mtl^T- [fall.
^r^K^ V. c. To cause to
qr^5?Tlt m^ n. The year
commencing with the 1st of
^^.
TF^^ n. A fawn. 2 App. in
endearment to a calf or an infant.
Tf^T A male calf. 2 A
hamlet. 3 The gathering of
tree-fruits. 4 A column of the
multiplication table. 5 A class
of letters (as arranged in the
^TtO alphabet). 6 A ward
or quarter of a town. 7 A young
tree.
Tf^r A tiger's cub.
^\^\^ Defeat, a. Overthrown
and captured.
tlir^^^ n. (s) Scholarshi.),
erudition. 2 Pedantry, v. f?T-
^^r /. A female calf (of a
cow, not of a buffalo).
^Rff p. Shaken or knocked
oflF— a fruit. 2 Made, laid,
tbrowu. Sic— a road,field,biidgc.
^ij" (s) The jaundice.
^r^ n. A calf of a cow.
fTfWr Poet. Tlie caste
called «T^T^.
TrS^rr a half-srown tioer. 2
A village -officer.
^\ZX f. The whole commu-
nity of a village. 2 The region
of a village : flT trt^^tfT ^rf^-
^ ^'i\'?l ^rf ^T^- 3 The
divinity (of a village). 4 Village-
land appropriated. 5 Peopled
state: ^?I^ ^^o ^H^. 6
White soil. '7 A tract of white
soil as occurring here and there
in the usual ^T^ ground. 8
Duties on commodities or
chattels.
^iS'^oS" 11. The villa2fe-com-
munity. [emaciated person.
qiSrqfc^/. A term for an
q"fe'?:^^^r a term for the
higher class as distinguished from
the mere cultivator.
^\Zl^ a. Whitish.
qigT^% v. Fluor albus.
^\Zl[ a. White. 2 A covert
name for a snake.
qr5T13T>^^ Grey mica.
qi5"^r^lf5Jr a white crow,
Rara avis.
qiSTftRF^ A term for an
arch cheat, a black leg.
^\^^^\ irsST A terra for the
villa^ge-Mahar. [-^u ^„^^
^I'^T^'^ j)l. Hoary hairs ;
^\^T^^ n. The white por-
tion of the eve.
fTFS""?Tm2Tf^r a. That brings
dishonour upon his relations; a
black leg.
qff^^r-iTrr/.Whitish.2 0fa
glistening white.
Ti§"^^r /. Glistenino- white-
ness (of paper, cloth, fish, &c.) 2
Whiteness coming over the
black of the eyes. 3 The daz-
zling brightness (of the dawn).
qr^^^cIRr Dishonouring,
slighting : dishonoured state.
mmi'^l / A pelican.
qi'^^qr a. A water-carrier:
fig. an illiterate and rude person.
qPWmfr A species of harm-
less watersnake.
qR^# /. A watermill.
Tf^^S: a. Watery, washy. 2
fig. Vapid, dry speech, &c. ;
speaker, &c.
grq^c7 f A fireplace for
heatmg water.
Tl'^sf^lS" n. A deluge, an in-
undation, n
^ [lapwing.
m^\^^\ f. Red-wattled
qi'^STS" a. Sloping steeply.
qRcTff Heating of gold or
silver (of which the quality is to
be determined), and plunging of
it into water.
qR^fr/. The spleen; the
disease incidental to it.
^l^^rsr n, A tract of wet
soiL 2 Ground watered by irri-
gation.
^\mz iriw- a phrase used in
reference to the signal defeat at
^if^m^ of Nanii Bhow's army,
and implying utter slaughter
and destruction.
^\'^Tm\ a. That drinks
(much) water; — said of ears of
corn spoiled by excessive rain.
Hence fig. Watery, weak, vapid.
qm^r /. A dive. V. ^K. a.
or -^T A diver.
tlRiR^fqH /. Land newly
brought under irrigation.
Tl^Wn^^rtcT/. Lands, which
are not reckoned under irri-
gation-lands, receiving irriga-
tion.
qfJTiT^'T'l^r, m^m\^ a. That
enjoys irrigation.
^mW-m a. That supplies
water to people's houses.
qRiTiST^ n. An otter.
mm\z -JTiT^r -s^r /. The
receptacle of liquor amnii or
the icatei-s. v. ^, t:i^, fsfg, ^-g.
qW\^Z{ .E\ A place (viz." a
stairs, &c.) on the margin of a
river or tank, for people to fill
water or to vvasli.
^\^m^ A bhip or boat.
Tnrtf
260
TR'sr
tTRffn /. A jocosely de-
scriptive term for fish.
TM^^S" 77. A species of
harmless water-snake.
qf'^^S" y, A mason's level.
2 A slope to carry off water.
m'^'^ Pasture and water,
considered as they affect cattle :
'TUT Jlf^'^T ^T" ^^t^ «niT<T
Tr'T^T A water-snake.
flF^rS" /. A shed erected
by the road-side to supply travel-
lers with water. 2 A mason's
level.
qfPr s The hand. 2 In
comp. Bearing in the hand :
^■§"t(To.
m^^K m. ^m^K^ V. s
Junction of the hands, of the
bride and bridegroom. 2 Nup-
tials : contraction of marriage
(accepting of the hand).
mi w. Water. 2 Rain. 3
Temper (of metals). 4 Spirit,
mettle. 5 Lustre (as of pearls,
&c.) water : energy of look. G A
plating. 7 Edge, keenness (of
a tool). V. ■?, XfTST. 8 Honour.
V. «TT, ^ff^, '^^. 0 (with
TTT or iTTut, &c.) Tameness,
va])id quality (of singing, &c.)
Ti'^r^r^^ a. Seasoned by
having been steeped in water.
TFlicTR a. Having lustre — a
gem : temper — a weapon : spirit,
pluck.
gmrqff^rH" Rain suitable to
fill rivers. Sec. : ^^ ^T^^
mf^^ A physician whose
medicament is charmed water.
m'^mki^m^^ a. i:\cccding--
Iv mild, patient, &:c
^ ^g / Terms exprcssi\e of
1-lst d.ilitV.
^r^^r^"^[^?T -^m\ a term
for a morsel of solid food eaten
by a person desirous of drinking
water ; tliat he may without in-
jury gratify his thirst.
^r^ n. Tlie blade of a tool.
2 An eyelid. 3 /. The team of
oxen at treading floor. 4 m.
The name of a seawater-fish. 5
The eye of an ax, adz, &e. [inw.
TTcT (s) Falling or descend-
^r^I A pinnate or a long-
shaped leaf (as of a sugarcane,
&c.) 2 Lefl/gen.; it occurs only
in the saving '^TcIT^t fflH-
TFcT or ^Fcf /: The line (in a
rice-field) along which the man
proceeds fixing or uprooting
])huits of rice.
m^^\ n. (s) Sin : a sin.
m^^l a. Sinful : criminal,
faulty.
^^^ w. An almanac, or
any contrivance by which to de-
clare the heavens or to prognosti-
cate.. 2 The articles (books,
])apers, &c.) of one's business, as
lying spread out before him. v.
tl^T, ^g^, ^j:s, -^JT^, -^T^,
^^^a.(H) Thin, not thick. 2
Dilute, weak. 3 Of loose tex-
ture— cloth, &c. 4 Rare, not
dense. 5 Not close ; sparse. G
Lean, slender. 7 Faint, feeble —
love, atfection, friendship.
^FcT^lf /. Diminished close-
ness : Tjgf ^^-Edjri -^JTit ^Tfft,
^TrfftTTo -^T^"^. 2 Diluteness.
^m^m -^m a. Of a slight,
thin make.
^^^r /. Thinness. 2 See
^T?ra5Ti. 3 A smith's chisel.
4 Plane : superfices.
TicTrcT n. (s) pop. -55" Hell;
the regions under the eartli. 2
Usoil fig.; as^^T^m^T^ili^
t?TrrT53T¥ TT^.
V^]^^^ n. An apparatus
for extracting oils and essences.
fircrrf^^^f «. Deep, close,
secret.
^iRrTc^r n. s Chastity.
TlcTr f. A share of some
j iiit concern:^! '^[q^TVfrl
'CigNl ^T<» ^Tc- 2 A slip ol'
BulJcr, 3 A pinnate.
m^^lT, qiHRTT c. A partner.
qg/. ^ij^w. (2ri'^'^[:qf3" s.
Phrase used in presenting ^^-
fgtfTT) A term fur ^f^UTT- 2
m. pi. Rupees.
qi^ n. An eye-lid. 2 A
blade or s]; aft of a water wheel.
3 A blade (of a weapon) ; a pin-
nate or a long shaped leaf (as of
the sugarcane, cocoanut, &c.) 4
The lower and corresponding
member of a yoke.
Tf^r Loose and dry leaves
(of ^^^T, S:c.) 2 Mercantile
credit or citizen-repute.
^J^r^I f. -^ V. A small culi-
nary vessel.
qr^ n. (s) A vessel in gen. ;
a ])late, dish, basin, cup, jug, jar.
2 A receptacle literally, as a
socket, stand, base : a recipient
or subject fig. (as of gifts,
curses. &c.) : a mine, an ocean, a
fund, &c. : (of virtues, vices, &c.)
3 The bed of a river. 4 s In the
drama. A disguise, an assumed
character. 5 In comp. Worthy,
fit: "^^f^ ^To, 85*TT ^T»-
qr^r/. A dancing girl.
Tt'^r A road or way.
TF^r /. (H) A large, flat,
smooth stone. 2 A stone gen.
mm^\^ (h) A bird, the
stone-pecker.
^\^mZ A caste. They are
splitters and hewers of stone. 2
The stone-pecker.
^\^m c. A traveller.
mT^^ a, s pop. qflsSr^ Way-
faring ; a traveller.
m^ Vrvlris crepitvs. 2 (.s)
A foot. 3 A fourth or qnarter.
4 A foot of a shlok or quatrain.
r> The quadrant of a circle.
Ti^'^lfr n. (s) That travels on
fo.^t, a pedestrian. ^^^^^^^
TF^'H' V. i. To break wind,
Ti'^^f? s A footstool.
m^^'^ n. (s) The filling up
of a stanza. 2 fig. An expletive.
3 Filling up of a gap ; matter so
scrviii'j-. [the feet.
^\'^^^\\^ s Bowing down to
'\K^K\K s A kick.
"^
^r^5^ (s) The instep.
trr^^rfi^rC /. Boasting,
bluster.
^RT^r y. s Any protection
for the feet — shoes, &c.
Tf^^r a. Given to breaking
of wind. 2 fig. Cowardly. 3 A
brown sort of beetle. 4 fig.
Feeble, infirm.
^KR^ ?;. c. To cause to
break wind. 2 fig. To work hard.
3 To beat in play.
^K^\?\ (p) A king.
^r^srrer «. Granted by,
suitable to, relating to, the
Muhaniraadan kings ; — used esp.
o/^t^T'C, ^^■^, fs^^T, &c. 2
Kingly ; grand, fine, noble, &e.
3 Exceeding, superlative, &c. ; as
tiro ^^JT -^T^HI^ -ifi^, &c.
trr^srrfr/. Royalty.- reign
of a king.
TKr^rer «. (s) Trodden un-
der foot ; travelled — a country :
subdued — an enemy.
^\^\mi f. s A toe.
^r^fjg" s A great toe.
^fj^r /. (s) A shoe ; wooden
shoes ; an impression of a foot
on stone, worshiped as the trace
of some god or Guru.
m'^^l^ n. Blnck salt.
^\^ V. (s) Water &c. for
cleaning the feet. 2 Washing the
feet.
^Rw. A leaf. 2 The leaf of
Piper betel ; the roll of this leaf,
with betelnut, spices, and lime,
to be chewed. 3 A leaf of a
book. 4 A sheet of paper. 5 A
leaf of metal foil. (5 A leaf-
form ornament. 7 A single dhotar,
one of a pair. 8 A petal of the
flower ^rlsift. f) A single card
of a pack. 10 The blade of a
weapon or tool.
^R V. (s) Drinking ; in
comp ^^JT mo. 2 Drinkiut;
spirituous liquors.
^f'lnr Dough spread over a
leaf and rolled up and thrown
into the fire to be baked.
^R2:R v. a vessel to hold
the betel-leaf, &c.
qR% /. The betel-plant.
261
TR^S" -^[oS" f. A mason's
^"^^^1- ^ [contents.
qR^f^S^r / An index of
m^mJU f. See ^R sig. 2.
2 fig. A small bribe.
TFC^, m^m V. c. To let
down the milk into her udder —
a cow, &c. from maternal yearn-
ings or on seeing food.
'TT^?'^ v. Food, (fee. placed
before (a cow, &c.) to induce
the milk into her udder. 2 fig.
A bribe.
^\'^ Descent of milk into
the udder from maternal yearn-
ings, &c. App. to the filling
with milk of the breast of a
woman, v. ^"Z, and in con. ^ :
'?f3S-[qr'^T II . 2 fig. The melt-
ings of tenderness : relenting.
qr=?-T^rr,qFi^f?:c.That with-
holds her milk — a cow, &c.
Tf^ n. (s) Sin, crime, vice :
a sin. 2 Apjj. to an evil intent or
evil suspicion. 3 App. to a wicked
or a troubling person, a pest, a
plague : a scrape, a strait.
^nmi a. Wicked.
7f^^2" pi. Great pains, v. ^.
Spoken in anger : jgr m'i^^T^
^\^^\^ f. A term for a
Monster of iniquity. [of soda.
TF^^'^K Impure carbonate
TlT^r/. A sort of thin, crisp
cake. 2 A pavement of flat
stones. 3 A cream on the surface
of boiling sugarcane-juice.
^mr/ An eye-lid. ^,i„.
qr^^rrq -^'crri The anguish of
m^U See ^^^^Tl
fTfTfrS" / A sinful look:
atti ih. evil-eyed..
Ti^iT^ A teim for the con-
ception of a woman whilst
'TFTMl^ a. Fearing to sin.
Tf^JTr^/. -l\m m. -^T n. (s)
Terms for an atrocious sinner.
7(Tr ind. Papa.
TRTf
TRF^r^fq A term for the
Natural father, in opp. to 5-
•.X _j [sms.
^\^J^^^^pl. Great and many
^rTr':^r a very wicked per-
son, r J
rv rv [praved.
Tnqsr, ^m «. (s) Sinfui, de-
qrrj^rr -err a detached crust
(as of a cake).
^M\^ m^ n. A term for a
meagre and puny fellow.
^W?: a. (s) Low, base. Used
of lovVness of condition.
TF^ The foot. 2 The leg. 3
fig. The leg (of a couch, &c.) :
the foot (of a mountain). 4 A
fourth. 5 A round of a ladder.
TRTcTR A ford. a. Fordable.
fir^T^i^cr/. Foot-labour.
'Tr^T^IRr (p) A privy.
^r^^cT n. The foot (of a hill,
&c.) The foot of a bed.
^m"^ Luck ; good or ill, at-
tendant upon a man or beast.
n'RTf^r c Entanglement by
the leg. 2 fig. A state of em-
barrassment.
m^^^m f. pi The cloths
which, at a wedding, are spread
along from the place at which the
bridegroom's party are alighted
to the house of the bride ; for the
mother of the bridegroom to walk
upon.
Trwr^ Reaching down to
the feet — a garment.
^r^^oS" m. f. An evil foot.
qR^roT/. Going on foot.
^R^irr (p) Trowsers.
"T1^2^r A step (as of a lad-
der). 2 A footpath. 3 fig. Re-
gular course, v. q^, ^TJT, '^'^.
4 A felloe or felly.
m^m -H n. (Vulgar) Shoes.
qr^ref V. See TI^cT.
qr^T^^ 71.. Infantry.
qf^T'^rroTr /. Earnest and
liumbie entreaty.
qrW^/. Dust of the feet.
A term assumed for one's self
in e^xcess of humility, ["slipper.
qr^rqr^ -^ (p) a shoe or
^\^^\
262
m^
TRqr^T^r^: c. a term for a
liijht, mean, shameless fellow.
qr^'TfoS" m. j. The time of
noon ; the heated state of the
gro^i'^- [sician's fee.
qPT^rS'f^r /. A visiting phy-
^[^^^ (?) The liinder leg-
rope of a horse. 2 fig. A clog.
tTPnTrr The infantry of an
army.
qr^q'pfr /. (p) Devastation
and ravages, v. ^^, ^T- 2 tig.
Contnmeious treatment.
qiJIffm A foot-path. 2 A
road by land : opp. to oj^-
^\m^ c A footfall. 2
Tjt^IT^l An evil foot, (p) In-
tercourse with.
^\^X\ f. A step. 2 fiii.
Rank, grade. .'"! Among Karkuns.
A stage or cutting of a quil! lin
making a pen). 4 Amongst lea-
ther-workers. A division of a
liide.
m^^m A plague incident to
cattle. V. V- 2 Demoniac visi-
tation of a female. Supposed to
arise from the demons havnig
trodden in her steps whilst she
was proceeding to bathe, &c.,
or on her re-entering into the
house. [sher.
^\'^^ f. A measure of four
^\^^Z^ v.i. To appear well-
trodden— a road.
C[r^^'^ n. Water in which
have been washed or dipped the
feet of a Brahman. [-jij. ^g
^\^'\^T^\'^ Getting a footing,
^\^\ A foundation, lit. fig. v.
^T^, ^^^■ 2 The bottom of a
lull. •< In survying. Base.
CTRr^r^^f ^F7 /".A road well-
trodden bv aud'widl-knowu to.
m^l'm ^^^^ a. Given to
kicking — a beast. j-,.„e
Tf^r^r ^na'r f. The little
qr^rr^m ^r^r /. pi. Feet
burned by walking over hot
ground, v. ^T. ^^"T g.
qr^j^^r ?r?:'^^iq'^r^r a term
for a close and sparing person ;
niggard.
qr^r^^ a. Of firm, regular,
correct foundation— a business,
building.
qrqr^-S" a. That is born with
the legs foremost. Held to be
endowed with certain super-
human powers (as of discovering
thefts, &c.) : also held to be
l)eculiarly in danger from an
apprehension of lightning.
qR (s) The end, limit, lit.
fig. ; the farther side. 2 The bank
raised around the ftr'^oJ, ^^,
and other trees.
qR ad. On the other side ;
/. e. across, over, through.
qi^T A watch of three hours.
mT^ f. (h) Examination,
trial. 2 Knowledge of or skill
in determining upon. Used esp.
of exanuning money.
qR^t^r^S? f The price of
e.xamiuing a sum of money.
qKt^t^r /. Examining (of
moiiev) : testing.
qr^^"^ V. c. To examine
(monev). 2 To try or examme.
^KWl W^m^ V. C. To exa-
mine and assay ; to test and try.
^K^\ a. Other, foreign — a
person : strange, novel — a thing.
qR^?r a. A critic, a jud^'e.
qft^cf a. Thoroughly versed
in ; adept, proficient.
qr^nr?iTiTr^r a. of, i e. suit-
able for or demanding, turns,
bouts, reciprocal reliefs : ^
qiTslTfi" The coral tree. 2 w.
The flower of it.
qrrjr (^/.Tlmt is well advanced
beyond her last bearing and is
vet milch — a cow, &c. : that is
fidl-weaned and separate — the
calf of such a mother.
qiT^r f. A young female
buffalo.
\^K\n. A buffalo-calf.
qK^ n. A scale of a balance.
qi^'T n.(s)pop. -^Breaking ol
a fast. 2 fig. Feasting. [_„itude.
qrTJT'^' w. s Subjection, ser-
qr^^ B Quick-bilver.
Wy^ f. Hunting, fowling. 2
Game.
qRfr a. A hunter. [^T.
qrrq^^ n. s Punishment, v.
qittr /; The descending
shoots (of Ficus Indica, &c.)
which take root and re-ascend.
qRifrra"^ a. s Splritually-
minded ; studious of divine
knowledge and favour. 2 Spiri-
tual ; supremely good.
qrrirrR^ik' s Actual (not
illusory) species or kind.
qR^fl%^ a. Relating to ^-
qKqr (n) Blue pigeon. 2 In
comp. ; as xfT^^ ^WT^ Blue
pigeon-coloured, &c.
qfT^r -^r a Parsee.
qrn Quick-sllver. 2 A young
Jack-fruit. [and white,
qrn a. Spotted with black
[qin^r^ n. (s) Perusal, read-
ing through (esp. of a H^TW).
qr^rW a. One who has
read through.
qrn^r Tiie near and far-
ther banks of a stream. 2 fig.
Bounds ; reach, v. «nJT ad. On
tlie hither and farther sides.
qrK3f[cf, qfr^rcl^ s The co-
ral-tree, [i'.^?:.
qiKq^^ n. (s) Punishment.
qrfrirri'^ a. s Relating to
^f^«T^T. [stale,
qr^^*^ V, i. To become
qr^"^^ n. s Harshness, vio-
lence (of speech, action, treat-
ment).
qirr^r That is (as yet) un-
reui'wed by the daily ablution,
wash, or rinse — a person, cloth,
mouth. 2 Stale — flowers, water :
that is yet unsvvept.
qr^f^ a. s delating to earth,
earthy. 2 Terrestrial, n. An
eartlu'n lingam made to use in
worship, m. A king.
qit^r /. (s) The name of the
wife of Shiva.
qr^, qrf%^ a. s Lateral.
QTsr
263
^^ f. The common house-
lizard.
TFc^ n. A cloth, &c. stretched
across a pole forming a sort of
tent. 2 A sort of cloth used as
carpeting. 3 The tender shoots
(grass, &c.) V. -^Z, f^H, ^, %T-
^Fc^orTr^^ a. (s) Thiit
supports, cherishes. In conip.
as iTqisfT.
m^'^ -^ Poet. A cradle.
qrc=5-W^ ju The family of
one's adopting parent.
^r^^fr That exhibits his
goods in, or that dwells in, a
Tr?5'<:?r /. (h) a palanquin
of state : app. to 35IT'^T-
qr^^T^r f. An assembling
and feasting in the fields of the
cultivators, esp. at the season of
reaping or thrashing.
^\^Z A turn, recuni no-
season ; a change (of labour, use,
action) : ^T^rt ^^T^JI'S ^^^X
tiTo. 2 Shifting, alternating;
TiTo ^^♦r gi^T^. 3 Turning,
change : ?qi^T tT^T fR^eff^
^T^T xfio xi^^tlT or -gi^T.
qfc^J'^'r f. Turning over ;
changing : returning (of a sick-
ness).
m^Z^ V. c. To turn over. 2
To change : to vary (a course) :
to relieve (a sentinel, &c.) 3 To
change, alter, lit. fig. v. i. To
turn over or on the other side. 2
To vary ; to become difi'erent. 3
To return — a sickness.
m^^ See ^\^^.
mr^^^\ u. c. ^. i. To turn over,
^r^^r a. Upside down ;
prone.
m^'^l ^f. Swelling com-
mencing at the '^T«f> or pos-
terior ))arts.
mm7:(\ q-mfrqr ^Mn. a term
for instruction, counsel, &c. to a
self-willed person : for labour in
vain.
fjr?^^ 71. (s) Preserving, pro-
tecting. 2 Keeping (of a vow, a
'^'•"°^'^^' ^^•) [and feeding,
qrc^^ qrq-t^ n. (s) Keepmg
TF^tr /. c See ^^f F.
qTc^^ The extremity of a
branch bearing new leaves : a
tuft of foliage. 2 The skirt of a
garment or cloth ; esp. as used
in waving to one at a distance,
in flapping out a light, v.
WT^, «T^, ^X, ■^. 3 fig.
Outskirts. 4 fig. An embellish-
ing circumstance added to a tale
by the narrator. 5 Atfiiiitv- i'.
f^5?, vfT3r, fH;^. 6 Spread of
a familv.
[waving, &c.
qr?5-?0Tr /. Beckoning by
qj^f^ r. i To sprout forth,
qr^^q^ ?/. The chorus (of a
song, &c.) 2 fig. An expletive.
qrc^^r^PTFc^^ Remote relation
through marriage.
qF^lfot V. c. To beckon by
waving the hand, &c. 2 To
flap (a fire, &c.)
TF^fr /. The sprouting (of
plants). 2 fig. The recovering of
fiesh and plumpness (of one re-
duced by sickness), v. ^«, ^.
^\^\ Leaves, blades,
Tf^^F^ a. Having copiously
blades or leaves.
7Fr=^lTF51F /. A generid name
for vegetables of which esculent
portion is the leaf. [gance
qf?g;(S" Amplification, ele-
TF^^TS'F^ a. Diffuse.
TF^ A quarter. 2 A foot, a new
hand : -iT^T t:iT^ "sI^T ^T^. 3 A
land-measure of 30 square bighas.
4 Poet. A foot.
TF^ n. (Port.) Fermented
t)read : a loaf of it.
TF^ 8 Fire.
^l^^\ A step (of a ladder,
&c.): a notch for the foot (to
ascend a Palm, descend into a
well, &c.)
^Ff^ n. A fourth share. 2
One fourth or any multiple
of it. ^
^F^r A pulse.
^[^'Zl In fencing, dancing,
&c. The artistic position or a cast
of the foot. 2 fig. The inci-
pient portion.
^F^?r / A footprint. In
loc. case : (qiW^Y), and with
a numeral prefix, it takes the
sense of Time ; as ^ejf t{Jo .
^\^'^\ A notch cut in a tree
by which to ascend it : a hole
scooped out of the side of a well
to assist descent. 2 A foot-print.
3 A foot-step r. ^l^, 'Z\^.
m^^l A flook of an anchor.
qF^°T V. c. 6f i. To conduct;
to cause to reach (a person or a
thing). 2 To reach or attain, lit.
fig. : ifr JTtWTW tf^T^TBST ■qH%T.
3 To get. 4 To come to hand;
to be received by : fTiJil^
^^T ^^'^ g^T ^1^ X{T^^?
5 To be attained and enjoyed by ;
to he found by; — used otthe Deity
or his favour by a worshiper. 6 To
come home to : '^ iria fi'^1
'?T^^ 'fhis matter is mine. 7
To find occasion for; to be able :
g-STT ^I^ ^I^T T5T1^ ^T?^I
qF^^TF^F Interest at three
quarters per cent, per mensem.
7F^^F p. pr. Reached,arrived :
qi^^F/. A receipt. 2 Arrival
(as of things sent).
^F^ a. (s) Pure, clean. 2
Purificatory hallowing.
q'F^^F A quarter of a rupee.
2 A. foot-step. 3 A step. 4 The
graceful or scientific cast of the
foot.
qr^c^F^f^^r ad. Step by step.
^F^^F /: A quarter of a
rupee.
qFfo?rqF^c^r«f/. At every step.
^f^SJ?: A quarter of a sher.
qF^^f^F The rainy season.
^\'^\ A sort of fife.
^f^cTF prep. Until, unto
(whether of time or space).
«Tnr
264
TT^
^r^T (s) A noose ; a snare
for catching birds and beasts.
2 iijr. Any ensnaring, obstructing
(business, &c.)
m^^'l pre/). Near,nii:h. '2 With;
noting posessiou : rm "tTI" '^T'^
^€ 3TT^fT. 3 To ; noting do-
nation, direction: ?qr ^^o ^
^N^ See Tf^^.
frrTC^ (s) A stone, a rock.
CfFTr'^fT^ a. Stone-hearted.
TfTT^ a. Relating to stone.
^r^/.The iron share of af^^
(a harrow).
^W prep. Poet. Near.
^i^^ ti). n. (p) Inclination
of the balance : the thing put
into to the light scale to remove
it and etfect equilibrium.
m^^ a. (h) Uelatino; to the
vicinity of; forming part of the
property of; connected with or
near uiito (by ))osition in space,
by blood or alliance, by posses-
si^'". &c.) [Plantain.
?[^^r An ofF-shoot of a
m^'^ f. Lying on one side
or on the back, reclining, v. ti.
m^^^ V. i. To recline.
There is some implication of
reproach,
qf^^r a. See ^f^^r. 2 Along
the ground, supine.
qr^S" a. Si.\ty-five.
m'^ prep, (h) From or since;
noting distance from the past :
HIT f^'^^^^ ^^<' '^ wcf ^"jf .
2 From ; noting se|)aration or
distance from in space. 3 From,
proceeding from: ■^T^l'STmo
"^ZS ^I?r- 4 From ; noting
departure from : ill r^T'^To
^T^t- •'> From, away from ;
noting y)rivation : f5}T«f "^T ^'[o
^Tq$ irl^f. G By ; noting the
agent : \ »Tti T^fl t:|To tje^.
7 By or beside ; noting passage
along: ^T^rm'^Jlt^im' ir^I.
8 Out of; from within.
mi^\ A coloured m^V^l
^\^^^ f. A shawl composed
of two breadths doubled over
and joined to two other breadths
doubled simihirly. 2 (Because
given in lieu of or by way of a
TCIT») Freehold of land granted
to the 'm's\^ of a village.
qimc^r, m^]^if. (h) a rib.
TRcfJ^cT/. (h) Interrogating:
earnest inquiry about or after, v.
Trctfa. (ii) Relating to hills.
^\K^\ f. Looking, seeinir. 2
Inspection (of lands, crops, &c.),;
revciuie-survey. fvevs.
tT[?:oTfcTf55T Tallying of slu-
fTrg-otiJ^TT^jr, qf?:qt5R:^r The
rough account of a revenue-
""T-'- [veyor.
qrC^rrcTR a revenue-sm--
TrCOT /;. c. cy /. To look,
behold, view. 2 To see. 3 To
perceive in gen. 4 To look after ;
to mind. 5 To regard, consider :
^STi^ir tjl^^^, iTUTT^i' T^IT^lW.
6 To examine, prove. 7 To
ins])ect, survey. 8 To look for :
^T^T ^T'^T^T ^^^ tn^T^T WT
^1^ »IT'^. 9 To desire ; to
seek or look ( — to speak^go—
come — act) : '^T ^^T tl*! ^T-
^?f T ; ^T «1I^' -^^ -■^^ -^3*
-■aa^ MT^^T. H) ■qi'^iTf is much
used with verbs of Trying, exa-
mining, testing, comparing, &c.
as sul)sidiary or supplementary
to the sense : ^^«r -3^^*IT-
^^ -•^T^dTfT -'ST^^ ^I^in.
m^F^\ a. One that can reco-
ver stolen or lost things ; that can
tell where to dig for water &c. ;
a wizard.
^fC^ or qifC^R^ If is neces
■sary, ex[)edient : ^T "tri^T 'fl^T
xjio . Used after verbs, it throws
them into the past tense : "^
g?TT^ f^f^^ ^1°.
qr^'^^R Hospitality ; guest-
rites.
qf^'^r A stranger, a guest.
qf^ n. A ramification of the
root of a tree. 2 fig. Scattered
jitate. V. m^, ^t^, ^'^V..
^rS" y, A parapet wall (as
built around wells and tanks). 2
The raised edge of tlie mouth of
a handniill. .'^ The outer and
curving edge of the auricle, the
hehx : the lower edge of the nose,
&c. 4 A furrow (as made by
a rush of water). 5 The circle of
flour around a mill : the crown of
the glacis around a fort.
qfoS" a. Free from taxation —
a beast, &c. : ^T'C?I3i;t ^To3 3TT-
%W : remitted — a tax : ^^ ^fff
"tIToJ ^T^ : released from the
])ayment of a tax — a person or
family.
q\a^ or qrST^ a. That sup-
ports, protects, defends.
crr^^J^ A foster son.
q[Srq-?:fiT n. Cherishing, fos-
tering, [ing^ &(..
Cff^fT 11, Preserving. 2 Keep-
m^'^ m^ 11. Feeding and
nourisliing; supporting and
bringing up.
qWi^^W'l One that feeds, kc.
qrSForr a child's cradle. 2 A
box of the turn-cross erected at
fairs, &c. 2 A lullaby sung over
the cradle, v. ?TT, ??tT.
qrsroT^/. Bringing up, &c.
qrs^^ V. c. To feed, foster. 2
fig. To keep, observe (custom,
an oath, a vow) : to regard (a
command) : to protect (religion).
3 To agree with : ^ ^^ muft
qicS"cr or -''^ f. A narrow and
covert watching over (the doings
and goings of another); at:'acing
or searching out (as of a theft), v,
qf^^r or -'^f One set to
watch the conduct of another;
or to take note of liis items of
property for stealing them.
qrST l*oet. An encircling
line : ^T«ff ^^Tl ^-ff^T^ST II
^^R^T '^f'Crfl T?T5JT ||. 2 Au
encircling body; a band, troop :
iTrrt^ T?I^; a flock : 3IK:t^
tflSj. 3 Scattered state (of
things). V. «I^, vi^x, ^^,
qm)"
265
F^roJ"
^r^ f. A turn or recurring
season : a turn, bout. 2 Lot or
allotment. 3 Poet. An encircling
body or line (of troops, trees,
\vall, &c.)
^\^\^ p. Brought up at home,
raised. 2 Tamed.
^foS" n. A wooden bow]. 2
See 3TI3- 3 The raised edge
of the mouth of a mill. 4 A
dale, a basin : the cavity of a
pond.
m'^mX A revolted Ryot set-
tin» himself up as a chieftain.
r^^ /. (h) Spittle ejected
from the mouth, v. ^'[T., <n^-
X^Wi'^ V. i. To grow ripe, lit.
fig. ; to ripen. 2 To loose fresh-
ness— a colour. 3 To be ])ro-
duced ; — used of crops. 4 To be
full, rife — a report, &c. 5 To be
getting on prosperously. G To
be advancing inpregnancy; — used
of the ^lar or womb.
T7^°T n. A mouthful of water
taken to rinse and ejected.
VJ^m -% /. A spit-box.
The season of reaping and ga-
thering the corn.
f^s?r a. Ripe.
rqr^^irr^ n. a
bountiful persoo
yielding business.
fq^^flR n. A term for au
extremely old person.
T^W,^^ 7?,. •Straw, &e. used
to mature fruits. 2 A poultice,
&c. to induce suppuration.
mil^^ V. c. To ripen. 2
fig. To beat soundly.
R^r^T -f n. Approaching to
matm-ity. 2 Fertile — a soil.
to? n. (Port.) A pickaxe.
m^^ V. i. To be turning
yellow — plants, &c. from age,
fruits without ripening, tlie
countenance or body from sick-
ness : to be fading — a red colour.
term for a
or a readilv
\^^
a.
Yello
wisn-
-plantSjj
rotting fruits, the body, &c : : r^.!^
piile. '""
34
m^ a. Yellowish, auburn. 2
Having the stench of the beetle
J^?;^- [yellowish.
r^n^^T V. i. To become
fqiT'^'T /. s pop. (in Poet.
Ntsi) a certaiu tubular
vessel of the body.
m^ A kind of beetle.
ftpT^r Little spotted owl. 2
also NiTSST ^TST1 a term for n
class of fortuneteller.
l^^^J, \^^ a. Tawny, auburn.
I'^m^ n. A term compre-
hending many classes of the
winged insects that flutter
around a light : a butterfly, &c.
fqq^oT V. c. To melt, lit. fig.
f^^^^ -^ T^r -K^r ad.
Imit. of the sound of squirting
out (spittle, blood, &c.)
f7^^3" a. Rather blear. 2
Rather split.
fq^^^^r /. A mouthful (of
spittle, &c.) squirted out.
I^^^r a. Cracked, sHt. 2 fig.
Contracted, half-closed— blear
or rheumy eyes, a bleared person.
3 fig. Slight, flimsy.
fq^^ra / (h)A syringe. 2 A
stream (of blood, water, &c.)
spurting out forcibly.
fq"^^S"fy. s A syringe.
fq^fq^ -^fac/. Blinkingly. 2
Imit. of the sound of a reiterated
squirting out of spittle, &c. ;
of a sudden cracking of thread,
&c.
rq^Pq^^ V. i. To blink. 2
To sound squirtingly.
f^^fWr^ a. Blinking— eyes.
fq'^S" 71. (s) A feather.
The tail of a peacock. 3 A
crest.
f^^r (h) The hinder part.^.
2 'rheback-pieee(ofan3fiT^^r,
&c.) Used in figurative senses, as
fq'^T ifW, Ht^TWtrf, f^'COT. To
pursue with closeness and de- 1
termination, lit. fig.; to hang
"Pon- [-parts j
i't-:Jr'?r (h) The hinder!
Pq-tJrl'f/. (H) The hinder
parts. 2 The hinder legs of a
horse : the heel-ropes. 3 The
rear of an army : the back (of a
house, &c.)
I'q^r a. Split, slit, rent.
r^^^ a. Rather split, (Sec.
r^^^f V. c. (H) To comb
(cotton, &c.) 2 To sjilit (bam-
boos,quills,&c.) 3 To tear length-
wise (cloth, paper, &c.)
I^^=r/. A^^ of a full and
red colour, n. (s) A cage. 2 fig.
The skeleton (of man, &c.) 3
The ribs.
mm v.i. To get dishevelled
— hair,&c. : to be scattered loose-
ly and widely — grass, &c.
mTl A cage. 2 A cell
with bars. 3 fig. The head of a
])al!n-tree. 4 The frame, skele-
ton, hull (as of a house, ship, &c.)
rT^^?:[q'f^ See qi^Tqr^.
(q'^r?^^ V. i. To be covered
with waving foliage — trees. 2
To look wild, confused, and dis-
orderly— the hairs, nose, tail,
of a person or an animal en-
raged.
mil^ V. c. To card or
comb (cotton, &c.) 2 See fxf-
mK\ (H) A carder of
cotton, &C. re
fTHrf^l / Beating, pounding,
iqr^:^ V. c. (H) To beat,
thrash ; to strike with a hammer,
stick, &c. 2 To drive before one
furiously (cattle, a routed armv) :
to gallop (a horse) : to despatch
(a messenger). 3 rig. To beat (a
proclamation, &c.)
m^^, fq-iS-oj See l^ot
sig. 2.
I^ST A spirit-shop.
rq^r a. Gritty, friable — sorts
of stone, &c 2 Clammy.
f^ST'I" 71. m. Crumbled, tram-
pled state. V. ^X, ^^. 2 fig'.
Exhaustion (from over-exertion,
Jic.)
r%r3"a.Soft,douohy— bread,
r^5r
266
rtr^
rqjr5rff[,[qj5rq- V. L To be
(louj^liy — bread.
I75r /'. Fine flour, esp. of rice.
iq^T^f^^rr/ Soft sugar,
fq^r a. White like flour.
On
n^ (s) A lump, heap. 2 An
oblation to deceased ancestors.
3 The Ijody. 4 A b:ill, <rlobe,&c.
.5 In preometry. The dimension
of thickness. 6 The embryo.
n^'^/. Piiltiuy; to pain,
troublinj^.
r^I^ V. c. To trouble, afiiict.
r. I. To be in ])ain.
V\t^^^{1T^^{ f. s Construc-
tion or arrangement of the hu-
man body in correspondence
with the scheme and fashion of
the Universe; e.g. formation of
the eyes to agree with the sun
mid moon ; of hairs on the
bodv to answer to trees on the
mountains, &c.
fq^a f. (II) The calf of the
leg. 2 fig. the full state of the
car of corn.
m(\f[[ a. Sickly from birth.
rTTfTRrt. Anatomical science.
iq?r /. See qr^r-
rqfr /. A b.ill (of medica-
ments) made u]) in cloth ; to be
slabbed ui)ou the eyes, &c. 2
Tlic lingam of Shiva.
iq^T /. A generation.
Rr?r5Tr^ -^r^r a. (v) Of an
ancient (and genteel) family,
rq^" n. A sort of stool,
fq'^ r.c. To drink. 2 To tope,
guzzle, soak. .S To inhale (smoke
of tobacco, &c.), to smoke. 4 To
absorb — ns wood, doth, &c.
nl)sorbs oil, ])aint, &c. .5 To con-
sume the |)riming — a gun. (i fig.
To stiile, suppress,. sita//oic (one's
angerj : to endure quietly, to
stomach (affronts or provoca-
tions).
iq^T (s> The mnvrs. 2 n. pi.
jqcTS" 7?. Brass.
fq^srqpT n. Bras.«-foil.
fqc[^f f^ A circular and
high-edged brazen dish. a. Relat-
ing to brass.
fq^r(s) A father. ^,,,,,,3, &,.
iq^iifr A silk ch.th for
fqcTi^ri/. An inferior iqcTi^.
rq^PTC s A paternal grand-
father.
[If^'^ n. is) The duties in-
cmnl)ent upon a son in return
for lil'e and other benefits receiv-
ed through his father : the debt
lue from man to his ancestors.
rq^H 71. The business of .
performing; ^t^ to the manes tqqafr f. Piper
fqxff^ a. Subject to constant
derangement of the bilious
humor — a temperament. 2 Tend-
ing to vitiate fqfl — an ar-
ticle of fooJ.
rq-ira" a disease in the nose.
m^ The holy fig-tree.
fqqs'fr'fr, fqqs-R^^r 4^^
Terms of re])roach for a daring,
desperate fellow, who, heedless
of imps and goblins, goes out at
all hours of the night and in
the wildest places. 2 A wander-
er, a rover.
fqq^ft ^^=5- n. A term for a
visitor whose visits are " few
and far between ;" an angel-
vis'tor.
onsum. 2
of ancestors.
V^m n. The body coUec-
tively of ancestors to whose
manes ^T?[ must be performed.
iq^'^ n. s Fcttherhood ; the
relation, condition, quality or
character of father.
V^ilK (s) Hatred of one's
father or of one's ancestors,
fqcsirfra. That has fqcfil'^.
Tiie pod of Piper.
Pqqff^r /. s a kind of ant.
rqqlr>T^Wfi7 in the ^f^ sys-
tem. The gentle and gradual
method of accomplishing ^-
Vjf^. 2 The gradual way of
attaining weanedness from the
world, -i fig. Tlie slow way of
performing in gen.
rq?:Tr5jot, pq^fsr^ v. c. To
rq^q^ The fortnight of the ^twist, wrest.
waning moon of »Ti?'q^, tliejiq^^r^, W^\o!^ A twist or
period appointed for ^r^ to
the manes of male ancestors.
^qf^"l^ /. Duti fulness to
one's father.
H^^^ A term for a fellow
wlio makes no ^t? to the
manes of his ancestors.
rq^r^r^ The region inhabited
by the manes.
(qp^ s A paternal uncle.
Pq'Tr^r /. Piuricide. RJ"
^?qT^T A parricide.
f^^ ». fs) Bile.2fig. Choler,
irascibility.
rqTfjqr Bilious fever.
contortion (as of the body); a
twist gen. 2 Twisted and in-
jn.'ed state. ^^,^,1 j-^^^i^^ ^^^^
mm^ V. i. To whine, beg,
my\T\ -^r One ever whin-
inir — a fretful child.
rqimfr^/f/. Drizzlingly— rain-
J"r [chick,
iq^"^ n. A cub, pup, kitten,
rq^"^ /. A yellow paint.
Pq^^r a. Yellowish./. Taw-
jiincss.
Tq^Srr n. Yellow.
Tq^^r^HT -51TT -m^ ■^^^
tliftfr, &c. a. Of a full, bright,
glaring yellow.
r- T, , Q / 'PI t''^^^^3[ Flatulence arising
UnJ: I'arents. 6 n. pi. 1 lie ^^^^^ ^^^^^^ ^^^^^ vitiation of the \m'o!:m\m f. Sallownes.S
^^^ colleciively performed j^i,;^,,^ ,,^^^^,. Lc^-all-blad.ler. i (from sickness) v. ^, aij. 2
<ninng the waning fortnight ol lr._,^r, ^r^ --^^jf^ I U>*'m 5,iLKncss; i. •^j >ai |. ^
Bhadrapad. Jq^R: f'^qf -[q^T^ /; The I The tawny discoloration of ob-
f- Ci r-, ,.,^ ir„_,„_ * iects under solar eclipse ov thick
(TcRq^, Pl^qr^ ?ee Tq^TtT. 'Tq^^m^ s The liver. \ Lr,.
f^^fl"/. A purse.
tor^ (s) A devil, fiend. 2
A ghost, a spirit. fqvxT^^TWI
/. Demoniac possession . fq jit'^
f^Pd/. A term for the tri^ cha-
racter.fq^IT'^f'^^T/.'riie hlacL
art. fqsil'^^^K Demoniac
])Ossession.
H^'T a. B Slanderous.
Pr^IT'^ V. i. To lose one's
wits; to become wiUl, foolish
(esp. from fqsii-=g^Itll).
F^^f^^Sr f. The cost of
g'''V.'''"^?- [levigate.
V\m V. c. To iirind. 2 To
Pf^S'OT V. i. To become
rabid or mad — a dog, jackal, also
a human being bitten by a rabid
animal. 2 See fq^^fff.
Twr a. Maddened or mad.
rT^rS" //. c A ghost, a goblin.
2 App. to a crazy person. 3
Stupor, infatuation. r.^iJT, '^l.
torf (p) Urine, v. ^^.
fq^r^ot V. c. Sc i. To bristle
up its feathers — a bird.
RffTin A feather. 2 The fea-
thered end of an arrow. 3 c
Plumage. 4 Poet. An unfilled
ear of corn.
r^Ff|3"CT y. ;. To become
rabid, v. c. To madden. fness
r^^rST 71. Madness, crazi-
Pt^/, (u) a flea.
R^T^ n. A man-metamor-
phosis; a man turned (by a curse
or mantra) into a tiger, dog, &c.
l'^^ n. Fatuity, dotage.
V\^^ (p) The pistachio nut.
\^^^Z^ V. c. To twist; to
turn round with violence.
rrSTor „. c. To twist. 2 To
wrench. 3 To squeeze, press
(matter from a boil, milk from
the dugs). 4 fig. To extort.
fqfS'fqs'rrr a. Loosely-twisted
— a rope. 2 Loosely-woven — a
cloth. 3 fig. Vague, lax — speech,
&c.
f^STqR" a. Strongly-tvvisled.
267
fqSJ^^MT/. Twisting.
Frs^^ot V. c. To twist,
wring, wrench.
r^srr f, A twist. 2 fig. The
body under writhing and contor-
tion.
7r c. s. A drinker. In comp.
«^q"1.
^1^ See fe
qr^ n. Ripeness of a crop.
2 A crop. 3 A gathered crop.
q'r^rfn'r/. a spitting box.
qr^Tl^:^ Rain suitable to
ripen the harvest.
qf^lTt^r 7?. A term for the
crop of the harvest.
qri^ri:fTl" /. inspection of
the crops.
m n. Meal, 2 fig. Crush-
ed state : the state of utter ex-
penditure, dissipation, &c. 3
Used after iri^i, iri^T'ffa"
Surpassingly fair. 4 Used as ad.
in the sense Clearly and brightly
of the shining of the moon. v.
TfJ n. (s) A stool, a low
seat. 2 The seat of the religious
student. 3 Seat or spot of emi-
nent residence : f^'^l -jt^-
^[fe?[ /. (s) A series of
generations. 2 fig. The whole of
any business, story ; all the par-
ticulars, points, &c.
^\^^ V. c. To torment, dis-
tress.
qr^*T n. (s) Inflicting pain.
Tf'^T^. Pain, torment : trou-
ble. 2 A pest, plague, 3 De-
moniac possession.
•Tfr^cT p. Pained.
^r^ a. (s) Yellow. 2 p.
Drunk, that has been drunk. 3
That has drunk.
f^rcTf^r A garment of yellow
silk.
^rq n. (Port.) A cask : a tub.
"TlT (p) A Mahomedan saint.
2 fig. One's man or match.
^r?r?IRr (p) The place wh^re
the elephants (of a Rajah, &c.)
are kept. 2 The elephant-depart-
ment.
7r?^lTTi7 c. A hypocrite or
hollow professor gen.
qf?^=rf^ An elephant-driver.
^r^ A feather: a quill. 2
The feathered end of an arrow.
IW n. Fleas.
rs
^1^ A twist : twisted state.
2 fig. Perverseness. 3 fig.
A yearning of an affection. 4 fig.
Grudge; a prejudice, v. q'S.
qi^rsrrr a. Strongly-twisted.
2 fig. Hanghtv-minded.
q^K or J^rn m.f. (h) Loud
bawling. 2 Crying out against.
3 Crvine; out. tf^T^'h" f. i. To
cry out, &c.
5^r /. A sort of pipe.
^^\'T:^ -S- „. Betel-nut.
^'^HT a. Unsound, pithless,
lit. fig.
5^3" ji. (s) A tail.
5^ (s) A heap.
J5[^rA tuft,hunch(as of hairs,
maegots) collected together.
^^°T V. c. To worship; to
reverence. 2 To apply (flowers,
&c.) upon idols, &c. by way of
worship.
5'^'^/. Worship; homaire of
su])eriors. 2 The vessels, &c. used
in idol-worship.
J^ffr The officiating Brah-
man or other person of a
temple.
5^r /. A little heap (of
rupees, grain, &c) : fig. a stock,
fund (of wisdom, skill).
J^ n. (s) Any thing folded
so as to form a cap; — as, tha
hands, leaves, &c. : 3f5^^
■qz. 2 A hemisphere. 3 A
single application nnto ; — as, in
preparing medicaments, of fiio
to bake, of sun, air, &c. to dry : u
single dipping into an infusion,
,1 single coating: ^fitj" go:
t;^ 50. w. ^. 4 A nostril, as
I •Tlf^'* 5<». 5 A crucible.
5?^
268
Tr*T
q^^wJi^r or J^°5^ V. i
be poveretl with pimples.
J3^i^r a. J^J^r A pimple.
^TJ?: f. A close and con-
tinued succession of light noises;
a feel)le mutterinu;. v. ^K,
'33. -^t^, MS, ^, ^T.
Toi^S-fcT SeeJ^^r.
^^ (s) A son.
^'^ ad. c^' pr^'p. From be- 13"^'^^ Filial duty.
fnrc. 2 Antecedently.
^5" piep. ^' fid. Before : a-
heiid. 2 Beyond, forwards.
^^o^i^ prep. ^ ad. In the
front of. 2 Before.
JiTTiiT Z-. i. To pitter-patter. '5'^^ n. (s) Moral or religi-
2 To murmur, grumble.
ous merit: a meritorious act.
^^r n. That has undergone ^^T^ifTf f. Fame of good
a dippino; into an infusion, a i works.
smearing or a coating, &c. Sec igazj^jf^ / ^
JSr -ir A buttock or cheek ; f,,,,i,e^,arv
m. A holy day.
elfth day of the
dav of tlie decease
used of beasts. 2 The leathern | ^^^ ^ ^jqifsT and the ^H pei-
cover of a tradesman's day-book. } p^^^.^^^^^j ,^^ j,-^ ^^^^^_
3 A file-b:!ok. 4 Any cong-regate !
bodv. a company. 5 A number S^^^^^'^*^ «• Intent upon
of villages viewed collectively. ! meritorious works.
») A pack, lot (as of articles to be I q"Jq q^qf ^ ^ Ys\?i.\) rich in
sold). |- jj freebooter, j moral merit. 2 A virtuous man.
5^qr^ir?^?rqcqn /. a race
downwards ; posterity.
J^mf Sonship. 2 Regard
to or treatment of as son.
^^\^^ n. One of the sixteen
^^T^c, — triving the infant
clarified butter out of a golden
s])Oon before dividing the umbili-
^^1 ^o"l- _ [son.
q^r a. (s) Having sons or a
•\
^^[^tTf Rejoicings on the
birth of a son.
jf^^T (p) Mint.
J'l: (s) ad. Again. 2 Back, in
return. [again.
J*?: Q'-T: ad. Again and
T^Tp-r ad.
5^ n. Refractory, turbulent; gojfq-^fg Xhe might and effi-
^3"^r A small bundle (as ofi cacy of^viitue.
paper, &c. doubled over and , JCTiflTr^ A term for a de-
tied).
H'^^roS" A freebooter.
^?"r See ^^■^r. 2 A grocer's
cotfin. 3 A head or end of a
drum.
vout and virtuous person
ga.:|;q-riT f. The sacred land
of the Ilindvis.
g'jq'^l^ A heaven.
. IQ'^^^R a. pop. -^cT Virtu-
ous, righteous.
^sft /. -^ n. Refractoriness;
lawless proceedings ; brigandage,
qfr/. A smnll bundle (as of 15''^^^ «• Virtuous, good.
uicdicine-powder, &c.)
2 ^A iJ'Jir^r^ A lieing— whether
divine — of sacred
human or
celeliritv.
grocer s coffin. 3 .\ term for ,
tlie mealing or the meal of a j
^^(€t. Because supposed to 1 •■
be little, like a medic.ue-packet. \T^'^^ n. A sacred place.
Hence a snack or light meal gen. i q'aqfl' f §gQ ^^^^
^T^r a. F'oro, anterior. 2
Tuture. 3 The next afier : g-
^;^I MTS^T'C The Monday
nft_er next. [-^1,^ i„cisores.
5^^ ^f^ ^;Z. The front teeth,
^Z'^'^l^^ prep. Scad. Fxactly
in front of. 2 Before all others ;
first of all.
^fJ^F^TT One exceedingly
righteous.
5^%/. A man's brother's
dauu'hter, or a ivoman''s iuii;-
liau'l's brother's daughter.
JcF^rufa male the brother's
son ; of a female the husband's
brother's son.
•T^^ nd. Onw.ir-ls ; a* you |J^°^f An image, idol, statue.
2 App. endearingly to a man.
advance: ^T ^^ H» "^T^l^T
the lead; tluit takes the conduct
55"ISFR /». JS'R^r /.The lead, ,
taking ot Uie lead, v, ^, ^r:. i^^f /, OfTsprln
as, in English, " idol."
3^^ /. A small image, doll,
. &c. 2 .\ g(dd coin valuing al)out
5I(f T,5Tr-h[^r nd.Th^t takes ! fuur Rup'ees. 3 The frog of a
horse's foot. 4 The pujiil of the
eve.
Again, even
again.
5=7^rf[^ n. Returning.
^^T^lfTT /. Reperusal, re-
vision. 2 Returning.
J'f^lTFy. (s) Repetition of a
sjieeeh or word. 2 Tautology.
J^^-^^jr^ /J. a Resurrection,
^lit. fig.
tr^si'lT Beino- born again.
2 fig. Recovering from a dan-
gerous sickness.
^^^ f. A woman in her
second marriage.
^■^7^*^ a. s Recoverable.
^^^ f. The day of full moon.
^"^ ad. s And again, still
again.
q^^f SeeJ^:
jr n. 8 A town, or city,
qr^r A senior. 2 A vener-
able senior.
qr^fr /. a little thing or a
small quantity (as a nut, sug.ar,
grain, &c.) put up in a corner of a
elotii and secured by a knot. v.
J^^ 71. f. Stuaing. 2 Sjillt
pulse jjrepart'd for stulKug. 3
The inferior metal (as of orna-
mcntsj lying under an overlay
of gold. 4 i'illing up mutoriaU
ocn.
J^tryqfSf r /. A wheaten cake
with stuffing ot 5^UT.
^■^f f. Drivino- into or fix-
ed ill the cTound (stakes, pUuits,
&;c.) 2 A kind of tiubiiu. 3 See
^rv\ sig. 3, 4.
^^^r r. c. To Ijuty, inter. 2
To plant or fix in the gioiind
(a post, tree). '6 To suttice,
serve.
^^^ ad. Enough.
^^r J), pr. Sufficient. 2
Entire; uantinj:; no quantity. 3
Adequate unto: '^i T«J'5I r^T
^T=?. 4 Finished. 5 ad. Fully,
exactly : "^T ^T^T^^tl^T S '
S^5^ ad.&lop ! stop ! enouohl
2 Used as s. ?i. : ^j"^! tiT^'3T^
H' ^^- [diis.
5TiTJiTr (h) a cast of Jr^in-
^mm^^ f. A uoman that
has completed the period of
gestation.
^^^ f. Sufficiency. i\ ^ or
p^^^ tj^fff. 2 Sufficed state.
tX%Tg. ofs. [quacy.
^^^r -E\ Sufficiency, ade-
^l^l:mT a. Fill inn- or satis-
fying— an article of food : that
lasts well ; that {/oes a great way.
J^^'^r /. Satisfying ; supply-
ing. 2 Supplying the part want-
ing. 3 .A sup])leinent. 4 Support-
ing. 5 Complement. (! \ string
of pearls.
^^''T^/. An appendix or a
&u])plement. 2 Supplying the
poitiou wanting, couq)leting.
^?^^'^r V. i. To fill or pervade ;
to be present throughout. Used
gen. in fig. senses and of dis-
agreeable person : ^i ^af ^c
3K^^'T This fellow is found
. every where. 2 in comp. To
please or suit; to agree with:
■ ^Hig ^T%, gSFTT 5^t^ TT^
^^m V. c. To saiify; to
269
supply to the fill: u\ g^TT^
<j;q T[^^?T. 2 To eke out.
3 To serve ; to be sufficient for :
^ ^T^ ??STr mxj f^^^ 'SX.T^H-
4 To consplete.
5^^rr f. Substantiating by
evidence.
J^°^r a. That supplies.
jr^r -m^ / (p) Question-
ing; examination (in a court), v.
^^■^^•^ ri. s. The recitations
and other rites prescribed bv the
Mantra shastra to be observed
by one who would acquire the
power of using a mantra.
JT^^r Mistaken for J^^^
sig. 2.
5?:^^Tr? (s) Tliat introduces,
])romotes. 2 That leads, heads.
^UW>R (s) Promoting. 2
Taking the lead.
JU^^ a. That leads. 2 In
comp. as Vlf "50 "^^ Sim fl€-
With Indra at their head, &c.;
V.q^5^^^ il^WT. He
Sf)eaks with an oath ; SfT^'C
5^^^ Respectfully.
q"??S" _3T An efflorescence, v.
q[?r3''^ 1). i. To have papul-
ous eruption.
jn a. Complete. 2 Comple-
ted. 3 Adept. 4 Sufficient, ad.
Fully : adequately.
^T\^ V. (s) A Puran, a
sacred and poetical work.
grft^J^q- A title of God,
Ancient of days. Dan. vii. 9.
m^^l]^^ n. (s) Distaste of
worldly vanities whilst listening
to a Puran-recitatiuu.
jmra A Brahman well-
read in the Purans. 2 A public
expounder of them.
TO'^1'^ a. Prescribed in the
Purans.
jn^T^ a. (s) Old, antique.
JT[^ or -^r Supplying. 2 Sup-
plying the ])art wanting. 3 Sup-
porting, establishing ))y proof.
4 Backing.
5^1/. (s) A town. 2 A kind
of wheaten cake. 3 An order of
the Gosavi. 4 Sufficiency.
qfi^^riT f. Rising up to
receive or dismiss a visitor, r.
^^^ (s) A man generally, a
male. 2 An adidt. 3 A male among
fruit trees. 4 The masculine
gender. 5 A man's height. 6
Used freely for a male ancestor.
7 In grammar. Person, valour,
prowess.
^^^m /. a reef-knot:
opposed to TJ^ or ^li^ Jif^
Grannam's knot.
5^f^^^ n. Verility:
Personal pronoun.
3^^r^ A common term for
the four ends of the existence of
man ; viz. "tf^", 3?^, ^t?T, ^T^.
2 Prowess, martial daring.
i^ ad. Enough. 2 or jt ^1:
Enough ! stop !
S^cT ad. Enough : q^F^ ^tl
^^nCcT (s) The family-priest.
^^'\ (h) a bundle (as of hay,
grass, &c.)
^fc^?" (s) A barbarian.
^1§T^ n, (s) The masculine
gender.
^^^ 72. s A place of pilgrim-
age. 2 .4. lotus. 3 .A tank. 4
The tip of an elephant's trunk.
W^^Xm A topaz.
^'^^iRf^n/ s ji(yp. ^^V^ A
small lake. 2 A large well with
steps.
J^5i^ a. s pop. -^ Much,
copious, many.
^S" a. (s) Fat, plump. 2;;. s
Nourished, fed.
W f' Fiitness. 2 fig. Prop-
ping (as of a weak cause, &c.) 3
Increase, advance.
^fa-q^ w. The cover of a
book. 2 A coarse sheet, &c.
spread on the lap under the
sliect to be written on. 3 Back-
ing. V. % 4 A backer.
52'raT'^ n. Supporting, con-
tirinnig.
^ n. (s) A flower. 2 The
menses. 3 A disease of the eye,
albugo.
J^l^ n. s Albugo. 2 or 5^7^-
f^^fiT. m. 71. The chariot of
the i;"d "f^K'
^^1T\^ A topaz. [flon-ers.
T^^J s The farina of
sT^^^^ /. s A menstruous
woman. ^ [<;arilen.
J^mUi^l f. (s) A tlower-
^Tff^ /• -^ phrase used in
extolling an eloquent discussion.
J-^ (s) The ei<;hth lunar
asterism. 2 A month, December-
January.
^^^Z a. Rallifr effaced,
indistinct.
gg"^H:ot V. c. To efface : to
rub or wipe roughly.
J^^r a. Indistinct, obscure
— letters, figures, &c. : dim— an
object gen.
JF'^r^r a. That is entitled to
call to account.
^^"^ V. c. To ask, inquire
of. 2 To receive politely. -^ To
obey, regard, care for : FqT^T
^mr H^'T ^I'^lr. 4 To wipe.
5 or 5^.^ ^T*m. To efiCiice :
to extirpate. 6 To ask or inquire
for. 7 I'sed after f^f^fff :
lie cannot write a bit.
•-»
5^"r n. A clout or rag to
wipe with.
^^r\l p. pr. That asVs, that
requires account from.
J^rT^ ». (s) A bo<'k.
JfrT^TJ^rT ad. (p) From gen-
eration to generation.
J^^nrr^T -^=T/. (h) Closeand
minute questioning, v. ^K, ^.
^.^ f. A paper required
from schoolboys exhibiting their
progress in writing. 2 A patch
of leatlier. '-^ Aid, backing. 4 A
buttress. [mvi\\i.
j^^^W n. s Virility. 2 Valour,
270
^a5^o?tcT a. Tasteless — an
article of food. 2 Vague, vapid
— speech : slack, lax, a measure;
feeble — a person.
^o^r/. A pimi)le. 2 A pha-
gedenic ulcer.
7 Pus. 2 The mucus of the
eve. 3 App. to extremely rotten
wood.
Tsf n. A dot; tlie nasal sign.
2 A cipher. 3 A cipher (as
against a pro])cr name or an
article of a list, denoting it to be
wautnig). [adoring.
'J^T'T n. (s) Worshiping,
'T^^T^ a. Fit for worship,
adoration, homage.
'{[^^ p. Revered, adored.
^i\^'^K pi The sacred
vessels, sicts, &c. pertaining to
idid-worship.
^^ a. (Proper) to be
w'orshi[)cd.
qj -Z n. Powder. 2 Foil.
3 See gs sig. 3.
^/. Powder. 2 n. Case
(as of kettle-drums, &c.) 3 m. n.
A compartment, pocket, cell
(of cases, purses, &c.) 4 n. A
half, either the lid or the bottom
(as of ^5IT3, ■^'ft, &c.) 5 A
case of rattan to hold the betel-
leaf.
^fT A son.
^^j). s Pure, purified.
q;?r=I[lT[^^r /. a term for a
(lisagreeal)le, teasing, maternal
aunt : any good-looking but ma-
lignant woman.
'^ s A sort of bread.
'JJ A swelling of rivers, r.
^. 2 fig. I'^xuborance. 3 (tr^ s)
A town ; as ^T^m'T.
q;?3CcT p. s Filled, full.
'PT p. (s) F^ull, perfect, en-
tire, lit. fig. 2 Adept.
'7'^^u.s All-nervading.
'[oi^S: The full moon.
'J^^^cFq'a.s Full of life, acti-
vity. An epithet of God. n.
Fullness of life, &c.
^^t
^^\^ n. (s) A metal vessel
presented by a Haja, to a Brah-
man, with authority to demand
it to be filled with grain when-
ever he begs.
f^k*^ n. (s) Full Brahma,
^"^ altogether and absolutely.
"T^r^ (s) An integer.
T^'fl''^/- (s) A burnt-offer-
ing to several deities niatle at
the close of certain sacrifices.
2 fig. Great slaughter, (as of aa
army) sacrifice.
^Vn^lf. (s) The day of full
moon.
'T'ItT /. (s) Fullness. 2 Sa-
tiety. 3 Perfection.
^, "Ttr^^r /. (s) The east.
^ a. (s) Eastern. 2 First,
prior, until. In comp. as ?a-
^-<, -^4^ %^_ Seen before. With
^ attached, it enters into
many coniliinations ; as ^T-
Tf^ '^■^=1? W'tli importunity.
^^^ n. (s) Actions done
under some former state of being,
considered as the generating
cause of the jjain and pleasure of
the present life.
'T^^^a. (s) Elder-born — a bro-
ther. 2 s. m. A father, or forefa-
ther; a male ancestor gen.
^"^^ H. m. (s) A former
state of existence.
^^^'^[[sicT (I. Acquired in
some former state of existence —
merit, demerit, &c.
f^J^r The actions of a
former birth considered as the
source of a stock of moral merit
or demerit.
fj^q-l^q* „_ 'fi^g early corn.
^^'\\^^ a. That lies east
ami west.
r
^1'<T In logic. The propo-
sition, thesis. 2 In law. The
complaint. 3 The fortnight of
the waxing moon.
T^^fS" Established usage;
ancient custom.
T^qilJ^r f. The former,
earlv fashion, course, practice. 2
A chapter of prolegomena.
1%
^^^^ n. pop. -5*^^ /. Merit
acquired in a Y/t^"^. I
'p^T n. A proonostic. 2
The antecedent form.
JJ^^^ JTR n. In medicine.
Frognosls.
^^^^ ad. As before.
^k^^ n. (s) Tlie first half of
human life. [possession.
'J5^f^ The plea of prior
^^^l^l s The proponent. 2
The plaintiff. 3 One who pleads
tlie former possession.
^J\^ V. The first part; the
preliminary measures (of a book,
work, &c.) [subsequent.
^mT a. Antecedt^nt and
'^R^r^r''^ Inconsistency of
context.
^^]W, TfRFT a>I. From the
first; from days of yore.
fT^P't Tlie first half.
fT^r^[^'f n.s Pre-inspection.
•T^r ad. At first; in the begin-
nins-
^^\'^ a. Of former times.
o
Q"tlTTT a. Antecedent and
subsequent, ad. At the begin-
ning jxnd subsequently.
^ (p) A bridge.
"je- See J^^ sig. 2.
^^U^ a. s That ask".
^"^r/. (s) A question.
^'^^a/^. Separately, apart.
^^-T^'^T n. s Separating or
distinguishinp;.
^[A^l f. s f-^l f. (s) The
earth. 2 Earth considered as one
of the five elements,
^g" H. (rt) The l)ack. 2 The
rear, the last. 3 A page of a
book. [tents.
5'^'^c^ 71. s Superficial con-
fix ??. A huinp-back.
q^T, q^r^ n. The loins.
V.
q^y*. Noddin;:,- (from drowsi-
ness). V. ^.
Wr/. See ^^. V. \.\f ^r,
mi<:. 2 Lirn])iiig.
271
q^ot V. i. To nod, &c. 2 To
limp. 3 To be listless.
q^*T (p) An application or
address; recourse made or access
sought; a correspondence open-
ed, r. mx, "^t^, "^I'S : ''TTsll^t
^i ^<» '^T^- 2 Reach, range,
capacity.
^^^'^ (p) A prophet; a mes-
senger from heaven.
qjf^fH^mqr (h) Muriate of
amimink. rjggg_
^"^.^"^ (p) A twist (as of a
turban); a turn (round any
thing) of a rope. 2 fig. An artful
turn, a trick, wile (among wrest-
lers): also (in argument, dealing
&c.) a trap, snare. 3 A trouble :
a strait, scrape, v. it.
?^^ V. c. To twist. 2 To
perplex (in argument). 3 To in-
volve in trouble and difficulties.
V. i. To turn and be sprained — a
limb.
q^qr^,q^qr^ The artful
turns, &c. of wrestlers. 2 fig.
Fraudulent devices.
q^y. Rice-gruel,
q^^"^ n. Rice-oruel.
q^ The charge of a gun. 2
The report of a gun. 3 /. m.
Kindliii''. v. g.
q^^r A fit occasioned by
the bite of a snake. 2 Air describ-
ed as felt in the musculous
parts, i. e. cramp, spasm, v.
^, ^a?. 3 The springing or
rising of tlie biceps muscle after
being pulled forcibly.
•\ v« ^
q'I°T V. i. To kindle, ignite.
2 fig. To be enraged. 3 To be
broken in — a bullock, &c. for
the yoke.
\z^^ n. Straw, chips, &c. fo
light a fire, kindling-uiaterial.
'ta^r/ Kindling.
q^m V. c. To kindle. 2
fig. To enrage. 3 To break in
1 (a bullock for the yoke).
^
qj r Sphere, compass : ^f
'r\\t[. 2 A division of a coun-
try consisting of a number of
towns, villages; a sub-division of
a rfl^s^I or •q^flUTT- 3 A box-
trap lor tigers. 4 A cub of a
tiger or lion, cat, dog, &c.
^r^r A covered basket of
bamboo shaving.
qjf/. A box, a chest. 2 An
ornament for the arm (of males).
3 A necklace for females. 4 A
string of ci^ckers closed up in a
paper. 5 Armour of the body or
trunk.
q^ V. A gourd-float to
cross rivers (for passengers or
for goods).
qS or qj /. (h) An em-
])orium, a mart, a market town.
2 A place of sale; a long street
of shops in a city. 3 A large
division of a city. 4 Market
intelligence, v. v. .T Private
intelligence. G Market rate. 7 The
town belonging to a fort. 8 A
banker's letter of advice. 9 A
renewed hundi.
qj^r ni^ A respectable vil-
lage; a small town.
q^ 77. (h) a tree ; as ^t^^U
^ ^^. n. f. 2 The trunk of
a tree. 3 n. The girth (of a
tree).
q^ /. Oil-cake. 2 A mass of
slightly wetted earth adhering
to the feet in walking. 3 /. A
bunch of young cocoanuts. 4 m.
Bruised and heated leaves (as
applied to foment). 5 A load
carried l)y men i)ressed. 6 An
earthen floor of an upper-story.
q^ ^rc7 or q^^c7 /. iviois-
ture of the clods (from scanty
rain). 2 with "qi^g Rain just
sufficing to moisten the soil. a.
with 5?lT^^T Having the grain
in the ear.
q^r c Rice-straw.
qt[=5rr ^^r a term for a"
person of beauty and graces set
down amongst musicians, &c. to
divert the attention of the com-
pany from their dl-favouredness
and ungracefulness.
qtf^ ^*^ n. A bribe-taker.
•qfl'
272
^(^R^
^^ 71. c A circle, company, ■'t5TT? (p) Urine, v. ^^. T^"^]^^"^ -^l^ a. Relating to
crew, band. Iut^tt /„\ t'i •. j. tlie phice or time bevoiul.
^ W<:n< a.(p) 1 he next to come :!^r.
^ A straiid, yarn. 2 The j ^^^^^^ -^^ i w^l^l^af/.Fiom the farther
stones conii)osinj? a hiindmill, a "v v.^ I side. .
leaf. .'in. c ACocuanutorUetel- 7"<'^ ''T Jl. (p) A Port ofi->--r^ , ^ , Ls'<'e.
shirt. r ^^^1^^ ad. On the farther
q'c^ (p) A side. 2 A face (of
a cut gem, &c.)
4<^«.l^ a. rlavinir facets.
nut tree.
^5T (h) a sweatmeat com-
posed of milk and sugar. 2 A
level ])ieee of ground partly up a
a hill.
Q2T c Rice-straw.
^STT n. A body of Pindaris.
2 The depredatioijs of these
marauders.
^^lT\ A marauder of a (for-
merly) well-know description.
^5"r /, A bundle (of grass,
&c.) ; a sheaf.
^5"r f. The seat of a shroff.
2 (Guj.) A shop.
q^ a. s Drinkable.
^qr n. An articulation or ^^ /' ^ ^et. r. ^^, ^\^. 2
joint; an iaternodatioa. 2 See A <leclaration that somethmg
will hap|>en. 6 A bargain, com-
[costume.
^^Tm -m (II) Dress, habit,
7i"rR% /. Presenting of ar-
tides of dress to visitors. 2 The
clothes so presented.
'^^J co»j. Than. 2 or'^^t^rZ.
Suirc, seeing that; therefore,
that bein? the case.
^^>\ Money.
^^l prep. Out of, or of; from
amongst : ■SJH^'^tl^t ^*t ^T-
^^'T^ Any one (as a Legacy-
hunter, &c.) professing for lucre's
sake to be or to serve as a sou.
■Cf '?.
^?°Tr f. The sowing of seed. ,.. ,.^ , . ,
n^^ ,.. ^ .., ^^f^ f' (P) A shoe
q^^ r. c. lo sow. 2 To ^ ^. V
pact. V. TTI^, mx, m^.
"7^^r /. (p) The date of the
receipt of a letter or parcel, as
noted on it by the recipient. 2
Connection or concerns with ;
intercourse (as by residing at,
^by frequenting, &c.) ^^^^^^y^^^^
'JM'^ a. s Relating to a
q^^^'^^^l^ s A form of
marriage. Acquiring and marry-
ing the girl by stealth.
%'=^». (s) Wickedness. 2
Malignant lying,
TST^^T 7?. A secret vice; a
toiljle. V. ^T^, tfT^, r*ig.
j qsrr/". s Spirituous liquor dis-
tilled from meal.
strew, scatter. '6 fi
the foundation of.
^^\^ If). Growing from being
sown. 2 Sown — ground, seed.
T^ Guava tree and fruit,
^^^^ V. r. 'J'o balance, poise.
2 fig. To manage, sustain (any
ditHcult work by money, bodily
force, &c).
qc^^ See qfr^^H.
j q^ Room, free space, o.
To lay qj'^ry. A ^^^ .Manufactur-i Spacious. 2 ^rf. Loosely, freely
1 X ?-,„ .1 Tvi 1 .. ■^^, — sittiiii;, things lying. 3 (ii) An.
ed at q^ui. 2 Made at tf^la. ' ■ '^ ' - '^ •
_^ interjection to jieople in the
3 Em|)ty, false : "^SUJ) ^TT^^' road". Room ! Way ! Give way !
Hollow comi)liments. iTi'iTr a • ott
j^ ^ ' 1 Hnl A copper coin. 2 iVloney.
q^, q^ a. s Paternal. ^^
^■^1 (p) A cup, bowl.
q=r, TT 71. A graiu-cellar.
q^-rr /. A kind of yellow
p;iiiit.
qt?r>?r«. (p)Graffcd.
M^^ n. Bile.
q^^^f-^roTl Monied,wealthy.
q^^3r a. E.xpensive. 2 That
peculates.
^i A lamp of dung.
[Made,
q^f a.(p) Acquired, gained. 2
^^1^^/. (p) Gains, profits.
2 Birth or production.
u'lrrTT^rirr ti . ! ^1^^ f- The court-wall of a
4*Hh,I^i*K 1 he assessment , /
, temple.
consecpK'Ut uj)on the survey. ' •%. '
=^n.rJ?v ^r /- s o • I ^^^ ''• ^ hump back ; the
qirr^f-^r /. (p) Surveying: i„„„p. o „. ^ (.,,,,,>,1^ l,,,,t_^
and measuring (ot lands). j |,(.i-s,,ii, a building.
I^JTliTl^rcf, giT[57^f^ 11. Re-iqr^^ a. Hollow. 2 fig.
'nrrS'T S'r ; / \ d r venue-survey-department. I Empty — promises : unmeaning
qrisir-sff ././(P) Before, 1^ ' -speech I liirht, easy-a yvork'
formerly; -used in notes. |M<=J /. r». (p) I'requenting ; ' ^
q^Iff (P) The Peshwa, the 'J"t^-'course yy.th. v. ^r^.
head minister of the Manith;! : q^f -^T See W^- I qr?^55"^^R/. Soil easily turned
'^it'f. The rei.n, business, ^"^^^ f- 'i^'- ^'-'^^^^^ ^-^^nk. ^'P '^^'^ P^--^'-
office of the ^^^^. 4^?R See qPCc^^R. Mf^^'^l'^Tr-iT^'Contcmptuous
'..J -■ . _^_ ^ terms for a Biahman ; aBraiiman
W-ll fp) An^occupation: +K- iW'^U /. Ihe opposite orl without learning, money, or wit;
unpiotitable — a business: vague
^speech.
farther side or bank.
,, a mere dhotnr-wearer.
TT^T^
273
•TTHT^
m^aS^^ n. A term for any
showy and empty matter.
Tf^oS"^^ c. A term for a slo-
venly person.
qr^JcST /. Hollowness. 2 The
regions of empty space, inane
profundum.
^rW -tFF a. (p) Arrived at
maturity or years of discretion.
2 Perfect, adept. 3 Matured — a
matter. 4 Profuse, plentiful. 5
Strong — a building : massy — a
metal vessel : huge — a load.
^^^r a. Humpbacked.
^mX n. "fr^rn m. a hole
(as in a wall, tree, &e.) by the
digging out of rats, &c. 2 The
dirt, dust scraped out. 3 A
cavernous hollow iu the ground
or a rock.
^^l a. Excavated. 2 fig.
Loose, light. [f^uft.
qr??^, j^^^^r / See T^^-
^\W^ V. c. To excavate.
2 fig. To pill, fleece, to eat out.
^\^ See ^^ sig. 1-
^^r An unadult lad.
mt\ f. A lass.
^r^TT f. The spike which
shoots out from the Cocoanut
and some other Palms, contain-
ing the spadi-s. or fruit-stalk.
^r^ See m"^-
qr^a:, ^kl a. Dinted. 2
Unsound, unsolid. 3 fig. Pith-
less, spiritless.
qr^'fr, qrf tr see q^^^r.
qr^^at, fi^^ot ^^ c. To
sustain or receive a dint.
^V^, qkr A dint.
qrf r /. (h) The wrist. 2 An
ornament for the wrist (of
males).
W: n. The stomach. 2 The
belly. 3 The womb; and, by
meton., pregnancy. 4 The belly
fig., i. e. the bulging portion of
any thing ; the cavity : the in-
terior portion : the body (as in
English, the body of a coach,
ehip, &c.) : 'ettit'O'^ ^^^ ^T3" ;
35
=^T ^r€i ^T^, Ji^fT, ^t^^
%tgT ?TUT^ T^TT'^T m^Pf '^ISR^t-
"^T ^l^T. 5 The mind or the
heart : oft ilT^T ^TE:tff f^^T
B:tfT ^q^ ^1^1. [mind.
mZZ^^ f. Opening- one's
m^ZK -l\ /. Suicide by a
dagger, v. ^^"Sf ^. 2 Stabbing
of another, v. ^x;.
qr^T^fR /. A pregnant
woman.
»\
qr^T^ST 71. A person within;
a person standing as a guarantee
for another.
qr3"?3;<CRa. Having uncultiva-
ble space (as sheet rock, sands,
&c.) in its midst — land, ■qi^
^^T^T c Uncultivable land ly-
ing amidst cultivable lands.
qr?^^ Cost for one s board.
mzm f. Provision (laid up,
taken with one, &c.) for the
wants of the belly. 2 A mainte-
nance.
qisrrr^rr^ A pittance.
qfJ'^r a. Of one's own
womb; one's own offspring. 2
Of the loins or womb of, sprung
from : =?! ^Tm=^T ^T3^T ? 3
Comprehended under : ^Tift-
qjT^ ^\nn. Connate under-
standing. 2 Instinctive impulse.
3 One's own wisdom, &c.
qRT^T nrST -^rST Terms for
one's own child.
qiJ^rr^R, qr^^r stf^r a
jn-ivate surety. j-^g^^
mZ^la^ Maternal tender-
^]ZM\^ /. The uvula.
qf^^f ?I^ n. Belly-ache with
flux, gripes.
mz^^ m. qrjT^r /. c a
constitutional belly-ache. 2 fig.
Envy. 3 Want or demand for;
aching after : ^<gT'=^ "^To
(aching after fees) ; ^t'^^
v{\9 (after bribes).
qr^^Rr n. a general term
for providing for the belly.
qrjq^r /. (Cant.) Eating. V.
^x:. 2 fig. Offering a bribe.
^\Z^\^\ a. That nourishes his
belly; a bellygod.
^\Z%f[\ f. A woman that
becomes or is pregnant through
whoredom. 2 SwoUenness of
belly. 3 Constitutional swelling
of the belly. 4 Envy. 5 Harboured
hatred, rancor^ grudge.
q^rq^I^ f. Opening one's
mind. 2 Disclosing of a secret
matter. 3 Explaining of any
puzzle.
qrJ^^T a. That serves for his
board only.
qi^^ff^ (h) a bellygod, an
epicure. 2 An idle fellow careful
only about his belly. fbellv
iyZ^W a. That stuffs his
mZU A filled ear of corn.
qr^fr /. The calf of the leg.
qri^jf r -^^r See ^^^m
ig- 1.
qr2^^^ -^TS" Gripes, colic.
qfJ^^^cT/; Subpartnership:
a subshare.
^\ZBS^ V. c. To clasp to the
belly (as iTT^, rlT^, &c.) in
climbing it : to grasp closely and
fondly (money) : to hold fondly ;
to cherish.
i\Z^\ f. See q^^-
•\
qr^T /. s A woman havuig a
beard.
qr2:riT f. Zeal, ardor. 2 Ma-
^ternal yearnings. [bowels.
qr^r^r ^kst sm^ a. Lax of
qrJM^ n. A term for the
disorder of bowels incidental to
children.
i\z\^[ See qrar^rf. 2 See
iizm 3Tq- s'rnr^ ^^^ n.
Moderate means of subsistence.
qrJf^ a. Corpulent.
q[2:r^^ V. c. To feed. 2 To
clasp fondly to the breasts ; fig.
1 to cherish.
'TTTl"
274
'ir^r prep. After or upon ; at
the tail of : BT'^H^T't ^T^t ;
"qrzirr See ^f^r^rf^
m^ m. f. A bead of glass,
gold, &c. 2 7ft. A neck-ornameut
of females.
^^ (p) A seton. n. m.
Weftage or texture (of cloth);
quality as respects closeness,
firmness, body : ^rl^Ifl ^T^T
gfcTfr/. ^ n. X bag.
m^\ See ^t^'
'TFcT^IT (p) An officer under
the native governments, llis
business was to assay all money
paid into the treasury, lie was
also the village-silversmith.
^fcT^^ (p) The treasurer.
qf^ -^f, gr^?Trf^# ad. (A
low word.) In person.
^[% f. A daughter.
qfct n. (p) A sack. 2 The
treasure-bags of Government.
3 The treasure-bag of a village
made up for the district-treasury.
qr^^rr^r Settlement of the
accounts of the treasury.
qfcTt n. A rag(as used in cow-
dunging floors, &c). 2 The smear-
ing of cowdung effected by means
of it.
qf^T m. n. A seton.
qp^ /. A book, a pamphlet,
a manuscript. 2 A dye of lac, &c.
used as red ink : the cotton im-
l)ucd with it.
qtq^ A parrot.
qrq^i a scale.
qrqw, qrq^r^ n. a pompie-
moose./. The ])lant.
^['^:^ f. The Betel-nut tree,
n. The fruit previously to any
operation (of boiling, &c.)
qf^ n. Hypocrisy ; show. 2
Empty celebrity; idle popularity.
^r^ /. See ^Rf. 2 See ^^-
qR n. A child, m. A little
hoy. /. A Uttle girl. n. A cub,
pup, &c.
qR^S" a. Puerile.
^\T^ a.Juvenile.2 c Orphan.
qR^ Boyish play. 2 Boy-
ishness.
m^^ a. Childish.
qf^r A boy. 2 A page, lad.
'6 A male dancer dressed in wo-
man's guise.
qR'tr / A lassie.
qR^ST /. The liveliness and
wantonness of children ; skij)-
j)ing, frisking. [cXuU.
qrU^T^g" A light term for a
qRSrr m.-'^\ f.-^n. An angry
and light term for a child ; cor-
resjjonding to Brat, chit, imp.
qRJ'f^ /. Immature under-
standing.
qR^J a. Childish.
qr^^^r -^^r -^f^r An as-
sembly of children. Used of a
king's council or other assembly,
or of a family composed of
yoiuig andinexperienced persons.
qR^JT¥^ f. Puerile under-
standing ; the wisdom of a child.
qf^tf^r See qRR^^.
qrn «. wiid; qfer^w. a
wild tree.
qRiqR^ ff. Deprived of pa-
rents and friends.
qf^q^r ad. Amongst, with,
by, through children. 2 From
son to son — a patrimony de-
scending.
qpr^fS" n. pi. Children com-
prehensively ; boys and bairns ;
brats and bantlings.
qf'qr See qR^ir. 2 See qrc^r.
qrc55-R:n.(p)Steei.qr^Kra. of
steel.
qir^'R^y*. Land under culti-
vation. 2 The '^^ or dues on
the field-produce of the HT-
Z\^ and the iT*^!^.
qrf^ V. c. To soften (plan-
j tain-leaves, &c.) by exposure
before a fire, or in the sun-
beams, &c.
qRST or q^srr a. Of a
dusky-red colour — a cow, &c.
m^[ -as- n. Coral.
qrff, qr^r a sort of pipe or
fife. 2 A troop of pilgrims, beg-
gars, &c.)
qr^ n. Honeycomb formed
in the hollow of a stone, tree, &c.
qRTl a. Fostered— a child.
2 Large and lubberly.
qf^r^ -W -^ (p) Apparel,
qrr^^r c (P) a patron, pro-
J;ector. [supports,
qr^^ a. (s) That nourishes,
qr^'T n. (s) Supporting, &c.
qr^^r^ a. s Proper to be
fed, nourished, &c,
qr^^ V. c. To nourish, feed.
qrqr^ -^ -^r See qr^r^.
qiPT^ p. (s) Nourished.
^m\ a. Adopted. 2 Kept
and used on condition of feed-
ing it — a beast belonging to
another.
^M a. (s) To be fed and
brought up (fit. &c.) 2 A title
corresponding to Protege, alum-
nus, &c. assumed for one's self
in writing to one's master,
^patron, &c. [dants.
q^^^l The class of depen-
qr^^r -nr see qf'^'^r-
qr^^ V. i. To thrive, flour-
ish. V. c. To nourish.
qr^^jf V. i. To shoot into
the ear — corn.
qrw^T See qriOT.
qf^ 71. Money or spnits
given to dependants on great fes-
tivals. 2 The banqueting with
it. 3 Money given to servants in
reward of an extra piece of
work, &c. : a term for spirituous
liquors. 4 The rag usually kept
in the inkstand.
qRcT^f^ n, A poppy-head or
capsule.
irr^
275
Wff^
^\W'^ f. m. (h) a receipt. 2
The arriving and being received.
3 Monies or grain, &c. received :
^T" W5fT^^"T ■^T^'i "^T^^ if-
4 m, fig. Reach, range, capacity:
qrir^'^ V. i. 1 o reach ; to
arrive at. 2 To come to hand. 3
fig. To understand : fi^T^'qio.
'Tf^T^cfr/?. Reached, come to.
qrC^^ V. c. To conduct,
convey, bring to.
sFC^^r a. Farseeing, provi-
^"^"'- [swim.
qrf%/. Swimming. 2 A
?rC^ «.Too deep to be ford-
ed ; that demands swimming —
a stream.
W:^ V. i. To swim. 2 To
float. 3 fig. To abound in (wealth,
&c.) V. e. To cross by swimming;
to swim over.
mKK\ A metal or wooden
pail having handles. Used in
drawing water.
m^\ A troop (of pilgrims,
beggars, &c.) 2 The singular
number of tfj^.
?rC 'pl. Rice flattened (by
having had hot water poured
over it, having been dried over
the fire, and having been press-
ed in a mortar).
qr^r A lump of dung.
TTS" A bull dedicated to the
gods. 2 fig. A fat, lazy, good-for-
nothing fellow. 3 /. A wall of
loose stones. 4 n. c (or ^ToS^)
A honeycomb.
qj3''Tf y_ i^ ^Q burn, singe.
2 fig. To suffer loss in an under-
taking, to burn.
^^r A festive day for cattle ;
— the day of new moon of
Shravan or of Bhadrapad. 2
The cake-form portion of a
honeycomb. 3 A kindled por-
tion flying up from a burning
mass, a flake.
hT^T y. A plain wheaten
cake : a stuffed wheaten cake. 2
The cake-form portion of a
honeycomb. 3 fig. Any squeezed
and compressed cake-form body
or mass. 4 fig. A dewlap. 5 See
^^T'^'t sig. 2 ^^g„cg_
1R^ n. s Youth, adoles-
%^^ i\ i. To lie down ; to
recline (in order to rest).
%^ s A grandson, tl^/. A
granddaughter.
qRH"^ SeeJ^rr*^^-
^\W^ a. s Manly, human, n.
s Virility. 2 Strength, vigour.
q[^^^K s The doctrine of
Free agency or Freedom of the
will.
qif[fl"cr n. s The office of a
J^Tf^fT. [full moon.
^r%r /. (s) The day of
%^ (s) See J^^ sig. 2.
qffS"^ a. s Invigorant, nour-
ishing. 2 Tending to bless, to
prolong life, &c ; — used of reli-
gious rites.
'■^r^r a. (h) Onion-coloured.
'^^r^r m. -S n. (p) A foot-
soldier. 2 A pawn at chess.
"^mm^ -^^KT/ Checkmate
with a pawn.
^^R /. (h) Love, fondness.
2 Liking, fond of.
'^^TR, "^f^r a. Loved, dear.
'^^r^r (p) See q^r. 2 The
pan of a musket or gun.
^m^^[T a. Rounded off
into the shape of a xqi^T.
'^^rr^ /. (II) Thirst, lit. fig.
R" s A particle and prefix
implying : I. Progressive motion
(forth, forward, &c.) II. Excess
(very, much).
^'^^ a. (s) Displayed; be-
come evident. 2 Proclaimed, ad.
Openly, in public.
^^Z^ V. c. To publish. 2
To display, v. i. To come forth
manifestly.
ST^r^'cT p. Proclaimed.
^^^^ 71. (s) A department :
sio. 2 A chapter, section. 3 A
subject : an article, item : ^^
JT^^Tft ^T^T. 4 An affair, a
case : ^t^ ^-^X"^ 3^5? ^^'l
^f=a%. 5 A body, class : app.
to an individual pre-eminently
excellent, clever, wicked, &c. :
6 This word is used in the sense
of Affairs, concernments, inter-
ests, &c. : ^^^«TI^T^ ^» f«T-
^^^ s Excellence ; intensity,
abundance of. [cendent.
W^ a. (s) Superior, trans-
^K (s) Sort, kind. 2
Manner, way. 3 In arithmetic. A
case.
fffir^ (s) Light, lustre. 2
Expansion, difi'usion, lit. fig.
^^r^T^ a. That enhghtens.
2 fig. That informs, instructs.
T^^\W\ -fWf V. c. To en-
lighten, lit. fig. ; to elucidate.
If^m V. i. To shine forth ;
fig. To emerge from obscurity.
^^mm^ jJ.pr. s Shining.
^T^rf^TcTp. (s) Enlightened,ht.
fig.
^^15^ a. s (Possible, neces-
sary, &c.) to be enlightened.
^Wt\^ a. s Contammg
numerous subjects — a book, &c.
;;. Expanded. 2 Diffused.
^f?!" a. s That is in hand
or under present view or con-
sideration, present, ad. At
present, now.
q^cf f. Constitution (of
body) ; disposition (of mind).
^^f^ /• (s) Constitution ;
temperament. 2 Natural state or
form. 3 Nature — in philosophy;
the passive cause of the world; as
opp. to the active cause. 4 Nature
— in mythology ; a goddess ;
the personified will of the
Supreme in the creation. 5 An
uninflected word. 6 A radical
form of predicament of being. 7
A requisite of regal administra-
tion.
iTf RlJ^^ s ^r^ or Nature,
&c. and the primeval male — the
Deity.
JURr^
276
ir^^
3Tf f^^firr^ (s) Constitution,
^c. See 3i?5«T.
IT^FT s Excess (of the
liumours of the body, &c.) :
f^?T^*m- 2 Violent anger,
rage.
^^"^ a.(s) Very hot, pungent
— snuif, medicines, &c. 2 fig.
Fierce, ardent, alacris. ad. Sharp,
bluntly — answering, &c.
^^^\ f. s Fame, renown.
iP5^cf^, Famous.
^m\fr\f. Celebrity.
^T^ See ^^^.
^^^ a. s Matured, perfected.
2 Bold, energetic.
^fcT (s) Prevalency, curren-
cy. 2 Custom, practice. 3
Fashion, rule.
^"^^ a. (s) Extreme, super-
lative. It bears great ampli-
tude of application in the
sense of Vehemence, outrageoiis-
ness, stupendousness; — used of
atfections,qualities,persons, busi-
ness, &c. : 3}^^ ifT-^--gT^-^T5T
^■^f^ (s) Prevalence.
^^{^ f. See Wf^.
^3^ a. s Much, many, re-
plete, full of: 51^ qo gg ^o
q"^r /. (s) A subject, pi.
Subjects. 2 Progeny.
iT^nin A name of Brahma,
and an epithet common to the
ten divine personages first
created by him. 2 A king. 3 A
covert term for membrum virile.
^'^^\y\f. s A raising up or
a rising up of progeny. 2 Off-
spring, descendants.
3pl[?TTT^ 71. s A raising up
of progeny. j-,j„
^'^^^^ n. s Kindlintr, lit.
iT"-^r^^ J). Kindled, lit. fii,r.
wt Sec m^^.
^'^^ p. s Trending; fig. hum-
ble, obedient.
RoraT^^T^fl. (s) Patron of
|be poor snxd humble.
^^^ s Love, affection.
^"^r^ (s) Obeisance.
irmicT s Salutation.
^^\^ p. s Made, done, com
piled ; 5JT'^ 510
^ /. A copy (throughout
its applications in English). 2
Book. 3 A specimen. 4 A set,
class ; a lot. 5 A particle imply-
ing direction (to, towards, &c.) ;
^^^\'S\ The taking account,
under several and distinct heads,
of any comprehensive business
or multitude of things : such an
account, v. gjT^, ^R, ftrs?,
T%^, vlTJT, ffl^.
^cT^?T /. Classification of
soils.
^cf^K ad. By classes or sets
— arranging, &c.
^^^\l\ f. A roll of the seve-
ral classes of soils in a tract.
^^17 (s) Majesty, dignity. 2
Power, valor. 3 Efficacy, virtue
(as of medicines"). r
r^ ^ Iness.
^m, ^]^\ (s) iiiustrious-
3TarPT^R, 3T^rqr «. Powerful,
mighty. 2 Potent— medicine,
^'- .. [hide.
JT^R^T V. c. To cheat, de-
^1^ s A particle and prefix,
implying I. Substitution (in-
stead). II. Several order (several-
ly). III. Direction (to, towards,
upon). IV. E.^change or return
(back, back again).
^1^ (s) A particle implying
direction or designation (to,
upon, &c).
rs
^Fcf^lK s Counterworking;
opposing; revenging.
qTcT^^ a. s pop. -^ Contrary,
hostile. 2 ?^. An adverse acci-
dent.
q'frri%qT /. s A return, a re-
compense. 2 An net to counter-
work an act. r . , •., ,
[Admitted,
^nrl^ p. s. Accei>ted. 2
^rwC s Acceptance. 2
Acceptance of a gift. 3 In law.
The actual getting possession
of a gift.
JTlcTlTr^ a. (Proper, possi-
ble &c.) to be accepted, accept-
able.
W{U\^\ f. (s) Shadow. 2
A reflected image. 3 A picture;
a bass relief.
^f^i^ ad. (s) Daily.
3TF>'^1^ (s) Echo.
^IcTF'ff^ (s) A resemblance
of a real form. 2 Viceroy, vice-
gerent.
^m^ f. (s) The first day
of a lunar fortnigbt.
^fcTT^ s In law. The oppo-
site side. 2 or 3ff?T'?^ (s) An
opponent. 3 An opposite thing.
3TrcFTK^ a. s That esta-
blishes, supports — an argument.
Jrr^cir^ot y_ f. To prove,
establish. 2 To make over utter-
t [Giving.
q"r^r?=l n. (s) Proving. 2
^rfTTlKef p, s Proved, &c.
^m\^ a. s (Possible, &c.)
to be proved.
^ml^ m. -TF^R n. (s) Sup-
p^rting, lit. fig. [cherishes.
m^f^^ a. That nourishes,
srfcTF^ n. (s) Retribution,
renuittal. r .. i
^^ [prevented.
JTIcf^^ p, s Obstructed,
^1^^^ m. (s) pop. m^\f.
An obstacle. 2 The state of being
stopped.
m'^^^^ a. That hinders.
^m^^ n. (s) a reflected
image.
^^m^^^ V. I. To be reflected.
^rrcDTW s A reflected image
or similitude.
^■1%^ s A surety.
iTf^^ a. s Like: ^^tff^.
3T(cFR^ir^ n. s The eccentric
circle.
^Icfirr /. (s) A resemblance,
an image, a picture. ^^.^^^.^^
^Kf^tj „^ ^s^ ^n image or a
JTftd
277
vcn^
srrcT^Tf^ a. s That opposes.
frfcr^PT s Contrary to the
natural course. 2 Low, vile. 3
One sprung from the connection
of a man of one caste with a
woman of a higher.
iri%fr^ (s) A defendant,
respondent.
m%?rfe a. s Annual.
^fd^irs^r (s) Echo. 2 A word
formed by reduplication ; as
fjIJT^ from ^3T^.
JTrcTS""^ V. c. To consecrate ; to
set up with the prescribed rites
(an idol) : to install (a person into
a dignity). 2 To set or place gen.
^r^Srr/. (s) Honor, fame. 2
Instalment ; consecration ; sum-
moning of the divinity into a
new image and establishment of
it as an idol in the temple. 3
Airs, swelliugs. v. ^^, ffl^^,
■^To?T. 4 Endowing of a
temple.
common term for the numerous
words of respectful mention ; as
^KT, ?n??IT, &c.
m'^S'm See ^f^ST sig. 2.
irrlrST^^ n. (s) Honorary
robes. 2 Fine clothes.
m%fS"^p^a. (s) Treated with
honor. 2 Honorable, 3 Fine,
splendid — clothes. 4 Installed,
consecrated. 5 Famed. 6 Com-
pleted. 7 Endowed. 8 Fixed (in
life, &c.)
^f^^J s The solar disc. 2
fig. app. to a learned man,
mm^\f.(s) Rivalry, v. ^l^,
^mwXl a. Envious; that
contends or strives within rivalry.
irf^f /. (s) Promise. 2 A
bet. 3 In law. Solemn affirmation.
4 In logic. The proposition.
IT%^ n. (8) A text. 2 A
point taken up to be disproved.
3 An instance.
^%^r/. 8 The west. ^Mr
a. Western.
^^nn f, (s) Experience,
discovery, 2 A clear aud defijiite
perception : ^^t^T^Tt^IT^'T fj-
TfT^. 3 A miracle, v. ^T^^-
^#r^^ V. c. To await, .j^^
^^r^r/.(s) Awaiting, expect-
^^^cR" n. (s) Corroborative
evidence; proof gen.
ir^q-q" See ^T^r^ sig. I. 2
An affix to roots and words.
W<^^m (s) Sinfulness. 2
Badness, harm ; — used of things
or actions of which by the use
or commission sin is contracted.
Hence used in the sense of Matter,
importance : ^% ^^T^ ^T^
^^mm a. s Sinful.
T^^\ ad. Daily.
W^'^^ a, (s) Perceptible,
present.
^^^^ n. Perception : ^^f-
^^'\'^. 2 «(?. ^^rep. In pre-
sence of. 3 ad. In very truth :
fll f?[^i- ^fSjag ir#T. I went
there myself; "^t ^T'5'T ^o
ar^ 3TT% This is verihi my
brother.
^^^^^^^«. Witnessing.
^^^?'^r a. An eye-witness.
JT^^^^Tl'^l n. A modern
term for Axiom.
W^^'^ln. (s) Rejoinder. 2
A reply gen.
IT^3"7^R (s) A favor in re-
^i^'"^^- [rally.
^^^^ a. (s) Each. ad. Seve-
^^^ a. (s) First, chief (whe-
ther of time or space), ad. In the
first place.
ir2jir^?:ijr The first step; the
very outset.
W^^^ : ad. First, at first.
^m ?"?a^r ad. At the very
outset.
^^^ g^q- (s) In Marathi
gram. The affix which is attached
to form the first person : the
first person, I.
"R^^J f. (s) The nominative
case. 2 The vocative case. 3 The
first persou of a tense.
ir^TiTr^fl" a. A covert term for
a ^3^T^T m^'OT.
^5Tr/. s Custom, fashion. 2
Fame. 3 Common saying; pub-
lic opinion.
^^ a. s That gives, grants :
^^"^^ a. s That shows : 5^-
^^'ST'f n. (s) Displaying :
"^"^^^i:^' [point out.
^^'Sjm^ V. c. To show,
^T^mr /. (s) Circumambu-
lation of an object (esp. of an
idol or a Brahman by way of re-
verence) keeping the right side
towards it.
^^fcfr a. s Liberal, as ^=T ^^
^^R n. (s) Giving, as ^'T-
^^R=T n. Kindling.
^^FcT p. Enkindling.
^^5T (s) A place, spot.
^^N (s) Evening. 2 A ^^
in worship of fsn^.
^*=1R (s) A minister. 2 n,
Nature; whether the natural state
of a thing, or the cause of the
material world, a. Chief, main. 2
Prevalent (in, among, amidst) :
also (in conip.) inhering or being
in principally or prevalently, &c.
^Ft^ (s) Tlie world, the
great theatre of human action,
2 The business of life. 3 Deceit,
fraud. 4 Treating with parti-
ality. 5 Error, illusion. 6 Diffu-
sion.
^^"^r a. Engaged in secular
business. 2 Relating to worldly
aff'airs. rp ^,
rv [father.
^R^f s A paternal grand-
m^mW 8 A pat. great-
grandfather.
iry^;,. s ^'^^m(s) Blown
or expanded.
^^^ s A kind of metrical
composition in the Sanskrit Ian-
I guajge. 2 Composition (of a dis*
JT^^
278
JHT^
course, &c.) : a discourse, trea-
tise, &c. ; or the pamphlet cou-
taining it.
^^^ a. s pop. -^ Powerful.
^J4 p. s Matured, perfect-
ed— mind, a person. Hence Pro-
foundly wise. 2 Awakened^ lit. fig.
J?^*^ s Vigilance. 2 Awaken-
ing. 3 Knowledge. 4 Instructing.
^^f^ 71. Awakening, kc.
^rf^^cT p. Awakened, &c.
3T^^ s Air or wind.
^iT^ s Mij^ht, majesty. 2
The orit;inating cause of being,
— the operative cause. 3 The
basis of being, — the generative
cause. 4 The local source of
being, — the place.
^mf. (s) Light. 2 Shadow,
esp. that cast by the style of a
dial. 3 pop. Account, regard.
iWr^ 8 The sun.
irirriRrrcT pi. Compound
fractions,
^^fcf n. s Morning, dawn,
JWrcR^rt^r n. (s) The
demonstration of the morning
clouds. App. to any empty pro-
fession.
^T^r? s Majesty, glory. 2
Power, prowess. fradiant.
^^^R a. (s) Luminous,
^H^ (s) A lord, master.
Ajip. to the deity, king, &c.
W^f 71. Lordship, rulership.
^f^ ad. s First. Both in
sense and in use the word agrees
witli BTlf^: ^^ ITo From
to-day ; 5T^ ^o ; fjr^: ^o .
^fT n. (s) Proof, evidence,
authority, li ISu|)port, warrant :
^T3T Xfr35g ^Tff^ ^T»J ^o
•SfT^t. 3 Ordeal. 4 Definitc-
ness : 7^^ f^rfl 3TT^<! ^T^
^<» ^TnrT ■sfTTf- 5 Measure,
quantity : a dose. 6 A measure
(whether of weight, length, or
time). 7 The rule by which a
thing is determined, adjusted. 8
The name of that term of the
Rule of three which expresses
the rate.
^^I"^^. True, just.
^^m^ The first terra in the
Rule of three.
^^m^ a. True, fair, equi-
table ; — used of persons,dealiugs,
&c.
^^r"^ j)rep. According to :
like unto.
^^f? s Liadverlencc, neg-
ligence. 2 Error. 3 Haughti-
ness. 4 Intoxicating intluence,
lit. fig.
^f^^ p. s Established,
l)roved. 2 Adjusted, conformed
(by some rule) : '^^ 3^0 ^JS
^[^fn" f. s True knowledge ;
knowledge resulting from posi-
tive proof. 2 Measurement.
^^^ a. (s) Chief, main : best.
2 In comp. Leading: f%^Jrsio
^^^ a. s To be proved;
that which can be proved.
*\
^^C (s) Urinary affection.
^^r^ s Pleasure, joy.
JTifrKcr p. Pleased, &c.
^^^^ (s) Great exertion. 2
An effort. 3 An endeavor, essay.
3T5T?^fr2rs The doctrine of
free agency.
3T^i^^R a. Active, diligent.
2 That labors, works.
q"^R^^ The officiating
priest at Prayag — the modern
Allahabad.
^^r^^ n. (s) Going forth. 2
fig. Death.
^^rg" (s) Labour, efforts.
^W^ s In comp. Ivesulting
from ; -qiq -^o ■^■.^. 2 Applied,
set. 3 Endowed with.
^rxfT f, s Consequence,
result.
^^^ n. s A million.
5T^R (s) Applying, direct-
ing against (a charm, a medi-
cine) : application (of words,
&c.) 2 A charm : the application
of it. 3 A form (as of a sen-
tence). 4 Reducing to practice
(of some rule or ])reeept) :
tH"^^!. 6 Consequence, issue.
W% a. That sets against
or uses (charms, spells, &c.)
^^\^^ a. That originally
instigates an act ; author. 2
That occasions.
^^\W\ V. c. Poet. To apply
or address ; to bring to bear ; to
set against, at, upon, on.
TO^^ n. (s) Need, call
for. 2 Reason, ground : 31'^-
3J^ KTT^uziT^ ^o f%^T. 3 A
festive occasion and the feasting
attendant. 4 Motive, cause.
W^^T a. s (Proper, &c.) to be
occasioned, effected. 2 In gram.
Causal.
*\ _
3T3Tr^Zfq"fj s A causal verb.
^^^ (s) The general destruc-
tion at the close of a ^^. 2
Death; loss; destruction. 3 App.
tig. to any extensive devasta-
tion ; or, more laxly, to express
vehemence, wilduess ; as tjt^-
q"?5-q-fR f, A term for a
furious person ; for a smart
])erson ; for a woman of daz-
zling and confounding beauty.
'^^\^ Unconnected and un-
meaning speech.
^^\^^ V. i. To talk incohe-
rently; to rave.
5?^"^^ a. (s) That sets on
foot, promotes. 2 That instigates,
urges.
^ V.
^^tJ^ v. i. To engage in. 2
To be proceeding — a business.
3 To begin.
5?^=! 71. (s) Setting up;
promoting. 2 Instigating. 3
Action, business.
JT^K s Popular talk, rumor.
^^f^ n. s 2>op. -^ Coral.
^^W (s) Residing abroad :
a foreign abode.
^^Wr«. That resides abroad.
^^\K (s) Stream, flow : ^^-
Ti^T^. 2 fig. Course (of affairs,
&c.) : i\o\v (as of eloquence.) 3
Tendency ; predilection.
V[f^
279
in=?Tnr
JTI^S" p. (s) Entered, lit. fig.
2 In notes. Arrived — a letter,&c.
irffT a. (s) Well-versed ;
erudite.
M^Ti ^. (s) Set on foot;
ffxed. 2 Engaged in. 3 World-
JT^tT'T' v. i. Poet, To engage
in or occupj' one's self about ;
to embark upon.
Iff f% f. (s) Prevalence :
procession: ?F^-^TQcr-"^5r^'^fT}.
irffrWril Active or worldly
life.
jfw^ (s) Entrance. 2 fig.
Insight. 3 A scene (of a play).
ir^Ai«f> s In the drama.
Prologue. 2 Poem, exordium.
a. That introduces, lit. fig.
^^Wf V. i. To enter.
SiT^^'T n. Entrance.
3T5T^ n. s Assuaging,
allaying. 2 An allayer.
iJAIt1«h a. s That praises.
■sjsi^W V. c. To praise, ^li-
^■^t^ a. Commendable, 'srii^i
/. Praise.
ir5T^^ a. (s) Roomy, spaci-
ous— a place, &c. : large, loose —
a garment : frank — speech, &c. :
liberal — a mind : ample — things,
means: agreeble — actions. T-
'giBT g o ^l^H "iTTft. 2 Right,
excellent, ad. At large, abroad.
1^"^%/. The adulatory or
complimentary introduction of
epistles.
3T?T^^ a. s (Possible, pur-
posed, suitable) to be praised.
JTr^"^^ A scholar of a moni-
tor, a sub-scholar.
^^ (s) A question. 2 An
omen. 3 The point upon which
an astrologer is consulted and
required to foreshow futurity.
4 The oracle or response de-
livered.
^ST a. s That asks questions.
^tn (s) The fit time,
season. 2 The occurred time ;
aa occasion ; ^HT^^T ^^5Tt "iT^
»ffrr "IT^t. 3 An adverse
time. V. r\-^, §, ar^'C, ^35;^. 4
Junction, association : 'g'^T
cqT^T^uJTT'^ujJT^T^o ^T%; a
coming constantly in the way
of: ^T^TTlfrT ^IfTT^lr ^°. 5
Meeting (as for debate) : ^T^
"UTSfT. 6 A division (of a
book); a topic under discussion.
WT^STlcf ad. According
to the time.
JT'JWR n. Wisdom meet for
the emergency ; " understanding
of the times." (See 1. Chron. xii.
32.) ; ready wit.
^^R^^ ad. According to
the time ; as occasion demands.
lfg"JTR[^ ad. Suitably to the
occasion ; seasonably ; apropos ;
through the force of circum-
stances : g^ g^T'CfT ■'TI^ ^I^
^^^ p. (s) Pleased with;
propitiated. 2 Delighted. 3
Pleasing, a. Clear, clean — the
heavens : pellucid — a stream.
3Te-^r%^ a. Of pleased
rnind.^o ■^?sr a. Having a pleas-
ed countenance.
^^^ (s) Spreading : dis-
persion.
JT^^°T n. s Spreading abroad,
dispersing. 2 In medicine. Re-
laxation.
v»
^T^'T V. i. To spread
abroad ; to be extended, lit. fig.
^^^ (s) Bringing forth (of
young.) 2 Birth. 3 Offspring.
^^^^ V. i. To be born.
T^f of ^ p_ To bring forth
(young). 2 Used fig. in all the
variations of generating.
q-^^%?Rr /. (s) The throes
of childbirth.
^^r^ (s) Favor. 2 Any-
thing (a fruit, &c.) given by an
idol, a guru, &c, as a blessing.
3 Food, &c. presented to an
idol, &c. to be distributed a-
mong worshippers, &c. 4 The
rice, beteliMts, &c. which are
struck upon an idol when it is
consulted.
^mf^^ See JTr^rr^T^.
^^fcfr a. Given by way of
blessing by an idol or a saint.
^■^1^ (s) Spreading ; diffus-
ing : spread state.
^^\T^ n. See W^'^.
^^m V. c. To spread
abroad ; to scatter : 3i'^Tf'C?T.
p. s. Spread, diffused.
^1^^ a. (s) Notorious,
public. 2 Clear. 3 Extant. 4
Openly, publicly.
3Tra"f^ /. (s) Publicity, cele-
brity.
^'f^r^'?'^ n. A paper giving
])ublicity to any matter ; a pro-
clamation, a manifesto ; a circu-
lar, a notice.
^^^^ p. (s) That has brought
forth — a female.
^^S^ f- pop. ^^cT Bring-
ing forth, parturition. 2 .s
Birth.
q-'^fctW?! n. s The vow or
purpose of future continency
made by a female during the
throes of childbearing.
^^^2?. s Diffused, spread.
'^l^K See ^^1^.
R^^r^ s Occupation of a
topic ; the being under disquisi-
tion, narration, hence freely,
Occasion, season, v. ^ToFf, ^t
3?^ g. of s.
^l^\^^ n. -=Tr/. s a dramatic
prelude. 2 The preface.
^^^ff r Regret or repentance.
^^^ a. (s) Ready, prepared.
2 s That is under discussion — a
subject, ad. At present.
^^^ n. (s) A term for a su-
perior personage.
^WR n. (s) Going forth,
departing. 2 Leaving one's own
house to enter upon a journey,
and alighting at a neighbor's
house, spending there the re-
mainder of that day. 3 Money,
rice, &c. bound up and given in
charge to a neighbor on the
day on which it is desirable to
set out on the journey we con-
template, yet on ^^hicli, fioni
lateness or other circumstances,
the then settinj^ out is incon-
venient. 4 tig. Dying, v. ir^T-
SS, ^T^^, ^t^- 5 The being
spread or laid out — vessels, &c.
for idol-uorship, articles of a
shop, &c. <i A term for a sujieri-
or personage ; a Crcesus, a Solo-
jnon.
ST^J^ J), s Blown or expand-
ed. '2 fig. Divulged. .'5 Become
very clear.
JT?r (s) A watch, an eighth
part of the natural day.
^K['^ (s) Striking : a blow or
stroke. ^^jKm v. c. To strike.
JTST^T^rrt The fire of a ^^^ :
hence an extensive or wide-de-
vouring fire.
lT^c^°t y. c To wash, ^^f-
^^ n.{%) "Washing. -STg^Tf^rr
p. s Washed.
STRTH" />. Thrown, cast.
3T^^ s Throwing p. Thrown.
iJ5lT?TJT n. Throwing. 2 Deter-
mining.
W^^ V. c. To throw, cast.
^r /. s Understanding. 2
Genitis. [blind from birth.
XTslT^^ c. s A term for one
m^i ad. s Before, prior. 2
Easterly.
mW^ s An enclosure, a
fence.
m^^ a. s Natural, i. e.
cu'mmon, vulgar,— app. to per-
sons, diction, words, and to
languages considered as derived
from tlic Sanskrit. 2 Natural,
native. 3 Natural, i. e. ordinary,
usual.
^\^^ ?"fS" f. s The common
wiiy of regarding: viewing with
common eyes ; /^ro/ane view.
^ffrTT A common reader or
scholar ; one who is ignorant of
Siinskrit.
^\r^^ n. (s) Fate, destiny, a.
s Early, primitive. ^^^ ^^^^.^^,
iTIW^^r nirT /. The course
m^r^^ a. s That lies or
Ktaud* east and west.
280
qr^^^*-^ s The primitive
connection established between
a certain allotment (of right and
wrong doing, and of good and
evil e.\])erience) and the subject
of it. 2 The early connections
and concerns of; the antece-
dents of.
^Tf^H^^IT s The operation
wrought or act impressed on one's
soul antecedently to the present
birth, by the force of which one's
fortunes and doings in it are
determined.
m^^^ n. s Maturity, adult-
ness. 2 Profundity, solidity, wis-
dom (of speech or conduct). '6
Boldness, energy.
^r^r / s The east.
^r^R a. (s) Eastern. 2
Former, prior.
The tissue of one's doings in
antecedent births as the founda-
tion of one's allotment in the
present.
^\^^ a. s po-p. -^ Clear or
pure, through the variations
noted below : — Articulate — pro-
nunciation : distinct— writing :
pure — the heart : frank — speech :
clear — water, &c.
iJTsJTtT^^ w. s A mode of
penance. 2 A particular sacrifice.
3 A gift of cows to Brahmans
by way of expiating guilt.
q-Riq^l't^r^ s A form of
marriage, — that in which the
father of the girl saying, "^t
eRR/?it '^'Tii ^T^iCBT ^K or
^^Tf^T^'fT^ ^^TW, bestows
her upon the man.
^r"^ (s) A vital air. 2 fig.
Any thing dearly loved. 3
Breath, air inhaled. 4 Air or
wind. 5 Life, vitality.
^Ym\^^ Destroying of life,
killing. 2 fig. Ruining.
JTm^WI Expiring; self-im-
molation.
qroHrsT-'Tfar Terms of en-
dearment for one's husband or
gallant.
q"RRnT5T /. s The rite of
bringing life into an image on
occasion of tlie 'i^%DTr^K-
worsUip,
ITRJITO^ s The second of
the five (metaphysically imagin-
ed) sheaths of the '^cf^, viz.
air as ])ervading and quickening
and prompting and actuating the
whole organism and all its senses,
afiections, and faculties ; the
animula or animal soul. ["life-
m^m^ (s) The breath of
m'^r^^r^r See ^i^^m.
A perilous case or state ; jeopar-
dy of life. ^ [enemy.
3TRr^r in^X^ c. a deadly
5TRi^ (s) The last extremity;
the closing season of life. 2
Jeopardy.
qT'^TfcTfr^ /. Hazardous
counsel, v. "^jv, '^^^^^.
JTRHTPT s A rite consisting
in breathing through the nostrils
with certain closings and open-
ings of them during the
mental recitation of the names
of some deity.
3TFTr^T n\Zf. A jeopardy, v.
^Rr(s)An animal gen. ; any
living creaUn-e. r-j^ jover.
m^, m^"^ A husband :
m^l^Wn n. Death.
^i^ (s) A county, a shire. 2
A region. 3 A place. 4 End,
finale. 5 Edge, verge.
qrcT:^!^ {s>)pop.-^T\\Q early
morning.
qrcTmSf^r n. Breakfast.
qT^-q*'^q"r / The morning
devotions of Brahmans.
^\^^A a. (s) That inhabits a
country.
qT^:^iT?:oT n. Reciting the
names or name of the Deity at
break of da}' ; early matins.
iTf?"^!^ 8 Arising ; coming
forth into existence.
^rj4^ p. Revealed.
^f^F^T n. s The state of
being chief or foremost; supre-
macy. 2 Prevalence.
^rq^ See If4^. r.
^Rl^^ a. (s) Worldly, secu:i
srrrr
ZGL
HHT
m^ a. (s) Acquired, gained
2 Arrived : ^^T^^T^ "ft
^TJI^T^T^ ^T?l IJTsfT; also
arisen unto ; befallen : T^ilT
■5:^ ^JH ^#. 3 Become
necessary to or obligatory upoa :
fiw ^ ^T*T ^x:w m??.
^m f. Gain, profit, &c.
irrff^ a. s Attainable.
irWsq^R: a. That has
passed his minority and is be-
come of age.
irrfR"/. (s) Gain, profit. 2
Acquiredness. 3 Befalling. 4
One of the eight superhuman
faculties, — that of obtaining
every thing. 5 Freely. Attain-
ment: ?i5T^^-nT^ ^Ti^IT^TvlT
^I'^ a. s Obtainable.
3TR^ n. (s) Powerfulness.
irmtea. (s) True, just,
fair ; — used of persons or pro-
ceedings.
^\^l^ n. s Truth, equity. 2
Veracity, honesty. 3 Proof,
authority.
m^ a. s In comp. Like,
similar : JT?q-3nr?T ^jo As if
dead ; like nectar.
^R :, m^^ : ad. Generally,
usually. 2 (Laxly.) Probably :
3ITO 3Tm^ -mm ^i^Tf^^^T^t
iTRN'cf n. (s) Expiation,
atonement.
JfRS^T n. (s) Merit and de-
merit during some former stage
of existence considered as con-
stituting the occasion of the
present birth, and as regulating
the allotment to it of physical
good and evil : — thus ansveering
both to Fortune as the appointer
and to fortune or fortunes as
one's portion appointed.
^^^T (s) A beginning.
^itm V. c. & i. To begin.
?rPk a. s That begs : th^t
prays.
361
^\^^ n. s ^r4=fr /. (s)
Begging, beseeching : praying
or prayer, v. ^X, m'[^.
m^^\^ a. s (Proper) to be
begged, &c.
rrr^ot, JTfi%^ V. c. To beg,
petition (a subject) : and, with
gen. of person addressed, to
pray (an object), v. i. To make
begging ; to pray.
mfep. s Begged, &c. 2
Prayed unto.
ijTc^sq" ri. Fortune.
JTR^'T n. (s) An upper gar-
ment. V. ^T^-
m^ V. c. To throw on ; to
cast loosely around or over the
body (a shawl, scarf, &c).
^r^ a. (s) That drinks.
^r^"^ V. c & i. To drink :
to absorb.
^r5H n. (s) Drinking :
absorbing. j-j^jj^
^\^\^ a. Drinkable, sor-
^r^^^ n. s Roominess. 2
fig. Frankness (of speech or
conduct) : liberality (of sentiment
spirit, &c.) : amplitude (of means,
&c.)
nrr^TcT jJ. s Drunk, absorbed.
^r^ (s) A figure of rhetoric,
alliteration. 2 A bearded dart.
^mm^ a. s Incidental. 2
Relevant: seasonable.
^TRfr^ s A temple. 2 A
palace.
Tr^lK^ a. (s) Given by way
of blessing by an idol or a saint
— a fruit, &c. 2 Honored or favor-
ed by Heaven ; blessed ; — used
of a popular book, a successful
physician, teacher, &c., of a pros-
perous worker in gen.
qT^^Tff^^ a, s Relating to
departure.
^r^T a. s Wise, sensible.
^nn"/. s Sagacity. 2 Used as
^ifa, and the words grouped
under f^'^TfT, in the general
sense of Competency or capacity
for or unto. Neg. con. as '^^-
r^ a. (s) Beloved, dear,
pleasing. 2 s. In amorous con-
positions. A husband or a gallant.
1^^^^ a. s Exciting or
attracting love.
RT^cIIT a. Dearest, m. In the
drama, &c. A husband, a para-
mour : fsj'^f{f{'[ /. A wife or
a mistress.
f^^r /. s A beloved female ;
a wife or a mistress.
^r?^ /. (s) pop. te. Love,
affection. 2 A liking for.
^flcT^cTC A mock-dispute.
MTlcTl^rfr? A love-match, i. e.
a marriage in which the fortu-
nateness of the connection is
not inquired into by the astrolo-
ger. ^
MT^^ prep. (Rightly com-
pounded of ^f?r Love &
^«I For the sake of; but mis-
takenly applied.) For, on, upon,
about ; Jim ^o ^^j r^JKW^
»\
Tcf n. (s) A corpse. 2 A
goblin.
^^^iA n.-T^m /. Funeral
solemnities.
^cT^^r /. pop. -3T The livid
hue upon the countenance in
death. 2 fig. The cadaverous look
of alarmed guilt, &e.
^cTlTl^ f, A burning or
burial ground for the dead.
^cTrar^ n. Impurity con-
tracted from carrying, or from
some connection with, a corpse.
T^^r A light term for the
Brahman who conducts funeral
solemnities.
^^ (s) Love, affection. 2
Divine love. 3 The rising and
forth flowing of affection, v. ^.
^TFfT The yearnings of
affection (esp. parental).
^iTirr A flood of affection
or tender love.
^^^ -ar a. Filled with love.
W s Affection. 2 The
overflowing of love or tender-
Jipss. V. ^.
W^ m. n. The tear of
affection.
fer a. s That sends. 2
That promptSjUrges. '^T.W n. s.
nT^T/-(s) Sending. 2 Urging.
a^wf V. c. To send. 2 To urge.
^fXtf p. s Sent. 2 Incited.
^f<;?fr «• s That sends, &c.
5^qB a. s That sends. ^^^IH" n.
s Sending, ^^rw w. e. To
send. ^f^Trr p. (s) Sent : one
commissioned and sent forth ;
a missionary, an apostle.
^^^ V. c. To behold or
view ; to see.
■»\
^rrfT a. s Spoken, said :
iil^^H, ^nm^ w. s En-
couraging, stimulating.
^^^C s Ardor, excitement.
•\
JTr^til^+ a. That stimulates,
stirs up.
srr^lT^ n. (s) Sprinkhng. W-
nf. ». c. To sprinkle.
^\V^^ J), s Sprinkled.
^IS" a. (s) Full-grown, ma-
tured— the bod}', the mind :
the person. 2 fig. Dignified :
great, illustrious — a person : or-
nate— diction : polite, courtly —
manners.
^TS"5Tcff7 a. Puissant, valiant,
renowned in arms.
HrS"r f. H A woman from
thirty years of age to fifty-five.
2 A woman of impetuous desires.
fltfe /. (s) Maturity, &c.
See the adj. Trt^.
5i=l*lf 8 A monkey.
St^ s The spleen, — the or-
gan, or the disease of it.
^ The twenty-second con-
sonant.
f+^H Sec. ad. A word form-
ed in imitation of the sound or
expression of the action or man-
j^er of chucking (as of %!'§,
282
&c. into the mouth ; of throw-
ing a handful of ^TiSfT^, &c.)
^^mt\ f\ A corolla or row of
])etals : a flower with a single
corolla, a. With a numeral pre-
fix ; as ^^ 1^^^^ Having one
corol.
^^cT -l^ ad. (a) Only, simply.
'T:^'^^ -^t, 'F^rqR^ See "1^^^.
q^r^fr/. (?) The condition,
habits, &c. of a t?f^^. 2
Alms given to Fakirs in the
^T^'CT. «. Relating to a ^^^.
m^r^^ f. Fluctuating
wealth.
"T^f^n^FTr The profession of
beggary, v. f^x, i, ^ToS^T.
^^{ See ^^r.
Ml 4^1 < (a) A Mahomedan
mendicant. 2 fig. A person free
from worldly cares, &c.
^^^ See ^^.
'^^r (h) a quantity (as of
parched corn, &c.) taken to be
chucked into the mouth, v.
T^I^^Rf /. (s) An assertion
to be maintained. 2 A prose
sentence.
TTrF ad. (a) Only, merely.
^*iT^r See '^n^L
^^^ ad. (a) To-morrow
morning.
^r^cTl m. ^r^rlr /. (a) Dis-
grace, ignominy. 2 Plight, mess,
trim.
^'ST^IT (Port.) A land-
holder upon certain tenure.
^Sflcf a. Abashed, confound-
ed ; looking foolish, v. %T,
IRrsr^^K c. A fellow con-
stantly incurring disgrace; a
sorry wretch.
^^ f. An opening, a chasm,
cranny. 2 fig. S])areroom (as in a
statement or declaration). 3 A
fjrefik,n. spare momeut.4 r A trick,
a sham. 5 Prefixed to the
following and similar words j
"^Z is an enhancing particle :
^o ■qrf«I«fl'A miserable plight,
■^o ?:t^ A crack whore.
^^^ ad. Used enhancingly
with TTt^TT.as tff^'CT ^ • White
as crystal. 2 Imit. of the sound
of walking, esp. as slipshod.
'^Z^'^l A cracker (of gun-
Ijowder). 2 fig. A short, compact,
light and tight, dapper man.
^^^r/ (n) Alum. 2 A
cracker (of powder).
"^m -^^ -^ ad. Imit. of
the sound of a smart slap, cuff;
of sudden explosion, pop ! and
hence, expressive of prompt
action : 7^\ir ^ alTriH ^»
f^Zm V. c. To sift (grain)
by shaking it in the ^q. 2 To
fan. V. i. To start off; to break
from ; to part.
^J^S" ci. Free of tongue (in
abusing, &c.): WT^T^T-^T^T^T
T^o 2 That blurts out. 3 That
lives and walks alone ; self-rely-
ing ; independent. 4 Poet. Foul,
vile — speech, person.
^Ti^^r A stroke (with a cane
or whip); a cut, lash. 2 See
TTJ^Kf A slash with a cane,
sword, &c. 2 fig. A vigorous
effort — a stroke. 3 A blast (from
a w<f) ; the impetuous sweep
(of a blast of wind, of an epi-
demic) ; the whisk (as of the
hand, the sifting fan, &c.)
^^^ f. Alum.
^T^^ffr/. ^?^ n. A worn
and torn ^t'^SfT.
^2:7rrsT% /. a miserable
])light ; a stew, hobble.
^T^qR^: -Z\ ad Imit. of the
sound of blows, slajjs, words,
&c. following in rapid consecu-
tion ; of fruits falling in a high
wind.
^^^ /. Knocks, rubs,
crosses (as incidental to busy
life) : ^"^TTT^ tpo
^^TiZ^ V. imp. To become
broad day-light : ^?f^qrat»T
^^^01 in this sense. 2 with
TT^ or ^l^T^ To be dissipat-
ed.
iTH-qr
283
^^
^z^^, qrjqrs: n. A fan of
bamboo-matting for fanning a
fire.
fErq^rcTa.Extremely white. 2
Wan, pallid. 3 Rayless, faint ; —
used of the moon in daytime. 4
Plain, bare — the forehead with-
out its iff^ or ■^^. 5 Bright-
beaming — the f^^IT- C Clear,
fair ; as upon the clearing away
of clouds in rainy weather :
^S'(^"T V. c. To deceive.
^jFfi^f Tw.^^Rjfr /. (h) a
cracker.
^2^r?r (h) a cracker, v. ^\^-
2 A paper-cracker. 3 A whisk with
the tail (of a horse, &c.) v.
mx.. 4 fig. A sharp boy,
girl or woman.
qr^CT V. i. To light up;—
used of f«[;^T : to shine bright-
ly ; — the rising sun or moon.
V. imp. To get broad daylight.
TTfjiT, qrrjirm^ One with-
out family or retinue.
Bold and heedless ; iitterly in-
dependent ; that raps out his
sentiments however offensive ;
that expresses his feelings or
follows his impulses freely and
fearlessly.
qi^ (h) a place of public
business or public resort : as a
mart, a custom-house : in an
ill-sense, as '^o5U¥T^T-«TT^-
'JJTT'^t ■"¥<» A gambling house,
&c. 2 The spot to which field-
produce is brought, that the
crop may be ascertained and
the tax fixed. 3 A plantation
(as of ^¥,-gt»ff, f«^^T,&c.) 4
fig. Full and vigorous operation.
V. ^1^, t|^, gx^, irt^. 5 A
company (of actors, dancers,
&c.) 7. The stand of a great
gun.
q:^^ V. i. To flutter in the
wind — a flag, &c. 2 To shoot
up vigorously — a corn.
^vS^^r A man belonging to
a band (of players, &c.) 2 A
master of a 'qr^. 3 A retail-
dealer (esp. in grain).
'i>3^f A piece of cloth j a
strip : a torn piece ; a rag. 2 A
sort of gown. 3 A flap (of a
wing, &c.)
^T^^^rr^^, T^^^f^^t y, c. To
make to flutter. 2 To slap
soundly ; <5lT"^ "^T"*! ^T^T^t«T
'^^^\ f. A colored shawl for
children.
qi^^ n. A rag.
qr^^T^^r/. A clearing off
of public business ; clearing ex-
amination of any ■'?f^. 2 fig.
Scolding vehemently ; paying off.
V. ^T^, g, g. of 0. 3
Taking the accounts of the
several xr^.
qRJcTS" n. A cupboard. 2 A
room (as a shop-room) having
sliding shutters : such shutters.
qi^<:^K Clapping, flapping
(as of wings) : flattering (as of
a flag or cloth) : lashing (of a
tailj : brisk striking (with a
switch, &c.)
'^^\^^\ -^r/ The office of
q^^^fEf (h) a public officer,
— the keeper of the registers,
&c. He answers to Deputy audi-
tor and accountant.
qT^'T)¥ ad. Imit. of the sound
of the flapping of wings, &c. v.
^r, ^T^, ^^, y^^, ^tst. /.
Flapping, fluttering, crackling,
&c.
qr^qT^"^ V. i. To make a
fluttering, rattling sound ; — as
a flag, wings, a stiff paper, a sup,
&c. 2 To rail at.
qT^^qT:??^^, q^;j'^^ri%ot t'. c.
To apply the cane smartly ; to
scold soundly. 2 To perform
hastily and imperfectly ; to
7-attle through. 3 (Active of
T?f^^Tr3"oi) To make to send
forth a fluttering, flapping, rat-
tling, crackling, smacking sound.
%Z%-^\Z A loud rattling (as
of volleys of musketry, oaths,
curses ; of a vigorous caning,
slapping, &c.)
qr^^qr^rcT a. Hard and dry —
grains of boiled rice, &c, from
bad boiling.
T'^^F (h) Clearance, settle-
ment (of a debt) : settled state
(of an affair) : consumption, (arti-
cles of provision), v. ^r, "f j.
^^r/. The hood of Coluber
Naga, &c. 2 m. f. A common
teira for the joints of Flat-jointed
prickly pear. 3 A root (as of
ginger) which separates into
cloves.
q^^i^ See t^t:^-.
qr^r^f, ^^%^ ad. Imit. of
the noise proceeding from re-
iterated and rapidly successive
strokes of a cane : of the flutter-
ing of a flag, flapping of wings,
rustling of a stiff paper, clatter-
ing of a volley of pebbles,
clacking of a brisk and abusive
tongue, &c.
q^t~r/. See^STSig. 1.
^^^r (h) a retail-dealer.
q^^?TlR^|iT, tr^if^^JiT n. c
Flat -jointed or broad Prickly-
pear.
^^ A sort of harrow. 2 m. n.
s The hood, esp. as expanded,
of Coluber Naga.
^"^^^r An off-shoot. V. ^,
2 fig. Turning off or aside, v^
^T^ : 'fjT^ TfT^T ^T'il^T ^«»
■^T^^T. 3 A difficulty started.
qr^qj'^ /. A throbbing at-
tended with glow.
%^%m V. i. To be in a
a glow (from fever, anger, &c.)
2 To sing, fizz — a substance
under fermentation.
qrqq^qr^ The loud singing,
hissing of a substance under
fermentation : vehement throb-
bing : excessive ardor, burning,
glowing (as of the body under
fever).
T^tJTqrqrcr a. Glowing hot (in
fever, &c.)
"m^ The Jack. 2 The fruit.
'TTir^te /. The pulp of the
Jack rolled out into a cake.*
q^'^r/. 2 Seeq^^Sig. 1,3.
q^^ /. A comb. 2 A wea^
ver's instrument. 3 A combing
card. 4 A clustering stalk of
plantains. 5 See ^^t sig. !•
^Fofrn
284
qr^rrrr
qR%r5r, ^\m\^ A title of
^"^•^r Complete destruction.
qR-T^rr^T^TiT See 'Ti^^f'R^in.
^^^r^ /. Sitting broadly
iind roomily upon the buttocks
and hams. o. V^T:, ^T^^ ■^¥.
^^r^fa.Spreadino out widely
— a bush : low squat.
^% /. (a) Victory. 2 Used
as a. ^^ ^Tuf To be suc-
<r^*f'>^- [ing vessel.
T^cTfTRr /. (ii) A small sail-
^T^^ (h) a stone, lit. fig.
q^^rgsir /. Pelting with
stones, &c.
tF^Ffm^- /. A term for an
iirduous attempt.
^^ (ii) A plot; a seditious
scheme : an intrigue, v. ^X,
X'^, ^Tsr. 2 An evil habit, as
drinking, &c. v. ^^, ^% ^T5T-
^^iJ^ pi. Artifices.
W,^'^ -^f ad. Imit. of the
sonni) of the manner of wild
^^^^^ V. i. To fizz, sput-
. ter — a substance under fermenta-
tion. 2 To thrill, tingle — a boil
ready to burst. '3 To dung sound-
in <rly — a cow, &c.
^^I'^^r A compr. term for
plots and combinations.
^?r A libertine, a rake, a
voluptuary. 2 One ever engaged
in some plot.
^^ffifr a. Given to evil
plotting and devising.
'T^^r A piece of cupper money.
■^^^^^FThe fork of a branch.
cf;qr -^r See ^''^.
^^ /". c The scapula or
shoulder-blade : the blade of the
thigh-bone.
^^^(A) Difference. 2 In-
terval. 3 Discrepancy.
^T^T'JT V. i. To move alon^:
on the buttocks, v. c. To write ofl"
ra])idly, to knock off.
liT*^ /. The track of any
thing dragged or dragging along.
'^Xt^l A shred (of cloth). |
tF^^=T -^^ &c. ad. Imit. of>
the sound emitted on rending, i
tearing, dragging, &c.
^T^^r A devious stroke in|
writing ; a flourish with the
pen. V. ^TS, ^iT^, ^T^, ^'C.
^^5T a. Smart and sharp ;
clever and adroit.
^^^^^r a. One stored and
ready with bon mots, pithy
saws and sayings.
^^^^5 T^r^^ n. A witticism,
a low mot ; an adage, 2 An
anecdote ; an episode.
^^ (a) a single piece (as
of shawls, dhotars, &c.)
q^^r (A) A plank ; a fold
(as of a door).
^TqZ f. See^^t^. 2 The
track fig. V. '^\, ^JT- 3 fig.
Course, consecution. 4 Drag-
ging along the ground, v. ^ts
g. of^.
^C^J'^T V. c. To drag on.
^l'^ M See q^^rTTT.
^l^l^ V. i. To emit the
sound "qf^: ! '^^ !
^rr^^rf^oj y_ c. To drag
along (any brustling thing).
^^T or ^^l (Form)
Amongst printers. A form. 2 A
model, pattern.
"T^^ITR -=ir (ii) A royal man-
date, order ; a firman.
tFriTrr^^ V. c. (II) To order,
direct, bid.
'^Tm€l -^f a. (H) Made to
order; commissioned — an article.
2 Superlatively excellent.
^T^n^fiTK A sound beating.
'^T^l^ (i>) An order; a
charge. 2 A complimentary offer-
ing to a superior.
^?r -^ A battle-axe.
^^^ffr / A battle-axe. 2 A
large chisel.
"?^^ m, -^ /. (a) a pave-
ment.
qR^t^/. (p) Pave-work,
paving. 2 Paved.
^r See ^. 2 A row, line
3 A measure of capacity.
^TV^^ or ^\ ad. Imit. of the
sound of reiterated and loud
fluttering, rending, crepitating.
V. -^JT^, '^TiSr, ^r^, ^K^,
"T^riTr A streamer. 2 A flut-
tering rag.
Ti^ftr a. (a) Tiiat has aban-
doned his tenements and home ;
absconded or emigrated ; — used
esp. of a Ryot.
^I^r^ -€m A Frenchman.
^U^ (a) a servant in the
household of great men.
^f^^Rf (p) The place where
the tents, carpets, &c. of great
men are kept.
^^fS" Taking a slight repast:
such repast. 2 Omitting or skip-
ping words or letters in writing
or speaking.
^tf^ A man without family,
ties, &c. Used with abusive im-
plication. 2 (A or Freed Eng.)
That is off guard.
q^fr^ p. (p) Sold, ^o ^^^
'i'« ^^"- [of sale.
qRn=?fr^cr or ^ n. a deed
T^^r (p) The queen at chess.
2 Poet. A vizier.
^^ n. (s) Fruit or a fruit.
2 Offspring, progeny ; profit. 3
The iron head of a spear ; the
blade of a weapon. 4 The area
of a circle.
fc^^f^TffcfT 71. Astrology.
q^o^er, ^c755 (s) qr^if^ a. a
Fruitful. 2 That has been profit-
able.
^F^^Rr^ (s) Fruitful.
'JTcT^Ry; Advantage, profit.
"^Tc^Rr^^cTTOT n. (p) This thing
and that thing ; trash : this and
that matter ; some nonsense or
other.
'I^Rr pr. (p) Such a one.
'ITc^r^r/. Desire of hope.
^F^CK See ^F^o^ Sig, 1,
qrf^
285
^izt
mT^r[ p, (s) That has pro-
duced fruit. 2 fig. That is be-
come profitable. 3 fig. Involved.
4 n. An implication.
T^fo^cTF^ (s) A meaning in-
volved.
•F^rr Loc. case of ^f^ Snare.
Used thus — ^o "^oi. To en-
snare.■qfoq^uT.Tobe entrapped.
^^mz^, q^^OT V. i. To
burst and come to nothing ; to
end in smoke.
q^^R^/. The state of being
entrapped. [snare.
^^^ f. A bog. 2 fig. A
^^1^ /. Sticking in ; get-
ting involved in &c. lit. fig.
^^^ V. i. To stick in, Ht.
fig. ; to be involved in difficul-
ties.
'F^'TnSTt^, tp^qr^^ a. Dry
and crumbling. 2 Very wet
and sloppy — mud, &c.
^^'^^ -W\ ad. Imit. of the
sound of walking over sand, &c.;
of the hissing of substances under
fermentation.
q^^qr^oj- ^_ j^ xo
[fizz,
fizzle or
V. I
^^^ f. (a) The harvest:
the harvest-season.
qi^^CJniT (A k p) The
season of harvest.
q^^r^^-^^ n. The har-
vest-year. This year originated
with the Emperor Shah Jehan in
1636 A. D. The rule for convert-
ing Tjo into Christian is —
^^¥ff, qr^f OT^J / Deceiv-
qrg-ftot, %mm v. c To
cheat, trick.
^^°^ a. That cheats.
q^^K, T^K(Jr, 'TT^r^See
q^erqrg- -^ see ^^qrg-.
q^^^ ad. (p) In the state of
utter desolation, exhaustion, &c.
9*3" n^ See ^^. i
^cS^ y. i. To be in the state
of bearing fruit, lit. fig. to be-
come propitious — destiny : to
become prosperous — a person.
2 To undergo the covering of
the male — a female beast.
q^S'q^oJOJ y. i. To urine copi-
ously and noisily — a beast : to be
propitious and to shower down
favors — one's destiny : to be
lucrative — a business.
qiS'i+iaiid Prosperity : over-
flowing state.
qT5rq^a"f^^/. Fruits collec-
tively, fruitage.
q^S'qrsTrr a. Hard and sepa-
rate ; — used of grains of rice
badly boiled : dry and crumb-
ling ; — used of lime or earth
badly slaked or wet.
q^oTirr^fr y. a general term
for those vegetables of which the
esculent portion is, not the leaf,
but a fruit ; — as brinjals, &c.
q^^^TW^ n. Ceremonies ob-
served on the first appearance
of the menstrual flux, for the
purification of the womb and
the facilitation of conception.
T:^^Rt, q^oT^cf /. Advan-
tage, profit.
q>^r A ploughshare. 2 A
large plank.
T:^ /. A plank. 2 A leaf (as
of a door, table, &c.) 3 A side,
party. 4 A close and dense line,
rank or row (as of beasts, men)
q^o5" n. The iron head of a
spear, &c. 2 c A rudely-cut
plank.
q^STcTf A class of letters (as
arranged in the Nagari alphabet.
q^f^, q^f^/ (h) a slice. 2
A term for the obscene jests
bandied about at the ^To3l.
qiRiT n. Any rude gate (to
an enclosure).
q^r^J or q^r^ « Opened
wide ; spread abroad — horns,
legs, a road.
q^f^jot, ^tW;^^ V. i. To open
widely — trenches, &c.
qrr^ST a. (h) Smart, dashing,
fine ; sharp, and prompt ; clever,
adept.
q^^^'t V. c. To scatter in
various directions.
qir^ot or q^r^°t v. l To open
out wildly ; to part asunder —
horns, roads, &c. 2 To disperse.
3 To rove — eyes, mind. 4 To
be discussed or broken — viscid
phlegm : to be resolved — a con-
gestion of blood.
^{m, q^Ri^ V. c. (H) To
chuck (grain, sugar, &c.) from
the palm into the mouth. 2 To
slice : to split.
q^r^r, q^i^r (h) a quantity
(sugar, &c.) taken to be chucked
into the mouth, v. «TTK. 2 A
hungry day. v. t?^. o. Empty,
blank : f^c?T f^*<1 %\-fl iTT^
qir^lc^T V. i. To branch away.
q^i^iqTt^ /. General and
confused dispersion.
q^r^r f. a prose-sentence
gen. 2 A streak on the body (of
tigers, &c).
qif^^R c. A high minded
maiutainer of his terms however
hard pressed by poverty.
q^^r^ a. (A) Overplus. 2
Surplus or spare.
q^l^T An objection (as raised
against) ; a flaw (as discovered
in). V. ^. 2 Discrepancy (as
of statements).
q^fJ^ 71. (h) a rude gate,
q^rr^^ JHT^S- /. Torn and
broken things ; odds and ends.
a. Torn and broken; old and odd.
q^l^r^f a. Torn, rent. 2 fig.
Broken down, wasted (in body
&c) : poor, shabby — a business.
q^r?^ V. i. (h) To tear, rend.
2 fig. To break. 3 To be torn
(with cares)— i^fi^T-^tfTt, ^t-
o3t«f. 4 To roA'e — eyes, mind.
5 To discuss or resolve— a con-
gestion, phelgm.
^^^^^ f' A crack (in a coin,"
a wall). 2 The breaking, dispers-
ing (of persons in partnership,
of an army, &c.) n. (Imit.) The
popping of musketry, &c ; hence
a fight.
q^t^r or q^Jf An arm, a
branch (of a tree, liyer, &c} ; An
arm (of a letter) ; a line as
drawn through a letter. 2 fig. An
episode.
qfrr^rT^R: /. Breakinsr, dis-
solving (of friends, armies, &c.)
^if r /. A small branch (of
a tree).
^f?r /. A broad basket.
^r^ Cuttino;, lancing (as of
a limb) : the opening made. 2
fig. Dissection (of a subject) ;
enraveling (of a difficulty))
clearing (of an account}. 3/. c
A slice.
TTT^'^T V. c. (h) To tear, rend.
^I^r A column of the mul-
tiplication table.
^3T^ p. That has a portion
torn or cut from it — a cloth :
that has been torn, &c. from the
main body — a piece.
^r"^^ n.(p) A lantern.
^rcTRR/ A term of abuse
for a fat bloated woman ; a ronion,
a trubtail.
W^l f. pi. (a) The first part
of the first chapter of the Koran.
This is read in making prayers
for the dead. Hence in the
careless misunderstanding of the
Hindus, Gabble, jabber, chatter.
^f^ The fork of a tree.
T.\^\ f. A branch. '^TT^^R:
fid. I'rom, to, in or at every
branch.
^=TfT (p) A lantern.
^tqr n. An ulcer.
7:RI?^ r. i. To swell into
copious foliage. - To puff up.
W^^l 'T^MJf.pL Sobbing, v.
«T^, ^, ^X- '^«. 2 fig- Fruit-
less efforts.
^i^ n.f. Hocus pocus; con-
juruig.
"^TJT/ (a) Self-collected ness.
TT^T^T (A) Advantage, profit.
^fnr a. Many, much. ad.
Very, too.
TR^rT /; „. ^\T^^\ / (A)
An acquittHnce : a deed of relin-
quishment of claim for partition
of property.
286
^FTT^ -Cr (p) A Parsee. 2
/. The Persian language, a.
P^'-^'^i"- [tary.
T^K^'ir^ A Persian secre-
^r^^«. (h) Surplus, spare.
^rc^^ 71. (Eng.) A false
])earl.
W?3r=r (s) The twelfth Hindu
month ; February-March.
"^If ^r (h) a large hoe.
TTff tr /. A hoe. 2 A curved
staff used by the SfT'ft &c. 3
A iron hoe.
'^ffi n. (h) a hoe. 2 The
crook of the ^tt'^THR and
others. 3 fig. A mischievous
fabricator, a troubler.
'T'l^'^ V. imp. To be found by
as convenient and opportune — it
or the state (understood) of the
matter to be done ; that is, To be
at leisure ; ^^f ^?^t ""^TWrT
•fTTf. V. i. With the direct
construction of xiT'^Uf. To
find as convenivent, practicable.
V. i. & in. con. To be won :
'Ttf^, ^W A noose. 2 A snare
(for birds or beasts) composed of
a noose. 3 fig. Any encumbering
business or person.
Tif^^'T y. c. To rub over
roughly (ashes, &c., over pots,
tlie body.) 2 fig. To cheat out
of, to rub.
^m^^, %\w\\, ^i^tr /. (h)
An incision to excite the flow of
blood, as preparatory to cupping.
V. JTI^, «I^. gen. pi. 2 Mak-
ing; such cut. V. eR^.
'^ro^RTy. Suppressed grum-
bling. 2 Rubbisli, stuff.
T.\B'^\ or q^Wr^r or ^ &c.
/. (hi A rib.
T^fFTr, TTt^r A clasp; a hook
and eye : the eye, ring, &c. in
which the hook is inserted. 2
A snare (for birds, &c.) 3 fig.
Any tiling by which one is en-
tangled.
I'FIOTAdie.
fqpgrr
T^F^R:'^, See qTRR^.
T^r^f^i^r, q^f^TR^r One
who catches animals by a snare
or net. 2 fig. An entrapper, a
taker in.
^\^\f\, "T^wlfr /. A snare
lit. fig.
ft^^ A ploughshare. 2 fig.
A very broad nib of a reed pen.
Tir^o]- ^, f, 'i'q iQSiY, rip. 2
To allot (to the several royts)
the amount of an assessment ;
to part out. 3 To distribute gen.
^^l A shred. 2 A rent or
slit.v. ^TS.fvr^, «fT- 3 A roll of
spun sUk. i A share of a tax.
5 A share of a distribution gen.
6 A ploughshare. nj^jj^
l^^Z, h^Z a. Faintish, pa-
r^^T, h^\T f. (a) Care,
anxiety.
fer, h^\ a. (h) Faint,
pale. 2 Weak, vapid. 3 Faded
in look, pallid. 4 Of no vigor,
poor.
PF2;^ V. i. To get loose — a
fastened garment, a knot. 2 fig.
To be removed or cleared away —
a debt by a payment, a favor by
requital, a vow, promise, oath
by ])erformance.
r^t^W: a. Cleared off— a
debt, &c. : requited — an obliga-
tion. /. n. The being under re-
payment ; or the being liquidated
(of debts, favors, vows).
fliJr /. A piece of wood,
used as a wedge. 2 A piece ap-
plied to stop up a hole.
toot V. i. (A & h) To revolt
from perfidiously. 2 To be taken
in — used esp. of children.
fe^^r/. Drawing off from
allegiance, &c.
toRi^, h^\m V. c. To
seduce, disaffect, estrange.
h^% h^\^\ Seducing, dis-
affecting, v. mx- 2 Revolt,
defection.
I^^'^ V. c. To persuade to
revolt or to desert, v. i. To de-
sert jierfidiously.
Vmt\ -^r a. -^n: c. A perfidi-
ous revolter* .
Rr^r
287
J?ru?f
nr^ 7w. f^Fjrr /. (H) Revolt,
defection. 2 A revolter.
fto a. (a) Devoted to,
ready to be sacrificed for. v. %t-
f%^^ V. c. Used with ^fS"
and •rr*, as ^TS^f^o To glare
at angrily ; -^T^ fq>i-o To dilate
the nostrils as in vehement
anger. 2 Used with %8i, ^^-
"Z, xft^, as ^K fq^o To dis-
hevel the hair ; ^5^ f'^fo. To
bristle up the tail ; fq^ fcffo .
To open and spread the feathers.
[TiT^^ A whirl or maze in
the fig. sense ; embarrassed state
(of a business, &c.) (fVl^t^t-
t{) V. WM, tj^. 2 A circuit, or
a trip, thither and back (consi-
dered as laborious or unproduc-
tive) ; a fruitless journey.
\^K^ V. i. To stir ; to take
a turn ; to move about a little ;
^T f*^T ^T^H TTin^ f^':^
■^H •TT'flf- 2 To turn, budge,
move one's body : rjt ^T^-
t'lT^^r /. A quaver (in sing-
ing). 2 A turn round (in dancing.)
3 A male screw. 4 A whirligig ;
any little roller or thing turning
on an axis- 5 A small scale (as
that of a goldsmith).
f^HR n. Country subject
to the rule of the Indo-Por-
tuguese : the rule of that people :
that people considered collec-
tively.
Vf^t^m a. Relating to PR-
hUl\ (p) A Frank or an
European gen. and esp. an Indo-
Portuguese.
n><C^ V. i. (h)To turn ; to move
the body round ; to direct the
face to a different quarter. 2 To
return. 3 To turn round : to
have giddiness — the head. 4 To
walk to and fro. 5 To travel over;
to traverse (a country) : to go
over ; to go from one to another;
^ t^K ^X fqrC^T. 6 To turn
off. 7 To alter ; to change. 8 To
be'turnedback; to be rejected. 9
To be circulated— an order, &c.
10 To turn against ; to become
against. 11 To be melted.
FF^rTl p. a. That turns,
winds, rotates. 2 Changeable,
fickle. 3 Recurring : fc|f^«f1
•RIoJI. 4 That itinerates : fqro
^1K:^«T ; that involves iti-
nerating : f%o i;^T ; that is
now itinerating : f'^r^crt ^I'C^
(which last word is also app. to
express The movements of a
rover). 5 That goes about ; that
circulates; that walks to and fro:
ffi^<fr ^T^, ftp* ^T^«e-]^T-
^'QT. (which last is Walking
sentinelship, or A guard that
perambulates.) 6 That is turning
or on the turn; '^o f^qf^-
■^T^flt -^f . 7 See the verb.
fqRT^^r / Turning, &c.
rRHox i,. c. To turn; to
move round. 2 To make to
revolve. 3 To bring the inside
out. 4 To turn, change, &c.
hK^^, T^^l^ (p) A traveler,
wanderer, pilgrim. 2 A pedler.
r^^'f ad. In reply or return;
back ; again ; another time.
PF^r? /. (p) a representa-
tion of injury and an application
for redress, a complaint, suit,
action, v. ^T^, ^^.
f^i^r^r a complainant, a
plaintiff.
fqF^rr^^r See 5^n:^r.
R^^, rFWr inL Pish ! pooh !
fqFH^ot^ fq^g"^^ V. i. To
fall off or back from; to turn
from one's allegiance or attach-
ment ; to haul off. 2 To be
broken off; to come to nothing ;
to be blasted — plans, measures. 3
To begin to kick and refuse her
milk— a cow, &c : to become
refractory and unmanageable — a
horse, &c.
r^^^TROT ^_ ^_ Xo seduce,
to disaffect.
FF^K/. (a) Mutiny or in-
surrection. V. ^"3, '^^, ^T,
^ri, ■^T'S. 2 Tumult, com-
motion. 3 Discrepancy (in ac-
counts) held to be fraudulent. 4
Disagreement,
^12" /, Discharged state (of
debts).
^FcT /. (Port.) Riband, lace.
JCf r, 5C /. (h) The name
for a husband's mother or a
paternal aunt.
J^ m.f. A puff. y. ITR.
5^^ ad. For nothing, gratis.
Without remuneration — done.
5^a:?ir3r -ji'r?: c. Sf a. Low
terms for a fellow who, without
contributing to a work, comes
forward on the completion of it,
to partake of the fruits.
J^HTfT^r^?: -?rfr ad. Gratis,
for nothing. t^^^^rt^ a.
Free of cost, ■qi^zj -^T a.
Obtained gratis. Hence worth-
less. x^^HTTi; /. Gratuitous-
ness, •'^^b:!^^^ -^ ad.
Gratis.
$^% / A blow-pipe. 2
Verbal of ^^uf. 3 A hollow
grain (esp. of rice).
J^ V. c. To blow. 2 To
blow (an instrument of wind-
music). 3 To excite ; to blow up
(a country, &c). 4 To blow (the
bellows). 5 To squander (wealth).
6 To gabble over (a ?f^). 7
Allusively. To perform the burn-
ing of a corpse : to burn a corpse
any hoiv.
W:^T, i^r A blast with the
mouth. V. 5TT^.
^^T^, ^^m V. c. To blow
(fire, a hot dish) with the mouth.
J^' 5^^ j^^r ad. See J^^T.
t^li a. Rather inflated,
swollen.
3^^^^ V. i. To swell, puff
up, lit. fig.
jnfr /. A kind of dance, v.
^Tvf. 2 fig. Reeling about
wildly.
^^^ V. i. To swell, to be
puffed out. 2 To be filled out —
the belly, a bag. 3 To rise,
tumefy — a stream, &c. 4 To be
inflated (with pride, &c.)
jn"n a. Swollen, inflated,
jnf fr, ^^m f. Turgidity.
ffTTT
288
U>?*^'
J^^R^ /. Exaggerating. 2
Puffing up.
JWT V. c. To make to
swell, lit. fig.
JTT A bladder, or blister;
any thing puti'ed out. v. "^T-
2 A fit of passion, v. ^. 3 A
false pearl. 4 A swelling under the
knee of a horse.
jnrr^ V. i. To pufF out.^
5^rrr See the verb^C^^-
^K a. Swollen, blown. 2
fig. Bulging. .'3 fig. Swollen
with conceit.
^m p. Swollen, blown. 2
Filled out.
^TJf n. Eddy. 2 A dam across
running water to cause it to rise
and swell, r. ^T^.
T^T^ ml. Separately, broken-
ly, a. c. Cracked — a coin, &c :
hurst — a dam, &c : intermitted,
lit. fig. 2 Odd, broken.
^.d'+icii a. Broken here and
there — a wall, a hedge. 2 Bro-
ken up — an article of the shops.
3 0(U1 — an item of expenditure,
&c. 4 Miscellaneous. 5 Abusive.
ad. In broken quantities — sell-
ing or buying a whole.
^^^\ f. A pimple.
^JT?^ a. Broken, burst. 2
fig. Broken ; — as a period, an
item of expenditure, &c. 3 That
is pierced readily by the pen, or
that causes the ink to spread
(in writing) — paper; or that
spreads readily — ink. 4 Dull of
vision, hearing — an eye, an ear ;
bad, cracked — fortune. 5 Abu-
sive, light — ■»TT''?Tn".
^d^ojuf V. i. To be under
papuloiisefflorescence — the body.
^j^5jfvj-f ^p^j^ An errup-
tion of pimples.
qTT^^r ^TF^I'^r a. llnfortu-
nato.
qrr^PTT iT^r^r a. infirm of
purpose, weak.
^Z^( V. i. To break: to
burst ; to part or open suddenly.
2 To sjirout, bud. 3 To burst
through, '0 cut — teeth. 4 To
break; to divide into small
Junips ?ind water — curds: to
separate — serum from the cras-
samentum. 5 To run ; to suffer
the ink to spread — damp paper;
to spread on such ]iaper — ink ;
to be spread largely and indis-
tinctly— the letters. (5 To branch
off — a road, &c. 7 To be afflict-
ed with the rheumatic affection
■'g^ ; to ache and feel broken
— the body as before fever. 8
To burst forth; — as a smell, i)
To become public — a secret mat-
ter. 10 To break up — armies.
&c. 11 To break with; to fall
out with ; to quarrel and part.
12 To burst— a boil. 13 To
burst into eruption. 14 To be-
come hoarse — the voice. 15 To
crack — lips, hands, &c. 16 To
cease, fail ; as, ^T^, ^1«T, ■^^-
^^. 17 To become dissipa-
ted— the mind.
"^l a. Friable. 2 That
cracks — the body.
^JFTF Gram soaked and
parched. 2 fig. A smart, sharp
and lively boy.
TT^TF^y. The breaking one
after another of several things ;
the dissolving (of alliances, ar-
mies, &c.)
JSTT a. That breaks readily.
2 Friable. 3 That cracks — the
heel, &c. 4 Opened, cleft. 5 Bro-
ken here and there.
JW /. A spark. 2 fig. A
spark of discord, v. ^T*, ^T^-
3 Applied to a fiery woman or
female child.
JtiTWt V. i. To hiss and
spit at under passionate excite-
ment ; to fume and chafe at. 2 To
tingle (from a sting, &c.) 3 To
emit piquant odors,
J'W'^Rr Excessive tingling,
burning.
V.
^^^TTcI'T' V. i. p To wliisper.
f ^ Sobbing, r. ^^, l^,
V, t:t'^. 2 Conceit, vanity. »"•
^, iT^. a. Inflated. ■^^[TJfr/.
Sobbing. ■qi'^W v. i. To sob.
[f^=rr, ^r^^rr Mint.
5707^ jqq j,^ i^ To hiss— a
sn-ake : to blow (as in blowing
firej.
WJf, 5Tr2T Embers. 2
App. to gravel heated by the sun.
3 fig. A light and dry soil. 4
Dry dust. 5 fig. Bluster, vapor-
ing. V. mx.
^m=l^f V. i. To storm or
rave at. [lungs.
5^^ s pop. 5\^ The
^^f^ ad. With a blowing
and puffing ; with noisy pro-
fession : -sT^ q^o ^^^ ^T-
^ ad. Hissingly. 2 /.
Hissing, &c.
^r^r See ^^.
^'^ n. See ^^^ Sig. 1.
5^^^ V. i. To snort— a
horse or an ass. 2 To spit — an oily
substance burning. 3 To make
a whirring sound with the
mouth. 4 See ^?:of.
^^cl -^cT/. (a) Leisure. 2
Interval ; time yet to run.
,3^^ 71. A species of Coluber,
^U^ n. See ^^ Sig. 1.
5^% /. Blowing; flower-
ing ; swelling, &c.
5^^°r V. i. To blow or ex-
pand— a bud, &c. 2 To flower —
a tree. 3 To swell — as soaked
corn, as black earth, lime, &c.
on being wetted : to puff out —
the body or a limb. 4 To open or
spread in glowing radiations —
the f3f»^T at dawn. 5 To puff
up with pride ; to be inflated
with anger ; to get elated by
praise or with pleasure : to look
pleasant — the countenance, fi To
spread al)road — the head of a
nail by a hammering. 7 To become
covered with white spots — a cow,
&c. 8 To have the pile gathered
into little knots— cloth. 9 To
become covered with eruptions
(of small pox. itch, leprosy).
10 To have the hairs of one's
head and whole body turned
white from age ; to be blossoming.
11 To become disentangled,
open, loose — the hair from be-
ing combed : to open, start up;
— as the hairs of a cat's tail : to
open out to the air — feathers.
i^?^^?5ot ,,^ I To expand J
1 to distend — eyes or npstrils frojjfi
ir??T
289
%^
anger, ardor, desire : to look
bright and pleasant — the coun-
tenance.
Jf^^rr A chaplet or garland
of flowers. 2 The blossom or the
blossoming state (of corn, &c.)
^c!5"f?0T V. c. To cause to
blow, expand, flower, swell, &c.
^rfr A florist.
^^\ f. A flower as cut,
painted, worked, drawn (on
paper, cloth &c.) ; an asterisk.
jre5"^ n. A spark.
j^K^r, qr^rfr /. Empty
swelling and bragging ; extrava-
gant lauding and extolling (of
one's self or one's own), v.
•^fit. 2 Vaia ostentation. ^-
^T^'slK. c. One that puffs
and vaunts emptily.
^^ n. Chaff", husks, &c.
a. SofttsA, &c.
3^^^r a. That breaks readily
and with a soft noise. 2 Worth-
less, vapid, hollow, — used of
persons, substances, speech.
^^^\T^ V. i. To hiss— a
snake, &c : to spit — an enraged
cat : to blow noisily.
je^rn Hissing, &c. 2 Blow-
ins;. V. % ^T^.
^^^ry. Soft crepitation, v.
^I^. 2 fig. Soft scandal, v.
^ffjyffcT a. Soft, friable. 2
Loose and yielding — soil.
^^^^ f. A hissing, spitting.
2 Whispering. 3 Soft crying.
5^^^ V. c. To hiss— a
snake, cat, &c. 2 To snap at
petulantly. 3 To whisper. 4 To
cry softly : to fret. 5 To hiss —
green wood under burning.
TT^^mr /. Cajoling, coax-
ing. V. %, ^T, ^TW.
J^ETWlffot V. c. (h) To cajole,
coax.
J^fTc^F^T a. That cajoles,
coaxes.
^^'^ int. Imit. of the noise
of hissing (as of a cat or snake).
^ /. SwoUenness, puffed-
oess.
37
"^ f A crack (in a stone, a
vessel, a coin.) 2 Grains of rice,
&c. broken during husking. 3
An acute rheumatic affection, v.
^TII. 4 Division (of component
pieces, lit. fig.) 5 The becoming
public of secret matters. (5 The
raking forth (of trees and plants)
into foliao-e. v. vnz. n. Au
inferior variety of the Musk-
melon species.
"FJ^f^ m. n. A straggling
village. 2 A village not reckoned
under any district. 3 A village
in a territory subject to another
government.
t,^*!?/- ^ loose term for
cracks, flaws. 2 A collection of
broken things.
'^^iilT (s) Hissing: puffing
(of enraged, snakes, cats, &c.)
'^^K'^ V. c. To hiss, spit.
'^ n. A flower or a blos-
som. 2 A spark (esp. from
iron or fireworks). 3 Down (of
cloth). 4 pi. White spots cover-
ing the body (of cows, horses,
&c.) o A whitish exfoliation
upon stones or wood in rainy
weather. 6 Albugo. 7 The
soot of 'g*^. 8 An ignited
drop of oil caused to fall from a
marking nut. 9 That region of
the womb in which the con-
ception is supposed to be form-
ed, the ovarium. 10 A medicinal
preparation from 3TT^T. 1 1
Fine cuttings of betelnut. 12
Pewter puflPed by the action of
fire.
•^^f^ pi. Superficial inci-
sions (ia the flesh), v. X., g,
'Fc^^r A term for a man
puffed up with conceit.
^^l^f. (h) a flower-tree.
"Fc^^tr /. A term for the
flowers and leaves used in idol-
offerings.
'^^J'^r^r A preparation of
betelnut.
TTc^F^R A flower-garden.
^^^ift f. A firework.
tF?r3T[3T m, -^Trs^fT /. A
florist.
'^ f. Secret instigation (to
evil) ; clandestine assurance of
support or connivance, v. ■^.
^T?, ^oS. 2 An opportunity;
a vacant interval, w. ^, ''TiT^,
T?r^ ^fq^^l. m. The fungous
abortion within a cocoanut.
^^ a. Softly brittle : unsub-
stantial.
'f^W a. Light, empty;—
used of man. 2 /. Any rub-
bish ; any trifling and unmean-
ing action or speech, v. ^T?,
^t'3'. 3 Whimpering.
^ ind. A particle express-
ing disdain : g^^T "^f A fig
for you ! 2 or ^ ^. An excla-
mation expressing weariedness.
^^ot^qR^ot y^ c. (h) To throw,
fling, hurl. 2 To set off; to put
out in a gallop (a horse). 3 To
despatch express (a messenger).
4 To toss with an air (turban).
"^^^rj^ir a. Bowed or
bow form — a leg : bow-legged —
a person : after the manner of
bow-legged persons — walking.
fe, %?r (h) a small kind
of turban.
•\
^^ /. Paying off (of debts,
vows, &c).
%^^ V. c. To loosen, undo
(a knot, a fastened garment). 2
To pay off (debts, favors, &c.) 3
To clear away gen.
\^ Froth, foam. VT^t v. i.
To foam. ■%wY /. Frothy
scum. 2 Rice-flour, &c. beat
up to a frothy consistence.
'^X^ V. i. To become snub
^ a nose. [snub-nose.
^?^r a. Snub — a nose:
%^ (s) Froth.
%7fr, V^\ f. A terra app.
in angry contempt to one's
speech : g^"1 '^o "^ ^^-T. I
will stop your phe-phering (the
rattle of your silly tongue).
qrq^, ^qC n. a foaming fit,
a fit of epilepsy, v. \ ^W-
^mr
290
fUlfMI
%qT^ft A male person
subject to epilpptic fits.
^ f. Confession of bank-
ruptcy or helpless wretchedness.
2 Disgraced state.
7:$: See ^. sig. 2.
"T>^ Turning round in a rine,
or galloping up and down (of a
horse), v. V^, givT. - Dif-
ference. 3 Variance. 4 Change,
a t7irn. v. trs", g :<5JT^ rfT'TTSIT
■^^ x^^wlT. 5 Curvature (as
of a road, &c.) 6 PovA'cr of mo-
dulation ; ^T^ iTSajtfT ^^ "-^t-
3i^T ^T%- 7 A circumference.
8 Skirt.
^ nd. (h) Again ; back.
^irrS*/. An answer back;
a saucy reply (from some in-
ferior).
"^r^fn^ V. Treating roughly
and disgracefully.
T^fT n. A return-injury.
V. g.
q^<'+.d^r (h) Turning round
in a ring ; galloping.; up and
down (of a horse). 2 Rambling.
3 fig. Making use of (one's
talents, &c.)
VtTR- Turning about ;
shifting. 2 Difference (in an
account). v.'^X, ^T-
"^^T^r /. Bartering. 2
?.Intual relieving (as of troops).
q^^r^^^^r -^K^r Barter,
truck.
^^\ A turn (around a stick,
&c.) ; a convolution (around it-
self) with a rope, &c. 2 A
whirl. 3 A turn or bending. 4 A
circuit, or a trip thither and back,
esp. as considered as laborious
or unproductive. 5 fig, A maze;
tumultuous and bewildering
course (of affairs, &c.) G A
circumference.
"^toj'qra^.^ n. (p) A list,
catalogue.
"^r/. See 7:rr.
'qpifl^r?^, >T^fr (u) a ped-
ler. 2 An itinerant, mendicant,
&c.
<F^^ qrr^^ ad. By or with
turning over and over, from
that side to this side.
^^ or ^^ (h) Foam, froth.
W7 a. Frothy.
%^^ v. c. To beat, stir, or
rub up into froth.
qR^S^r /. Foaming,
wr^of, qfre-fT^ V. r. To
cover over (a sown field) by
means of the t^^T^.
^m?r, ^erfr /. a bundle of
loppings from thorny bu.shes.
2 A harrow composed of thorny
bushes, to draw over sown
ground.
^^rS",W55- a. Frothy.
7^^ /. (a) Loose practices.
^c7 5f[JTR A personal secu-
rity against misdoing or misbe-
havior.
%^\^ -^r (h) Outspread,
extended state, lit. fig. : spread-
ing out. 2 Dallying prolongation
or expansion : prolonged state.
^^\^^\ f. Spreading out.
TTc^r^'T V. i. To spread out,
lit. fie.
TTc^Tl^'T 7?, c. To spread out.
^^^ m.f. %^^\ m. (A)
Decision (of a cause or dispute) :
settlement (of a debt).
%^?r^nTr (p) A written ad-
judgment of any cause.
Tl^ A twig. 2 Used enhan-
cingly, implying supple and
Strong: ^T ^^T ?I^tJTT '^Tfi
'STT^. 3 (h) Thin and co-
pious matter voided at stool, v.
^%\Z^\ V. c. To beat with
a %^iz1.
#^rfr /. A switch. 2 fig.
A slender and supple ])crson.
TiF^ A boil, blain : a pimple ;
any kind of abscess. 2/. Divulg-
ing : disclosed state. 3 Dividing:
divided state. 4 /. n. A slice, bit
(of fruits, nuts, &c.)
^I^^jTi /. Oil or ghee heated
with mustard-seed, &c., as a
cooking sauce for vegetables. 2
Breaking, parting. 3 fig. The
roll of betel— leaves which is
eaten after a meal.
^r^^ V. c. To break,
to shatter. 2 To break open. 3
To cleave, split. 4 To burst (a
boil.) 5 To punch or force out
(the eyes). 6 To divulge (,a
secret). 7 To break (buttermilk)
by heating it over the fire.
T^r^f f. A pimple, esp. of
the small pox. Gen. in pi, as
^T^r Pocks, i. e. the small
pox.
'nfR J). Cleft, split. 2 See
the verb. '^T'^w.
'Wr A fruit-tree and its
fruit, Carica papaya.
^\m\ -^F a. Bloated, puff-
ed.
^fTFHrr Hot cinders.
^r^f^ n. m. The lungs.
%\\Z\ Hot cinders.
^\^ n. A hollow grain. 2 A
husk of a grain. 3 Chaff: hollow
grains. 4 fig. Hollow promises.
TTl^'T V. c. To husk (grain).
"T^R /. (a) An army, a body
of troops.
'?Tr5r^l^(p) A native criminal
judge or magistrate. 2 One that
commands an army. 3 The head
of a bo'ly of elephant-drivers.
fFF^^rfr/. The office of a
T^fslTKr a. Criminal ; opp. to
civil — a court, a case.
^sTTTFJT An army with its
appendages and accompani-
ments.
^[^■^a. (p)Having a stand-
ing army ; prepared for war.
'W^^sTFT Assignments for
the support of troops and main-
tenance of forts.
^{^^] ijiterj. See ^ TT.
5r
291
n^
^ The twenty-third conso-
nant.
^, ^f /. Mother, ma.
^^ (s) A kind of heron. 2/-
(h) Idle talk.
^^"^r/. Chatter, jabber.
^^^ V. i. (h) To chatter,
prate.
^^^^R 71. (s) Sanctimonious-
ness, crafty saiiitHuess. i^.^lqT,
^^*^^nf a. Sanctimonious,
demure : a religions hypocrite.
^^^ f. (h) Prate, chatter.
^^?^°T V. i. To prate.
^^^^^ a. That prates.
^^^R See ^^^m^.
^^^^^rC A mutton- butcher.
^r^^rST/. Depradations of
goats (upon a garden, &c.)
^^n A he-goat, ^^ff /. A
she-goat. •^^^. n. A kid:
^^X- n. a goat (without re-
ference to sex).
^^^oj V. c. To pommel.
^^?r m.f. (h) Prate, chat.
^^f RT See ^^t"R.
^^^=JTI^ See ^^'^JTR.
^^KF m ^W^I /. A thump
vvith the side of the fist. v.
^, ^K, ^T^, -srg?.
^^r^ (a) a shopkeeper.
The word is seldom used but in
conjunction with ^JV]^ ; when
used singly it has contemptuous
implication. 2 n. The body of
shopkeepers.
^^J^^ V. c. To pommel.
^^r^r / The business of
shopkeeping. a. Relating to
sho[)keepers.
^^W<C A term for a vora-
cious eater.
^f ^ (s) A flower-tree and
its flower.
^^^ (a) a time, season.
^^cT^C a. (p) Fortunate,
thriving.
?^cr<=llU f, Prosperousness.
'^^^ f. Any history, relation,
memoir, &c. in Prakrit prose.
^^o^ f. Open space (in a
village or on ground) ; any void
spot. 2 fig. An extensive and
desert tract. 3 The depression
in the flanks and belly from
fasting. V. xj^, ^^^^. 4 App.
to a sinking in a roof, floor, &c.
^^^ a. Open and clear —
space. 2 Plentiful, many or
much.
^Wr/. (A)Weight,estimation.
^?H'3"?^rr c. A quarrelsome
person.
^<5r3T (h) Contention. 2
App. to a troublesome business.
^^rrr p The shoulder-joint.
^?^^% -fr (p) A general.
^^^r^, ^^fr^ n. (p) A
gift (to an inferior). 2 Pardon.
^T^ n. The loins or small of
the back.
^^^ V. c. (Vulg.) To see.
V. i. To look, to direct the
eye to.
^W^ prep, (p) Without.
^^^ /. (p) The armpit. 2
Gusset. 3 A crutch. 4 w. A
side.
^n^^r^^r / (H) A term for
a child much dandled; a pet,
tenderling.
^^c7;Trff^r a. A term app. to
one who, in innocent-looking
thoughtlessness, claps up and
carries ofi^ under his arm.
^iTc^fiT^^r (H) The carrier
of the Arm-waterskin.
^^^r An Arab boat of a
particular description.
^^^r (h) a summer-house,
a bungalow,
^^^'^\ a. One that serves
under another; an assistant,
mate. 2 One at the back of; a
minion.
^IF^TFTR" One ready, when
opportunity serves, to snatcb up
and run off with.
^^^r m. ^^f /. (h) a
kind of heron.
^^r^ n. A religious morti-
fication. Swinging, by means of
a hook introduced under the
muscles of the back, from a
cross-piece passing over a post
either planted in the ground or
fixed on a moving cart. v. ^,
tm^ a. (h) Relating to
Bengal.
t^ /: (h) a pole with a
sling attached to each end,
carried across the shoulder.
^^Rf (p) A small garden.
^J}^ n. A certain metal
vessel for culinary purposes.
^^\^\ The root of the arm.
^^ot See ^m-
^^^/. ^^^r m. R The hand
inverted with the fingers extend-
ed. V. ^K. 2 A quantity
brought up by the hand so held.
W^^ '%T: ad. Imit. of
the sound made by the foot
slipping into mud.
^^^r m. -t\ f.-^ n. A young-
one (of man or beast).
^^^r^ -^ (h) Poison root,
root of Gloriosa superba.
^^=I[iir^r ^ffr /. a term
for a pestilent fellow.
^^^^, ^^itiT3r /: Confu-
sion, disorder (of affairs, persons,
things) : disgraced state.
^rf^xJTcf a. Sloppy, washy
— mud, boiled rice, &c.
^"^1^ (h) Protection. 2
Deliverance, escape ; getting
safely through.
^=qrr=r'^r /. Protecting,
^^rr^"^ V. c. To protect,
save.
^"^n /. Disgrace, v. ^, KU
^ifST /. The chaps, esp.
the lower chap (of beasts, &c.)
^^r --5IT (p) See ^=^^r. 2
Apiece let into the body of a
^gnfj"
292
yrfl^f
garment to increase its girth, a
goar.
^^rtr, ^^rU^ Terms of
compeilation used comteraptu-
ously, and equivalent with My
young man, my fine fellow, &c.
^^ff^"^ v.c. (h) To achieve,
execute. 2 To enjoin strictly. 3
To play (a musical instrument).
4 In law. To execute (a decree).
5 To warn impressively : to re-
mind of and press roughly home
upon (some sin or fault).
^^rCt ad. (p) In, by, th rough
one's own person ; by one's self.
^[^^ a. k ad. Downright,
outright, flat : openly, directly.
2 Genuine, real — used with
^^X m^<Tl, ^=^1 &c. ; also
■with ^T^J, ^IK &c. 3 In one's
person.
^ A strong and well-made
kind of pony. 2 c A large marble,
a taw. 3 n. A kind of iron. 4/.
A quantity of the fibres of hemp,
&c. as clotted together, or as ly-
ing in preparation for. Hence
app. to a disorderly tress or a
clotted lock of hair. 5 /. m.
pi. Young and short hairs of the
head. 6 n. The steel-head of the
stonesplitter's ^rl^.
^T^r, ^Z^-^\' -U A man
that consorts carnally with fe-
male slaves. Pr. %^ UT^ ^^^
^Jtjqfl" / (h) The annual
stamping by the public officer,
of the weights &c. of trades-
men ; certifying them to be agree-
able to the authorized standard.
2 The fee of the offio-r, or the
tax levied, for this service.
^JiTRS" y; Balance of cur-
rencies.
V
^^^ V. i. To undergo chang-
ing ; — used of coins.
*\
^Z^UK\ A species of Jessa-
mine, [wages).
^^^^ (h) Distributing (of
WZ^^^-^'h n. A pay-abstract.
^^ A draw-purse.
^n^ V. c. To change
coins of one value into coins of
the same name, but of higher or
lower value, paying or receiving
the exchange.
^Hrrf" /. (h) Exchange. 2
Tax paid in kind to the pro-
prietor of the land.
^Ff (n) Exchange.
^3t^ /. A female slave. 2
A prostitute.
^^, ^^ (s) A young Brah-
man from the period of his
^51 to that of marriage.
^fr (h) Exchange. 2 A
stain, slur.
exchange
^l\i^^ V. c. To
monies.
^?r^r A term for shrofF-
business,~exchanging of curren-
cies, &c.
^f^Ka. Of deficient value —
coins. 2 That has received a
stigma — a family, person.
^f^rsf c. One that has some
stigma. 2 A rogue. 3 A wencher.
^f a. Sturdy and sluggish.
^^ n. (p) Insurrection, sedi-
tion. 2 A band (of insurgents,
marauders). 3 See •^^. 4
771. An insurgent ; a rebel. 5 A
counteifint pretender to the
throne. 6 App. to a refractory,
cross, and perverse child.
^S'l^K c. A rebellious per-
son.
^^m A cudgel.
^^^r /. Growing more or
great.
^3"^? f. Gabble, jabber,
prate. 2 Delirious talk,
^^^^of ^. I To Gabble. 2
To rave.
^S'^^iTf a. A chatterbox.
^^^'|\l f. Beating, thrash-
ing. 2 Any instrument of beat-
intr ; a mall, mallet, &c.
^^^ n. A thins? to bruise
or beat with.
^3"!%'^ V. c. To bruise or
l)f,\t with any thing thick and
heavy ; to bang ; to pound (the
testicles of a bull, &c. iu geldiog
him) : to strike violently against
(as clothes against a stone in
washing them).
^¥^ -55TT (Because they
pommel the people that crowd
upon the idol.) One of an estab-
lishment of Brahmans enter-
tained at the temple of xf^T^x;
for the service of the idol there.
^^^fc^ An insurgent, a
bandit.
^^r a. (h) Great, big.
^Srt"/. Seditious practices.
^S'foS' -3"[ y. Commotion,
uproar. 2 Distress, exigence,
^r^^^ Greatness, majesty.
^*^r /.(H)An ^TRWr without
skirts.
^t\ -^\ a. Seditious.
^tr%fT -5Tf7 /. (H) Sweet
fennel : Anise-seed.
^J5ff^i7j^.(H)Anexclamation
uttered by the chobdars before a
Raja in i)rocession.
m i)rocession. It means
Advance ! increase ! and it an-
swers to Vive le Roi. 2 m. /.
Greatness, grandeur.
^S"^! /. (h) Increase,
growth.
^STff r, ^STC /. (h) Great-
ness, mnjesty. v. ■^fJT, q\T,
^T'U?. f*T^^.
^STt^rr,^S-R?3rr c. a brag-
gart.
^^^ f. The calix of ^\^<^'
2 (Canarese.) A small "g^^.
^cTfOTr -3T a Enormously
large ; huge.
^cTFl -=rr -^r a kind of
inner turban.
^m^ f. Acting, exhibit-
ing, playing. 2 Gesticulation,
delivery. 3 Pretending. 4 A
rough draught.
^m^qr a. An actor.
^cTflf'^ V. r. To represent
with gesticulation and action. 2
To narrate with embellishing
additions, gen. used in the
^•T form and in conjunction
with ^TTvl' or ^^f^oi.
^cir^r, ^r\\W\ (H) The name
of a aweatueat.
^rT^
293
^[T?P
5^^r A boat from fifty to
five hundred candies' burden.
^tTF, ^'t^TF c a pestle.
^FtT^ '^^ f. An aggregate
of thirty-two. e. g. a set of teeth;
the age of thirty-two years, &c.
2 fig. (From the teeth.) Saying,
speech. ^T $T^^T ^t ^T^
^W /. (h) a wick (of a
lamp); a lamp. 2 The tongue
of a cracker, rocket, &c. 3 A
tent or bougie (for a wound). 4
A train of gunpowder (to a mine).
V. ^T^, ^^K. 5 A set of
thatchers.
^"^re" a. Thirty-two.
^TTf^n'^r -?^^oTr a. That
possesses the thirty-two marks of
excellence detailed in palmistry.
2 Ironically. Eminently stupid.
^^ (h) a venerial bubo. 2
The hole at marbles.
^^ (p) Any thing to tie
with: any tie; fi":. a bond, a
fetter. 2 A regulation, law. 3
Confinement : fig. restriction. 4
A joint. 5 A fold of a sheet of
Country paper.
^^a.(p) Blocked up — a road :
stopped — a work.
^ fl.(p) Bad. Only in comp.
^^^flT^ m. ^^^A n. Mis-
conduct; esp. app. to adultery
and fornication.
^^^ (a) a duck.
#?"t^^r^ .^^m a. (p) Li-
berated. ^"^^^T^ Liberation.
^^^T«fT A prison.
^?"?$qT^a. (p) Lewd.^2:^5qT-
««f1/. Lewdness.
^^[/. (p) Slavery.
t?cfr^ (H) Epithet of an
excellent kind of mango.
??=r^2[ir-^ (p) Ridiculous
plight ; dishonored state.
^^•TR a. (p) Infamous, n.
also "^^VfTfll/. Ignominy, in-
famy.
?^p5" a. (p) Lewd, disso-
lute, •s^^yfl /. Lewd prac-
-iices.
^^^ _^ ad. Imit of the
sound emitted by thick liquids
m being poured out ; of that of a
slack drum,&c ; of treading upon
a hollow place, v. ^T5T, ^'C,
^^^^cfr ^, i To emit the
sound ?i^«r'^. 2 To be full
and tense and dull-beating — a
boil. 3 To be heavy, full, stuffed
— the head or nose under coryza.
^^^ffcT a. See ^^^^.
^^^li -^rq" /. (p) Stink. 2
fig. Disrepute, ill savor, bad
odor. ^^Ti^ a. (p) Intoxica-
ted with pride. «J^»1^ /.
Arrogance, conceit. t^«^itt*T^
/. ^^TiT^^T ni- Violent and
overbearing demeanour (esp. of
one resisting a demand of pay-
ment). 2 Malversation in office or
trust.
^^^ n. (p) A port: a port-
town. 2 The sea-shore. 3 A
landing place on a coast or in an
inlet.
^^?r^r5" -^\El The sea-coast.
^^<"^ (p) Blasted honor;
dishonored state.
4^^i -^ a. That has
reached the desired haven.
^^<r a. Imported. 2 Relat-
ing to a port.
^ST^r l^^r^ Foreign or sea
wares. 2 A cant term for the
broken fish brought from the
sea-coast by the tranters.
^^^ f. Changing, v. 5^ g.
of o. 2 Changing one's mind. v.
^. 3 Turning from one's word ;
receding, t). ^j prep. (A)
For or in exchange of: instead:
mni^T "^^^ 'W^T H^ 4 On
account of :^mj ^^^^^ ^V] ^tTI-
^Tc^ or ^^1"^ ^^ n. In-
terchange between families of
daughter* in marriage.
^^^'^Sfcl^ prep. For the
sake of.
^^c^of V. c. (h) To change.
2 To alter ; to make to differ.
^^^"^ V. i. '\o undergo a
change, lit- fig. 2 To turn
against ; to revolt. 3 To deny
one's self i to turn back or from
(a deedj.
^^^\ prep. For; instead ; on
account of.
^■^^\ ^:^^ -c?ry; interchang-
ing ; exchange.
^^^\^ a. (p) Of ill name.
^^FRr/. ^^^m n. Ill-
repute. V. 'EIT^, 3^, BTIW, ^.
^c^R^Ko^r Exchanging of
monies.
^^c^r /. (h) Exchange or
relief (as of a guard.) 2 m. A
relief. 3 Also '^^^l A sub-
stitute ; — used of persons.
sr??/!?^ Disrepute.
^?r (p) A male offspring of
one's slave girl. 2 fig. A person
bound by favors and kindnesses.
a. Unchanged, whole — a rupee,
&c. 2 Definite, stated — service,
stipend.
^^\^^ See ^^^.
^l?t^ a. (p) Built up, closed
up with masonry : "^t ^^tff
2 Built up, — a well, tank. 3
Built, walled — a dwelling house,
garden. 4 Fixed, settled : bound,
restrained. 5 Imprisoned. 6 Con-
tinent ; refraining from woman.
7 Well ordered-regulated-
ruled — a kingdom, army : well-
kept-managed — an account, af-
fair : well-disciplined-trained.
/. A structure in gen. 2 Also
'^f^^ /. Structure ; form
or quality of building. 3 Also
^f'SJ^. Well-ordered state ;
proper management. 4 Number-
ing (of a file or bundle of papers)
by attaching the number to the
upper or outer one. 5 ra. A set-
tled stipend.
^IcT^r a. Firm, compact — a
building. 2 Regular, orderly-
conduct, business.
^^I /. (p) Obstacle, impe-
diment. 2 Stop, cessation (of a
work or custom). 3 »i. s or
?i<f!5}-ii m. s A bard, a min-
strel.
tffj^Rr m. -^rsrr /. (p) a
prison. ?r^en«r (h) A pri-
soner.
«i^ f. (t) a musket or
firtlock. 2 A matchlock.
^f^
294
^r^
^{^^ m. -^ /. (P) Settle-
ment, adjustment. 2 Govern-
ment, mana;^ement. 3 Orderli-
ness of walk. 4 Fitly arranged
or well-ordered condition ;
order.
^^ p. (s) Bound, tied.
^-^+ n. s Constipation (of
the bowels), a. That contines,
hinders : that troubles, annoys :
tliat constipates.
^^^Jf^ n. (s Fixed and
glaring looks.) Determined and
deadly hatred. 2 Fi.ved aim.
Also attrib. in both senses — that
has such hatred or such aim.
^§"5S' -fe n. Costive habit
of bowels or costiveness ; attrib.
costive.
^^jfS" a. s Close-fisted,
miserly.
^^fsTfc^ a. s Poet. & vulg.
-oS\ -^o3t- Having the palms
overdosing each other (in hum-
ble entreaty or representation,
or in respectful attention. 2 /.
The over-closed palms.
^^ (s) A regulation, law,
rule; a restraint. 2 Restriction,
limitation. 3 Any thing to tie
with : any tie; fig. a bond, fetter:
used in comp. «T'? -^{TSIT^^.
^'"T'T V. i. To yield compli-
ance. 2 To be brought about-
3 To yield, to succiunb : ■gi«Rl
^'■•-H a. (s) Tying, binding.
2 Fastened state. 3 A tie, lit. fig.
^'H^ r. c. To bring about,
effectuate.
^'"TrC'T n. A fixed precept
for guidance; a law, rule, canon.
^W a. (s) Deaf. 2 Insen-
sible, numb.
^ (s) A brother. 2 A
cousin, a kinsman. 3 An asso-
ciate, a fellow, a comrade. 4 In
comp. Protector, friend : ^^-
fg^^-y.-^-q-sr.n. Brotherhood.
^ ^ ■•11-
2 Brotherliness or Inendship.
•iiu^lai. A term of respectful
compellation or mention for a
brother. 'ifH^'ir Kinsfolk, bre-
thren.
^•T n. A wood, a grove,
3f^^^ Poet. A dweller in,
frecpienter of, or keeper of a
wood, a woodman.
^•T^ V. i. (h) To be made ;
to be brought about, JlrT^iqT'^
f*T^Ti ^T^^ ^UT^ ^^^ ■sfT^t-
2 To come mto any state ; to be
made; to become : T^T'^T ^T
'^R^T -^^T^T ; WT %T^T^ ^^^-
<Tl^ tl^T ^^?^T. 3 To be-
come fat and stout ; or weal-
thy and prosperous. 4 To agree ;
suit ; '^T^ fJIT'^T^f ■^•sf^ ; ^-
■^■^•[^ ^im ir\^\-^ ^t3T#r ^-
•r^. 0 To be dressed and
tricked out finely : 3T^ ^f^
ttrt ^^^ ■^"'^^ ^TiT^^i^
^1^^^^? G To change the
shoulder — a hamal, &c. 7 To
get into proper form or state
— trade, service, affairs.
^^FcT/. (h) Broadcloth. ^-
-^Trri a. Made of "^«rifr.
^-II^ (h) Good understand-
ing together; mutual agree-
ment ; harmonious correspon-
dence (of persons, things, quali-
ties). 2 Splendid arrangement
(as of a ball-room).
^^r^/". (h) Structure, make
(of poems, buildings, &c.) 2
Texture. 3 Array, disposition
(of a place, a business, a rite). 4
Dressing uj) ; tricking out ;_ nar-
rating in ornate style. 5 fig. A
fabrication; any fictitious matter.
a. Fabricated, made-up : ^o
^^r^^r /. Adorning, &c.
^(T^^ V. c. To adorn, dress
up ; to model. 2 To tell with
elegant amplification.
^f (ii or Port.) A fire-en-
gine ; a pump. 2 Thickness,
stoutness : TfiV^ #«^^ ^T ^
^^^ "?• 3 Infamous notorie-
ty : fUT^T ^t^I^T 2f <» ^T5I^T-
ad. Up to the brim. 2 Full,
choke-full : ^^f ^<» ^T^—
'If JT^. 3 t^^ ^r^T"^^ ! Corrupt-
ed from ^?r T^T^^ is the shout
of Gosavis when they demand
alms.
^^^ Interj. of admiration or
astonishment.
^f^ 7n. n. See ^^foS" a.
Huge, vast : large, extensive. 2
Wasteful, lavish — a person. 3
(with T^T^) Streaming with
or covered with (blood). 4 Poet.
Loud — sound.
^®^r a. Large and lubberly.
^^Tf, ^*^r Noised ness a-
broad, esp. of a matter that
should have been kept secret. 2
Infamous notoriety.
^^\'^ m. n. A huge roaring
blaze (of fire) ; esp. with
^Tift'^T : a dazzling glare (of
a lamj)); esp. with f^STT"^!-
2 A copious and forcible gush
(as of blood, juice, &c.) 3 Used
as a. anil in the above applica-
tions ; "Sfo iafJIo3 ^H'^I -^^"S^^
q^^T ; xirur't -Xt^ ^^ qriff ^.
i^K]k^ See i^ sig. 3. 2 fig-^'^
A stout, strapping fellow.
^^r Weaver bird./. A term
of respectful mention for a
mother or an elderly female. 2
Used of or to a female child.
^^Mr-'Tr(A) Earnest money.
(p) A relation or an account :
a tiresome story in excuse, v.
^^r[^ m. /. (A) Detail,
minute and particular relation.
■^?JT^^Kc.g??T^1 a. Given to
tedious repetition ; prolix, pros-
ing- ■^^T«<;^T^ ad. In detail,
minutely.
^T^^cT /'. n. (a) Success,
happy termination : successful-
ness. <^m 3T^^Kt«T ^<» ^cT
■s\-['^. 2 Overplus of good ;
benefit above the degree expect-
ed (resulting from a business).
3 The word used for the number
one in counting or measuring
anything, /or good luck.
«l<*<;i^ (p) A musketeer. --^
/. Musket-firing.
<sl<4ir a. Soft, flacid ; — used
of the jmlp of a kind of Jack, of
the fruit, and of the tree bearing
it.
«i(.'icir
295
y'r«H'
^t^€ -^^ a. (p) Risen or
broken — an assembly.
^^n Millet. 2 fig. A miliary
disorder.
^^JTf r / A rib.
^"^r /. (h) a sort of spear.
^*rT An insect infesting
grain, wood, &c. 2 /. c Rice-
ground left, after yielding a crop,
to rest.
^5-, ^^T^l^ a. Consist-
ing of ^^:Tr, gravel, &c. — soil.
2 fig. Pock-pitted — a face.
^^\ f. A China jar or vase.
^cT^"^ a. (h) Dismissed.
■^^rf^^/. Dimissal.
^^K a. (p) That bears;
^^^cT /. (p) Hospitable
entertainment (of a guest, &c.)
V. ?R^, TJ^- g. of o. 2 Look-
ing after(children,articles,cattle).
^V^ n, (p) Snow. 2 Hoar-
frost. 3App. tolce. 4 fig. any
miliary eruption. 5. App. to
densely growing grass, hair, &c.
^V^\ f. (p) A snow-cake.
«l<«l'i m. n. Water, ^r^ &c.,
thickened by tamarinds, &c.,
being squezed into it. 2 m. A
preparation of flesh-meat.
^T^J^ r. i. To be daubed
with "^T^^, mud, &c.
«!<«!< -^f ad. Runningly,
oozingly. v. ^T^, ^T^, fs*^^,
^K'AK^ V. i. To run with
purulent matter — sores, boils :
to run with mucus — nose, &c :
to be soft, oozy — a fruit.
^•^tfcT a. Squashy, mashy
— mud, fruits: snotty, snivelly
— the nose : running with pus —
the mouth or a sore.
^^Z\-^?:la. Poet. Beauti-
ful fair. [choice.
^^m a. Poet. Good : fine,
^r-BTcT f. (h) The rainy
season. 2 Rain gen.
^^^rfr /. A disorder of the
horse. 2 The screen of leather-
shreds to protect the eyes of
horses.
«1<^* -^ a. (p) Right, just.
^r^'^^iT ad. (p) According
to, like.
^r^ f. Incoherent speech
(of a drunkard or a person in
sleep or in fever) : idle gabble.
fl. That prates wildly.
^i:a^^\ f. Raving.
^55"^ V. i. To talk wildly ;
to delirate.
^n a. Good ; passable. 2
Well ; having health. 3 Consi-
derable, ad. Conveniently, well :
^Tl^T a. (p) Equal. 2 Exact,
correct. 3 Proper, fit, just, good.
4 Even, level : straight : agree-
ably uniform, ad. Along with,
together : exactly, justly, square,
true.
^T\^f\ f. Equality. 2 Even-
ness. See the adj.
^J\^^ f. A false accusation.
V. ^,-mv{, ^TTW.
^U^t See ^f^-
^n ^ifn: a. Moderately;
middling.
^■rr^ ad A very common ex-
pletive, corresponding with
" Indeed" in the senses of In
very truth, to be sure ; truly,
actually ; or This is to be granted
that. It is used as a particle of
connection. It notes concession
in comparisons, &c. ^ ^iT3
^r^cT f. A hopeful, promis-
ing state. Gen. neg. con : TfW
-^^ The writing-reed.
^^ n. Weal, welfare. 2 Be-
nefit, good. ad. Well, right. 3
Used expletively : ^T^ ^^ '^T-
■^ ^^T^^W. 4 Well, yes.
gn^r, ^n^fr See ^n^r.
^^ n. (s) Strength, force,
lit. fig. 2 An army, & force.
^^^f ad. (a) Not only so ;
yea, even.
^'^^'i^ f. Season of danger.
ad. la time of danger.
^^^55" or ?^^?^^TT f. A
Babel. 2 Disorder, confusion, v,
^^f tR" a. Strong, mighty ;
— used esp. of fate, time,
^^^r (h) Uproar, tumult. 2
fig. Notoriety. 3 Disorder (of
affairs, &c).
^?5-q"[=r a. (s) Strong.
^^\i See ^^ra".
^c^I^cT f, A trouble or an
evil that befals one without his
own procuring : a person, ani-
mal, thing considered as a
plague. V. V, 'ETT^T, ^\^.
^^[Z^ ^^XE n. A false
charge, a calumny, v. g, ^TvI»
^J'^V " [son.
^c'J'f^r^lT c. A slanderous per-
sTc^IJr -2iIT a. Slanderous.
^^U -TT -^c^rr^^R: See ^^f-
s, &c.
^c^rSif a. (s) Strong, mighty.
^c^n^R (s) Violence.
sfc^r^cJ^ fl. Comparative
strength and weakness (of con-
tending parties, of the pros and
cons, of the arguments for and
against any disputed matter). 2
I'owerjCapability: resources.^
■^tM h ■^ot^T^-^ ^Tt^. 3 Force,
virtue in things or persons.
^^^^f. (p) See ^^fs:.
^^m J^ (a) a misfortune. 2
A plague, bother. 3 A false
accusation, v. gi^, 3TTW, V.
^^\\^^ See tr^^ff^^.
^Iw (s) A religious sacrifice
or oflFering in general, an obla-
tion. V. ^. ■^f^^T^ n. The
offering of a sacrifice.
m^^ a (s) Very powerful.
^^r a. (s) Powerful, lit. fig.
^5^ ^'- A share of the corn
and garden -produce assigned for
the subsistence of the twelve
public servants of a village.
^^^^K, ^Jcrr -?qT A public
servant of a village entitled to
^^Ti f, (p As if by wager.)
Extreme exertion : HJT^ T^T
7^0 -^ ^t^f%#- ad. With de-
termination of effort : ??JT ^f-
?Ttfr ■^» ^'Tsg -^^r^siT- -
Positively, assuredly. 3 Deter-
minedly, thoroughly, out and
out : ^9 ■#T^T-'^T.
^^ ad (p)Enough. 2 Vulg./.
Plenty, lots, piles.
^^ Seatedness ; the state of
a firm seat or comfortable fixed-
ness at, on, in, about ; the being
at home. v. ■^^ ; 7?JT 3T«sit?r
^^^f. Any thing spread as
a seat. 2 A pedestal, socket. 3
Also ^^^f. The bottom. 4
Also ^^^"l^ ^fllsT /• A
flat or low piece of ground. 5
Fixedly seating one's self on the
ground (through exhaustion,
doggedness, &c. by beast or
man), r. %, 'nT-
^^T^J" f. Squatting down
through fatigue or stubbornness.
V. i, MIX..
^^rnt /. A sitting, a session.
^m V. i. To sit. 2 To
sit down ; to perch ; to roost. 3
lobe without employment: to
sit idling. 4 To stand upon a
pedestal. 5 To lie upon, lit. fig. :
fig. To rest as a burden. 7 To
settle, subside: to sink, abate. 8
To become blunt— an edge. 9 To
set in; — as rain, fever. 10 To
retire, lose height. 11 To be-
cotne expert ; to get in— the
hand, a faculty. 1-2 fig. To come
upon, fall on : f\-[X "^^^T, ^J-
Z\ ^^ffi^. 13 To fit; to suit,
applv, tally — joints, devices,
calculations.' 14 To fall ; to be
ruined— a trader. lo To be-
come hoarse, or inaudible—
BRH, JT53T, 3n^T5l, ^^T. 1 fj
To be established — a rule. 1 7
To acquire fulness and strength
' — a crop : to settle down as irre-
coverably gone.
^^"T V. See ^^^. Sig. 1.
^TT^r p. a. That is used for
riding — a horse, &c.
296
sT^^ n. (h) Of a yellow color
—cloth, &c. [enough !
^^nrrf ind (h) Hold ! sto|) !
^m\i a. Relating to ^^TH
(Bussorah). [-j,ion.
^^5TPTrr=rr a monthly pen-
^^^"^r The stone-image or
«f^ worshiped in the temples
of the sfJlH.
^^fr The =tfr or Shiva's
bull, placed in front of the image
of Shiva.
^HF^'T'?;. c. To seat. 2 To
fix, fasten. 3 To impose. 4 To
lay, compose. 5 To inflict or
bring on (some evil). 6 To fit,
suit. 7 To establish (a rule, rite,
practice).
^^ft/ A prostitute.
^H'r/. (p) a plate or dish.
^^cT A he-goat.
^^rR -^cTH n. (p) Arrange-
ment; well ordered fprni.r.^^:
Settling down. 3 Fixing (as a
proportion): hence Average ; the
ratio of any distribution v. ^^ :
■^■q^T ^T?^t=%' ^'^^¥ ^■pT^trT
^o ^tT§ ■^^^ ; ^'^T'% ^^?TT-
m%f. A temple of the %=f
sect.
^^■W /. Straying.
^K^^ V. i. (h) To stray. 2
fig. To deviate. 3 To err."^ 4 To
rise beyond bounds — price. 5
Poet To rise and spread.
^^^j^^r^^nT/. Mislead-
ing.
^r^I^^, ^^^f^"^ V. c. To
mislead ; to cause to err, lit. fig.
2 To bewilder, put out.
^[t^\f. (h) a pole with a
sling attached to each end. It
passes over the shoulder bearing
packages in the slings. 2 App. to
the package conveyed.
^qT /. m. The season of
greatest abundance ; the zenith,
flush (of])roducts of the earth,
of health, riches, •ports, honors).
'^
^K^ a. Exuberant, copious.
2 Spacious, ample and free —
a building. [text.
^^r^r (p) a false plea, pre-
^Cr^t V. c. Poet. To call.
^fTfr a. (h) Seventy-two.
^Cr^T, ^Cr^ a. (p) Bold,
daring : capable, clever. App.
freely as the words arrant, arch,
dab.
^c'ln n. That revels in feast-
ings and sports. [ino').
^^T^ n. A beam (ofabuild-
«l^|c7 a. (p) Kindly -disposed
towards, favoring. 2 Restored :
established in or invested with
(office, &c.) : forgiven.
^Cr^T /. Favorableness. 2
Establishment (in an office). 3
Pardon.
^^* a. s Out, on the out-
side ; ^f^ : si-^il.
•^i^JT a. Strange, alien.
^IWTZ a. Deafish. 2 Deaf. 3
Numb.
^f^f a. Deaf — the ear ; the
person. 2 Dead ; callous.
^fg'nffT^ «. Deaf and crazy.
^f^# V. i. To become
deaf. 2 To become numb, callous.
^I^?r /. (h) a falcon.
^I^<1r A name of the god
^fcfi^r -5^^r /. Insensi-
bility of the skin, r-ppjj
^l^fr^^ft^r Peregrine fal-
^rdr^r See^n^r- 2 App.
to a deaf man.
^r^K^g"^(ot V. i. To go out
for the purpose of relieving
nature.
^fek" n. Adultery.
CCi^cT a. s Of the outer
side, exterior.
gi^;^(xff sifsn/. A covert
term for diarrhoea. fsual.
^r^^<^ a. 8 Worldly, sen-
^fi"r#
297
m^r
^FCr^^rr A covert term lor
Lues Venerea. ^f^^ adultery-
^rC^^'T n. A covert term
^If^^R (s) Expulsion from
caste. V. 'EfT^. 2 Putting out
sjen.
?rfS''^^rr n. Expelled from
caste. 2 Put out gen.
^ii^ f. A sister. 2 A fe-
male cousin.
^^f^ilTf^ n. j>L Brothers
and sisters collectively.
^?:K a. Dead, numb.
^^ <■'. (s) Many or mncli :
^o ^T^ Many-fiioted ; ^^f^j?}
Dear to many ; ^o ^aj uiut-
tonous.
^^^'^r n. That has many
aci omplishments.
^c"cT a. (s (fe h) Mnny, much.
^^cT^ a. Many a one, sever-
ral. 2 Poet. Very probably.
^^'^f (id. (s) 1 II many ways.
2 For tbe most part.
^^'ir^'-iFir f. Government by
many, polyarcby. 2 Anarciiy.
^^^^ (I. Munificent, Hberal.
^^^N -m a. Talkative. 2
Tluit knows many languages.
^^'JTcT n. Genera! opinion, a.
'{ hat has the sanction of many.
^^'ITR Respect ; honorable
reception.
^dpT a. s pop. ^f^foTr
Ili_nh -priced.
^?"^Cf ^^ g Theatrical re-
presentation, a. (s) Manifold.
^^^qj ^n individual of a
class of dancers, actors, &c.
^^^ n. An altar (at <^^, Jsf
&c.) on which sacrifices are \->av-
formed, and the bride ami
bridegroom sit. [ber.
^^^^-T n. The plural num-
^^^^ '/. Loquacious. 2 Poet.
Many or much,
^^■^rr ad Many times.
^^I^'^". Multiform; of many
Ivinds.
38
H^ sfff?" s A form of gramma-
tical conposition.
^J5T : ail. (s) For the most
))art ; generally speaking.
^f^^ a. Thiit has heard
much; one of general informa-
tion.
^c'^^JTcT n. General opinion.
^^m^ -S- ad. Poet. Many.
2 Often.
'^J'^r^^ nd. For many years.
^^^^ a. s Verv i)atient.
^fsf a. (s) Thatknows much,
^^ a. Many or much.
^"'^ f. See ^i^- n. See ^•^.
^^^iZ „. Strono-. 2 Laxly.
Hcfivy — rain, &c. Used acl. Ex-
pressing vehemence, complete-
ness of actiun : rJJl'SiT '^o
?^^7r/. Strength. 2 Firm-
ness.
^•^^I=T a'/. Tiohtly, firmly ;
— used with verbs of seizing,
tying, &c.
^ST^r^q, ^S-^rf^J? V. c. To
seize i)ossession of forcibly and
unjustly : to retain unjust ])OS-
session.
'^'^^^^^\ i\ i. To increase
in strength.
^•-^siKr f. Violence.
^^^TM\ f. Pride of strenrrfh.
'^STc^fJ'Jr n. A religious pro-
cession to conduct avvav any
sickness beyond the village-
bounds, r • 1 .
[mighty.
^ST^'cT, ^^m\ a. Strong,
^'T^rfT" a. Strontr.
^aS\Z>\ See ^^\Z^.
^3"f^crr 11. i. To wax strong •
to increase in intensity.
^'^f a. Strono;. ^n. f. See ^\^.
^^ ad. By force. 2 Deter-
minedly. 3 or ^s^w•^ With
strenuous efforts.
c. F'^rcpd, fetobed — a sense, &c.
^i^# -<\\ /: See ^m^-
^'^ff (p) A general.
^^r^FT n. (p) A gift (to an in-
ferior), v- ^X- 2 Pardoning, w.
efix:, \. ad By way of present.
'^f Pa. 2 An affix of respect
to the names of deities and men :
JID13I becomes 3ioiigT, f^»iT^^
becomes fw'^T'^r. 3 App. with
jocose reverence: ■^t^T'^l,'»?T'fT-
■^T. 4 A term of endearment
for a child or youth : ^j '3'^T
'^iSfrJT^ra II 'ST^JTSiT f*Io5frI^
'J^SS II
^ff^qf, ^\%^^\ n. One ever
with women ; a cotqnean. 2 Wo-
manish. 3 One governed by his
wife.
r
^\^f. A term of respectful
conipellation for one's mother
or an ehlcrly female. 2 An af-
fix of respect to the nnnies of
females gen. as x:?TIe;T<. 3 ^j/.
n. m. Lady, mistress.
^\i^ f. c, A wife.
^\i^'W^\ a. That is doing
or is competent to do, female
work only ; — used of a male.
^ff c^'jy. Grannam's knot :
opp. to reef -knot.
^f^r^JT^ y Feminine wis-
dom. 2 A feminine connsel,
device.
^r#c?.f T^:5Tr a. That is led by
his nife or by females.
^[^'^JTFTO' A female person.
2 An effeminate man.
srrWc^^^r «. Thatisdotingly
fond of his wife or of women.
^[■^ A word used to frighten
children ; answering to goblin,
bag-man, black-man. 2 In
nursery language. A wound,
sore : app. to a snake or any
object of fear to children.
^r^, m^ (h) a bend. 2 A
winding road over a hill. 3 fig.
Strife, discord.
^i^ ( Port.) A bench.
sfr^RTTr a Having a bend,
lit. fig.
^I^^r V. 1. To bend, curve.
^i^, ^r^r«. (h) Daring,
^^
298
^rrm
dushinr/, tearing; a bullv ;
■^Nt ^T'^iTKT A. smart and
able spenk'T ; ■^t^lfsi^Ti: Ai;
intrepiil soldier.
^f^r A kind of bugle.
^f*r f. (a) Hemaiiiclpr. -
Baliince outstanding, a. Remaiii-
^1^ '/*. if large, /'. if small.
(p) A garden.
^IIT/. ^[iT^rr m. (H) A lon-j
rope with which horses are led.
^i^ f. (p) The crouing (psp.
the inorniiig crow) of a cock. v.
^ni^ V. i. To skip, fri-k.
frolir; used of kids, puppies, &c.
mm\ f, A glass hracpl'^i
worn by female:?, v. vr^, ^i^f-
2 A round of a coil [oi rope).
sTfJJ^I ITn}"f (p) Gardens com-
prehensively ; gardens, orchards,
plantations.
^R^r^ (p) A gardener. 2
One of a caste that buy and
sell vegetables and flowers.
^m^f^ /. Gardened state;
any little gardening as made
about a mansion.
^f^fT^r a. Appropriated to
or fit for fruit -trees or vegetables
— soil or land. 2 Having nnich
garden-land around it— a town.
&c. .'i Raised on garden-land.
4 Relating to garden-land.
^.'Tf^cT n. (p) (i round plant-
ed with fruit-trees or vegetables :
garden- land : garden-stutF.
m^]^ The name of a 2"()blin
imagined to be seen, and men-
tioneil to frighten children ; a
bof/rjle.
^rn^r /. a goidsmith'.s
ehafin^: dish.
«rr^, ^f"^ A sudden concep-
tion of terror or aversion, v.
?aT- 2 A conception of venera-
tion, awe, c. ^§1, i-
^I^^t^f /. Takiuir sudden
friglit, startling : becoming con-
founded.
^R^i^ V. i. To startle at:
to lose one's self suddenly'.
^r^fR^ r. c. To aff.iohtlwr^ iTi^^rn -m^^r ^rf
Clever at carrying off a part
•:ssig led or espoused.
WiZ Polntion ; unfit for so-
cial intercourse v. R^, ^'J.
2 Stain, slur (in persons or
things. ) V. i^, tj^f, ^^^.
■^r? a. Sharj), cunning. 2 See
^TI'JIT sig. 2.
^\Z^J a. Defiled. 2 Sharp,
suhtle in loose practices.
"^dZ^^l See ^i^^^r.
^r^t^^. ^17"^r f. Bpcoming
])olluted ; being polluted.
mZ^ V. j'.To hecnnie polluted
and unfit for social intercourse
(by carnal connection or by
eating one of another caste, by
eating forbidden things, &c.) :
to be defiled and nntit for use —
an article.
suddenly : to take aback ; to
tiirow (ill of a heap.
^f^oS'if ,7. i. To become
bewildered. 2 To run wild. ;
To rave.
^l^^f^ -"^r f. Altercation.
^1^ f. A bedstead.
^fsf^ r. i. To bear — a fruit
or tlower tree : to be borne ; to
form in crop — ft nit or flowers :
^[sfcT -ST r//;/.(p) Besides; more
tliau that. 2 And again : ^-
^f^ITf J, (h) a cereal grain.
^l^^ n. A cot.
^f^r (h) Playing upon mu-
sical instruments, v. ^X, %T-
^RK (p) A market. 2 The
business of a market. '6 fig.
Publicity. 4 fig. Disorder (in a
family): a disorderly family or
house. [nunor.
^\mi ~<^%m / A mere
^r^lR^^r A marketman.
^Fsir^^c^^ -'I'r a. Current
in the market — coin.
^r^RR5rt^(H) Market-rate
(III. & 0. Notoriously, arch :
^r'^f^^^tr -^?T^r /. a pros-
titute.
^[^[^Tf^JT n. (p) 'iMie sut-
tlers and followers and baggage
of an army. 2 fig. A set of rijjs
and rafran>nffins.
^]'^\T: JTC^IT a. (p) Notorious.
^fFslKf a. Relating to a
market. 2 fig. Low, disreputable.
'6 Common, bad — an article.
^rfsf^r a. (p) Clever, adept.
^rtKlf /. The reign of the
•qjrgx Bajecrovv.
^^\f'i^') A side. 2 Any part
of a body opposed to any other
|)art. .'3 Verge, border. 4 tig.
Party, faction r. TiT^, "^^TcS
.0 A patron, helper. (> A suit: a
hand. 7 A strait.
[tion.
^ST^^r.^l^rr^r General pollu-
^l^I^rs: /. General defile-
mcnt. See the verb.
^\\^n. Stalks of^f'-^iarr cut
whilst green.
^\Z^\ a. Defiled, polluted.
^13" f. A mango-stone.
^rjoS"^ ^i5^ </. That has its
stone fully formed and matured
— a mango.
^fJSJof^^fjr^af y_ I To have
its stone fully formed — a mango.
^rJF, ^\E\ c A mango-stone.
2 tig. A bump arising (on the
body, &c.) from a blow.
^\Z\,^\Z\ f. A man 2,0- stone.
^\ZJi n. Stalks of ^FFV^F cut
whilst green.
^F^ //. A book into which
are collected the general heads
of a science; a compendium, an
e])itome.
^f^ a. Stout, lusty — a per-
son. 2 Coarse and rough — cloth.
^f^ A ^T^ of a coarse kind.
2 The style of flowers and plants.
'^ A stalk of uncared corn blast-
ed. 4 /. ?i. A field of such blast-
ed corn. 6 m. The writing copy
of scholars.
?r?^ a. Kough, brutal. 2
. Refractory. '6 Defiled.
^Rft
299
^R
^r^RJJr?" -"^Kf. (h) a teim
for one's furniture and ap])arel
&c. ^T^'f^s^T'Tr. m. Rattletraps.
^r^r //. Of a white, bl;ick, or
red ground with stripes of an-
other color — a bullock, cow, dog.
^^r f. (h) An enclosure. 2
An enclosing wall.
^\f\ a. Relating to a ^13"
(a compendium). 2 One who has
not studied any science deeply,
but has got a su]jerficial know-
ledge from reading compendiums,
abstracts; used esp. of physicians
and astrologers.
^R(s) An arrow. 2 A rock-
et. 3 A stone worshiped as
an emblem of Shiva. 4 A term
for a man without wife or family.
gmRT /. A term for .Mili-
tary uniform and accoutrements.
^fT^ V. i. To enter deeply
into the mind — a discourse, &c.
2 To adorn or beseem.
^f'Tr(H) Profession,pretension
(of or upon any particular virtue] :
any department, field ; the/o7-/e or
element of. v. '^ToSH. 2 A man-
ner of dress, a costume. 3 The
woof.
^(^rt"^ c. sTF^rr^r a. That
makes great pretensions.
^m^\^ a. s Paraboliform.
^RF f. Style (of writino:, &c.)
2 Verge, edge. 3 Gunwale of a
boat. 4 Pretension, priding or
pluming one's self (of or upon
any accomplishment or virtue, v.
"«^To3iT. 5 A crisis. 6 One's na-
tive temper.
^P^r^rr a.Ofa pleasing style
— reading or singing.
^l^ f. (h) Idle talk.
^rcTHT /; Intelligence.
^rcTfTf^rr c. An intelligencer :
a spy.
^f^"^ a. (a) Empty, idle —
new'^, &c.
^r^^r a. Fond of romancing,
or of fabricating reports,
^r^ ad. (a) Deducted (from a
number, list, &c.) v. 'Efi'jf, '^^,
^f? A dam, mole. v. ^1^.
^J^mW\ (p) A King. Used
only of the Mahomedan or of
foreign kings or em'perors.
^r^^rft a. Kinolv, royal. 2
Granted by the Mahomedan em-
perors of India ; nsed of ■^■sfSf
fs^^T, &c. 3. fig. Superb,
grand. /. The kingly office or
comlition, kingship, royalty.
^KR /. (p) Almond-tree.
2 n. m. also ■^T«> irTo3r w«. An
almond.
^RT^Tfa. Relating to almonds.
^i^J A dam, dyke. v. m^. 2
The raised boundary (of a field).
'i Binding, tying.
^r^T (s) Objection, obstacle.
^r*"^^ a. (s) That opposes,
])rohibits; that affects injurious-
ly. 2 n. An objection.
^mR^/.The cost of build-
ing, binding, fastening. 2 The
mode of building, &c.
^f^ofr/. Verbal of ^i^'^K 2
Style of building or binding (of
a house, well, turban, bundle). 3
fig. Any prescribed course.
^r'-T'jf V. i. To hurt ; to dis-
agree with and affect injuriously ;
— used esp. of articles of diet or
of points of regimen. 2 To as-
sail and strike (man or beast)
with some disease or evil ; to
blast; — used of a devil: to act
upon hurtfully — poison, a spell,
one's own sin. 3 To oppose :
to impede. 4 To act, work inju-
riously : -^^I^Ct ^^^ \'^^X
tm V. c. To tie, bind. 2 To
f.isten with a knot. 3 To fasten
on (shoes on a horse's feet). 4
To entrap, enfohl (things in a
cloth, &c.) 5 To bind (the tur-
ban). 6 To confine or stop up
(water by a dam, &c.) 7 To ap-
point (rules, modes). 8 To re-
strain,bind (as by laws and rules).
!) To build (houses, walls, ships):
to set fast, make (dams, roads).
10 To compose, or frame (poems,
books, discourses). 11 To form,
combine (conjectures, schemes).
12 To make up (sli03S, confec-
tionaries). 13 To conceive and
cherish (enmity, envy). 14 To
l)ind up under magical influence
and sus])end the natural working,
exercise (fever, the sight).
m^miS f. (A tied knot) A
close purse, a hoard, a purse.
^i^l^ s A brother or cousin.
^f^r a. See t^T. ???. Make,
structure.
^I'-TF f. (s) Pain, disease,*suf-
fering, esp. that caused by evil
spirits.
m\m -^\f. Active or hur-
ried packing or tying up (of many
bundles, loads, &c.)
^rr^cTjr). s Opposed, prohi-
bited, excepted.
^i^"^/j. Made or built ; not
formed accidentally or roughly — •
a well, a road, a tank. 2 Made
up; made to order — shoes. 3
Of a fine make — shoes. 4 Mi.x-
ed up with a base metal— an
ingot or a coin of gold or silver.
^f^^n A person residing in
a village in which be has not and
his fathers had not any landed
property. 2 A person residing in
one village and cultivating land
belonging to another.
^f^T a. s Objectionable, ex-
ceptionable.
^IT A father. ^RST^JTl^ ^
■^I'tiST'jff- ad. In all one's
born days : ^ "^T" ^l^TT^
^IT^rr^ pi. (^R .t" p) Fathers
and grandfathers, ancestors.
^nr^r a. Poor, gentle, harm-
less. 2 Silly, hel|)less, weak, pi-
tiful. 3 It is used expletively to
express Indifference, careless-
ness (respecting) : ^'CDTT'C fl-C
^^ -^To ITI^ ^T^ ir§f.' 4 Or-
phan on the father's side.
^ITcTr?" pi Ancestors.
^mrr^r Orphan on the fa-
tiler's side.
^rq"?r?r/ Patrimony.
^n\ Fatlier.
^rq-l-^ff^r-ofr«. Poor, forlorn.
2 Whining, piteous ;— used of
speech, tones, accents.
^F'TT An adult, a youth.
^1^ /. (a) An article, item,
point. 2 An affair, a matter, a
case. 3 A tax, a roll.
^rarT
300
nv^T
m^^ .^ f, (p) An article,
item : a point of view. 2 A de-
tailed account (as of expenses) :
a long story abotit ; a strino; of
e\cii?es. V. ■^rt'T, ^T'^, *Tt^,
^TTqr. prep. On account of: in
TP>T)'^Ct of: rqi ^^T ^To T^T
^r^^f /. Any item of revenue.
2 pi. The shares (out of the re-
venue) which belong to the head-
officers; esp. that portion of the
•^t^ which was reserved by
the head of the Maratha govern-
ment.
^Tgr?rTfr /. j)l. Poet. Dishe-
veled tresses. -^T^CT/- A loose
tress.
^rf^fRT A blubber-lip.
^i^f A term of respectful
compellation for a father or an
elderly person. 2 A term of fond-
ness for a child.
^17^ A bamboo.
^\^ prep, (a) On iiccount
of; under the head of; for.
^\^^\ c A term of endear-
ment, also of contempt, for a
chilli or lad.
^RT^T, ^riT^r, ^r^^/. Gum-
Arabic-tree.
^pj-ff^r ^'fTr A term for
out- bold and boasting at the
outset, but who soon meanly
yields and sinks.
gPT^r f. A woman. 2 A
wife. 3 The female (of plants).
^r^^^ a. One ever "ilh
women, a cotquean. 2 Effemi-
nate. m^sSJI- «. Tiiat is
poverncd by his wife, henpecked.
2 Etfeminatc. 3 One ever with
women.
^K (ii) A time: ^^FT
Once: at once: ^v{^^ "^rt^^
^K (p & h) a charge (of a
gun). 2 Exjilosion : the report
or noise, v. ^\'S, ^^. 3 fii^.
An emulous reciting (of shloks,
&c.) among scholars, v. ^TrT.
■z^^. 4 A crop (of fruits). 5
A musketeer.
^K^^ n. (p)
vessel.
^iT^Ff /. (p) Fineness, thin-
ness ; tenuity. 2 fig. Close-
fistedness; niggardliness.
^[^'FI^'^ V. i. To become
tltin, slight, fine.
^[^^oS" a. Wild, wanton; —
used of persons or beasts : law-
less ; — u'ied of speech, action.
■^T^To3'Jl «?. i- To become
loose and libertine. ^r^'JTT a.
Licentious, loose ; heedless of
cliPcU, law, or rule.
^Rmfr f. The employment
of gyrji'l^. a. Belonging to a
^roTrr (p) A trooper that i^
mounted and equipped by the
chief or state that employs him.
^IT^R 7t. (p) A chest, box,
sack, a receptacle in gen. 2 c
Cargo, lading, freight (of a
ship, cart, beast.) 3 The wrap-
per of a bale.
^\^^K a. (p) That bears;
tliat is in its prime — fruit-tree.
2 A musketeer (esp. of a retinue).
'A Tliat carries,
^IT^TI^T^r /'. A contentious
and dishing oligarchy; a dis-
orderly democracy; or a wild
annrcliy.
illTRsTr -^r/. (p) The duty
of -^l-^^l^.
^R^ff (p) The officer of
the state whose business it was
to atfix the word ^\T: (Entered )
to notes, bills, orcU'rs, Sec. which
had been duly copied or register-
ed ill the ^i^'ffT: This enfer-
irig as well as tlie rff/islcrint/ book,
is en lied ^t^f*?^-
^ITITPC ;;/. (h) a term for a
pack of fellows of discordant
tempers and opposing views
united in any undertaking. 2/.
Tiie confusion and disorder
arisit\g from the association, in
any business, of manv persons of
discordant dispositions or dif-
ferent designs.
^ir*T?f ad. (n k p) During
the whole year.
■^R^r^f a. Perennial, an-
nual.
A trading l^fniT^r a. Tliat lasts during
twelve months.
term for the several series of
twelve letters into which the
Marathi alphabet is disposed.
^R^ n. ^R^r m. The cere-
monv of naming a child on the
twelfth day after its birth.
mT\ a. Twelve.
^rn The mouth or bottom-
orifice of a brick-kiln. 2 The
space opposite or contiguous to
the mouth of a harbor or any
particular portion of a coast.
The word answers to Offing.
^(Ti^tr /. See ^R^^^r.
^Rfcfrr Incoherency of
speech. V. ^T^, '^tl, ^'I^.
^Rf fqq5Jmm5^^r a term
for a person that has so many
places of resort that it is never
known where he may be found.
term for one that has traveled
fur and wide, and is become
shirp nnd knowing.
^Rf^fi'-^f'T Terms for a pack
of fellows of discordant dispo-
sitions and plans united in any
business.
^Rrml^r^cTr (h) a term for
an undertaking conducted by
many of diverse judgments or
hibits ; a work of confusion.
^I^f /'. A ravine, defile. 2
A passage through a fence. 3
(n) A turn or time. 4 A tour
of duty. 5 A window.
^fU^ a. (p) Fine, not coarse.
2 f g. Subtle, fine. 3 Secret—
2rTrr*Tl.
^ffr^JiiTaT a, Thiit calumni-
ates subtly and covertly.
^f^f^r Interest at 12 per cent.
per annum. 2 The twelfth part of
the atnouut of interest (due on
any sum).
^fo5 n. (s) a child. 2 //i. A
boy. 3 In corap.Youug, immature.
^r*^ (h) Hair.
^X^^ m..(s)A child, m. A boy;
^(?5jFr^r f. Juvenile sport-
ing or pl'vy.
^\^'^-^\'^'^n.l^ false charge.
^RT
301
^r^rq"
STfc^^nirr c. a slanderer.
^c^JF "^Jir a. Calumnious.
'?r^?"r /'. A leathern bucket.
^Wi^E f. A hair-breadth
crack (in a coin).
^[55"^!^ (id. Hair by hair ;
per hair r"^!' Jl'WJTT^-'qT'Jt-^^T
^r^^r^ a. Level with the
capacit)' of cliildren — a hook,&c.
m. The Devanagari character.
^rc=5^ir=^rn a man tlmt
has not been married and has
never knovTn woman.
^c^[lT^ A friend of one's
youthful days. 2 The tender sun.
'6 A friend of the juvenile.
^rc=^^r -iT'-^fr /. a widow
whose husband died before she
attained to puberty.
^WiT^^\ j. Infanticide. ^\^-
"^W[W «. A murderer of in-
fants.
^r^??rcr^r /. (s) chei)uiic
myrobolan gathered and dried
when young and tender.
^r^ry. (s) a girl or young-
woman,
^r^r A stam|) for coins.
^f^r^T'^rcr ad. At every hair.
i. e. incessantly — abusing, ly-
ing. Sic.
^fc=5TlT ad. In the slightest
degree ; by a piti's head.
^m\Z See ^\^(^.
^\^\i^^m Study during
cliiUlhood.
^r^^"!^ The early morning-
sun. 2 The heat of it.
^r?5-fer (P) The highest
portion of the works of a hiU-
fort.
^Fc^r^^rr Any mild and
gentle medicine, remedy, &c.
^r?q"w. ^i^qr^^^r/. child-
hood : youth.
^r=r/. c A well.
^m^^, m^^^ -Z V. The
nnper part of the shoulder.
^R^a5" Craziiiess.
^ff'^S'q y. i. To rave. 2
tig. To loose one's self-posses-
sion : to become crazy. 3 To
run riot.
^r^7r (h) a flag. 2 The
unper arm.
^Rtr/. (h) a large well.
^r^'T V. i. c To fade.
m^ -^ a. (h) Fifty-two.
^f^^^^ar a. Purified fifty-
two times, i. e. very pure — gold,
and fig. a person.
!?i'f^€[^ (h) a terra for a
vnliatit or clever fellow.
'^r^n a. Bewildered, lost.
^[^r, ^{W^\ A term of re-
spectful mention for a li^T'JT^'t,
J^^, ^m, or elderlv person.
^RFH" a. (h) Twenty-two.
^rfSTT An ornament of
paper worn by the bride and
bridegroom on the head during
tlic "eliding.
^rr^Tf^^S" A term for one's
Inck considered as auspicious
and as bringing about one's mar-
riatre.
^1^3" a. Loo^e, devious,
wild (in speech, conduct, &c.)
^['^^cS'fJT V. i. To run riot ; to
become loose.
^PT 71. m. s Poet. A tear or
tears, m. Vapor or steam.
^r?T2: -8" a. Si.xty-two.
^mz -F7 a. (H) Stciiish. 2
fiLr. Vapid, unsavory — speech.
qftT^ //. (H) A plate, dish. 2
See ^I^-^.
^fHT a. (h) Smelling, stale,
not fresh.
^r§^r, ^rg'fr, ^r^rfr /. a
kind of custard.
^\^ V. c. Poet. To call. v.
i. To make a cry.
^r?"Tl?r a. Seventy-two.
^ri^^r A cord confining the
le<is of a cow at milking time. v.
fil^, ^t^, ^T^-
^riry. The whole arm. 2
The sleeve of a garment. 3 A
post of a door.
^f^r^R r. One that lends
tlie shoulder; a helper; one
that ,nj^arantees. [arantee.
^r^rSTRf /. Helping. 2 Guar-
^f^^RS" n^ Force of arm ;
bodily strength.
^1" (s) The whole arm. 2
lie upper arm.
^fo'Jr The arm from the
shoulder to the elbow.
^f^3"^«. Close fight; box-
ini:, wrestling,
^r^f^r A representation (of
a man or other male) made of
cloth, woom, earth, &c.
^rf^r f. Female of ^f?"?^r.
?rr^f^ ?/. A doll, pup|)et.
^f^^q" //.. (s) Abundance,
jilentv.
^r^^^^ n. The quivering-
or itching of the arm (as of a
warrior.
*\
^ICr ad. k. prep. Out or
without. 2 Beyond, lit. fig, :
JTf^JJJT'W ^T^T: ; Bfl'^gio. ?>
A covert and polite phrase used
bv the wife in speaking of her
hnsbimd: '^it^ ^fl ^"^ qTTJft
^rQ^???Trc^ A covert term
f(»' adultery or fornication.
^r?^?9?Tr^r «. Lecherous.
^r^^^r Exchange or per
centage added in exchanging
cun-eneies; exchange upon.
^rlr^r^^r /. a term for de-
monific possession.
^KTl^mad. Out or in : out
<Jn(7 in ; somewhere : ^t gi^T
^rcr^r «, Exterior, ^rcffc^
a. Outward. '^T't^T ad. From
without.
^RT a. (s) Outward ; extra,
ex, dls ; as ^TI^T'C -W^l -'^^
^r^r^^lfr ad. Outwardly. 2
tig. Openly ; esp. as opp. to sin-
cerely.
^f^rq^^R: in medicine. An
^external application, or remedy.
^5r
302
r%Tr
^[55", ^\o^^ See ^l^.
m^J]^ r. c. To keep ; to
bring up. 2 To maintain. 3 To
cherish, fostei' (pride, an opi-
nion).
grss-rfrTTS- j>l. Children,
youngsters.
^l^^ f. A woman just
brought to bed. v. ^T. 2 fig.
A term for a person ever cher-
ishing and cockering himself.
^r^'cTTT?/. Attendance upon
a j)nerperal woman. 2 Child-
bearing state.
^r3'<TTR Consumption as in-
cidental to puerperal woman.
^rs-^R/. See ^\^^'
^TS'cT V. Swaddling- ch^ths.
2 The clothes of a puerperal
woman.
pension granted bv a govern-
ment to the family of a soldier or
servant who died in its service.
2 (A situation, a friendship, also
a servant, friend) that has be-
longed to one from one's child-
hood.
^r^^?" r/. Mild, innocent; —
used of man or l>east. 2 Simple,
fair — speech, conduct.
«l|a5"^r'"T a. Teacliable to
chihlren ; simple, easy. 2 Art-
less, '.i Plain.
^]^UTWi\^\ A bengur from the
birth.
^T^^T^ f. Insatiable hunjjer.
^nZTT'^r A term of endear-
ment for a little boy.
^\^m^^,^\^^^v.L To crrow
chiibbv and ]fhim|) — a child 2.
esp. "^TSfl^' To become a
mother.
^fcZ"^ w. The chubbiness of
infancy v- ^, ^- [(.jj,.
^^r f. An ornament for the
^fiiTf n^f f. A comprehen-
sive term for trinkets.
f«r^^ a. DifiicuU or hard.
r^^^iT n. (v) The line or few
words which lie, who writes an
epistle through na amaaueusis
writes with his own hand, to
avouch the letter.
rf^ 71. A defect, flaw, lit. fig.
r?^r prep, (p) Without.
r'^'TITy. (h) Labor exacted
by a government or a person in
])o\ver without giving remunera-
tion for it. 2 A load carried bv
a person or an animal pressed.
•i fig. A work done carelessly.
r^nrn (h) a person pressed
(to carry a load, &c.) 2 A
nnrter.
i^^ 71. A blemish, defect.
f^q'3'iJ7 ^ f. "Pq spoil, da-
mage. V. i. To become spoiled.
•2 fig. To break with. 3 To be-
come impaired — health.
r^^;?rRH75" /. General spoil-
ing: spoiled, ruined state.
R^r A land-measure.
r^"^^, fW^ Ruined state.
2 Disturbance.
i. To start or startle.
f't^^f^r, r^^^Rotr /. Startl-
ing.
r^^^r^^ V. c. To startle or
start.
rf^?;r -^^r a. That is easily
startled ; sly.
r^"^^r?% /; Startling.
R^r^rR^ V. c. To startle,
f^if^f -^r ff Sharp, smart
■ — a child : active — a little horse.
Rxj^ /. in. (u) Changino-
for tlie worse (in fig. senses.)
r^^c^rffr/. Turning off de-
viouslv.
f-^x}"?yoj y f "Yq change for
the wo'se ; to become devious.
2 To run mad. 3 To recede from
a promise.
R'^^r (h) a sort of dag'jer.
2 A pp. fig. to a short but ejfpc-
tive pen. '.i A term for a little
but sharp and capable mau.
R^^r, \k--m\ (p) a small
tent without a pole.
R'^rn a. (p) Poor, helpless :
weak, pitiful. J
R^Jf^cTr, \^^\n^\ a. (h) a
pedler. 2 Relating to a pedler.
R^rt^, f^r^r^cT /. (a) Any-
thing spread for people to sit on.
R^T'Tf (h) a mattress, mat,
anv thing spread for bedding.
\'^^\\^^ V, c. To spread (as
a carpet or bed). 2 Cant. To
floor ; to knock down. 3 To con-
sume.
Rsr^r/. (h) Lightning.
Rsf^ fi^ Semen genitale. 2
Stock, seed. 3 Progeny, breed.
Rsffr A deuterogamist.
RSfrfcT a. That has twice
calved — a beast.
RsTFTfr/ T^^m n. A joint-
e<l hinge, jummers.
RIc^^JT 71. (s) A salt. Bit-
loben.
\^'^ (h) a mas>5 (of cotton
or cordage) rolled up together.
2 A load (as of grass, &c.) rolled.
3 fig. A tump, knoll.
Rtr / (h) a fetter for
the foot. 2 fig. A tie, or clog. a.
Made of ^^^ (iron-ore) —
cannons, &c.
RcfCT V. i. (h) To be close at
hand : vf^fT^ ^qtw^ f^H^
BTifoT *?Tf^?Ej ?rr m^ ffjft. 2
To fall upon — as a calamity :
^XTiT ^TTf. 3 To begin —
a fight, quarrel. 4 To enter into
(the mind) : 3Ti:^T ^^^k^ "UT
rf ^^5Tfc7 fj(l (p) li, a minute
manner.
RtTI^ a. (a) True, e.xact :
sure — tidings, &c.
R^foj ,. ,;. („) 7o f.^i]^ n^is_
carry ; to turn and corrupt —
a business or course. 2 fig. To
turn into devious paths. 3 To
lose his good temper and be-
come vitious — used of a beast.
V. c. to turn aside or off^ ; to turn
otF from attachment, obedience
or ri'.:htness of conduct.
R^fr, r#?"^f /. A small bale
(as of cotton).
fl^
303
if
f^^r p. (a) Sent away ; di.-^-
missed ; perniitted to depart —
a visitor, v. ^<C-
f^^i -ffr, T^^m^i /. ca) a
gift to a visitor on semling him
awHV. V. ■^. 2 'I he sending
away (of a visitor), v. ^K. g-
of o.
T^fl f. A street.
fkT (s) A drop. 2 A dot.
.'^ Focus.
r^5"^r r^^ ^^^r^r a. a term
for a poet or any exaggerator.
f^^ prep. Without ; as (^"f
^q^T^ That is wilhoui
crime.
f^^ (a) Son, son of: ^f^^T^
\^'{'-i\\%^ nd. A revenue term.
In the case of there heing uo
disaster.
\^'{^\ a siuall metal vessel.
r^^rm^^rt ^ n. (a house
rent-free.) A prison.
fl'^W^fr a. Void of pay-
service. 2 Exempt from work; —
used with ^^, ^q, &c.
f^^irrsf^r -m a. Not requir-
ing to he accounted for ; not of
the official account. 2 Irrespon-
sible.
%T^ olT^^ vl^li tfTt^ tirg
f^^r ;^_ Xhe calix of the
m^u'king-nut.
r^^JT a. Marked wiih spots,
resembling the marking-nut — a
t'vz'^v, a cat.
f^^oT V. i. To be impressed
(on the mind) — knowledge, re-
proof, &c.
i^^^r The marking-nut.
1%^55T, R^STfiq- A pnntlier.
r^^r -5^r See r^^^r.
r^r^^ r/. Reflected ; pop. im-
pressed.
r?% /•. (H) A Musul man lady.
i^^y^ n. M;irkino-nut-oil.
mm^ See CliT"^^.
r^^"^ /". Ashes (of cowdung,
&c.) with wliich Shiva is said to
have smeared his body, and now
used by his devotees.
r^^R n. m\^^ f. Sowing-
seed.
r?T':^i'"T" V. c. To scratch over.
f^r:fiTr^ ad. Jointly or in
common — an estate or a field
hehl.
1^ V, >..
[■^r^ -5" ti. A button and loop.
f^=Rf^^r Non-possession of - The knob answering to the
heirship or other right. JT^^t. 3 A sauce made of
R'lr A marginal note.
r^^ir^r /. (P) Careful inspec-
tion,
nHF/. (p) The van (of an
army). 2 The fore part of a
turban.
f^^r^r?^r (n) Quartermaster
general.
\^'^^^ V. i. (H) To break
loose from control.
\k^ n. (s) The disk of the
sun or a planet. 2 The body
which casts reflection, the sub-
stance. 3 A term for a personage
or tiling considered as that by
which splendor or honor is cast or
conferred upon persons or things
serving subordinalely : ^^^l^
J
pulse. 4 Any thin mixture.
r^^^^ The name of a cele-
brated Brahman Minister of
State to the Emperor Akbar.
Hence, a wise fellow ; a Daniel,
a Solon.
I^^I^r A grain (as of gun-
powder).
r^RT (p) A brother. Used
only in grants and public papers.
V^^^ n. (s) pop. WK a
tliread, &c. worn (around the
arm, &c.) as a badge of one's
forte. 2 Claim laid to ; profes-
sion made of v. ■^1531.
rt-c"!^ n. Lodgings. 2 Re-
sidence in a lodging. 3 The kit
of a hidger. 4 A separate por-
tion of an encampment. 5 Lodg-
ing. 6 fig. Reservation : a re-
served point.
R'^r^^f c. A lodger.
R"^^c7 ad. (a) Altogether,
whodv. 2 Never, not at all.
Pf^TI^ y. i. (h) To stick. 2
To clasji. 3 fig. To set upon.
R^Sr, T^^<\ a. (p) Prime,
eminent. Used in a bad sense :
fcjo ^ix: Jrch thief.
Ro^'flfci^OT ?7. i.To become soft
-a fruit, &c.
r^.^[t^r,r^c^r?^rcT a. Fladd.
2 fig. Cowed (under hard work,
&c.)
rf?5TiT^ j. A false accusa-
tion. i\ HT^, ^TTOT, %.
Mr, r^5y^ n. (p) Crystal-
a-lass.
R^KF ,1. Crystal.
r^§5"r (H)The breast-plate of
a belt (as of a peon).
I^?f (s) A tree sacred to
Shiva. 2 A leaf of it. 3 Its fruit.
r^f^ Any offspring of; a
(man, beast, plant,) sprung from.
2 The crop antecedent (to any
other) : mnr^T f^' ^^^ flTfSim
"^TTiST. Also /'. orwithf^o 5i-
Tt'^ The field of any particular
produce in the preceding season.
PsT^lcT -cT (h) Property;
money, goods. 2 Value, worth.
Rsrr / Messing, a mess. 2
Committing over to an indivi-
dual of a party the several
amounts of montiily pay of all
the members ; the successive
receiving individual foregoing in
return his own monthlv pay for
as many months as there are
members of the party, v. ^^.
[^^4T A debauchee, rake.
rf^r^-^SeeR^TR.
r^^cT^^ir (Vulgar) Thursday.
^Mnd. (h) Also, likewise.
^r / A seed. 2 A testicle.
3 fig. The core, heart (of a
boil, &c.) 4 A clove of garlic.
^r 11. The seed collectively,
2 Sowing-seed.3 Seed,grains,&c.;
any thing viewed as the princi-
#^
304
^r
pie of production of. 4 Cirro-
ommilus or fleecy clouds, v.
fu'es, Ur:, ^^^.
*r^/. The second day of the
vva.\ing or waning moon.
^r^ w. (s) Seed. 2 A seed.
3 Progeny. 4 The originfiting
j)oint ; tlie ])rinciple, root, spring,
o Deep j)iirpose, nieiining at the
bottom, (i Algebra. '/ A caba-
listic lettter, — the mystical letter
which forms the essential part of
the niautra of any deity.
€l^^ //. (s) A ialiel ; a list,
an invoice.
^RnpT^ /?. Aloebra.
qisfiTfr a. Epiihet of a soil
that returns not produce equal
to the seed sown.
qi'sTiHirT a. (s) Marked, cir-
cumscribed.
^r? /I. Iron-ore. 2 The
mass of this ore upon whii-h
sheets of cojijier, &c. are beaten
out. 3 A cart-rope. 4 Bitloben.
•^1^ 7t. Me:isure, model, pat-
tern : '^Tf^^I^T^Tl^rf^T^??}!
f-s
"^f^ /. (a) A dauo;htfer; as
'ff'vT '^\^\ ^ff f ^-^ ^T'^n^.
^I'T f. A conipeiulious y:a-
thering up of a matter in a head-
ing or marginal note.
^1^1" n.f. Faibire of crops.
2 rig. Utter extinction of tribes
or lamilies.
^f^T^^f/. (s'lDiisoustino-, nau-
seous— an object geu. 2 Fright-
ful, m. Disgust.
"^(^ A class of Genii, F.ibled
among Mahomedans.
^f^ The contents of an e^S'.
2 The contents of any soft, juicy
frnit.
^rs" n. A hole (as of rafs,
snakes, foxes, &c.): a den (of wild
beasts).
^^Z\ f. Powder.
W^'U ri. A quantity of calicos
()( ?it5TT:1: a single cali.x or ciip.
.^^rCrff A sppcies of ele-
phant that is without tusk.s. 2
fig. .\ term for a dunijiy ixrson.
f ^i'^Tr /. (h) Powder.
^^cTiiyr y. Pommelina', &c.
^"^r a. (h) Bare, naked.
^^r^Rinr Unwarranted as-
aTT^^rrfr rp i i. , suuiiitiou of official authority. 2
^^^ r. c. To pommel; to | Officious intermeddling. "
beat with the side or soft end of ___ _ ^
the tist. 5^I^KHKr An arroizant ^ve-
f^rc=^,f^c^/. A oeneral or a ^^'^'^Z: - A vain busybody.
lively and smart thumping or J^^l^"^, J^r?"*^ t?, c. To strip
pommeling. roughly and violently. 2 fig. To
J'^r A tViiorant powder. plunder. 3 To strip (leaves,
tl 4i^ '^ branches, &c).
3^r f. Powder, 2 A blow -r^arnV i^r-^m^^ . , • , P
with the side of the fist. |~^ ' "^ .^'uv mmu <ji
_r_.rY scarecrow. 2 fi». A term for
3^l^r_/, An ear-ornament of any person or thing that over-
tetnaies. awes and keeps in check.
f ^^T^ot y. c. To tear with f ^7, fiTH «. That is easi-
claws. • I Iv startled.
f ^^^ot ^,, c. Sf i. To dip. 2 sril% /, Startliii,ir.
fig. To dip into (as into a ^^^ . ^n ,„.,
science. &c.) 3 fig. To hesitate, j^ V. .^taitie.
f ^^5ST .^^\ Doubting : a 'f^*^ r. c. ^. i. To fill up—
doubt. V. ^. ' \ 'in aperture.
J'^^^^r -Jc?r/. A dip. t', ^rr. ^^^^ «. Given to startling.
f^^r A mass (as of en- f^^^r,5^R'^r f. Teaching
tangled threads, &c.) : a tuft (as of [ or explaining. 2 Startling,
])lanls, sprouts, &c)
^'^^r m. J'^^^^r /. The
hand inverted uitli tiie fingers
^m^^, f^RfJT v.r. To Startle,
to frighten, 2 To teach or ex-
plain.
e.\tended ; so as to take up bran, __rp-;^ rr> i i i rr-
fiour, &c. 2 A quantity brought ^^'^^ ^'- '^- io block, stuft.
u|) by the hand so held. 3 xVpp. ,Wi^,^ ad. Imit, of the sound
to the fore claw of a cat. I „f \i(,^\,^s failing suddenly into
^^?r A top-knot. 2 fig,! liquids; plump! flop!
^talks of standing rice, &c. tied igiT^r «, Short, stumpy. 2
together at the heads, forming a 'r,y^^^^ j^^^ ^^^^ -^^ -^^^
huiPCll, rv
^TT-rr r ^ 11 1 . r 1 f^5^^l" /• A dip. V. ^R.
3^^l ^, A blanket formed '^ .^ -^ . '
into a cloak by puckering up ^if^r, ^S'Tf a. Of low
one end into a shape of a hood. staCnrc.
f^^^ -=^r .,^/. Imit. of the f 75? r?(/. In a pitter-patter
sound fancied, or e.xjiressive of
the busy and lively motion ob-
served in the swarming of lice,
Ike.
S^S^ /• The swarming
lof lice, maggots, ike.) : the eager
and ch. morons crowding arou id
and inessing upon (of creditors,
duns, licggars).
^"■^J"^^ ?'. i. To swarm ; —
usfil of lice, bugs 2. To swarm
with (bugs, lice); — a bedstead, a
head.
^rj^^lZ 'pjjg swarming (of
mu^'gots, &c.)2. flg. Great press
(of buisness) : noisy crowding
lof duns, Sec.)
manner; — used of raining. 2
Mutteringly.
^d^d"^ r\ i. To pitter-patter,
jTTf ij"^ w. A term for a short
and stubby person.
^3T -fr (h) a flower or
otlier figure worked, painted,
drawn.
5^r /. (11) A medicinal h^rb,
a simple. 2 Figured work
(flowers, &c.) upon cloth. 3 A
term for any secret and marvel-
ous cure. 4 A stock (as of money
or wit) ready for any exigency. 5
Fragments of hemptops.
f^lfTT
805
^^r
f^RTT,5?:?K a. Decorated
with flowery work.
JTqirr,JTJTr a. short-sized
— iv person or thing.
^^^'T" V, i. To gambol in
the water.
f^r/ A dip. V. ^IT. 2 A
well dug by the brink of a
stream.
J"?f cTf m -^\f. -^ n. An
earthen vessel to hold liquids,
5"^3^r The stock (of a tree) :
the bottom, base (of articles and
fig. of an affair or a story).
^^^ a. Relatintj to the bot-
tom,
■i^^"!?/- Sinking or sujiken
state, lit. fig.
*^ . °
^^^ V. i. To drown or sink.
2 fig. To be immersed (in busi-
ness or study) : to be plunged (in
grief, care, &c.) 3 fig. To be
ruined, blasted — persons, crops,
towns. 4 To be lost ; to pass away
unproductively.
^^^r p. pr. Sinking, declin-
ing ; as ^o tJT^TT -^T5J- ^imT'C-
2 Sufficient to drowii an
article — used of water, oil, &c,
J'^cTl^RT The beginning of
a decadence, v. ^{JT, '^T-
f 3-5:3-q V. i. To bubble. 2
To mumble, mutter,
f SJ-jr A bubble. 2 A blister.
V. fsig, ^T-
fT=Frr,f1"^^/. Drowning
or sinking, lit. fig.
J"^!^^ V. c. To drown or
sink. 2 fig. To plunge in : to
rnin, destroy.
^^°^r a. That causes ruin ;
— esp, used of persons,
^^^^S" ?;. An affair from
which loss is likely, 2 State of
ruin,
f ^f^Rr ^^^I Jfr^- A term for
the sole survivor of a nearly ex-
tinct family.
5tr/. A dip, V. ^iT, h
^STcT n. A loss : dead debt. 2
a. Sunken,
^STcT^S" „, ^n insolvent,
debtor, &c.
39
^^■fcT^cT n. A dead or bad
bond,
|[^r? A sounding lead.
^^1?'' a. Relating to the bot-
tom.
5*15^ ^^- '^'lie foot (of a tree) ;
tlie bottom (of vessels, and fig.
of affairs, &c.) 2 fig. Incipient or
originating portion of,
^^T n. (p) The suttlers and
followers and baggage of an army.
1^ m. f. t4tf. A cloth
thrown over the head and face as
a muffler, v. "Q, ??T^, =3fl^,
j^ n. The bottom, base.
j'^ A drop. 2 (h) a coffee-
berry, 3 Used to serve as a
Standard of excellence : '^
^^K ^? Wo ^T^? 4 Affixed
as a term of exaltation to the
adj. ^T'S : ^Tirf^ifTaTTrJI ^T^-
^^ 3^1^ 'I'he turban is of a
flaming red.
^5^??"^ J'l^^oy w. A man or
piece at chess.
^^?^°T V. i. To swarm ; — as
maggots in a sore,
f^^r Seef^c^r.
^?r /". A granule of gram-
flour, &c,, passed through a sieve
and fried.
J"?"! Prostration of strength.
V. m^, ^^, %T.
5^ ind. An affix to the
word ^^ or ^«bl denoting
unity ; iioS^ ^^ ^^ ; 'TcT ^^
^T«T- It is applicable only to
the numbers below 20; above ! ^f^ /. (h) A
8 Ex. of compounds I'g'^a'i^,
^r^^r^^ n. Sharpness of
understanding,
^rl'iT'^ a. Comprehensible.
fr1"qTSr a. Conceivable.
f ig-JT-.^?: ad. Designedly,
p^uposely, [derstanding,
Jr^^^f^ n. Heaviness of un-
f^^\\ a. pop. Jfcf Wise,
sensible, judicious,
J'f^^r^ Counseling, advising.
f rrff c^f^The play of Fancy.
f f¥t^^ Strength of under-
standing,
f OTr 5^^ A perfect fool.
f ''T (s) The planet Mercury
or the Regent of it, a. s Wise,
intelligent.
f-T 71. See 5^^.
f '^^r A dubber.
f!^^/. Dimof f^^?^r. 2 A
small vessel with a spout, ia
which torch-bearers carry their
oil,
^"•i^ n. A bottle made of
skin to hold oil, &c,
f^^r Wednesday.
^mm V. i. To bring forth
on a Wednesday, — used of a
buffalo. This is an unlucky
event.
|i^r, 5^n:r See f 5^.
f'^r^n.Seel^^r.
Musulman
20 it gives place to l?!"^. female of rank or respectability,
ff^ f. (s)pop. 5^ The un- J"|^,f^^ "-The eyeball, 2
^derstanding or intellect. 2 '^^he pujjil and ins.
Wisdom, sense: Pr, 'sqTtT ^o 'J'^^f/. s Hunger.
Mi^t rqig Mt^^^ ^i^1f. 3 jjjf^cT a. Hungry. 2 fig.
Purpose, 7nind ssTwT "^rTT
Opinion, 5 The will and affec- <
tions, Pr. "9 0 ^T^^" ^53. 6
A device, scheme, 7 ^o In the i
sense of Mind, view, regard, |
is much used in comp. ; as '
Needy,
JT?'^ V. i. To grunt — a buf-
falo, a hog. 2 To blurt out.
fr^r -^r (A) A veil. 2 A
cover of cloth (of a carriage,
palkhi, &c.) 3 The canopy of a
travelling carriage.
JT^tr /. A horse-cloth, Sec.
JTjr '-'llT c. c A pilferer.
^<^^ .^^ A kind of feU.
3^^^ /• Muttering', grum-
bUn^;. r. ^1T^, ^^- 2 Diizzlc |
5^5?: or ^f acL Irait. of the j
drizzliii<5 of rain, of the li<i:lit
bvealhui<; of tlie breeze, of light .
and rauid rumihig. I
S^S^'^ 7". i, 'I'o nmmhle,
nnitter. 2 To be covered with
soft sovdes or dii-t — tcetli, bod}',
&:c. 3 To drizzle.
fT^r ■?:?[/. Mouhl.r."^, ^3",
2 The tartar of the teeth.
^Tt{Z^ V. i. To be filthy ;—
esp. the face or body.
^^^ V. i. To become
mouldy,
^^^r Mould ; a bare spot
on a looking glass, a. Foul,
fdthy.
5^r (ii) Mould, r. ^ ^5". a.
Bad. ■^nJ\f. Badness.
^U'^ (p) A bore (as in a
pearl): a little hole (as arising
in a vessel). 2 /. Disgrace, v.
^^, il g. of s.
.f^sT (p) A bnsfion. 2 Bas-
tion-form disposition of sol-
diers.
^^o A caste. 'I'liev fire
basket-makers ami workers with
bamboo and cane.
^^?r IMucus oi'tlie eye.
^TKl^ pi. {H k a) Distress-
ful condition ; pUyht, picJcle,
trim.
^^J"^ af/.Cbatterinuly, Avitb
light and glil) ratJe — used of
children speakin<:. v. er^, gy^.
5^5^? J"r^3^#r^ (Pj The
Indian nigliliugale.
J^^r A term ol" respccthd
address for an elderly person.
^^rjoTlcf a. Oily, creasy. 2
Lubricous. .1 Poor, tame, vapid
— sprech, couduct, cce.
^S'^nffcf H. Oiliness. [less.
^°^W;. Impotent. 2 Lax, care-
5^^ '^ A soundinir lead.
306
^^ f. (h) Reverencing or
iieknowledging merit, rendering
tlie due tribute (to learning,
virtue), v. ?:t'3, ^^.
1^ or ^^ A stopple ; a bung.
^^ (ij) A poition of the
fiuctilication of tlie Ilemp-
plaiit. 2 A dower, leaf,&c. worked
or drawn, o Apjdied to any
thing novel and sirikiug.
^ /". JiOS's (in trade, kv) :
loss (by discount) : dead money
(by liiul debts), v. V, vfTJT, ^T- i
2 n. The bottom (of a thing
gen.) 3 The root of a tril)e : esji.
an original and a yet subsij.ting
family holding a share o,f a
|T5f^ ^/. OpuJeni: respect-
able, worthy.
^ A diop. 2 A coffi-e-berry.
^^T f. (\^ulgar for ^T^) Wis-
dom, sense,
^r (h) E.xhansted state
(froni f.itip;'ie). v. fiTH, M'S,
'\
|5:^^rcf (s) The name of t])e
regent of the jjlanet Jupiter,
the Guru of the gods. 2 The
plan.l, Jupiter. ' TThursdav.
fi:^qr?r^i^ ^p) pop.f^^q?r^K
^ ??. The cry of sheep, calves,
&c ; bleat.
^ a. 'fwo : as ^ ^^ '^, ^
^ (v) A piivative p-.irticle
and iuseperable pre))osition.
^il5:^r /. Disres|.ect.
^■"ifif^ «. That has lost or
is without reputation.
%^^^ ad. In vain.
Iff^R a. Perfidious, false.
-•Tiy. Perfidiousness.
•\
^^ 71. A word formed from
<?^ to rhyme with it. It ex-
presses irrelevancy, opjjosition.
nroTWT^ ; ^T '^ifJTrr'Jf \^ "a^ifw
^^r^^r Breach of rule :
absence of regidation concern-
ing: attrib. that violates rules.
•s
^^rr a. That is out of
service.
^^[<r f. Absence of service.
^"^r y. An even number. 2 A
term used by boys at school in
asking permission to go out for
•\ r~v
^i*^"^ /• (P) Foolishness.
^^ a. Foolish, silly.
^^^ a. Loosf^, lawless, ad.
Licentiously. 3 /. Irregularity.
^^^ f. n. I.aminre of tin
covei-ed over with some coloring
suljstance.
^^^r a. Covered or orna-
mented -with ^'^r'S".
^^^ f- (t) Properly a lady,
the wife of amusulman grandee ;
po)). A inusuhnan woman that
remains single after having reach-
ed the years of puberty.
^^r f. (u) S( rved, supplied
state ; e:;einption (of a ])erson,
work) from care, or from likeli-
hood (;f daniMge. '^1«T "^^
«7T^3J f«E3I# ^mm ari^f^
^o "ill^ ; 2 By irieton. The
stock provided : ^^l'=€\ $»
%JTf Mr'f r^'I? (Vulg.) Quick-
ly, smartly.
%^^ »./. %WcJf / The hi-
furcation of a tree or stake : the
s|)ace between every two tingers
^"'' *"''^- ^ [out scruple.
^^T^ ad. Fearlessly, vvith-
^^^ a. Tasteless, v;i|)id.
g^fST, €I^f^riR"a. Forty-two.
•^l-qf^iT/. ^^r«5" //. The chaps,
and esp. the lower cha]). Lsed
of the jaws of beasts ; but of
those of human beings only in
contem])tn.ons term. 2 The hollow
above the chin.
^^V^^ pi. A term foront^'s
forty-two imnu'diatc ancestors
(half on the fatlier's side and
hall on the moflier's side):
%r%rr
807
Irl"^
•jjj g-ogj^-^ ^t^. Confined in
use to occasions of adjuration or
^ abusing. [untenanted.
%r^n^ -^ a. (p) Desolate,
"^srq'r See "^^^r.
^4^^ al. (p) Fearlessly;
promptly.
^^R a. (p) Wearied out
(from fatigue, pain, vexation);
suffering heavy sickness.
%3" w. An island. 2 A
cluster of trees, &c., springing
from one stock. 3 A Bamboo or
Plantain, &c., planted in order to
have a clump spring from it
4 fig. A cluster (as of relatives
or friends).
^JJ^f /• A small frog. 2
The rising of the bieejjs muscle
on being pidled forcibly, v.
^T5, ^if^, ^T'sl^-
^r (h) a son. In this sense
the word is little used ; but it
as also ^^T'^t, is of common
use as an expletive with con-
temptuous and sometimes of
fond implication, although often
with no implication whatever:
^?r /. (h) a daughter.
^■^ n. A boil. 2 Enlarged
navel. 3 The apple of ^T5T,
^^ HRKT, &c. 4 The de-
scendinij bowel in prolapsus ani.
5 The coil of the umbilical cord
in the ])it of the navel.
^^^r f. A small frog: a
female frog. 2 The frush or
frog of a horse's foot. 3 See
^3f ^1 sig. 2. [-c,.^,,_
>^f s'r, t;?f 5?r / a small
^^r f. (h) a chain or fetter
for the foot. 2 A silver orna-
ment of the ohape of a fetter. 3
A handcuff. 4 fig. A tie, clog.
*\
^^^ A froo-.
^^r^ a. (h) Shapeless,
^clumsy. ^ ^ [-^_ Dissolute.
^S"^(h) Licentious practices.
^^ fl. (h) Clumsy,
^^r /. Weeding, &g.
^^^ V. c. To weed (a field,
&c.) 2 To &0W.
i^r a. (p) Disclosed; re-
vealed clearly to view : become
visible. X^\VT^ ^{1=^^^ ?TW^ ^55-
^'^TR""r ??. i. To become visi-
^'"^f 71. Sowing-seed.
^^ (h) Plan, scheme, plot.
2 Purpose, design. 3 J^Vstem,
method (in a work.) 4 Form,,
figure.
^cT'^lf /". Taking the measure
of: cuUingout (as of cloth).
qcT^ V. c. To tiike the
measure of : to cut out (cloth, &c.)
2 fig. To lav (a slap) across
one's mouth or face.
^cToT a. (p) Extraordinary,
eccentric. In bad sense.
'k^mX ad. Methodically :
moderatel}'.
^cT[^'T V. c. To mfike,totaKe
tlie measure of, &c. 7*0 (jive the
measure of one^s fist (over the
face): hT^T^': ^^T ^T^^fT-
fq'SJT H=^t '^l'?' "g"!^!-
qc[r?5" or ^5" a. (h) That is onl
of time — singing or ])laying. 2
fig. Lieicntions, dissolute.
sfcTf;^, ^cir^f^ a. Foi-ty-two.
^^i^ p. Planned, formed. 2
Cut out — cloth, &c.
"\
^^^ o. (p) Wearied out.
\^^,^^l^\ a. (h) Care-
less, reckless. 2 Devoid of taste,
.'■i Pitiless.
^^r^ n. Roots and fibres,
esp. of wide-spreading grass and
herbs; a tuft of radicles.
^^rs" a. Muddy, swampy.
"^crroTF-^r (p) a kindofgrape.
2 or g'c^T'TTTS'Trza'^ A kind of
])oiucgranate. 3 Quince-seed.
^i'l"^ f. (v) A b-'?ence oT jus-
tice ; prevalence of injustice.
W^i^l Non-po'isession of
claim ; the state of being with-
out titl-e or right to. 2 An ac-
quittance.
iFcT^cT-f^cf ad. Without
difficulty, hesitation.
%R^ /7. Sorrowful, dispirit-
ed : i"f^w?1/. Dispiritedness.
*\
•^^^^ ad. (ri) Without fear,
boldly.
^K^r a. Careless, fearless.
^tTR (h) Traffic, trade.
%Trfr A trader.
^R^f a. Loose, dissolute. 2
^Ui.iuly— achild. [heedless.
^'^W a. (p) Inadvertent,
^^i" 71. The navel (of ani-
mals). 2 Umbilical hernia; swol-
len or enlarged navel : con-
temptuously, the navel.
^^^ a. Devoid of order ;
jmarchical. [matter).
t^RF Disclosure (of a
^■^m V. i. To utter its
bleat — a calf or sheep.
•^•^r f. The navel.
^f5" ^'- (P) Nonness, lack.
'^m\m Uncertainty.
I^K a. (p) Sick, ill. 2
Wearied, jaded. 3 Laxly. Ex-
ceedingly and extravagantly
great, strong, violent, &c. ; as
tHI^ xri^g --^IXf -^t^, &c.
t^^WT-■g^«iT-f'?^^• -i That is
inaccessible toattack — ahill-fjrt,
&c.
^^l<r /. Sickness or illness.
2 Weariedness.
^JTlc^JT a. That may not be
perceived, discovered, or detect-
ed; hard to be jierceived, &c.
^^Tfg"?!, %^mr^ a. (p) Im-
l)roper, unjust.
^^f=[cf ad. (p) Impolitely,
rudely. 2 also ^5^"^^ a. Im-
polite, rude.
^T^Z n. Oil or ghee that is
foul and thick.
^'Ul (p) Blasted honor,glory,
eclat : lack of honor : disgraced
state, altrib. Of blasted honor.
^X^W f. Cross plough mg.
^Tci' V. c. To cross plough.
'^Tl f. Tlie scum of oil.
'^T\^ f. The total of an ad-
dition : an amount. 2 A set of
%rNT
308
m^T
figures of a row. 3 Adding, v.
>?f^iT^fr /. Filling up of a
number; fraudulent rendering
(of men, Sec.) for muster.
^"^ See R"?^.
^^m^ M\ n. (p) That is
without reins. 2 That heeds not
the bridle. 3 fig. Refractory. 4
Inconvenient. 5 ad. Out of the
direct road.
^^^K A stone-di^fier, a
pioneer.
%?^iT^R A form of oath.
It consists in taking oft" the
^^ & Vf^K from an idol, and
sweating by them. v. ^I^,
'g'^wf. 2 .An agreement rati-
fied by this oath.
^^r (h) a cocoanut hol-
lowed to serve as a vessel.
^^m a. (p) That upon
which nothing can apply or
bear ; viz. inaccessible — a fort :
impracticable — a fort : unattain-
able— an object : incurable or
undiscoverable — a disease, a
trouble, ad. Without any help. 2
Witliout any ground. 3 Prompt-
ly, in a trice, m. Remediless.
%^r5I^ a. Sf ad. (a) That is
without ap])rehension or scruple :
fearlessly, recklessly.
^^r f. A half of a hollowed
cocoanut (serving as a bowl).
- v
^^ n. (p) A bag of money,
or money which Rajas, &c.,
cany in their train to scatter
amongst the people.
V^^ -^ (p) Foolish, silly.
^^^ /. Mixed sowinrj-seed.
*^f^^^r ad. (p) Without
fe;ir, scruple.
^^WM -37r^ a. (p) That is
without heir, master, proprietor.
^^\X'^ m^ Property want-
ing an lieir. 2 Intestate property.
'^^r^Hf (p) Non-possession
of right of inheritance; the
state of being without claim.
^mX[ (n) Clearnnce (of
del)ts) : despatch and disposal of
(as of duties, jobs, &c.) : exhaus-
tion (of a fund, &c.)
^^W a. (h) Twenty-two.
t^T a. (p) Good, proper,
fitting, ad. Well, good.
^^^ a. k ad. (p) Daring
(In a bad sense). 2 Shameless.
'km\ or %5^ ind. (v) In the
name of; occuring only in bonds,
&c., as ^^^ ^9Tift ^Trj^UT
^57^^ a. Shameless.
^f^Tt^rt. Devious, disorderly
—a person, conduct.
'^^^ a. Insensible.
•^^•T n. (h) Flour of gram.
2 A sweatmeat made of it.
^^r^'-T a. Inattentive, negli-
gent. 2 Insensible.
^5^^!^ n. (p) Excessive : in-
calculable.
«rHT a. Unmusical.
^^'T V. i. To be plump and
almost ripe (on the tree) — a
fruit, &c.
•\
^C^r Beleric myrobolam. 2
A certain public paper for the
guidance of the Mamledars.
^^cf^irr??" (a) An escheat.
%rcT=lJT[^rat /. The office
taking cognizance of ^'=?n"iT
flTrl & ^zw^li (escheats and
measure-stamps).
^?"^ -^ f. (p) Excessiveness.
%f7: arf. (p & a) In the
absence of. 2 (p) In the pre-
sence of.
%^^IT^ a. (p) That has lost
or is without reputation, credit;
— used of persons (not of actions,
or attairs).
^5?r Mutiny.
^^il^ -T a. (p) Bereft of
consciousness.
^^^ 71. The fork of a tree.
^^ n. Any contrivance (as
a stile, &c.) by which ingress
and egress, whilst it is jiermitted
to man, is debarred to beasts. 2
The brackets betwixt which a
word or bentence, omitted in its
proper place, is written elsehere :
the ^T^q^.
'^^^\ -% /. Of the color of
the Egg-plant.
^J^ /. (h) An assembly
(whether for deliberation or for
diversion). 2 The session of an
assembly. 3 Sitting, session. 4
A seat or manner of sitting. 5
Any thing spread or placed
to sit on. 6 A pedestal, socket. 7
The bottom of a thing. S Stall-
tax in a market. 9 Squatting
down (as through fatigue, ob-
stinacy, &c).
^JUT f. Imprisonment
without exaction of labor.
^SPTHR A pension, the
stipend of a sinecure.
^RrCTr Sentinel-watch in
which it is not required of the
watchman that he walk about.
%5rincT Boiled rice that has
absorbed all its water.
tjlfRirrr f. Service that
does not require to leave one's
house or village.
^Zm^\ f. A ledirer in which
items are set down once for (i. e.
are not brought to any more
regular account).
<T?"r (II) Insurrection, rebel-
lion, mutiny.
^^m\ An individual of a
class of mendicants.
^^ A bull: an ox or cas-
trated bull. 2 fig. A blockhead.
tcJy?ir?T m. -^i? n. Oblique
direction ; ])asition on both
hands (in front of a jjcrson,
thing or spot assumed) of two
villages or other objects or spot
assumed : app. also to either of
such villaijes or objects.
-sjcTqr^r A ghat over which
laden bullocks can pass.
%c^jqr-^r (Bullock-killer.) A
name amongst the '^^v^ &
■^inart classes for the planet
Jupiter.
%^^r V. i. To sit.
^Rfi^ A he-2;oat.
m^T
309
^TT
^r^3"^r'llr f. a term for any
assemhlv of wild, tumultuous
(loin<js ; a bear-garden.
tr^j^r -=ir ??«. ^\^^\ f. a
huge gobbet or mouthful, v.
2 Any thing stuffed into the
mouth. V. 'ElT'il, -^K, ^^.
^r^^of, #F^^^ y. i. T.)
scamper about wildly and wan-
tonly— cows, calves. 2 fig. To ba
extravagantly and obtrusively
full, exact ; — used of ^TI'^l'C,
■^^, #T^^- 3 In angry phrase-
ology. To eat, i. e. to cram.
^f^^r m. ^r^^ n. A loose
bundle.
^r^r A he- cat. 2 fig. A
huge, loutish person. 3 A kid-
ney. 4 The chest.
tr^tfr / ^r^fi n. a light
term for the neck. With verbs
implying injurious action ; «IX-
t^q^r^/. Calling out loud-
ly, with implication of weari-
someness and unprofitableness.
Hence fig. Wearisome and un-
profitable teaciiing; toilsome
and fruitless labors, v. ^t.
^ft^^rr^ A hvpocritical
profession of deadness to the
world ; sanctimoniousness.
^m^^ v.c. To Strip (a plant)
by nipping off its crop and the
tops of its stems.
^f^^^ V. i. To become crisp-
ed or curled and diminutive —
plants.
f'r^fr, ^r^r /. c a young
sprout ; an unfolded spike of
leaves.
^r^, tr^r The crop (of a
plant) ; or a top of a stem : a
sprout.
^r^( f. A young shoot,
^m^l (p) A breach (in a
wall). A cell in a wall (as for
prisoners) : a vault or cellar in
a wall or the ground (for
stores).
^m\ The umbilical cord
swollen. 2 or ^I3T"^T ^TJTI
The protuberance of a gravid
womb, li An.untidy protuberance,
about the navel, of the ■q'TrlT
or F3i§.4 A large and roundish
flower or bud unexpanded.
tfJTr, ^[iir^r a. Loutish. 2
Clumsily big — a garment, &c. 3
Blockish, idiotic.
mmT A division of the ^1-
■^T^ caste.
^(^ n. A prick (from a
thorn, Sfc). 2/. R. The point of
a thorn. 3 W. The beak of a
bird.
c. To claw. 2 R &c. To tear
up (grass, &c.) with the nails.
^f=^??^r, ^M^T\ A ^ gripe
with talons or nails. 2 W, ^1^,
^f^*r A mass (as of flesh,
dough, &c.) torn off by the
mouth or hand. v. g, ^]^,
ff^^r m. ^['^^ n. A loose
bundle.
%r^^q"fcr^r ^^X. a term for
a person acquainted with all the
_T)rivate minutiae of. j-^f ^^^^^
m^^^ f. A gap ill a row
lf^r%^jrr,ir^n%:3qTa. oap-
^toothed. ^.^^^ ^^
«lf^*^r /. Pricking. 2 Taunt-
%-7^ V. c.c To prick. 2 To
thrust in (any pointed body). 3
fig. To taunt, v. i. To prick,
pierce.
^i^T'T V. c. To fear with
talons Or nails ; to lacerate.
tf^r, il'^l (Vulgar) The
posteriors.
^l^n a. Acriminate.
»\
'^r¥ (h) Weight, dignity,
influence. 2 Honor, credit ^in an
affair).
'^F'sT^ a. Huge, burly — the
body : loose and bulky — a bun-
dle, a load : coarse and rough —
work. 2 Grossly thick — cloth,
skin.
#[511 -ITT (h) a load.
^f2r n. A finger or a toe. 2
The measure of afinger's breadth.
3 A fingerful, i. e. a small
quantity (of honey).
^TJ^TOf, ^-JlSTot V. c. To
squeeze and injure by the fin-
j>ers.
^f^ w. A short, straight
pod of the tamarind. 2 A Stump
(of a pen, a rope, &c.)
^T^ n. A contemptuous term
for the head, noddle, pate, sconce.
^f^ n. A spherical follicle
or capsule (as a pod of the poppy,
cotton-plant, &c); any small just-
formed fruit. 2 App. to several
things of this general appear-
ance : as ^R^T-i -f^«qi'^ -#-
o3l^ ^I^; the oil-cup of
lamps ; the bowl of a spoon. 3
The nipple of a breast.
^T3"^r a. Bare, uncovered —
the head, the person. 2 Bare
about the crop — a tree ; desti-
tute of the usual appendages — a
cow's head without horns, or
with short horns, a hand with-
out fingers, a hill without trees, a
house without roof; a widower.
^T^^rif ^ V. c. To bare, strip,
denude (a tree). 2 fig. To plun-
der, pill. See Ex. xxxii, 24, 25.
^T^^f f. A head- shaven
woman, a term for a widow.
tr^f^, it^ n. See ^TS".
^r^"^ n. Curds, milk, #,
boiled rice, cakes, &c. mixed
up together and presented in
oblation to T'^TvIS^ft. &c., by
a company of at least five
married women and one virgin.
V. ^^. 2 The act of so mix-
ing these things, v. ^^.
^T^"^ /. n. A pool for buffa-
loes to lie in.
^TT'^r/. Shaving, &c.: pill-
ing : scolding.
^r^oj ^, f.^ ^Q shave the
head. Used contemptuously. 2
fig. To pluck, pill, to shave. 3
fig. To scold or abuse coarsely ;
to wiff.
^rsfr /. Cant. Humbling
by vehement vociferation and
abuse; blowing up, rowing, setting
down.
^f^^ 71. (Board.) A side
■^rT^T
310
€r^
of ft ship- ■^5ji' ^To Star-
bi)ard ; ■^l? %T» Larboard.
^(^''TTS" V. A revilint; term
for a cocoanut : esj). when ofiVreil
as a gift where somethiiii; ol
value is given : ^TcriH ^T^ ^'l<»
^IJIT^T"^ 311^ There is no
likoliiioodof anv thin>' to be ™t.
V- ^ ».. ° "
^rST/. dim. ^rf^ //. (ii) A
roundish to)) (of a tliinp: geu.);
as the top of tlie uose, tlie nip-
])le ; a knob, boss.
^i'^ f. A flot.h thrown over
the liead and body as a cloak. j\
g, JTIK:. 2 An artist's brusli
or ]iencil.
WA^ a. nafhcr blunt.
^Im, il'^Z'n V. i. To be-
come l)huit. ^ [toothed.
^v^m^ -^r -^r a. Gap-
€^rr%? /. ^miW^ n. A
gap ill a row of teeth.
^i'Aim V. c. To blunt (a
weapon).
^r^r a. Blunt, dull.
tr^Tlfr f. A staff of bamboo
witli a to;)knot or bnncli of
clotii. It is carried in jirocession
before great men, and is used
ill the lance-exercise.
'^-'^
^iA[ f. A jioint or pointed
end. 2 An artist's lirush. 'A w
A j)lug of cloth, &c. 4 A clout.
^I'"-T (s) Perception. 2
Explaining. .3 Knowledge. 4
Informing. 5 s Arousing.
^f^ a. That exphiins; that
jioints out, that t} piHes : that
instructs.
^f'-T^f^ a. s That is within
tlie compass of the understand-
ing.
^r^T*^ V. c. To perceive. 2
To explain : to inform.
^Tf'T'T V. Exj)Idininir, teach-
ing; pointing ont: counselling;
arousing; making aware of.
^f'-^^rq" a. s Proper to be
cxjilained, &c. ; to be taught.
^fyr-:=^f^f^r a term for a
round-bellied and hiuipish per-
son.
^C-^F^^ V. c. To explain,
teach ; to point out ; to instruct,
a])prize.
•\
^r'^l^'^ a. s Incomprehensi-
hle, unintelligible.
^rrq'cr p. (s) Explained, de-
clared : instructed.
^I*T 7?. Aw offeiinii; (of food)
to an id(d. v. '^T'ta^. 2 Poet.
A^ictuais, viands. '6 Whcaten
paste to rub over the T^JT. v.
'SH. 4 Olfals, orts.
^f^/. The cry uttered hy
bellowing and at the same time
l)eating the mouth with the
hand. It is the cry of distress,
or of complaint against ; except
(luring the f3iJ?3TT. v. TTK-
HT^. 2 OuLcrv in srcn.
^l^^r a. Incapable of arti-
culating partictdar letters — or-
gans of speech : speaking lisp-
ingly — a jierson : so sjioken ; — a
word. 2 Not didy solved in the
boiling —pulse or rice.
^f^^r /, llesllatinp: and
stammering, as in great fright
or eoiirusioii. v. "^orfg. of s.
^Rc^oT V. i. To make an
outcry by Ijellowing and beating
the mouth with the hand. .2 tig.
To go to pot, to come to nothing,
— an undertaking, a counsel.
^f^l^R /. A general outcry
of lamentation or of complaint.
cTf^fcS" Hurry skurry, con-
fusion, stir (as attending prepa-
rations (or guests, &c.)
^r^r f. The navel.
^r^^r An official person at
C)Ia}a, who, when a company of
])ilgriins arrives, walks before
them, beating his mouth.
im\Z^ V. i. To become
notorious ; to be noised abroad.
^mm m. ^m\Z m. n. Pub-
licity (of a matter or a person).
2 General outcry. 3 A clamorous
complaint.
^Wfot V. c. Sf i. Poet. To
call loudly.
^\^\i^ V. i. Poet. To hoot
or screech as an owl : to howl as
a jackal, &c. : ^T5T*rr«;<t ^-
sfJia f^^T^fT ^T^TT^rTt H See
Is. xxxiv. II, lii— 15. 2 To
cry out loudly ; to bawl.
^rr/. Jujube-tree. 2 n. Its
fruit. 3 ?H. A color of horses,
distinguished into ^^l^i^ &
<Tt^^T«}r<: Bay and Chcsnut :
uttrib. — a horse.
^in (h) a Stuff for sackinor
and carpeting : a sack or carpet
made of it.
■^f^ The writini^ reed.
^f"^ Sjfeech, saying-, words:
*TI-^T ^I^ ^^X\ %TH:t tr^THT':
•TT^'^. 2 Reproof, rebuke. «,
tflTW : JSJT ^qxri-g ^^i oT^rit
tfc^^r a. Eloquent. 2 Talka-
tive. 3 That talks — a jiarrot. 4
Become able to talk — a little
child.
%^'^^[ -m^ a. Loqua-
cions, prating.
t^^^^r m. ^^^\ f. Terms
for a prater.
%'^^ V. i. To speak. 2 To
talk. 3 To sound — an instru-
ment of music, r. c. To say :
to tell. 2 To rebuke : if\ ij?i«f
ir^t ff^^r 'i^I $F#'?f. 3 To
call, name : qi^jl^t ^'^fT ^r-
fr?^aj ^f^of „_ Intercourse,
converse. r , ,,
^ [or talks.
^tr^clT p. pr. That speak.s
^fc^^Fc^r 7/t.f. (ii) Prosper-
ity, affluence.
^fc^r^^, ^mm V. c. (ii) To
call, summon, invite. 2 n. A
call or sinnmons.
^r^rff m. f. ^r^^R /. c.
Popular talk ; a report.
^f^^r^f^r, ^r^lCfc^r / Con-
versation, conference ; debating.
^rc^f^c-Tfg-JTfs/. A term for
any occurrence i-n casual agree-
ment with an idle prediction ;
a mere coincidence, ik x(^.
•s rv
^l^r /■ A tongue, Innguage,
speech. 2 An agreement : a
promise.
€r5yi=^
311
^grr
^r^^^r^^ /. (h) Conference
concerning (some compact) :
discussion in order to come to
some settlement.
^rc^=T^r^^ ad. Altogether.
vfT. 2 Openly, explicitly :
??Tir-?r sfii' tii:-^ 'ti^cT ^^^
^ICt^r-^/. (H)Tlie first sale
of goods occuning after the
dawning of the day. It is usually
for ready money ; and the luck
of the diiy is viewed as deter-
mined by it.
t[?:W See ^mi-
»\
^[25" Aloes. 2 Thickened and
clotted curds, paint, &c. 3 Re-
fuse (of grain, &c.)
^\'^m n. A toothless mouth.
^\^ V. i. To thicken, clot
— hlood, paint, 2 To have its
gluten fully formed — wheat,
gram. 3 tig. To be blotted out
of mind — an acquaintance, a
knowledge. 4 To become
blunt — a tool. r. c. To grease;
to smear (victuals, a thing in
j;en.) with oil, &c.
^r^^r^ ad. Up to the brim.
^i^^^f. The ceremony of
conducting a bride in procession
to her husband's house after
the wedding. 2 The honorable
dismissal (with presents) of the
friends and attendants of the
bridegroom after a marriage. 3
The ceremony ]ierfornied by the
people of a village, when evil
spirits have entered it, of pro-
])itiating them by offerings, and
then conducting them with
music to the confines of the
villa;re.
^rs-fcryj- y; 'j^j^g ceremonious
conducting or bringing on his
wayof a departing guest or friend,
by accompanying liim for a short
distance ; seeinr/ off. #To3f^0T.
See the noun ^To3^Trr\. 2 To
forget, drop ; HlT^ f^^T#I^-
^r^r A clout (to dip into
ink, paint, cowdung-wash, in
order to besmear any thing ; to
stuff into and stop up a hole). 2
A blot.
sirSTf r An escort, a conduct-
ing party. 2 Conducting.
^15" (s) The name of the
ninth incarnation of Vishnu. 2
A Budhist. a. s Invented, form-
ed by ^fli; imaginary.
Z^\^^^\, Ninety-two.
S^rr^Tor^ /. A disease: fig.
trouble, bother, ]icst.
Eighty-two.
sq-rr^-'r, ^^K\Z\ a. Almost
ripe — a mango, &c. on the tree :
hard from maturity ; — used of
S^IC^r Beleric myroholan.
fvj^l^T'^T *rTTt III the assem-
bly thou'lt not get out a syllable
even (the half of ■^?T) ■^•
^^qcT^fC Thursday.
^ST n. (s) The divine sub-
stance as well as cause of the
universe. All existencies are the
development of it, and are, after
the consummation of periods, re-
sumed into it ; to be again pro-
jected into being, apparently
])evsonal, but actually mere
emanation. 2 The four Vedas.
3 In comp. A Brahman. 4 Con-
fusion and general pollution
from disregard of tlie divisions
of caste. 5 Marvel, mystery,
eni;xma.
^ST^df^ s The universe.
sfST^^ n. (s) The religious
duties of a Brahman.
^^mE f. A very complicated
knot. — that which is given to the
^^^J- ^ [verse.
JT^Tir^ -m^^ (s) The uni-
^^Sff^ Confusion arising
from neglect of the distinction
of caste.
^^"^A 11. (s) One of the
four states of life through which
the r>rahman passes — ^tliat from
the ^51 until ^■^. 2 Absti-
nence from sexual commerce
with women ; either for a time,
or for the whole period of life.
^Sr^lft A Brahman from
his "^^T until marriage. 2 A
Brahman that religiously ab-
stains from all se.\ual commerce
with women ; either for a time
or through life.
sr^rf^r^r a day of Brahma.
2 The retrospect and prospect
taken on the first day of the
year, of certain ])ast and future
events in the history of the
world.
*\
^qJ?^ Brahma, the first of
the Hindu triad, as Fashioner of
the universe. 2 A village-god
set up by the ^T«rT?:, ^?jT'C,<S:c.,
and having a Brahman for his
priest, — that which is given to
the 5TT^W.
^a"5frC Enmity to Brah-
™'^'^^- ^ [Brahman,
^^^^rrrr a. That hates a
^5Tf=ff[fJT n. s Absorption
into and identification with
^gTRS" a. Absorbed in the
contemplation of :^^.
"^^^^'A The universal de-
struction that takes place at the
Old of every hundred years of
Bralnua. 2 fig. Any great catas-
^'•"l^^^'^;^ ' ^ [Bralirad.
^SnrUfT /. Obtainment of
^5T^r¥ a. Any one sprung
from a Brahman.
^Sim^^r /. _^IIolding the
doctrine of 3?%fr or pantiieism
^STW n. s The study of the
Vedas.
^aT-ry n. The aperture sup-
posed to be at the crown of the
head, through which the soul
takes its flight on death.
sToTr^ The savor of divine
knowledge.
^Srrr^^ The ohost of a
■^ 5fUT that in his life-time pos-
sessed high attainments, and
indulged a haughty disdainful
spirit. 2 The ghost of a Brahman,
ar^Vc^r \^\ f. The destiny
of every creature as written iu
its forehead by Brahma. 2 fig.
Any speech, promise, iS:c. that
is sure and certain gen.
^srr^
312
j^r^irr
Wm'l A ^rq" of a particular
"'■'^'-'[; [Brahma,
^^c^f^ The heaven of
^5^1'^ s. A company of
Bialnnans. 2 fig. A term for a
Brahman eminent (for piety or
Icaniiiiij).
^^fTfi", ^JrflcT a. (s) That
knows g^.
^^^rj^-q" 71. s Identifica-
tion witii J{^.
^57^5 n. (s) The order
or Course ordained by Brahma.
2 The Brahmanical thread. 3
The destiny, as estaolished by
Brahma which ])residps over
marriage. 4 I'lie cord with which
the heij^ht of tlie bride and bride-
groom (at a wedding) is measured.
^^e"l%/. The creation of
Bralnnji in opp. to f^'^\f^'^
^^^^ n. Brahminical pro-
perty. 2 Debt to Brahmans. 3
I)el)t in gen.
W^r^^ f. The kiUing of a
Brahman.
^^-g-r^in a. That has killed
a Brahman.
^^^,^^^\^\n. That knows
^?I as the one real suljstance
underlying all existencies, spiri-
tual and material— as the enti-
ty of which all objects are phe-
nomenal forms.
si'-^yiR ti. Knowledge ofSTST
as the cause and the essence of
the universe.
?^r Brahma, the first of
the Hindu triad and the form of
the Deity as the evolver, con-
structor and fashioner of the
universe.
^^TF^R Reoarding the uni-
verse and all things to be forms
of ^Sf: ^o ^ffl -«m.
^^r-4r ^\z / See ^^^^
Sig.3.
^oTl'? n. The universe, the
fourteen worlds. 2 The crown
of the human head. 3 Use<l in
C()m|). to convey the sense of
I^Ionstrousness, cxtf.iisiveness :
^^[T^JTC The universe.
^gTR^ The bliss of^^. 2
The bliss subsisting in abporp-
tioa into ■^^. 3 tig. Any great
jov.
^Srr^ n. Wenpon of Brah-
ma, an arrow, a straw or any
thing charmed and endowed by
the recitation over it of a mant-
ra. 2 The curse of a Brahman.
^f^Tf^^ n. The sacred and
mystic name ot the Hindu triad-
form Deity.
^rST'^r (s) The first of the
four great divisions of the
Hindu body, or an individual of
it.
m^^^^ A Brahman enter-
tained as a menial (in the
house of a Brahman).
^I^-'^fr^ a. Brought, used,
or touched by a Brahman —
water, a vessel.
^fg-qiTR^? n. Feefling of
Brahmans as a religious act.
^r^?% a. Relatinor to the
Brahman. 2/. A female of the
Brahman-caste.
Wl^K'^n n s. The state, office,
business of a Brahman, Brah-
msmism.
^f^c I^f rC A form of marri-
age— that in which the bride
duly adorned and furnished is
bestowed freely on the bride-
groom.
^f^€^r /. A plant : a com-
mon name of several shrubs.
^r^fl^qfrT/. Divine wealth,
i. e. ■?<;Tra, "^^IT, ^^\s fdffigr,
&c. 2 A pp. to holy or sacred
rites, business, &c.
^R: See r^^f^-
^ The twenty-fourth conso-
nant.
^^ V. m. Victuals or food ;
esp. offering of food to f^?^T-
^, Tn«"^^?fT, &c. 2 Vuig.
Tlie food or |)rey of.
^^^% f. Glow throuo;h eat-
ing or the api)lication of chillies,
poppers, &c.
^r^r ad. Imit. of the sound
or expressive of the manner in
which dust powders, &c., Hy up
and abroad on being flapped.
^^r? n. The hollow of a
side of the body, esj). as formed
by the sinking of the parts from
fasting. V. ■^^, t?^, qi^.
iT^r^r/. Sunken slate of the
flanks, &c. See »T^T2 : ^\'Z H-
^T^rW ifilj. 2 The hollow of
sunken sides, v. cj^, -q^g, qi^.
^^\^\ m. ^^\f\ /. A reel.
V. 5?T. g. of S.
iT^ff^r/. Misleading, <S:c.
^^(m V. c. (II) To mislead.
2 To i)ewilder.
iT^^^-SF^ ad. Imit. of the
suddenly blazing up of fire ; of
j)owder going otf ; of dust flying
up, &c.
^^^ a. Strong, lusty, huge,
iirm — persons, things, loads,
cakes. 2 Copious, plentiful.
^^ c. (s) A worshipper,
votary, or follower of; one de-
voted to ; «Jig§;'ai, fxjTlV^.
V^3T-STifHflT^. Titles of God,
or of Rama, or of a Guru or
saint; answering to Granter or
fultiller of the desires of hia
people ; Protector or avenger of
liis vvorshipi)ers; Jealous espous-
er of the cause of his servants.
lTTfr^<:'Er^ a. Gracious to his
worshi|)])ers.
irr^ /; Worship. 2 Knga-
gedness of heart and affections
ui ; devotedness to. 3 Liking or
love of ; fondness for.
^^rTfi3:r^ Adoring; love ; wor-
shipfid afl'ection.
^^fTF^Tlf Reverent frame of
mind ; devout feeling. 2 Attach-
ment to.
^H^\\ pop. irr^itcr „.
Keligious, pious. 2 Attached to.
3 Relieving, trusting.
irP^iTR The way of obtain-
ing salvation throuirh worship
and obedience. 2 The law of
love ; or a course of, godliness
from love to God. 3 Worship
without regard to precepts,
wf^^^. n. Extravagant p'ety.
jrr^rt
313
JT3^r
irrrF^'f'T a. Lacking in ador-
ing; love or anient ])iety.
ijTFr^T /. A female wor-
shiper ; esp. understood of a
female attendant of the temples
iTTRirr A dealer with gods
and devils. [dum muliebre.
^^ (s) An ulcer. 2 Puden-
^^ (s) Fracture ; act of
breaking or broken state. 2 Act
of breaking (in numerous shades
of the sense) ; — splitting, blast-
ing, crushing (of things, of
armies, affairs); violating (as of
a promise) ; infringing (aS of a
rule); subduing (as of the spirit).
3 Liability to fracture, injury :
•^t«ti:t¥ ^^\^\ if^^ *tjt ^i^T
iFIJ" -^ a. Addicted to the
use of MtiT.
^^'T s The twelve signs of
the zodiac. 2 The starry host. 3
Circuit througli the zodiac : the
period occupied.
^W\ V. c. Sr i. To break ;
to destroy. See HJT.
^^^ A worshipper or follow-
er of. 2 A dealer with demons.
iTTcT^r/. The ciiarms, tricks,
&c, of a ^JI?T.
ITIR"^, iTiI^r^ n. A large,
uneven hole ; as a breach in a
wall, dam, &c. ; an ulcer-eaten
si)ot, a wound.
^n?"^ (s) A disease in
which fistulas and ulcerous holes
form in the private i^arts.
^^mf. See iT^iT^.
^n^m 7.1. i. To feel a glow
(from the application of i)eppers,
&c.)~hunds, eyes, mouth.
^m^\^ a. Hot, fiery, pun-
gent— an article of food, &c.
1TJT1TF^T^^. (s) A term for
wealth acquired through yield-
ing up to prostitution (b}' a
female) of her own person, (by
a man) of his wife, daughter, &c.
^W Crumbled slate (of
bread, &c.): poAvder or crumbs.
^n^ /. n. (h) Imposture,
trick. /. R See »ftl^T.
40
Wc^m^r4r a. Wilily simple.
^^^\- ?^r «. Hypocritical,
sanctimonious.
^T^^ This is, in Sanskrit,
the neuter termination of the
adj. MJTgT«r, or the form in
comp. of •'HTl'gT'Sf (the common
name of God) : ^o ititt-'^tII.
^^^^ The Supreme Being,
■ God. 2 Poet. The word is app.
to saints and devotees.
iTT^fr /. (s) A name of
Parvati : also for any of the prin-
cipal goddesses. 2 or^o 3TT^
A term for red chillies pounded.
^n^r n. Of a red-ochre color.
iTJT^fit^r The ensign of tlie
Peshwa.
»TiT^R(s) God.
M^JfrT/. 8 Harlotry.
*T^^n^/. A large and dreary
house.
mm^l /. A class of Gujrati
shopkeepers.
^nt% /. (s) A sister.
^^ (h) An individual of
a low caste, who are sweepers, &:c.
^"TT a. Addicted to the use
of ^tir.
iT^r/. (s) A turn, cast, air.
2. A diagram.
^^\'k^ A dissipated fel-
low ; a libertine.
iTfflT2TiT2Fr (s) A term for
any prodigious and marvellous
effort ; a Herculean feat.
ITJp: a. (s) Broken, bent. 2
fig. Frail, fugitive.
^'^^ n. A fistula, sinus, or
ulcerous hole.
^T^H'^r A preparer and
vender of *Tt»T.
iTR a. (s) Broken. 2 fig.
Routed, shattered, blasted.
iTRt^^l?:^ n. s Lispino-. 2
Inarticulateness of utterance.
iTJ^iT^?:^ n. s Disappoint-
ed, baffled.
^^^Tf a. See '^^^
^"^^ n. (s) The zodiac : the
whole l)ody of constellations, or
the stellar sphere altogether.
^^^ a. (s) That worships,
serves.
it^^ a. (s) That breaks,
destroys, lit. fig.
^"^^ V. c. To worsliip ; to
minister to ; to respect. 2 Poet.
To admit, receive, allow (a sense
&c.) : Twr f^T^^t^ jt^^ -m-
^'^'\ 71. (s) Adoration or
worship. 2 Repeating the name
of a god as an act of worship.
3 A hymn. 4 In arith. Division.
^5f^ n. (s) Breaking. 2 fii>-.
Routing, shivering. 3 A correc-
tive or counteractive.
*T^2[if^ a. Devout, pious.
iJW a. Devout. 2 Pious-
ly credulous.
^^^\^^ ^■^^ «. g Worthy of
worship.
^■^ n. A preparation of
gram-flour, &c.
^2" (s) A Brahman, esp.
one that subsists by begging. 2
A warrior.
iTJ^OT -^^ -%X ad Outright,
flat, sharp, &c. i. e. promptly.
^^m\ f. Roaming.
^^°T V. i. (ii) To roam, wan-
der.
Terms respectively for Female
rover and Male rover.
iTJ^ rrt. pi. iTT^^r /. pL
used with iTl^in or fll^tfTf^'Cffl
To wander, to roam.
^J^^r fl. Addicted to ram-
bling. 2 Stray.
^"^^r A title of respect for
a ^^■\^x^\ in gen. , or for a cff^-
?F in particular.
^ ^•^T An exclamation of
anger or disgust, equivalent to
the })hrases. Burn it ! hang it !
rot it !
iT3"JT:Jirr Tuscan Jasmine.
JT^rr
314
ITTIT
iTJrr^Rr (h An inn or eat-
in<^ house.) A term for a tumul-
tuous and disorderly intermix-
ture, at feasts and entertain-
ments, of the purified and the
impure, of the great and the
vulgar.
lT27fr, ^rzm<\ The keeper
of a HZT^iaT^T.
iTfr Relating to a ^TJ.
IT^rrr a light form of the
word w^.
^ (s) A learned man. 2 It
is added as a title to the names
of learned Brahmans. 3 A Urah-
nian, esp. one that subsists by
begginn;.
iTlf^nf A title of honor for
a learned Brahman.
^ft /. (h) a kiln, a furnace.
2 A smith's forge ; a stove. 3
A spirit-still. 4 The matter pre-
pared in a kiln ; the quantity
prepared at once, the batch : the
art, method of preparation :
laxly, cast, mould, build, air,
Style : "ft *To ^R^ ^rfx:^ ;
fm^ ^■^^]^]■^ vo 31^^
T^^fTl'^t Mo 4 Straw so
«lisposed as to form ripening
beds (for fruits, &c.)
^ See iTJin-
^^rrfl" (ii) An innkeeper.
^^ s An actor, player.
^■^ n. (^t^ s) Exposure,
public disgrace. 2 (fiMt^)
A slander, a. Quarrelsome : con-
tumacious.
^•S^ a. (u) Bright, flnring,
gaudy ; — used of articles of red
or yflhnv color. 2 It is added
cnliaucinglv to tlio word wTI'3 :
^l^ Mo Of a bright red. 3
Added cnhancinglv to frf?s|2 :
» ' •
fa^^ «o Fiercely hot — a
dish. 4 (jilittcring (with gold
and silk, &c.), Ihishy — a dress or
its wearer,
^^^ f. (n) GHtterincss,
splendor, v. HT^-
iT^^^m /. Unconsccratcd
funeral tire.
IT^^"^ ad. Imit. of the sound
accompanying the suddenly
bursting forth or blazing up (of
cliaff", powders, fire, &c.) 2 Out-
right^smack. ^-^^^ nhvoml.
^^^^Jf. Blazing up; spread-
IT^^^ V. i. To hlaze up ; to
rise and spread fiercely — a
flame : to get up in force — wind.
2 To be diiFused abroad — light.
3 To be routed and scattered — an
army. 4 To take fright and
run away wildly — a beast. 5 To
run riot. 6 To fly into a rage. 7
To soar away ; — used of the car-
rier-pigeon. 8 To roam.
IT^^^R a. Bright, shining
— a dress, a person, a trinket.
iT^^f^ See iT^^r#.
iT^^r A blaze. 2 The glow
caused l)y the taste or touch of
pungent articles; or arising from
fever, bile, anger, &c. : a blast of
wind, a smart slap, a sounding
pntF (as of powders, &c.)
IT^"?^!^"^! /. Driving about
or making to roam (bet'oolingly).
iT^^fK'^ V. c. To send on a
fool's errand ; to ])ut upon a
wild goose-chase ; to befool gen.
iT^fiFR^ V. c. To slap
soundingly.
^t^ a. (h) Liberal, gener-
ous : lavish, profuse.
Terms for a beggar utterly with-
out the means of subsistence.
IT^^^ (I'L Imit, of the peal-
ing of repeated discharges of
guns.
i^Xj^l^'^ ". A term for a long
and tedious, or for a marvelleous
and incredible storv.
iTJiT3--^r ad. luiit. of the
sound of violent vomitting; of
the gushing forth of l)loi)(l from
a gash ; of the ])ouring forth
copiously of water ; of the rat-
tling out of nonsense, abuse ; of
the rapid rushing in or by of
])eople. 2 Quickly.
iT^iT^aT 7-. i. To blaze up— a
lire : to stream, gush ])roftisely,
forciblv. and soundingly.
iTTiT^r'?^ A fierce glowing of
fire. 2 A roaring (of guns, of a
storm); loud, deep and combined
sound. 2 Riotous revelry.
iT^f^fcf ad Clearly, brightly
— dawning, v. 'gsi^.
^^^^\ -^\ a. That speaks
from the impulse of the mo-
ment ; that rattles forth or raps
out without consideration what-
ever comes uppermost.
lT¥iJ^r3jr (^jj^ A grain-parcher.
iT^^^ A furious and loud
assault (as with peals of ord-
nance, showers of stones, tor-
rents of abuse).
^^^r (n) The attendant on
a dancing girl who beats the
M^iT. Hence A pimp.
H^ri" /. Poet. Quarreling.
^^m A blaze.
^^\^f. ^^\[^ m. Unhallow-
ed funeral fire.
iT^f^^ V. i. To blaze up. 2
To peal — guns, &c. 3 To gush
out — blood, &c : ^'Ui^'T W-
iT^R(iTr^RRs) A treasury.
TO. Turmeric-powder.
iT^RiHR'T^: n. A full and
overflowing treasury.
it^RirrS" A Cocoanut-tree
which is reserved to yield spirit.
^^r^r A feast given to a
company of Gosavis.
iT^lfr The keeper of a ^T^fr,
a treasurer. 2 A class of Shiidras.
They extract riT^.
^VSmT See ^^w.
ITSTl^^ A term for reviling
for a gigantic, savage person.
lT^r-5T Public disgrace, v.
m<:, ^;g^, mt^ g. of. o.
iT'^'Jlfir^Kr See iT^-JlfiT^IR-
^^^'^ f. A buzzing (of
flies, &c.) 2 Dreariness (of a
])lace).
^^m^ X\ ad. Imit. of the
sound of buzzing; of the whist-
ling noise made by the wind.
q-ijjijqq ,,_ i^ 7o hum-
flics, &c, 2 fig. To be routed —
ail army. 3 To tingle, ring —
tlie ears from a blow. v. imp.
irw
To sing or sound from very
emptiness— an empty house ;
deserted village. 2 To dawn
glowingly.
iTTiT'Tf^r A swarming din;
a deafening buzzing. 2 Naked-
ness, dreariness, dismalness (of
an empty building or village, of a
vast wilderness—" howling").
iT"Jm"'^fcT a. Sounding from
emptiness or barreness, howling
— a house, &c. 2 Brightly clear
—the f^f^T.
iPir^ ad. With loud buz-
zing;— used with ^T9j;T ^^T-
^TtTF (h) An allowance be-
yond the settled rate of pay
given on occasions of extraordi-
nary service : allowance made by
a creditor to one detained by
him in prison: subsistence-money
generally to prisoners.
iT?^=T ad. Imit. of the
sound of several sudden and
quick actions — thump ! hump !
bang ! also of fire bursting into
a blaze.
1T?T^ n. A breach or rude
excavation : a wide hole.
iT3r n. (s) Prosperity, good
fortune.
^^ a. 8 Prosperous. 2 Au-
spicious : benign.
iTST^P^f /. 8 A form of the
goddess Durga. j-^^.jjgg
iTST^f^r A sweet-smelUng
;T3Tr,iTsrr?j^Tr3rr^r «. iii-star-
red.
Wl -^ ad. With a blast :
Wq 3T1T ^"51^ -^^^ tj^^T.
iT"T^r,iT^^r,lT^^R:r a sudden
and strong blast (of flame,
steam). 2 A cloud of the powder
of spices, odors as raised by a
sudden blow.
iT^^Rf An alembic or still,
iT^^r^r /. Blowing in
gusts — used of wind. 2 The
forceful blast (of a tiger) in the
act of springing. 3 fig. Instigat-
ing. V. ^, ^T^^.
iT'^n f. Disgrace.
m^^ n. .s The stellar
sphere. 2 The ecliptic.
315
iiq" n. (s) Fear, dread. 2
Ground for fear, risk. ■»T^'^q
Trembling through fear.
W^^a. Frightful ; dreadful.
^^^i^cT a. Fear- stricken,
alarmed.
iT5T3T^5T^ n. Exhibiting a
ground for fear. 2 Anything
put up to frighten.
iTWrcT a. Frightened, afraid,
w^f^o^^ a. Agitated by
fright. ^^9?l5T a- Timorous,
timid. «^Tg[i^ -^t<f -^^ «•
Filled with fear.
^^I'T" «. Awful gloominess;
dreariness inspiring fear (as of
an uninhabited house, &c.)
^^[^ -^ a. Dreary, dismal
— a house.
iTq"R^ a. Friohful, terrible.
iJJTfifJTf^ ^n V. i. To break
or fall to pieces — a kingdom,
army, &c.
^^m^ a. Frightened.
iT^TRC a. Frightful.
iT^qr (H) A brother.
^^ (s) Fullness; the height,
meridian, heyday, flow (of the
products of the earth, of youth,
health, honors, riches, sports). 2
Fullness (of purpose, desire,
affection): C[KT^T*T^^53T^t.
.'i Charge (of a gun). 4 Rut,
heat. 5 Exacerbation. 6 /.
Loaded state (of a ship or
cart) : filled up state (as of an
embankment): complement (as
of a number). / /• Earth, &c.
thrown on or in to fill up (as
over the roots of a tree.) S It is
used in comp. Affixed adverbi-
ally it signifies Up to ; fully ; as
or as iu the class ^T'f'^iT'C,
*r^viT: ; or Throughout ; as
q^iT^, Tf^^T^^: Prefixed,
it singifies To the uttermost ; in
the highest state ; as ^l^^T'Jl-
iTT^^:^, iT^^oj j,^ c. To
])erform rapidly ami cursorily;
to despatch iu a trice; to knock
of. Used in the senses of
^T^^^ V. i. To scrawl or
scribble.
irr^^r, ^r^^^ a flourish in
writing, v. eRT^, %1^.
^m -^ -^ -f^ ad.
Imit. of the sound of a bird
rising suddenly from its rest; of
grass, &c. bursting suddenly
into a blaze. 2 In a trice.
iR^^r Whirlino;; a whirl.
2 A circuit, compass, round, v.
^T'C- 3 fig. A maze, laby-
rinth. V. ^t^^,^^^, ^T^ or qj^
with ^ffT. 4 The impetuous
rush (of a current of wind). 5
Any rapid and rude doing, v
^5^ a. R Of a sober, grave,
staid^lisposition. [ousness.
^<^^r f. Soberness, seri-
iRiTcT, iT^fffcT /. n. Loaded
state (of a vehicle or of the
belly) : filled up state (as of a
mound, &e.) 2 n. Cargo, load.
*T^^f^ m. n. A village of
dense population.
IT^^^r a. Abounding in good
things — a feast : to the full ; to
heart's content — a meal. Prefixed
to ^-^m -gfl^ur --ql^ -qT^^-
•^JTTTT, &c. in the sense Cram-
medly full; or Crowdedly and
overbearingly profuse.
iT?:=^fr /. Full allowance of
corn to a horse. Hence full
rations gen.
^'^'Tr f. The full revenue
(of a village, &c.), as previous to
the deductions for contingent
' ^ ^ ' [full assessment.
iT^^Wt^ /. Land bearing the
■^^■tf a. Composed wholly
of gold or silver threads; — used
of stuffs, cloths, &c.
^^^m^\ ■^^\^J f. (p) Adult
age, puberty. 2 The prime of
youth.
^^^ a. Coarsely ground. 2
Coarse — cloth, &c. m. Grit. 2
Pulse roughly ground.
^^'^^ V. Grain taken to be
coarsely ground. 2 Grinding
coarsely : •^T'ST ^^ »T^'U1'^ Mo
irrj
316
>m3T
i^T:?'T[r f. Giindiuij, kc.
^"^•T^ V. c. To grind rough-
ly. 2 fig. To do cursorily and
coarsely.
^^^ n. The quantity (of oil,
&c.) put into a lump-l)o«l. &c.
at one time. 2 Tilling — of ves-
sels, sacks. V. 5R<:, 'Eft^. 3
Measuring, i. e. fillinrj of mea-
sures. 4f. Matter ])ut in or add-
ed to iill up. 5 Filling stuff,
stuffing (as of cakes).
ilT'^r Filling up. 2 Com-
pleted state. 3Paying in in full( as
into a treasury, banker's shop):
^wlT ^if^^. 4 A collection:
^I?Tin'T^T-wq^T^I VFo. 5 Full
rate of assessment : ir<TT^T
iqrqrf 3-/. The cost of fill-
ing (up, into, on).
^■^r/. Filling up, kc; see
the V. 2 Filling material — earth,
stones, &c.
^^^ V. c. To fill. 2 To fill
up; to supply cavities, deficien-
cies. 3 To fill in ; to put in, into,
on (a cargo, a charge). 4 To pour
into (liquids, sands, &c.) 5 To
cover all over (with oil, &c. as
rendering dirty). 6 To fill up
(traces, rolls, tables). 7 To pay
in (monies due). 8 To sujiply
loss ; to make good. 9 To put on,
csp. trinkets : ^t^^T ^<J^\.
10 To fill up (a term) : '^j^
f^'^W ^fPl 3TT%rI ^ «<(: ViJ\ ^T.
V. i. To fill out ; to become
fleshy and pulpous ; — the body,
fruits: to fill — an ear of corii.
2 To rise to and equal; to
amount (to some number or
quantity assumed as a standard):
^«<: H^. 3 To become full
— a time : ■^^^ -btT'SRJ TT^'. 4
To become heavy and torpid ; —
iised of legs from sitting. .'3 To
fill uj) — a well.&c. with rubbish:
also H^^ ^af, to form in
granulations and fill — a healing
wound. G To enter and lodge — a
thorn in the flesh. 7 To gather,
come together : "^T^rrx: "^f-
^^^^^ n. (s) India.
^^r^ /. A body (of shijis,
carts, beasts) coming in loaded
with stores : such goods. 2 Load-
ed state (of ships, bags, ani-
mals, vessels).
irrfr /. The flux of the
ocean. 2 Filling, loading. .3Com-
])leted state (of slips, carts, &c. :
complement (of a number).
iT^m^fr^r^ /. The time of
perfect evening-twilight.
m^[ p:tr/.c Flow and ebb.
^^^ n. Completeness, full
measure (of sins) : the utmost
height (of a fever, &c): the swell-
ing and filling (of some sorrow).
^m^ ad. At full speed.
^l^^% /. The prime of
youth.
^mi-^^\ f. (n) Receipt in
full (of a sum or of goods due) :
a written acknowledgment of
full receijjt.
irma. (H) Brimful: filled to
excess, crowded : overabun-
dant. 2 Full — the voice.
iT^iT^^ a. Copious, plenti-
ful. 2 Chokefull.
^^^ /• Prosperous state ;
the prime of. v. ^t, '^T^.
iRiR-nrtr/. Quickly. 2 Imit.
of certain brisk sounds.
iT^iTTr?" Exceedingly flour-
ishing state. V. ^T, 3T¥, "^T^.
^X^T\^ a. Coarse, dry. 2
Coarse and rough — cloth.
i^nr {^^ s) Mistake ; erro-
neous judgment, v. "^x.. 2
SHS])icion, surmise, t'. tii^. 3
Doubtfulness, doubt. ?•. ^TS3T,
tiTo3. 4 Oedit, reputation.
m^-^ad. By full stages—
joTirneying. 2/. A full stage (of a
journey).
iRJT5T?rr A large and lofty
tipper story (of a house.) 2 a ink.
1 laving a large and lofty upper
story — a house.
iTciTitk^r or iT^rm^r ifrqazrr
Terms for a person, business or
matter, having fair credit without
solid foundation.
irrm^ qicT w. A term for a
person who, having the reputa-
tion (of learning, opulence, de-
votion, &o.) is actually empty.
ilTJTriT^r ad. Upon popular,
favorable apprehension ; upon
the general impression (that the
person has means) — carrying on
business ; »?Tiqi7ff Jim q^r
^fkrfT- 2 Upon suspicion
gen. : ^o ^ij^ '«f^^T_-^j^
^U^^l A
road.
well-frequented
irrcr^ /• The whole pro-
duce of a field collected and
stacked (not yet apportioned
among the sharers). 2 The whole
mass or heap ; gross lump :
^^^l a. Well-filled, abound-
ing (with riches, fame) : replete
— a kingdom with subjects.
iTT^WR^r a. Reputable,
worthy — a person ; substantial —
a trade.
irrf^^ V. c. Causal of ^T^. 2
To feed (a child, &c.) by the hand
3 fig. To teach by patient in-
culcation.
iTC^^r (H) Confidence,
trust. 2 Assurance.
n. Terms for a person or thmg
in or on which reliance had been
])laced.
^^^^^ The full revenue
obtained (from a village, &c.)
irn^r The wliir, fur, or
sudden and noisy vibration of
wings, r. MiK, ^^, '^T^. 2
A wiiizzing whirl (as with a
sling.) V. *TT^. 3 A rush, lit.
fig.: ^T^IW^ ^^^\ BTTfuTH^T-
^I ^^^T^ 5tfZIT¥ ^T'slvT
^T^T. 4 A blast (of a god
or devil); a paroxysm. 5 Close
showering (of stones, darts). 6
Whisk, whirl, spring : ^rCf-
^^[2"r Noisy arising (of
birds); noisy dashing (of a shower
of rain) ; swift actions (of run-
»iTr>T
317
»T^JT
ning, eating; smart dispatch (of
writing-matters) v. ■^T, ^T,
2 Exceeding copiousness (of a
harvest — fq^t^^l Vo heavi/
crop.) 3 Used in comp. as a. ind.
in the sense of Copious, mighty :
as »T<> ^51* -xiT^^. 4 l-^xliaus-
tion (as of eatables or of works).
V. ^X, ^^, ^T.
^^f^/. A hurried or general
fining,
^rn^ -^r ad. Imit. of certain
rushing sounds (as of whirring,
■whisking, fluttering.) v. q^,
^?, tiss, f^^, -^-z, ^sr. 2
Quickly, smartly.
^^-TK^T V. i. Intensively of
»T'C;M<:uf. 2 To fly up with a
quick motion and with a »T^ !
3 To hlaze up fiercely — fire. 4
To prosper — trade.
^KF f. Rising up with a
fliir. Used of birds, v. ilT^-
mV^K Full trust. V. Z^-
^1^ n. Loaded state (of a
vehicle, &c.) 2 A load or load of :
"I' ^T'tTT'T ^T^T l^t't' W 3TT%.
3 Load, cargo. 4 or ^T^WT'^
^o Sanious and corrupt state
of a wound. 5 A sauce, — brin-
jals, &c. dripped with seasoning.
m^ p. of ^^^' a. Full,
solid.
WiTfr, iT^r^fRflf/. Mea-
sure witli measure, r. ■^, ^,
^ff^r (H) Confidence. 2
Assurance or satisfaction re-
garding.
iT^r s pop. iTcTk A bus-
band.
^^^^ n. s Husband-hood.
W^4^ 11. iT^^^r / s Reviling.
^T^r{ p. Reviled.
^^Rf a. That fills up (a
period of time). Used in comp.
with a noun prefixed : f^^^j
^T^T'gT (^^Tf«r?T &c.) That
has fasted the whole day. 2 Used
with a noun signifying money :
^^ n. The bead of a spear,
arrow, &c.
^^ a. (Abridged from ^^F)-
Fine, grand, superb : H^gj^T'
^^ ^^ur ; also arch, adept :
H» %T^T; great, vast: ^o
^^^m, ITeTcrg-c^r a. Of AH.?/
kind ; like whatever you please.
ad. In any way.
^^fir a. Any one. 2 Imperti-
nent, irrelevant : ifl f^"=^T^^t
3 Used in comp. with ad. and
adj. of time, place, quantity, &c.
as »75lfrI2R%, W^^^^T-
iT-^cTl^c^cTr a. Any (person,
thing), whoever or whatsoever.
iT^i^r'^^C /. (H) Courte-
ousness, politeness.
^^l a. Good, virtuous : cre-
ditable. 2 (In poet, used for
^Kl). 3 Just as it should be ;
fine, capital, splendid : 3TT3!
Goodness, mildness. 2 Honora-
ble repute, v. ffTSW, f«oJ.
^^\^'^f. A letter of credit.
2 A letter of introduction and
recommendation.
iTc^iT?^rt- -^ / (H) Good-
ness or virtue. 2 Good report.
3 Accounts of welfare.
[bravo
^^ int. Well done! fine!
H^^r /. The calling to and
encouraging of one another by a
number of people at work to-
gether. 2 A vigourous and
unpausing effort, a stretch, a
spurt. V. •EfT^, ^T^. 3 Affect-
ed extolling and lauding.
^fTF int. Well ! ah well I
^^ (s) The world, the pie-
sent state of existence with its
pleasures and pains. 2 Birth. 3
Being, existence. Used in comp.
as ^^ ^^ Produced from the
body. Also as prefixed and in
the first sense ; as H^'^sfi
The world considered as the
theatre of changing scenes, of
turmoil, &c.
^^t f. An eyebrow.
^H or ifr#^ /. Vertigo.
iT^i^FC-^rd The abys.s of
earthly life.
it^cTr, iTfcTT, iTfcfT^r ad.
Sf prep. Around, about.
iTfcrr?r^r, ^m^^\ a. Re-
lating to the regions roundabout.
iT?[%^lT?r^/. (sltis^it is
not.) A debate, argument.
^^^,^^%^^^ad.&cprep.
Around, about.
iTfTF^TR^^^f a. 8 That cuts
asunder the snare of the world.
^^^^ n. (s) The dread of
another birth.
iT^frqr^^^^q- s A spirit-
ual ])hysician.
^^^\^l a. Sick of worldly
business or pleasures.
irfF^r / (s) The goddess
Piirvati in her pacific form.
^^FtT a. (s) Sick of the
world.
^moTf n. (s) Destiny, fate.
^f^"^ n. (s) A future event.
2 A prophecy, v. ^\i\, tlrJ-
a. s Future.
iTf^^^r^ (s) The future
tense.
iT^^fTFr a. A prophet.
^r^'^^E^^a. That foreshows
futurity. 2 Portentous.
^r^^^^TR n. Knowledge of
futurity.
^^^^ffTir V. Prediction : a
future event predicted v. ■^[Jf,
^°^ a.\s) Of a fine, bold
appearance ; handsome. 2 Be-
ing, coming.
lT?r^^ -^r ad. Imit. of the
sound emitted by a body piercing
forcibly into slightly resisting
substances.
lT^iT#^ -^cf a. Dry and
light— snuff, &c. 2 Friable.
IT^iT^- -m a./. Imit. of the
sound of clouds of dust rising
and whisking.
jrar'
318
^W^ 71. Dianhcea.
iT^^rr a. Coarse and thick
— ^rass, thread, &c. : coarse and
clumsy — a letter, mark : rude —
work or workman.
^m^^ -m, ^^\^\ See ^^-
IT^ n. (s) Ashes. 2 Any
metallic ox^de.
^^im a. Cinereous.
iTFrdl BuHmy.
iT^iT^R n. Rubbing ashes
over the body. A substitute for
ablution.
^^\^ An appellative for
a person of a ravenous ajipetite
and of wild and extravagant
conduct.
*TWf «. Of the color of ashes,
cinereous.
^TSnrs- -5rf ad. Imit. of the
sound made by grain, sand, &c.
streaming forth ; by blood, &c.
flowing through a narrow open-
ing. v.Jl^,^^, ^t^, ^TvT.^T'?.
lT3^aiu| V. i. To stream forth
gushingly and noisily.
^TcJii^^ V, i. To become
auspicious — a person's fortune :
^T^ (s) Food : an eatable.
^"^^ a That eats.
^^T'T n. Eating*.
^^^\^ a. s Eatable.
^^^ V. c. To eat.
^mm\ad. Used with tf^^,
^T^uf, ^T^in, ^tlTiui To cast
or let down into the place of
food ; to f/ulp, swallow. 2 To
devour.
*T^r a. That eats. In comp.
asBT'g«?9f, answering to voroiis;
as graminivorous.
H&'T a. 9 Edible. w.(s)Food;
an eatable.
r
*Tr^ (n) An affix to words
expressive of office, condition,
function, in the sense of Person,
icliow.man, chap i^T'Cf^'T ^T<»
^Ti^<t/--''7''TT/«. Brotherly in-
tercourse ; brotherly feeling. 2
iTit'^WT & ^tI^^sr^ or ^TT^af^
are further The state or rela-
tion of brother.
irri't^ pL (h) Kinsmen, re-
lations : the members of any
fraternity.
^r^T A brother. 2 A cou-
sin, a kinsman. 3 An associate,
a fellow, a condiscii)le, a brother.
4 A respectful affix to proper
names : '^^VJT'3>.
irrST, irrsrfr a term of re-
spectful mention for a husband's
'^■•"tl'^- [rout.
M"[3nT2rr /. utter defeat and
^\^^ n.^\7n. Brotherly in-
tercourse : the brotherly relation :
friendly feeling.
^rr^rt^ a kinsman.
iq"f3rfo5" f. Enjoyment of a
^?r?T according to turn in a
line of brethren.
^r^ /. a promise, y ?• 2 A
mutual assurance v. ^K- 3
Anything placed as a pledge
(with an idol) until the fulfil-
ment of a vow made. 3"^,
irr^^ n. That has ceased to
give milk— a cow, &c. 2 Uniiro-
ductive — land, work, &c. 3 In-
nvitritions — food.
irr^^^s^T /: laie talk.
iir^P^^/. An oracle. 2 Fore-
telling. 3 Telling.
iTf^^ V. c. To ])redict. 2 To
give (something to an idol") by
way of pledge. 3 I'oet. To tell.
iTrar /: Bread.
ITR^^^ A light term for
bread, and for one's ordinary
food.
ijr^^^^^^r a.' A contemptu-
ous term for a cook.
m^W^^r a. A drone,
^r^r^ n. A prophesy, v. ^f^.
iTR (s) A share, part. 2
In arith. Quotient. 3 Division,
dividing, v. ^. 4 Tenor, pur-
port of a speech. 5 A fraction.
WP^Wt
^In The line along the
sinciput (of females) made by
j)arting the hair on both sides. 2
Neap-tide.
^t^/. Hemp. 2 The intoxica-
ting potion prepared from it : the
leaves.
irnrr -^ See A^^i-
HR'^ff /. Dividing, weeding.
2 AJ.alk. [■_ti^g ^^^
^fJFT V. i. To be at the neap
^r^^ V. c. To make a path ;
to divide; — as a boat parts the
water. 2 To weed (standing
CO'")- [divide.
^\m V. c. In arith. To
^^^ V. i. To tire; to get
exhausted. 2 fig. To bend, fail —
a jjost, &c. 3 To sink under age.
4 fig. To yield to ; to be remov-
ed : T^IIT^T^ fg=f T^ 'a^ fll^
HTiTWT; ^T^T ^^ T:I5TJIT^
^mt\ f. A term for the
business of the toilette (of
females).
^\n^^ a. (s) Relating to
*TJT^<T. 2 That pays equal
honor to f^m and fi^^. n.
The name of one of the Purans.
irnrft^ v. c To tire out ; to
exhaust. 2 To break down the
force^of. [haustion.
iTFI^r"T Prostration and ex-
mmw: in arith. Division.
2 The quotient.
m^fr /. Partnership. 2 A
share in a partnership.
^\^\, ^[mK c. A partner. 2
A shareholder ; a partaker.
'^\m'^\ f. The Ganges.
iTin^rC /'. A term of con-
tempt for an impotent man.
iTiW-t^ST^ /. A good
slioot from a bad stock.
JIF^ ??. (s) Fortune, lot. 2
Good fortune, a. s Divisible.
iTFq'q^q' a favorite of For-
tune, [funate.
iTl^^^R rt. Prosperous, for-
W^i\^ a. Luckless.
wi^m
319
ITT^^
^Tffqr a. Addicted to the use
of HIJI.
iTF^r^TlTFIST Fortune's foot-
ball- [fortune.
ITF^TK^ (s) Dawn of good
^f^r A nephew ; i. c. a
man's sister's son, or a woman's
brother's or sister's son : the son
of one's husband's sister.
ITRF /. A niece. See ^\^\ :
the daughter of one's husband's
sister. [„-ife of.
^r^T /. Poet. A wife, the
ITR^ a, (s) That divides. 2
In arith. Divisor,
irr^r^f «. SHglitly parched.
2 Burnt-smelling.
^r^I^r a. Parched : burned
— the ground; boiled, roasted.
ITfW / Subtraction after a
certain mode.
■ '^'
^rrsT'T V. i. To portion, share
out. 2 In arith. To perform
^"r^^ V. i. To burn or
singe. V. c. To dress by parching,
boiling, or by burning in the fire.
2 To scorch : to scald. 3 fig. To
harass, vex.
^fsf'T n. s A vessel ; a cup,
plate, pot. 2 fig. A receptacle ;
as ^T^WT«T'!T, ^^ ^T" 3 In
arith. Division.
iTRr/. Poet. A wife.
^r^r f. (s) Fruits, herbs or
roots in gen. dressed to be eaten
with solid food. 2 A general
term for plants, fruits, leaves,
&c. that are used as vegetables.
irr^RF^r a general term for
esculent vegetables.
m^k p. of ITR^ Burned,
&c.
^r^^ n. (s) In arith. Divi-
dend. «. s Divisible.
^r3"y. n. A place in the sea
or a river which appears in low
water; a shoal. 2 n. c An ele-
vated and level spot occuring
in arable land. 3 /. c Ground
prepared for sugarcane : n plan-
tatioa of ^g. ?«. (h) A class
of people. They are bards. 2
fig. An empty chatterer.
iTfSr /. See iTf^: Sig. 1. 2
The level along the banks of
rivers. 3 A she-cat.
^f^iir A caste of Gujrathis.
^1^ /. Profits obtained by
letting out females to prostitu-
tion, [bolt ! smack !
irr^^^T -^^ ad. Whack!
iTf^^^TS: c. That subsists
upon "^l^.
iTi^, ^\^mx c. m^^f a.
Quarrelsome. [quarrel,
^"t^^ n. Quarreling : a
■ *^
'^\'^^ V. i. To dispute or
contend with. [Stock, store,
m^^c^ 71. (h) Capital. 2
^■f^TJTr^ n. (s) A treasury,
magazine. [a treasurer.
iTf^inrfr, irr^TJiTK^, ^rkifr
iTf^W^/ Mutual or gene-
ral quarreling. [sure.
iTf^R 71. A treasury ; a trea-
^r^rS" a. Quarrelsome.
JTl^rji^f n. pi. Vessels and
pots comprehensively. Also
''t'^^i' sinff. A vessel in-
definitely.
M"i^ n. A vessel, dish, pot.
2 fig. A cannon. 3 The bed of a
river.
iTfi n. Rent, hire. 2 The
business of letting.
ITf^^r One who hires out
(cattle, houses). 2 One who
rents a building. 3 fig. A hire-
ling. 4 App. to one of whom it
is the lot to labor where the
profits are enjoyed by another.
iTfi^i n. Rent, hire.
^]im\ -f r c. A tenant.
^f^ n. Rice in the husk.
Rice when slightly husked is
called ^^^, upon fully husk-
ed fft^oJ, when boiled ^t<T
tn. 2 tig. A mess of corrupt
and squashy fruits ; a rotting
sore.
^fcT/. p Good name, repute.
V. KT1, ¥»TT3, %? g. of. o.
m^^ -m A grain of un-
husked rice.
iTTcIJc^r f. A play among
children, in which they imitate
the cooking of rice, laying out
(of a dinner, &c.) 2 Light and
nice things as made and eaten
in this play.
m^r A bellows V. 5^. 2 A
quiver. 3 A kind of leather bag
in which soldiers and travellers
carry their cooking vessels.
v»
ITld^c^ n. Light and nice
things to amuse the palate : a
light repast. ^^^„^ &p
lTr^'% /. Shaving, shear-
v«
^f^^ V. c. To shave or
shear (hair, wool, &c). 2 To
shave (the head, &c). 3 fig. To
scold vehemently, to shave.
^K^^fr/.Violent and coarse
abusing or scolding, v. '^T3,
^^ g. of. 0.
m^^J The name of the sixth
month, August-September.
^^tr a. Relating to the
month ITT'^^T.
m^\ .^\a. Often beaten tes-
ticles— a bull, &c.
irr^rq^ (s) See ^Ti^^r.
^R n. (s) Consciousness. 2
Attention, heed, observation :
mindfulness: g?!!^^ $I^?lt
•TT"^. 3 Notion ; an impres-
sion ; 5T3IT^T% ^^s^x^^cf x:t-
ITR^^ /. (h) Intricacy and
confusedness ; intermingled and
disordered state; (of things,
affairs): ^KT^ ^TWt"^ WTo
^^ ; cEJT'^TTf ^\■^^ ^T^^T¥
^qq f^^ ^T^ mH'] HII?f
^T^ vrio ^5^ -^^R^; 'gl g"-
ITRIT^^I^ c m^^^J a. That-
delights in confounding, &c.
iTR^3^ V. c. To disorder,
derange.
m^^ f.iTR^gr w. A raised
place of earth behind a fireplace.
irnmr
320
ITf^TT
iTT^Rcrr/. Jugglery. 2 fig.
Arts, tricks.
iTHW^^ a. A conjurer.
^R s The sun.
^\^^\T -?Wr (s) Sunday.
■^ikzi .Z^\ See m^Z^\.
m^'S\ a. Simple, artless.
^m^\, ^\^m\ /. Taking
fright.
^mk, ^'mm, iTfirr?^ r.
i. To lo^e or forsjct one's self; to
get siulclenly perplexed : to tiike
friirht.
^■r^r, ^\^^ -^^T a. Forget-
ful and blundering. [brance.
iTFT /. (Vuk.) Reniem-
iTfiT f. A large well.
lTfJT3:r-2^r a tribe. They
are professed thieves. Hence a
sly tliief: tig. a subtle, dis-
honest person.
irrr (s) Gravity. 2 Weight,
quantity measured by the ba-
lance. '6 A weight. 4 Weiglit,
fig. (as of a favor, &c.) ; a
burden: importance, influence.
;') Heaviness (of the head) 3^1-
3TT?- (i A rupee's weight:
-^t ^T3~r ^T^r »TK ^t|. 7 In
corap. and through an elipses.
Of the weight of: ^'^T ^T^
^Tofr. 8 A load : ^TS^T^. 9
The application of a jf"^. v.
■Z\-^, Ti\^, T3R^. 10 A weight,
force (as of an arm of war.) In
comp. as 3T^HTr, JTSfHT'C.
11 Poet. A Hock : a troop, host :
ITR^/. Charming, lit. fig.
■J .V formula to charm, v. '^T^,
^Tf^'T V. c. To charm ; to
make powerful by charms (wea-
pons, rice, water.) 2 To enchant ;
to bind under spells, .'i tig. To
fascinate [See ^T^IHT^^-
*Tircr n. (s) India proper. 2
^\l^ f. (s) A name of ^^-
^ffl. 2 Dramatic recitation.
m. An order of the (losavi.
iTR??^ -l^\, ■^K'^.m a. (p)
Having weiglit, intluence. 2
\ alunble, costly.
^"RT^cfr f. Importance,
weight : overawing power.
^Tft^TsT a. Weighty, substan-
tial.
iTR"?IT a. Competent, ca-
))able, clever at conducting or
sustaining a charge.
mi^\^ (s) A bird.
^K^K ad. Up to the weight
of: % ^qq -^it ^Tlfur ^T<»
ITRTJTR n. Gravity, or weight
2 A l)arometer.
mr^rg"^ a. (s) That carries
a load. 2 Thnt bears the burden
(of a business).
mi\m n. The horn of the
^^r A bundle or load (of
grass, sticks, &c.), a fagot. 2 X
little bundle as of green grass.
^Rr^^r. i. To become hea-
vier. 2 To become stiff, dull — the
body from a cold, &c.
iTr?r a. Heavy. 2 fig. Of pro-
found accomplishments : mighty
(in learning, valor, &c.) : of high
l)rice. ad. Much, very, exceed
ingly.
iT[?r/. cDim. ofiTRT-
m^^ n. A long intricate
story ; a dull prosing, v. ^T^r
2 A trouhle. v. % ^^^r XT'?. 3
An obscure and difficult stanza;
a puzzler. 4 See "^Ht^.
^m (,s) A tribe of Gujrati
Brahmans. 2 A name of t^^^j-
Tjff. .3 The planet Venus :
the regent of it. rr
^Rf/. (.s) A wife, the wife
^T^ /. {^^ s) The head of
a spear, dart. 2 m. n. (s) The
foroliead.
^[^^Vf: (ii) An usher,
m^^fr f. The duty of a
^^r A i^pear. 2 A spear's
len;:tli. .'i Tlie cord Avith which
the legs of a cow, &c. arc l)i)und,
durii\g milking, r. ^\^, ^JV,
irr^ /. A bear. 2 An old
female Jackal; fig. a shriveled old
woman. ^
♦\ PS
^r^^^r A spearman.
^^^fl" /. Lawless domina-
tion. 2 Any turbulent proce-
dure.
^rf (s) Faith in or towards ;
assurance. 2 Meaning, mind :
purport, scope. 3 Market rfite.
4 An affection of mind ; an emo-
tion or a feeling : ^=?-^ffr-
^f^>?r?. .5 Being : ^q ^^T^T
^T's?: 3T¥^. 6 The simple
idea involved in the root ;
as distinguished from the
diversifications of it through
affixes and adjinicts : '^^[^-
^T^T. 7 Natural state of be-
ing ; innate property : ^w^t^,
T^TWT^. 8 A class of affec-
tions, passions, or sentiments ;
as f^viT^, 3f«f^TW, &c. 9 A
state of being — as birth, growth
&c. 10 The absolute idea or
sense (of a word) as abstracted :
Also the standing, subsisting,
being (of existences or subjects,
or of qualities, relations, offices,
conditions) ; i. e. the sense
involved in the Sanskrit affixes
ffT and ^,the Prakrit qnr, quTT,
^t, and the English ness,hoorl,
ship : '^ITHT^, ?l^HTW,ffl=?HT^.
11 Birth, coming into being. 12
A category in logic. 13 Love,
as an object of poetical descrip-
tion. 14 Power (corporeal or
mental).
^\^^^, iTR^I^cf a. Having
its meaning involved : that con-
tains an implication; — used of a
speech or a composition.
^\^^i -^ f. A brother's
wife.
^rf^ n. A collateral rela-
tion by the same ])arents, — a
lirotluT or a sister. 2 A half-
Ijrotlier or half-sister : a cousin.
iTI^^r .3T a. Simple, artless.
JTr^or
321
rjmr
V[m V. c. Poet. To hold,
consider, v. i. To have in mind,
to imagine : to intend : to feel,
•wish.
ITT^^ V. i. To be whole-
some ; to agree with — air, water :
2 To please or suit. 3T¥#
ITff^r /. (s) Forming^ in the
mind ; supposing : ^^t:t^ ^r«T
2 State of health ; feeling of
body as respects healthfulness :
TTI^TR'^T. 3 Assurance ; faith
in or towards. 4 In medicine.
A malady with its symptoms;
the disorder constituting the
diagnosis.
m^^P^ f. (s) pop. irr^iTiT^
Worship from love, faith ; hom-
age of the heart and spirit. 2
Engagedness of heart and af-
fection in. 3 Market — ac-
counts. 4 vri^vrnrr further
means Season of prevailing :
irrfT^T Inherent sense; pur-
port, drift. 2 Assurance. 3 Sin-
cerity, honesty, ad. In truth,
verily.
mfM a. Simple, honest.
^\^\ a. 8 Fut^ure. f. Pre-
diction. V. ^T1. ^f«?, ^'J. ^«^^>
iff^I'gr^ ^ or fflSJ.
ITf^Ri (t. Believing, trusting.
iTF?r^^, ^\^\^^ a man of
faith.
iTTfR /. A woman that
dedicates herself to the service of
m'^'^ a, s Future.
iTf^f. A promise, v.^- 2 A
mutual assurance, v. %.
^\^^ n. fs) Speaking. 2
Speech, discourse, talk.
^rf r/. A speech, language,
dialect. f^^.
^■^^^cI^ «. a translation, v.
^\N^ p. Spoken, said. n. A
speech or saying.
^f^r a. That speaks. In
comp. as fTifi«TTl, "^sm^Tl.
41
^F^ n. s An exposition,
gloss, scholium : annotations.
iTF^^IT A commentator, &:c.
^r^ (s) Impression made
on the mind ; perception : '^T-
TT^ ■^'T^T. 2 Semblance,
seeming : ?^f^?:t?r ^^T^I »TT^
%mT. 3 Likelihood, style.
V.
m^^ V. i. To seem to have
semblance. 2 To impress or strike
as actual or probable.
m^^ra"/. Trash, trifles.
iTR^T (s) The sun.
m^^m^ n. M^ m. A letter
of credit.
irrs-WlSST n. Simple, guile-
less : silly, soft.
\^Z or -^ a. Timid.
r^W/. A bug- trap.
m^K n. A crowd of beg-
gars.
m^\X a. Poor, wretched,
beggarly — a country, town ;
y)oor in various applications; as
R-^R^rsrr m. -'^r^ /. a
mean, low trick, habit.
W^K^ST /. Low, paltry,
scurvy doing.
r^T^R'ST A contemptuous
form of the word f^raRT^^.
IH^R^T V. i. To be reduced
to beggary.
OTrr^wr^J-^r/. (A draft
on Aldgate pump ; or a bill on
Mr. Bamfylde More Carew.) A
term for a ]3ecuniary demand
upon a person signally poor.
tefrq"? /. A poor town.
W"^R??^aT 71. A mean and
hegrjarly trait, mark, sign.
fiT^r^c^r^ Excessive caress-
ing and cockering (esp. of a
cluld) ; spoiling.
f^^Km^ Poor stufF, heg-
garly business.
nr^lfr a beggar. 2 A poor
person. 3 App, to persons,
places, things, to stigmatize them
as mean, vile, low, beggarly.
riT^^ A bug.
W^ n. A pane of glass. 2 A
piece of glass. 3 m. The name 6f
a white seafish.
mfr/. A play thing. 2 The
whirler of a spinning wheel. 3 A
J'^"*v. [whirl.
W^R^ V. c. To fling or
to^ a. Slightly wetted.
f^m V. i. To get wet, to
wet. 2 fig. To get moist, i. e.
sappy, succulent — a business. 3
To accept a bribe.
nr^TR^ V. c. To wet or
moisten.
W^^ V. i. (h) To come into
contact ; — used of bodies, events,
time : to cling to. 2 To bring
into contact ; to set together
(as for comparison). 3 To gird,
bind, or fasten on (H^^T^,
^T^, 3fl^, ^TJfT^): to gird
with (as ^^x, &c. or aiT¥T.
^T^T, ^^^, iTTin^, &c. with
W^^cT a. That pays defer-
ence to (the opinions or the plea-
sures of) others. 2 Bashful, shy.
mW'JT See ^^'^^'^.
WT V. c. To fear; to be
afraid.
rk^ f. A wall.
W^'^r^iTr A burglar.
fiTcT^ -^r prep. Sf ad. Poet.
In, within.
terr a. Timid, fearful,
\^^^ n. Any wall other
than the wall of a house or shed.
2 A coratemptuous form of the
word fifrT, a thing of a wall.
nT=f^, T^m\ RT^R^ V. i.
To penetrate and pervade ; to
soak into diffusively; — as oil,
water into porous or absorbent
bodies. 2 To enter into (by its
virtue) ; — as medicines or poi-
sons into the animal system.
RT^ a. (s) Divided, parted.
2 Separate, distinct. 3 Broken.
piT^ ^^WX Pitch darkness.
r^^jqf?:/. Bright, blazing
noon.
fiT^irr? (s) Duality of senti-
ment or soul.
fiTl^^S", firPiTr^ n. c. The
early crepusculiun or first glim-
merings of (lawn.
OT^f f r, PTJTSTT /. The val-
ley of the river Bhima.
Pnr^i'ra.Relatingto ^TR^^-.
NHf^cS" A personage on the
banks of the Bhima answering
to JI^T^oJ.
r^T^Jf -^i^r A whirl of a
stone, &c. or of wind or water :
a swing round (as of a child), v.
■^, ^T. 2 A gust of passion.
V. ^. 3 A fruitless trip to
and fro : a circuit, v. Ti^X, '^,
^TT, %, ^T, xjT. 4 A short
turn about : f^ ^si"^ ^^ ^^
f«o ^]^-if ^flt- 5 A perplex-
ity. 6 A stagger, v. «ir. 7
A shred. 8 esp. fir^^t^T
The track (as of thorny bnshes,
a dead beast, a heavy log drag-
ged along) : the trace on the
body (as of rough scratching) :
a scrawl.
f^Ttft /. A reel. v. ^\. 2
pi. Useless wandering about, v.
VIK, ^T. 3 A fit of giddi-
ness.
mr^i^^^ V. c. To whirl,
sling (a missile).
r^T^T^ n. A fit of rage or of
giddiness: the whirl and worry
of a business.
firr^rf^^ V. c. To sling. 2
To hurl. 3 To give in a con-
temptuous or careless manner.
mmT^ V. i. To ring, sin^r,
tingle tremulously and painfully
— ear, hand, &c. from a smart
blow. 2 To ring, sing, gen.
Mi{t\ f. The sensation
of sharp and quick pain witii
motion, tingling. 2 A gust of
passion : a fit of vertigo, v. v.
\^lT^t{ f. Ridiculing, jeer-
ing: ridiculed state, v. ^T,
■^^^ g. of 0.
mltlt ad. Imit. of whiz-
zing sounds (as of a stone from a
sling). V. Vkm, »iT^.
322
r^KXr f. A gust of passion :
a fit of vertigo, v. il.
Ti^^^\, T^mm Marking-
nut-tree.
l^^ (s) A race of people
that inhabit hills, forests, &c.,
and subsist by hunting and rob-
binir.
Mm\ / A wife or a female
of the Bhil-people.
W^l" /. An eyebrow.
T^^m V. c. To terrify : to
intimidate, snub.
f^^ry. Messing together.
fiT^3" f. Mixture, mixed
state. 2 That which is mixed. 3
A mingled mass. 4 Company,
club.
[W^^ V. c. 6r i. To mix.
Wffr^, Wms- a. Sliaggy.
'^^ /• Reliance or depen-
dence upon as indispensable ;
repose of mind on. v. ^, '^x,
r^T^Tr (p Heavenly : — high
regard and esteem being awarded
to the supplier of water). A car-
rier of water in a skin under his
arm.
M^^^\ (a) a term em-
ployed by the Hindus, with their
customary misconception of
Musulman words and sentiments,
to express Tumultuous or con-
fused intermixture, — a jumble,
medley : a mess (of things,
affairs, &c.) v. cfiX-
IM^r/. (s) Alms, charity;
money or food given to beggars.
V. "^T^, %. 2 App. to a boon
earnestly besought : '^ ^T-
v^\-^K ^lir -H^ -iT^I. ^-^^ ??^l
TiT^rJ^T w.pop. -^ Wandering
about l)eggiug alms, mendicancy.
rir<;Tr«!if a. a beggar.
W^ s PiT^^ (s) A Brdhman
of the mendicant order. 2 A
beggar gen.
m^jT^ry. The profession of
a fn^fi Wi?ivr. a. Becoming
irk
or belonging to the fn^^
opp. throughout to JZ"^^.
RT^^fr A beggar.
W^fT^f^r a. l^leemosynaiy.
#f^ /. Alms. 2 Want or
lack : ^-^iri^^l ifl^ 3TT%.
iTr^r^st /. An ornament
worn by a boy.
^r^/. Respect, regard, v.
T^'C, TT'a, ^W, ^^, Tmm, ^^:
^l^ ^t^ «1^ ^l^fT ^Wt ? 2
fig. Scarcity : ^TT^T ^T^TTTtW
3 Crovydedness : "^^oat*? ^I'T-
/. Reverence, regard, deference
for. V. -^X, Ti^, WX, i^, ^T^.
rs
^FcT p. (s) Frightened.
^(kT /. (s) Fear: terror,
alarm.
HR a. s Fearful, terrible — a
person or matter.
miT, iffiT^^ (s) The name
of one of five tff^^ princes,
a celebrated warrior. Hence
app. to a person of gigantic size
and voracious appetite.
^r^ n. (s) Timid, fearful. 2
Afraid of; in comp. as m^-
mT'^T a. s Frightful, fearful.
Hf^ (s) A warrior renowned
in Hindu story for his bravery,
wisdom, continence and fidelity
to his word ; app. to a valiant,
wise, continent and faithful per-
son. 2 A cant name for a bug.
jfr^JR[%5rr / a sure promise.
^f^ or"!"/. The terraqueous
globe. 2 The ground. 3 Stature :
^f^^ A fort on the plain,
tf^^ fi. A cellar.
^
^CfJ^rr / A mushroom.
y^C?"^ n. Ground-rent.
r
^1"^3T An earthen vessel
filled with fireworks.
^^^ A plant, Ground-nut.
5^57^1/ The pod of^^JT.
y^fr ni. ^^ or 5^^Tr,
ST^I/. Powder. ^
if^^ a. Hungry, needy. 2
Bad, vile.
If^^ ^^ 2. To bark.
^^r A fragrant powder.
Much used in offerings to idols.
2 Powder.
^^r^ a. Ever craving for
food.
yf^^ a. Hungry, craving.
2 fig. Needy, indigent. 3 fig.
Lean, meagre — a soil : bare, bar-
ren— a country, market, labour.
4 Poor, paltry.
If^^ni^ a. (h) Hungry and
needy ; a famished wretch.
I3%=^r3^[2:?^r a term for a
person under fiercely craving
hunger ; a ravening wolf.
^5fot ^,. I To hunger. 2
fig. To crave.
JJ^^iJfcJT c. A term for a poor,
meagre, half-fainished wretch ; a
starveling Monsieur.
^^^T a. Hungry. 2 Eager-
ly desirous of.
*J^ p. (s) Enjoyed or used,
ii Eaten. 3 Crossed, passed — a
space by a heavenly body in its
course.
*jr^ /. (s) Making a meal.
2 Fruition. 3 Space crossed, &c.
m\ m. iTfTr / Powder.
ijirr A black bee.
i]"^ (s) The whole arm. 2
An arm of a geom. figure. 3
The base of a right-angled trian-
gle. 4 The supplement of two
or four right angles. 6 A bend-
ing curve.
^5fJT (s) A snake. 2 A term
of praise for any clever, power-
ful person : for a fierce person.
^St^qrj, s The sine of an arc.
323
H"^^ See ^l^^'
if^rq^, ij(^q^ n. The inner
bark of the tree ^Tif.
^pr^^ n. Strength of arm.
^^r/. Poet. The whole arm.
JJ^icT?;" n. s The breast.
if^f^r or H'^ffr A grain-
parcher. [corn.
^r -?r (h) An ear of Indian-
iJJ^^R, ijl% A petty thief.
2 App. to a servile parasite, who
obtains his ends at the expense
of his patron.
Terms for a hurried ablution, v.
mr:. 2 »T^»T^JiT^ir is further
app. to an insignificant crop,
trade, work, &c.
ij^r See ^r^^.
iJcTifr ^f /. The violent
heaving of devils in possession.
iJ^rJ^r /. Sorcery.
iTcTl^ST, iTcrrs^/. ifcTl^ n. A
string of devils, v. ^^, ^, ^tjt.
2 The fiends and devils collec-
tively. 3 fig. A line or throng of
rogues, scamps, beggars, &c. v.
mm, ^z, m^'.
IJcTR" n. A button.
JTmsrr .sqr a. That injects
^':^r An individual of a
class of devotees of the goddess
IT^=T -^ ad. Thump!
bump ! whop !
y^^ir Food burned to a
cinder. 2 Powdery, crumbly
state: !R^<t-^ JIT^'^^T 3TTT<1
irq^f^The whoop of monkeys
V. ■^. 2 fig. Popular outcry.
W^r /. The name of a H-
■f^in"^. 2 A piece in the mea-
sure of this KTif^Huff, sung in
the morning.
^■.^\< See5^K.
^^T^r/. y^f^cT a. (8) Hun-
ger and Hungry,
v»
^^^r A long-established re-
sident of a place. 2 fig. App.
to one who is well acquainted
with (a place, business, &c.), a
ruttier. 3 A road-guide.
ifm?:, mK n. (h) a cavern.
2 A cellar, a vault.
WK^ a. Of a dirty or dusky
white.
»\«
y^=ft'^ V. c. To suck up with
a flurruping sound, v, i. To utter
its roar — a tiger.
iJT^^-^?: ad. Imit. of the
sound of a bird rising suddenly
from its rest ; of grass,&c. burst-
ing suddenly into a blaze.
H^^ A sup (of any liquid
preparation of food) with a
flurruping noise : a long whiff (of
a ^^r). V. ATT, g. 2 A cant
terra for a rupee ; a white boy.
3 A veil.
^^ /. A cloth covering
the body and head of a horse.
2 A cloth cover for a palanquin,
carriage, &c. 3 A top to a carri-
age.
ifW-^Faf/. Imit. of the
sound emitted by light articles
of fuel under rapid combustion.
.^J^^'T V. i. To burn rapidly
and with a brustling sound —
light and dry materials.
IJToyT 77. c. To be bewitch-
ed, charmed : to be beguiled.
iJT^ n. Charmed, captiva-
ted state (through spells, flat-
tery, &c.) V. tiT^, ^■^.
if^r a. (h) Of a light or
redish brown.
ij^"^ v.i. (h) To forget one's
self. V. c. Sf i. To forget.
^^^\q -cTfq/ See ^T^^T.
iJ^^^'T /. Captivating, be-
guiling: captivated state.
iTc^fq^oT V. c. To make to
forget. 2 To infatuate.
^^\ f. Stupefaction, forget-
fulness.
iJ^'T n. (s) A world.
J^^J a. Chaffy— corn.
2 Powdery from being worm-
eaten — wood. 3 Light, chaffy,
lit. fig. n. c Chaff. 2 Powder
(as of wood sawn, &c.)
vwir
324
W^
if^yfteT -^FcT a. Light and
drv ; friable — soil, wood.
ij^r (H) ChafF. 2 Powder,
(lust, &c. (as of sawn wood).
ijmr, if^IT 7j. A generic
term for the cereal grains, the
grasses, and the esculent culms.
ij^rr (h) a grain-dealer or
corn-chandler.
^^it n. Drizzling rain : a
mist.
IfSlJS- .S-f See lTo5"^'5rr.
^ J- (s) The terraqueous
globe, a. In comp. Produced
from : as ^'^^ Produced from
the lotus.
^ f. Hunger. 2 Appetite.
a fig. Desire.
^7 (s) An earthquake.
IT^^f^ f. Assuaging hunger
with a snack ; staying the sto-
mach. 2 The passing away of
hunger through waiting. 3 Sati-
ety. 4 Interruption of a man
eating before the hunger is satis-
fied.
^J^^ n. (s) A division of the
^''"^^- ^ [al horizon.
i^MT^'fcT^ 71. s The ration-
^l^ (s) pop -^ The terra-
queous ball. 2 A terrestrial
globe.
^^^ a. (s) That moves or
lives on land, terrestrial.
W^ /: See IT^.
^cT n. in. (s) A iioblin, or
tiend. 2 A ghost, an appari-
tion. 3 m. A demigod of a parti-
cular class. 4 K A common
term for the five elements, viz.
earth, fire, water, air, akash. 5
Any created thing; or any ma-
terial element or principle. (>
In law. Fact.
^ p. (s) Elapsed, past. 2
In comp. Been, become : m-
'iJrTCl^rcT n. Will-o'-the-
Wisp or Ignis fatuus.
i{r!g-Rr A place infested
with fiends, sprites and goblins.
2 The tricks, pranks of fiends.
V. ^H, ^T3T. 3 App. to a multi-
tude of children fiockinj? toge-
ther ; to a rabble of vulgar peo-
ple. 4 A dirty and disorderly
place.
ITcferqr/. (s) Universal bene-
volence; love extending over the
whole expanse of being.
^"Tifc^q" Destruction of all
being, animate and inanimate.
2 The overabounding and active
operation of the fiends called
Vrf. [earth.
^^^ 71. The face of the
^^3" y*. A common term
for noon, evening and midnight.
At these periods evil spirits are
abroad. ^^j^^
iTcf^^IT Demoniac posses-
iTcTFrS"/. The illusions effect-
ed by the power of the «rf . 2
Leger demain. 3 The class col-
lectively of the beings called
4T?r. 4 The material world.
iT^RT (s) The body. 2 The
vital principle as the proximate
cause of life and action.
»\
^f A title arrogated by
the Brahmans.
IT^^r A mountain. 2 A title
of the snake which upholds the
globe. 3 A king.
1%^^% ^^r^ (s) pop.
»Tmo3. A king.
^l^l f. A particular l^a-
gini. 2 A metrical piece in the
measure of this Ragini sung in
the morning.
ij^^^ 71. (s) The terraque-
ous globe.
^fff /. (s) The earth. 2 The
ground. 3 See ■5i*Tl^. 1 In
geora. The base of a polygon :
base gen.
l{Tq^ An earthquake.
^J^^\ f. The earth. 2 Thea-
trical dress. 3 Place (of action);
stage, arena. 4 Ground, footing.
^^Rfcr /. Geometry.
i{RrrT^^r/. s pop. i^mrci^l'r
(Jeometrical progression.
irriTiTR, i^m^iTir A term
tor a verj' wicked person.
^^ f. The earth. 2 The
ground.
^ f. Cloudiness over the
eye, nebula. 2 White mould,
^^ f. (h) Stupefaction (as
caused by the use of intoxicat-
ing substances.) 2 Obscuration
of intellect.
iTc7^ffT-cTR f. Deceiving,
deluding, v. ^.
^^^ (s) The earth as the
liabitation of man.
^T^T^I^r/. s A promontory.
^^"T n. (s) An ornament,
lit. fi?.
iTq-flof V. c. To adorn, de-
corate.
^tTq-cT p. Adorned.
^, ^ n. (H) Chaff or
husks. 2 Powder or dust (as of
wood). 3 See ^^^^K.
^5i2T /. s Contraction of
the brows ; a frown.
^^, ijirrsT (s) The hum-
ble bee.
^5^1^ s Friday.
\^ p. s Parched, roasted.
^ 71. Fear, dread.
^T^ s A frog.
1T^3-,>^T, ^^ a. Cow-
ardlv, timid.
^"^ ?;. i. To cry ; to bawl.
^^^ 71, A small species of
deer.
^W^ V. i. To crack, split-
ground, hands, feet.
^^ f. (ii) Meeting. 2 The
reciprocal embrace of persons
meeting. 3 The jiresent or of-
fering (of money, fruits, &c.)
made to a great person on in-
troduction to him : a present to
a superior or esteemed friend.
^Z^ V. i. To meet; to have
an interview. 2 To join in close
embrace — friends meeting. 3
To encounter ; to fall in with.
^TJI^'T ?;.c.To bring together
to an interview or close em-
brace.
^Z]^Z f. Mutual meeting.
M"?r /. Poet. A meeting.
^3- a. Poet. Timid.
w^^
325
inwqr
^^WC a. Fearful, timorous.
IT^^f^'T' n. A scarecrow.
To menace, snub : terrify.
JritST m. ^^f^ n. A roll
(of paper, tape, rope, &e.) : a
coil (as of rope). ,
ir^ V. c. 6r i. (Vulg.) To
fear: or to be afraid.
•\
*T^ (s) Dividing, parting, v.
■^X. 2 Divided state. 3
Separateness. 4 Difference. 5
Distinguishing, v. ^^. 6 A
distinction. 7 Variance. 8 Sow-
ing dissension. 9 Causing change
(of mind) : =?t '^T*^^ ^^?rl
10 Secrets, arcana : '^T <?JT
1 1 Dmerence, in comp. 3T?J
^T?^ a. That divides, severs.
^^"^ V. c. To divide, lit. fig.
2 See fvT^ui, sig 2.
iTT^'T fl. s (Proper) to be
divided, &c.
^^ V. i. To take frislit.
JT^TT Anxiety. ?>. §^. 2 A
fright ; a shock, v. g, ^^, %t.
^^fiT^ Difference, diversity.
^\^^ p. (s) Divided, parted.
iT^r -?rr a. That knows the
secret mysteries (of a place,
work).
^^ a. (s) Divisible, separa-
^b'e- [fear.
4^^l^ f. Worship from
ITPT^^ a. Fearful, timid.
^?r/. s A large kind of
kettledrum.
JT^y / Mixture. 2 That which
is added and mixed.
^^iJ n. ^^tf\ f. A wad-
dling motion ; a reel. v. mi,^l.
IT^^^^ V. i. To reel, totter.
^^^ V. c. 6f i. To mix,
blend.
iT^r -T -E (h) Dress, garb.
2 A costume. 3 A disguise.
^^^ a. Fearful or timorous.
^^^ f. A mixture.
m^, JT^^ a. Frightful, ter-
rible.
»\
^^ /. Anything added and
mixed. 2 also »to31^o3 /.
^M':^.t»fe- [blend.
^^^ V. c. Sf i. To mix,
^TC^ (s) A name of Shiva,
but esp. an inferior manifesta-
tion, of which this is the com-
mon name for eight. 2 A musi-
cal mode. a. s Formidable, ter-
rific.
irn^r A familiar name of
VK'^. 2 App. to a deaf man.
^rC (h) a class of people
who are palanquin-bearers and
fishermen.
m^, ^\^ n. A bore : a hole.
2 fig. HoUowness.
^\^, irr^ n. Barking (of a
dog). 2 fig. A violent and sudden
roar (as of a child), v. ^I^.
iTr^%/. Barking.
ITOT V. c. To bark.
m^T, ^\^■K f. A tree. 2 v.
The fruit of it. 3 A pendant of
an earring, &c.
JTr^^i^r^qr a. Of large,
staring eyes, goggle-eyed.
iTr^^r,m^r a rude gap.
V. ^T^, f%w, m^. 2 A loss iu
trade.
^r^r c A male cat.
iTRF^, iTT^r^, iTl^R n. A
contemptuous terra for the
mouth or face when distorted
by bellowing or yawning, v.
^"% ^^1 A bore, a hole
through.
irr^sq" a. (s) (Destined) to
be enjoyed or endured.
iirTfrr a. That enjoys : that
experiences. 2 A guitr.riand,
epicure. 3 That apprecintes and
patronizes (merit, learuiug, &o.)
iTPf^f n. See ^^l"^^- 2
Enjoying or enduring.
^f^ (s) Enjoyment or en-
durance : the pleasure or pain
enjoyed, v. %, ^^c. 2 Using,
use. V. ^X, a. 3 Any object
of enjoyment. 4 Pleasure or pain
arising to be received or borne.
Accomplishing : passed state.
?;T3^^t ^Ji^r^^T. 6 Rice
risen up during the boiling above
the level of the boiler.
mW\ V. c. To enjoy or endure
(pleasure or pain). 2 To use. 3 To
be enjoyed.
iTfT^^^ n. The pleasure and
pain appointed to be experienced
in hfe. 2 Enjoying : experienc-
inff.
JTRiTm^Tr A general term
for enjoyment, fruition, occupan-
cy, possesion.
iTRT^r Fruition, enjoyment.
irr^lN^^ (s) Pleasure and
enjoyment.
m^^ a. Loose, slack — a
bundle, dress, &c. 2 Slovenly,
untidy. 3 Disorderly — a busi-
ness. 4 Hollow ; — grains, wood,
&c. 5 Light; — a cowrie.
lTriT3"iTi A term for a slov-
enly Brahman.
irrns^rtfc^q v. The tube-
padlock, the common Native
padlock.
ifrnRfr/. The Ganges of
W a. (s) A voluptuary. 2
That enjoys or endures.
^F^ a. (Possible, purpos-
ed) to be enjoyed. 2 That may
be used : ^f^ '^T' ^^ ^II'^TW
3?^^ UX a5T5T '%^^ TT%5I.
3 Remaining to be accomplished
— a space or a period. 4 n. En-
joyment, function, v. SR'c:.
itr^'T n. (s) Making a meal.
ifrsi^^'RT^r /. The money-
present given to Brahmans after
supplying them with a meal.
m^rq-
326
^^^
Terms for a drone : a parasite,
irr^r a. ». That eats. In
comp. as ^T^ifToil, 3?^-
iTr^^ a. s Eatable.
iTFcT A large sack for hold-
ing grain. 2 Skin peeling off.
3 A cloth dipped in oil and
kindled.
iTK°T V. c. To impose upon,
o take in.
m^ -?rr a. (h) a deceiver,
im poster.
iflqs-'^f cTr /. A Tom-boy, a
hoiden.
iThS"^^! a. That requires
no neatness, refinement, delicacy,
skill in the management of it —
a state, a business, a work. 2
Slovenly, disorderly — dress, &c.
;:JCoarse,rough — a workmanship.
lffT55"r A gourd.
ifiq^^RT^T Corpulence or
obesity.
irnr -^^ The person that
officiates in the temples of vil-
lage-deities.
ITTIT n. An ant-liill.
^m^^ s Tuesday.
iTIX An adjunct of enhanc-
ing power used with adjectu-es,
exf)res3ing Black ; ^ToSI HT>.
iTR^r A tumbler, merry
Andrew, rope-dancer, player,
&c.
ifrff^ Tlie feats and exhibi-
tions of merry Andrews, &c. See
ITT^C /.An eyebrow.
^\^^ -^ f. Vertigo, v. ^,^.
^m^^, ^m^^ V. c.To whirl.
2 fig. To lead a wild dance after :
^\^^ V. i. To turn around. 2
To be dizzy — head, eyes. 3 fig.
To hover over afflicting or troubl-
ing; to beset and harass— an
evil, a crime : g'^R ^^ ^
iTRcrr, ^mi ad. & prep.
About, around.
m^crr?^=^r, iti^m^^^r a. Re-
lating to the regions round-
about.
iJR^^r^ m. n. A village in
the vicinity of.
ifr^r,ifkn A top, a whirli-
gig. 2 A whirlpool. 3 A ring of
hair (on the body). 4 The fruit
of ifT?^- 5 A bee that bur-
rows in the ground. 6 A circu-
lar spot of hair pi-eserved around
the ii'^. 7 The quivering of
the back (of a cow, &c.) on be-
ing touched. 8 A convolvulus.
9 A rotatory thing in gen.
mt\, iTf^tr /. A plant. 2
The whirling circularity of dan-
cers, tops, &c. 3 A blemish in
horses. 4 A circular discolora-
tion round the place where a
thorn, &c. has entered.
m^S-, ^\^^ f. Giddiness.
^\^\^\, it'R^T a circuit. 2
also irt^T^T ^T^T^T Pul:>lic
exposure (as of an offender upon
an ass), v. ^JS, fflK:^, ^T^l-
W, f»TH, ^TSi. 3 Messedness.
^m^^, m^^ot ^^ c. To
thrust into. 2 To stab. 3 To
spoil, mess.
m^fr, ^\^flf. Pudendum
muliebrc.
^\^, ifffS"/. Vertigo.
ifra^^J, iffS"^ a. Rather
simple oi-^silly. [-„po„
ifrSJ^ri'^ot V. c. To impose
^r^T a. Simple, honest :
weak, silly.
iTfS^RP-T, iffST^f^^ Titles of
Shiva. 2 App. to a guileless and
unsuspecting person.
irr^riTi^, ifr^PTf^fs? simpii-
city, artlessness.
msriirrW a. Simple.
^Wrm^r «. Porgetfid or
neglectful, v- 5TT w?. Blunder.
^f^ n. An oversight, a
blunder (as in an account); a
thing gained through the over-
sight of. 2 Charmed, beguiled
slate. V, ^^^, tf-s.
^flcT^ a. s Relating to the
malignant spirits called Vrf.
2 Relating to the five elements,
elemental, material. 3 Relating
to the universe.
m^ n. Weighty material
filled into a gold trinket in the
place of gold fraudulently
abstracted, a. s Relating to the
ground, earthly, m. The planet
Mars.
^\^K (s) Tuesday.
i^FJ" .^a. Timid, timorous.
*^r§?: a. Frightful, terrible.
^cTR (s) A husband.
^^ (s) Whirling round. 2
Roaming. 3 A whirl. 4 Mistake.
5 Wandering of mind ; aberra-
tion. 6 fig. Straying. 7 Surmise.
8 Doubt.
W^^ n. (s) Going round. 2
Wandering, lit. fig. 3 Deviating
from rectitude. [error.
^^"^^^ n. The wheel of
J^irt^fc^ a. Given to wan-
dering.
^^ V. i. To whirl, turn
round. 2 To rove. 3 To err.
^^ (s) A large black bee.
2 A ring of hair.
^1^8" a. (s) Erring, confus-
ed. 2 Ever confused and cloudy ;
a puzzlehead.
^^\ a. (s) Erratic. 2 Stray-
ins:.
^^ s Falling, lit. fig.;
mental aberration ; moral aberra-
tion : ex. com p. ^f% -'5T«I -luTfi
. "^
*^^^ r. c. To confuse, per-
plex. 2 To cause to deviate from
propriety.
^S"p. (s) Fallen, lit. fig. (as
from dignity, power, caste, vir-
tue). 2 Confused, perplexed.
*^S"^ V. i. To fall (from
virtue, rank, &c.) 2 To be con-
fused.
^^
327
ITT^
^^r^^ V. c. To pollute, esp.
ceremonially.
'^S'f^lT General pollution;
as arising from general profli-
gacy of manners, disregard of
the clean and unclean, or neg-
lect of ritual prescriptions.
*^S"r^R" A course devious
from the Shastras.
»^S"r^[fr a. That walks de-
viously from the Shastras.
^^l^^f. See '^g-f^R.
*^f^ p. (s) ErrincT, confused.
2 s Whirled, turned round.
»^fcrf?q- a. Doubtful, dubi-
ous; a puzzle-nose.
'^rfrr (s) a brother.
^^frcT/ (s) pop. ^fcT/. Mis-
take, misappreliension. 2 Wan-
dering, aberration.
^^irrT^^a. Doubtful, ambigu-
ous.
*^ff?r^rr «. Scrupulous; one
ever full of doubts and perplex-
ities.
'^rPcrg- a. Of a doubting,
wavering disposition : of a con-
fused mind.
^J^r^m f. s Fratricide. '^rj-
^ffilKl m. A fratricide.
^HT^ a. That confounds,
bewilders, puzzles.
^J^r/, Contraction of the
brows, a frown; the brow or a
brow.
\f. (s) An eye-brow.
^^ s An embryo.
^K'^^if. s Killing of the
iSr* [brows.
^^f- s Poet. The eye-
^^^ s Indication by
twitching the eyebrows, v.
T The twenty-fifth conso-
nant.
^f a. Soft. 2 Pliant, flexile.
3 fig. Gentle.
*r^3^^ a. Rather soft, &c.
^3rqrJTRr a term for a neu-
ter.
^^'^ Twisted silk.
^^^ (s) An aquatic mon-
ster, understood usually of the
alligator, crocodile and shark.
2 The sign Capricorn.
^^rj¥c7 n. (s) An ear-ring
(of males) of the form of
^^X^ s The nectar or honey
of a flower.
(s) The passage of the sun from
Sagitarius into Capricornus.
'T^ry. in. Indian corn.
^^l^ n. Straw of fl^r.
'^^r (a) a contract of work
or supply ; a monopoly, &c.
HTF^tr A contractor, (fee.
*TW s Sacriftcing; ex. of
comp. flil#^q-VlfiT, S^rlTT^.
nJ^^^ / (a) Velvet. 2
Globe amaranth, n. Its flower.
iT^JTc^r«. Relating to velvet,
&c.
^^T 71. A car in which idols
or Brahmans are seated on great
occasions. 2 A gaily dressed up
frame in which a girl under
menstruation for the first time
sits and receives certain honors.
^^c^?Tr-^r/.(p)The passing
of an account or the authorizing
of a paper gen. 2 The name of
the mark aftixed to grants, lease,
&c., and to accounts passed by
Government; the countersigna-
ture of the authorizing party.
3 The grand total.
^^r /. (h) The bead of a
gun. 2 The sting, point or drift
(of a speech, &c.) 3 The art, way,
knack (of a contrivance or
process).
^^3^^ a. Firm, strong.
^^ ud. Then, upon that. 2
By and by ; presently. 3 Then;
that being the case.
^^ (p) Pulp, pith, marrow,
brains.
^ntr /. (p) Ornamental
border.
T^fKKa. ThathasaTqtf.
^^^ (a) Power, might.
^n^ a. (8 & H.) Absorbed
in. 2 Glad, delighted.
lTri^iT^c[o. Intoxicated (fig.),
inflated.
^^ /. An alligator.
mxm^ a. Used of an ex-
ceedingly proud person.
^nxmi f\ The grasp of an
alligator. 2 A firm hold, a
Cornish hug. 3 Detaining one
by a long and tedious speech,
holding by the button.
^WU f. (p) Haughtiness,
an-s. [airs.
^n^X a. (a) Proud, full of
^^^ n. (s) Good fortune,
welfare. 2 A festive occasion in
gen. , as marriage, &c. 3 Ellipti-
cally for ifJi^T'^K'T. 4 The
planet Mars. 5 Fortunate, far-
ing well.
Jtr[c75R% y. A poetical term
for the earth.
^^'^^\^ n. a gen. name for
the musical instruments suitable
to festive occasions.
^^^mX Tuesday.
m^^^ n. See 3qfn55^^.
Hrfc^HR n. Ablution in oil
and afterwards in water.
iIiT^r^?:'Jr n. (s) The lines
at the opening of a poem, &c.
in praise of some deity : the in-
vocation of some deity upon be-
ginning to recite a J^TUT ot
^^T- 2 A beginning gen. con-
sidered as auspicious.
^IT^^IS"^ n. Stanzas recited
at marriages, munj, &c. in bless-
ing the rite or its subject.
^q^T^cTf /. pi. Rice cast
upon people assembled upon a
marriage, &c.
M^ See M^.
Rn3-JTr%/. A name of JH^fcT.
A^^mX Tuesday.
^^^^^ "• The marriage-
string. It is a string with a bit
of gold strung on it. It is cast
by the bridegroom around
the neck of his bride ; and she
wears it uutil widowed.
ITTST
if^oSTT^r f. The ceremony of
\Yaviiig (as aroiuul an idol) of a
burning lamp : the lamp so
waved.
^JT j7. (s) Drowned. 2 fig.
Absorbed in ; swallowed up by.
JT^r/. pi (s) Tlie tenth lu-
nar mansion.
iT^r a^l. Snmetinie back ; a
while a^ro : ^T ^R^N ^T^T, "^
3T"TITfr ac/. A little while ago.
^^^ (s) A bedslearl,cniich,
sofa. 2 A platform, a scaffold.
JT=^^/. The sound of the
jaws at cfiting.
if^lT^rcT a. Watery, washy :
fisr. vapid, insipid.
IT^S" a. Brackish.
^^r a. Relating to or situa-
ted in the middle.
i{^xq-[J{v:q- ,,f/_ Without the
knowledge of some person who
should be consulted ; with dis-
regard of some point which is
usually observed — going, acting:
«K*lTi; «To ^tnr'H^T.^ -Be-
tween the two : ^ '<T^ «t^^
^TTm *T^T *To fsT3JT f'TST'SJT.
^'^ (s) A fish. 2 tio-. The
sharp-edged member of a pier
which meets and sustains the
force of the stream. 'A also
iT'^^'^ n. The mariner's com-
pass.
^^-i3X n. (h) a moscjuito.
q=^r?r^ /. (a) Mosquito-
ciirtiiins.
ITsT^ (ai a written account ;
the contents of an ejiistle : an
oral communication. 1.' Mention
of. V. fnH, %, '^TvT g- of S- '^
pop. Estimation, account: rm-
^0«T. a. Above-mentioned ;
Current, present: ^T'sl '^'*-
JTsf^^ f, (p) Strength, firm-
ners (of things). 2 fig. Positive-
niss (of speech, promises, &c.j
^^^^ a. (a) Strong, firm,
fast. 2 fig. Staunch, steady;
determinate.
328
^^^ f. (a) a stage ; a dny's
journey, v. Wi^, ^^'T. '^T'C,
^t:^, JifH, HT*, *^- 2 Any
portion of a journev performed at
once : 3TT?fl ^^<:t?l '^T^ ^T^
^o BT^'^^'^- 3 The last stage :
4 fig. A stage of a business : ^I
iTsf?^^/. (a) See ^^ffc^^.
^5T?5T (h) An upper story. 2
A term for the decks of a ship.
',i A layer.
^^^\ a. Having stories — a
house : having decks — a ship.
^^\f. (p) Flavor, taste. 2
Fun, sport.
IT^[?^^/. (a) a roval court:
an assembly gen. of learned per-
sons, &c.
m'^Xl f. Any compound
flower (as that of ■g'oJ^) ; a
compound pedicle.
irfsfS" n. m. Bengal madder.
^^\^ a. (h) Soiled, fouled.
2 Dull, wan — a color. 3 fig.
Backward, slack — one's learn-
ing, &c.
JT^ a. Beautiful, lovely. 2
Melodious.
iT5?r /. (p) The wages of a
laborer. 2 The business of a
laborer.
^^^ a. S. pop. ^^ Soft,
melodious — voice. 2 Gentle —
the wind.
JT'^ (p) A day-laborer.
*TW^ a. (a) Agreeable. 2 Ap-
proved or confirmed— a deci-
sion of a lower court or subordi-
na'.e officer.
irir^rR a. (?) Savory, tasty.
2 Capital, excellent, fine.
^k^^ /. Tastinoss: plea-
santness (as of singing, playing,
&c.) 2 Prettiness, fineness (of
objects). 3 Endearing speech,
blandishment.
^^"if^ n. s Immersion ; ablu-
tion.
H^Jir f. s Marrow of the
bones or flesh. 2 Pith of plants.
^Z^^ -^l -f^r ad. Smart-
Iv, in a trice. 2 (Or i?f)
Mutely, still, v, s^^, B?¥,
V
^J^"T V. c. To sprmg upon
and seize ; to vab (a person run-
ning off, a thing falling). 2 To
shut suddenly and closely — eyes,
mouth.
W£% f. A bean.
iTJif^rR^ V. c. To gobble
up ; to guttle.
^Z^Z ad. Imit. Pit a pat;
'TT^T 5ft^ T^o ^fT^T My
heart is in great flutter and tre-
pidation.
^f a. Stiffstanding ; — used
of a restive horse, &c. 2 Slow,
sluggish.
^T? (s) A college. 2 A devo-
tee's cell, cave, a hermitage. 3
A residence of a company of as-
cetics.
^5" a. (s) Dull, slow of mo-
tion.
ITIS^I, ^ZJ f. A small
^■3. 2 A term of disparage-
ment for a dwelling house;
answering to Hermitage or an-
chorite's cell.
^^t f. (h) a green market.
JT^^T /. A ^vater-jar of a
bulging belly.
^^^ n. A water-jar.
^^•T n. (s) Ornament or de-
coration : the adorning mate-
rial. 2 Dressing out. 3 In dis-
putation. Proving, maintaining
(of a position). 4 (for ^^ff^-
■^.) Overspreading(of clouds);
canopy, v. ^T^-
^^^ (s) An open shade or
hall adorned with flowers and
erected on festive occasions :
an arched way of light sticks for
the vine, &c. 3 fig. A canopy of
clouds.
A^^ n. (s)pop. ^ A circle;
a ring; an orbit. 2 The disk of
the sun, &c. 3 A province, a
circle. 4 A company, a band. 5 A.
sort of mystical diagram inscri-
bed in summoning a divinity
upon occasions. 8 A form of
military array. 9 A region of the
T§"rT
329
JTT
body; as ?R^^ ^^l^wT. 10 A
period of forty-t"o days. Used
with reference to taking of
medicine.
JTJc^fff ad. 8 Circularly,
rinwvvise.
4?c?r /. (s) pop. -^r An
assembly, a company, a corpo-
rate body.
^^\i f. A^l^'^ n. A pre-
mium or bonus to a money-
lender above the stipulated
interest.
A^\^ -"T n. Overspreading
of clouds. ». HTvI : 'TT^^T'^' Tfo
QTff^". 2 (fig. of iT^*T Adorn-
ing.) Ornament or grace of:
^r^cT p. (s) Ornamented.
2 fig. Adorned, graced : uj;tf»T
'^■f^^^^ II.
Jf^i (s) A froo;. it^-^r^RT
f. s (The course of a frog.)
Skipping over, omitting at in-
tervals.
^^ s Rust of iron, or a
medicinal preparation of it.
*i^ n. A corpse. ^^^2J"f /.
The livid hue upon the coun-
tenance in death. 2 fig. The
cadaverous look of alarmed guilt,
&c.
^Z^\^^ f. The price of
overlaying or lining.
irs"^, ^z[^^ v. c. (h) To
overlay ; to cover over (the out-
side or the inside) with gold or
silver wash, with leather, paper,
&c.
^^^^\ .mif. Lining, Sec.
^i\ f. See ffjr.
^^ A measure of capacity,
a maund. 2 The quantity mea-
sured by a maund.
^^r A maund-mea<5ure. 2
A large gem. 3 App. to Adam's
apple, to a single vertebra of the
back, &c. 4 An amulet worn
around the neck. 5 A pully-
block .
^^^^ n. The wrist. 2 The
ankle. 3 The pastern-joint of a
horse. 4 fig. Means, resources
(of physical strength,money, &c).
42 ■ ■
^R^q" s. The wrist.
JT^Tr (s) A gem, bead, &c. 2
Glans penis. 3 Clitoris. 4 App.
fig. to a person emment in any
way. ^ A knob of wood ; a
puily-block. 6 Semen virile.
^^ A caste. They are jewel-
ers and makers of beads, &c.
mx^ W^^K f. A snake of a
venomous kind.
^TcTjorow. s Mine. In conip.
as M-^^, ^^<^^^Tl.
^ n. (s) Opinion, mind.
2 Particular tenets : a sect, a
heresy.
^^ An adjunct formed from
iT<T or ?IT«T s and attached to
nouns to turn them into attri-
butives ; as ^rf^lTfT, ?jf^fl<T.
^^'T V. i. To agree together.
fl'cWcTicR' n. Diversity of
opinion.
A^^^ V. c. To charm. 2 fig.
To bewitch.
^^^i f. Wind from the
land, i. e. East or North-east.
^cT^J^ (a) Purpose, intent.
2 Meaning (as of a document).
J^cTc^^^IT & JTcTc^fr a.
(p & h) Designing, crafty.
^^^K\ a. Opinionated.
^T^ f. (s) Intellect, mind.
^irf*^ Error, mistake.
^rcTfl?- a. Dollish.
JTrcT^R a. s Wise, sensible.
^^f"^ s A bug.
^tT j)' (s) Intoxicated, lit.
fig. 2 Mad.
JTtT
n. ^ee
^cT.
^^r/. (A) Property.
JT^^fi'iTrTR Dogmatism.
rr^lfiriTRr «. Dogmatic.
^^ (s) An incantation; a
charm, v. qj^, ^ix^, Ej*, w^.
2 A formula sacred to a deity. 3
Secret consultation v. ''5'tT, ■^.
A division of the Vedas,
^m See ^cl^ot'
^^cT^ pi. Charms and
spells; schemes and devices. ».
^«tf^, ■^JreiT, ^oSTo?.
RVj^qt^TpcT /. ^n. The gowpen
or double handful of flowers ac-
companied by the recitation of
a mantra, thrown on the idol's
head. 2 fig. A shower of abuse,
curses, scolding, &c. v. ^?;;,
^'^^^\^ (s) The applying,
directinsr, or setting against of
a mantra.
JT'^r^cfy. pop. -^Fp/. Rice
charmed by the recitation over
it of a mantra. 2 fig. Vollies of
abuse, v. ■^, MTK-
^^r (s) A king's counselor:
an adviser iu gen. 2 One that
can use charms. [Envious.
ff^^ (s) Envy. Jl^^fr a.
^<:^r A gnat or mosquito.
^^^ (s) A fish. 2 fig. the
ellipsis formed by the intersec-
tion of two circles. 3 A figure
formed by the lines on the palm.
4 A mole (on the body).
iT^^^^crr?: (s) The first of
the ten incarnations of Vishnu,
— that of the fish.
^^^"Mi^lfr a. Piscivorous.
A^^\ /. Churning, &c.
^W^ V. c. To churn. 2 fig.
To discuss : to investigate : to
consider. 3 To entice; to per-
suade craftily. 4 Poet. To put
to death, v. i. To agree together,
to combine : :^ ■^T9 irfl%
H§iH n. Churning. 2 fig.
Agitating a subject ; discussing.
^T^r The signature ofhim
who grants a hundi.
TRT^ ;;. (s) Churned. 2 fig.
Discussed.
^r^cTT^ Conclusion, upshot.
^^ a. (s) Slow, tardy. 2 fig.
Stupid. 3 Cold, apathetic. 4 Dim
— the sight : faint — light, &c. :
mild — a smile. 5 Low — a tone. 6
Gentle — a breeze.
^ (s) Inebriety, lit fig. 2
iscence^ passion. 3 The
i?TT
330
ir^rr^
running from an elephant's
temples when in rut. 4 The
nectar of Howers or juice of
fruits. 5 Pride. 6 Mailness. 7
Spirituous liquor. S Wilil tricks.
JT^JTr*^ a. Tardigrade.
fl^cTor T /. (a) Aid, help.
2 An aider, hacker. 3 An in-
toxiciUiug i)reparation of opium.
JT^cTHI^ c. (p) An assistant,
helper.
JT?'?Tnrfr f. AssistinL^
JTS-rTl^jfr /. IIel])ing. ^^^-
■^^ A helper.
IT^=T (s) The name of the
Hindu Cu()id. 2 The sexual
passion, lust.
^^•T n. The corn arising
from the first treading of the
ears; the corn and the chaff
together. [lust.
JT?=WRcr a. Inflamed with
JT^^r^fJcTST A term for a
handsome man.
AZ^f^, A^^\^ r/. (s) Dull of
understanding.
A^^m a. Unlucky.
A^T: or it^Tf^r^ (s) The
name of the mountain with
which the ocean was churned
after the deluge.
A^^K -^[^^ s Saturday.
iT^1^5g;c^ a. Mad with lu>t.
rt^RRcf u. (s) Smiling. 2 n. s
A smile.
A^\k f. Slo\vne.ss, languid-
ness, lit. fig. : slackness, (as of
a malady) : lowness (of rate).
A^\^^[ f. (s) The galaxy
or milkyway.
T^f''^ a. Blind from j)ride
(of learning, riches, &c. )
'fTcrrry. (a) The bunch on a
dromedary's back. 2 Regard,
view: ^T^^T^^ «T«» "siT^t ^-
^^Kt (ii) A juggler, tum-
bler, the Coryphcus of the band.
^^TR"^ v.i. To abate, assuage.
^?I^r Slowness, lit. fig.
^^ ^n. (s) A house: ^1^
A^\ f. Slowness, lit. fig.
'T?!^ A sort of turban em-
broidered with gold.
^?n^ a. s That is in rut —
an ele|)hant.
'^^\^^\ f. s A female frog.
2 Tiie name of Ravan's wife.
5T?F^tT a. s Intoxicated, fig
A^m a. Lukewarm, tepid.
^^ //. (s) Spirituous liquor.
*T?TTH //. Drinking of wine.
^^^r a. Th;it drinks s])irits.
^TS:!^! a. delating to
Madras.
^'^ /. 7)1. Honey.
'T'^^r n. The central aj)art-
ment of a house.
^*=T^r (I. Middle; belonging
to or situated in the middle.
r{i£r=EpT^Tr See JT^^-^TfiTv^t.
^'^^fcff n. A honeycomb.
iTHIf?*^ a. Middling.
^^T^r a. See ^'■^^F.
^'^^^\Z\ f. The region situate
between ^wTT'Sl &c. ?3TSfT^t, —
betwixt Desh and Konkan.
^^J^"^I n. Honey-water.
^'^^I a. The middle one ; —
used of brothers and sisters.
^'^r (fd. In the middle, prep.
In, into, amidst.
^^T]^ a. Middle.
^^ n. (s) Honey. 2 The
nectar of flowers. 3 m. The month
^■^. 4 m. The season of
spring.
^5 a. (s) Sweet, lit. fig.
m^^^\ f. pL Rivers of
honey. Used to express an over-
flowing plenty of good things at
a feast.
^5^f^^r /. (s) pop. ^^m
The honey -fly, a bee.
^^ ft. (s) Sweet, lit. fig.
^^^^ A fever of a putrid
type.
i^^TT'c^y a. Sub-acid, sweet
and sour — a fruit, &c.
^'=T'T (id. From the middle ;
from aiiiidst. 2 See ^rf ind.
^^ ad. In the middle. ;?/e/?.
In, into, amono;.
^^W*^ ad. In the very mid-
dle.
^^^ (s) Centre. 2 The waist.
3 In comp. Centrical, inter-
mediate.
JI^JfcTrr ad. In the interme-
diate space or time. 2 In the
middle quality.
^■-^^'K^ a tril)e of Brahmans.
T'""^^^ The country lying
between the Konkans and Desh
l)roper ; — the country between
the Goda and Krishna. 2 The
midland. 3 The torrid zone.
JT^^TtrftJTR 71. The middle
measure.
W'^V^m n. s In mathem.
Means.
^^^^ a. Middle, mediate. 2
fig. Middling, moderate.
lT>:iri7^3T^^ «. Middle-aged.
^^^^\f, The middle finger.
2 A female just attained to pu-
Ijtrty. 3 Speech in the third of
its four stages of progress from
the first stirring of the air or
breath in the trachea into
^'(sf'ft Articulate utterance. 4
A form of metre.
fl^^R^iTFTcI n. Medial alle-
ation.
^^^r^r /. Midnight.
^^^tm f. The equator.
^'■"^^fT n. s The zenith.
^^^^J^ The earth.
JT^-q"^^r a. (,s) Central. 2
Tliat mediates between parties :
mediatorial.
JT^^^E^T n. Situate in the mid-
dle part. 2 A mediator.
Mediation ; mediatorsliip.
^'■-^f^ (s) The second term
of the Rule of three.
I^•?TF^:fc^ -^/. Midnight.
^'^\'K m. n. (s) Midday, n
Meridian.
JT^^PC^r^ Noontide.
jr«T
331
JT^r^
T^^ ad. In the middle: in
or within. 2or*T'^'^ In the
meanvvliile ; before or without
the arriving (of some connected
person or event) : »?t "sitrrlt
^•=gxr^;^*IH^^. prep. In,
intn.
ir>-:q^>^ii ad. tlere and there ;
now and then ; at intervals.
iT^r/. j)L Blisters raised by
eup|)ini;^.
^"^-^ A sect among '^'^^^
Brfihrnans.
^-T n. (s) The mind or the
inteUigent power. '2 The heart
or the sphere of the sensihihty.
."^ The conscience or moral sense.
<^T^ ^^ fiiTtr T<?T^t" ■^^. 4
CoNsciousxnss. 5 The vnll or
(leterminin!>; faculty. 6 Liking,
choice : M^^^ m'^'^ ^^ ^T'<T-
R^^fS^ /. Mental cogni-
tion ; tacit conviction.
lT'T:^r?7cr a. Imaginary.
JT^l^^^r a. That discerns the
thou gilts of another.
^^^\^^\f. a desire of ihe
lieart.
^^•.'^^ a. s Mental.
IT^'^f'ir /. (s) A term for the
minil. "The divinity within";
tlie motor of all suggestions,
anticipations, and instructive
apprehensions, v. «T^, "^T^ :
2 The word mav he used in the
sense of Conscience or moral
sense.
JT^i^^'JTI/. Conciliating the
favor of. V. ^K ?• of o.
IT^^ n. Reflecting upon ;
revolving in the mind.
JT^Wfc=5" a. Of a reflecting
disposition.
W\\m'^\ f. The mind con-
ceived as a divinity, genius, or
ruler in the man.
T^:^ ad. According to the
approbation of one's own mind.
Fop. As seemeth right in one's
own eyes.
^^'^^ ad. Deliberately.
^=rUiPT n. Pleasing to the
mind ; gratifying.
"R'^J^rr^ Heartiness, earnest-
ness.
^•TlT^ f. Fancied appetite.
JT=TJTr^ a. Wanton, wilfid.
rr=TrJT5rr3r „. (h) Pleasing,
winning.
Wrrr^ a. Chnrming, de-
lightful. 2 Exuberant, to hearVs
content.
»\
IT*T^^ Pleasino, winning. 2
Celebrated with consent of the
])arties but without consulting
the Sliastras — a marriage.
*\
^^r^ a. Captivating; at-
tracting.
^^RF a. Fancifid, capri-
cious.
q^c^cVfr ^. Innate, native
modesty ; native shame. This
word answers in measure to
Conscience.
J?^^r f. Wish, desire.
^^'^{^\^ f Satiety, content.
^'i^-'Jl'^ 11. 7)1. Red sulphurate
of arsenic.
^^^^ (a) a rank in the
(Mahomedan) cavalry.
rr^HJTSTr^rffr /. Comiiosincr
an angry or afflicted mind; ap-
])easiiig. consoling.
JT^g"3T^^ y_ Opinion, senti-
ments.
iT^^r f. Wish, desire.
JT*T^3-T)r f. Disengagement
of the affections.
^^'^^i (A) A design, pur-
pose. 2 Consideration.
^^m\ f. Arbitration. 2
Intention, mind.
^^W\'^ ad. (s) At will ; ac-
cording to the impulse of one's
])assion ; ad libitum.
^^lW4 (s) Remorse, regret.
il=7ffr rf. (s Of subdued
mind and affections.) Pop. Lax.
licentious, lawless, capricious,
fanciful proceedings; and altrib.
the person. 2 Abundant, copious :
^I^T ; Ma ^j\ ; ad. '^T M»
^'fr p. (a) Forbidden, stop-
ped. V. -^x, ^T.
^=irl"/. Prohil)ition.
^'ir^f3'5!TST a. Artless, open-
hearted.
iT=frf%Jr/. (A&H.) A coun-
termand, revoke.
^r^RfS" /. Tenaciousness
of opinion ; stubborn prejudice ;
dog^edness.
^^fSrrqcT A facetious name
for fl-iT.
iT=fWR^c7r ^T^ To avert (a
distress from the demands of a
creditor, fee."* by numerous shifts
and exi)edients.
fl^r^fliT See ^^q'ff^-
3T^r?^r/. Gaining over.
fv '^' *"_
H'Tll^ V, c. To win over, to
jiersuade.
^"TF f. Pussy, puss.
^^ (s) The great legislator,
Mann. 2 fig. The proper period
or season : -^1^?} ^n?(^T'^T'T»
3 s A man.
^^\f. pi. (a) Dried grapes;
raisins in gen. excepting khismis.
^jsr s A man. 2 Mankind.
HJ'^'^ n. m. (s) Man or man-
kind ; a man, a ])erson. 2 Used
for one of manly qualities or
eminent qualifications, Man :
JR^^^r/. Human art. 2
Human cunning. 3 Intelligence
of look.
^J^m^ n. -'^r m. The na-
ture of man ; humanity, courte-
sy, politeness : orderliness of
deportment.
JR^^T^^ V. Strength of num-
bers ; combined force. 2 The
power consisting in men (in
troops, &c.); as (listing, from
^^\ f. (s) A wish.
JT%r';^cT a. Desired. //. A
desire.
irrnT
332
^r^
^^JW\ a. (s) Existing in the
mind. n. Mind, intent.
Hmr^ f. The passage of
tlie mind, i. e. the speed of
thou<;ht. 2 The access of the
miiui. '^ The forth^oing, inclin-
ing of the will. a. Moving as the
mind; quick, as thought.
^^\W^ a. Conceivable by
the mind.
^'TTsT^ Self-conquest.
'Hiciry. (h) a premiuni to
a money-lender above the sti-
pulated interest.
^^nr (s) Pleasure, will.
^f^^ Mind, thought. 2
Wish, desire.
H^r?"?? Determination, plan,
project.
^•rr^ A passion or affec-
tion of the heart, — as love,
anger, &c. ; a faculty of the mind,
—as thought, memory, &c : a
property gen. of the heart or
mind. 2 Laxly. Purpose.
iT^[^?:'^r /. Keeping in one's
good graces.
^F?^q"C Restraining and
governing the mind.
^•Tf'frcT a. s Chosen, approv-
ed by the mind.
IT^RW a. ^ ad. s Accord-
nut with one's mind.
»\
^RT^ a. s Experienced by
the mind.
^^\^^ (s) Frustration of
hope ; disappointment.
IRrm^ Mind, intent: ^=^r-
JT^IWTfiT a. s Delightful,
agreeable.
^^\^^ a. Mental, cordial.
^Rffq" a. s Agreeable to
the mind; gratifying.
JT^sf^I n. (s) Diversion,
sport.
^K*T (s) Purpose, desire,
wish. 2 or ^^i^^l'iffe. /.
Mental creations or fictions.
'ni^*! a. Pleasing, charm-
ing.
^'TRirr f. s An endearing
term for a wife or a mistress.
^'Tirr (a) a minaret; an
obelisk.
JT%fq[^rr s An affection of the
heart ; a passion or emotion.
ir%frTT/. The mind. 2 pi
The thoughts and feelings.
^f^ The speed of thought.
JT^s^rrtlK Mental operation.
H'TT^cT a. Disappointed.
•\
^•rrC^ a. Captivating, de-
lightful.
H'H^ A name of the Hindu
Cupid.
^-tcR" n. s The reign of a 'TJ,
a period equal to 306,7-0,000
years. 2 fig. The proper period
or season; the time, the day, the
hour, &c . emphatically : «T?i'^
iTTTcfr^ a. (a) Of the poor
or laboring class.
^^ proa (s) Mine.
iTiTcrr / (s) The viewing of
a thing as belonging to one's
self, Flence '2 Love, tenderness,
affection. '6 Pride, arrogance.
^^TcTr^ a. Loving, tender.
^^ lad. A Sanskrit affix used
in the sense of Full of, fraught,
replete, abouMdiiig with : ai^
■^g-^Wff-'T^. 2 Composed of:
*T^cf a. (a) Extinct — a fami-
ly. 2 Dead, deceased. '6 Blasted
— a crop, &c.
^^ (s) A peacock. 2 A
flower, Cock's comb.
^^ /. Dying or very sickly
state. V. $, ^131.
JR^f^iTr a. c Lean and
lank ; a starveling.
^^*n f. Epidemic disease.
2 Epilepsy : vertigo.
^T^ 11. (s) Death. 2 fig.
Loss, decrease : ^T^T'if •fT-
IJJIIW ^73 '?» ■siT'^t- 3 Any
danger or peril: t.g§?(^'F»f
ar^'r ^m ^it w» an^- 4
An act in gen. exceedingly dis-
gusting : ^^ ^TSin "^" IT^T
m^^^l f. The ghastliness
of death.
ir?:qcRar ,^^ ^Q-e^ih. and pre-
servation.
m^^:^\f. Danger of death ;
imminent peril. A term answer-
ing to Jaws of death; verge of
the grave.
^^ V. i. To die. 2 To wither
or dry up : to fade — a tree, 3
fig. To sink, fail. 4 To perish or
starve with cold. 5 To suffer
deprivation of its active qualities
— quicksilver. 6 To lose sen-
sibility : f^ TT^ ITir ^T^rlt
^T^'ii X^ flT^. 7 To dry up —
water, blood, &c. 8 To be resolv-
ed— an eruption. 9 To become
stagnant in any cavity — water.
10 To fail, go; as hunger, thirst,
or any appetite from denied
gratification : to cease, die —
hope, love. 1 1 To lose its fresh-
ness,— water or other liquor. 12
To undergo any extreme sick-
ness : ^T fPt^ ^^ MK^\ ^Tl'i ••
to sustain a heavy loss : ^T
^•^T : to toil and tug hard :
^T^ ^x:^^ ^T^ : to long for
with eagerness and wild excite-
ment ; to be dying with impa-
tience : iJWSI »T':^I¥ *t ^^t
■'5'^^ '^T'T' 13 To lie or sub-
side— dust.
i?^crf[=3"<I a. That is on
the point of death.
^cRF (a) Rank, station,
dignity.
iT^cPTS" n. A living corpse.
H^^^m f. A woman all
whose offsprings die in infancy.
iRcrr^fCR The last meal of
a dying person.
iTTtr^ n. Offices of the
dead ; obsequial rites. 2 c A
corpse.
ITT^TI^ / (The expiring
night.) One of the standards of
appeal by the Marathas in luak-
JTr?r
333
v^m
ing solemn asservations : *lo
iHld+^r a. Lean and tneaore.
JR«r See ^^•
^•n (p) A sort of drum.
m^T f. Wild, headlong-
rushing into situations of jeopar-
dy and danger ; desperateness.
V. V, ^IJI, ^. 2 Reviling
speeches. 3 Complaining mur-
murs.
^^^ Sweet n)arjoram.
*lWf (a) An elegy ; a funeral
eulogium.
^njf a. RelatiniT to the
Maratha country. 2 Relating to
the Maratha people. App. to the
Kunbi it contradistinguishes him
from the Brahman and the high
castes on the one hand, and
from the Parwari and all out-
castes on the other.
JTrrsr /. The Marathi lan-
guage, a. Relating to the Marathi
people.
RnjfJTTSrr Ways and prac-
tices peculiar to the genuine
Maratha, esp. the non-appear-
ance of the women of a house-
hold before strangers.
^rnclf m. /: (a) a title. 2
Disunity, rank.
iTriJTcr f. (a) Preserving in
good condition : the condition so
preserved, v. x.]^, ^K- - The
various operations (of manuring,
raking.&c.)in dressing up a field ;
(of kneading, &e.) in preparing
the dough; (of treading) in tem-
pering mortar; (of drawing, &c.)
in making silk : such state, ii
(Mistaken for ^^T«ff) Skil-
fulness.
'^try. Epidemic disease, a
pestilence. 2 Dying state.
iT^ar a. Epithet expressive
of a character of soil ; as To
^^2" m. n. (s) A monkey.
fT^JJ^ST / Monkey-tricks ;
li2ht,wild,or mischievous pranks.
^€/. (A) Will, pleasure,
choice. 2 Good pleasure, favor.
3 Disposition of the mmd. Ex. of
the three senses. ^^HT«JT%
^^ a. s Mortal, m. A
mortal.
r
^^ (p) A man ; but in use
implying praise for boldness,
firmness ; and app. as the
English word Man to one of
noble qualities. 2 Used in letters
before the name of a man, a
keeper of a female. Esp. this
keeper being a Musulman, and
his woman a 1?^T^ur or ^^T-
^^^rtr (P) A term for a
bold and heroic fellow.
^v^ V. c. To press and
squeeze.
^^=T 71. (s) Rubbing. 2 An
operation in general to soften,
or to reduce to dust ; as pressing
and squeezing, treading and
trampling, grinding &c.: (in
poet.) slaughtering, massacring.
^^r a. (p) Bold, intrepid.
^rc f. Boldness, valor :
heroic feats.
TcTRr a. Fit for males: opp. to
«fTT«ft — an article of dress
&c. 2 Masculine — a voice, &c.
flTFTfr / Manliness, bra-
very. 2 Manfully, valiantly :
with manly vigor and energy :
^"^. 3 With exceeding effort:
To ^TSC "Sf^^T: with diffi-
culty : To ^r ■gt^'ST.
HKcT p, (s) Rubbed, ground,
squeezed, &c.
^^ n. (s) Secret quality ; the
latent power, property, or virtue
of: T-^ tf^T^TT^ sff f ^^TT
TTSlfiTfl ? 2 A vital member
or organ : a mortal spot. Hence
fig. a vulnerable point. 3 The se-
cret meaniug(of a passage, &c.);
the drift. 4 The art, trick (of a
contrivance, &c.) : ^^I^i?j^
To TTSIfl TTTf. 5 The anti-
dote : JT^t^' Ta ^{^^.
^*^^^ Striking of a vital
member; and fig. touching to the
quick. 2 Discovering of a plot ;
of the art of a contrivance. 3
E.xposure of one's secret faults ;
of the vulnerable point.weak side,
touchy quarter.
«■
^R^§T^ n. A vital part or
place ; fig. a sore or sensitive
point ; the weak side.
r
^^^ a. Acquaiiited with the
mysteries and secrets of : dis-
cerning hidden beauty or spirit
of. 2 That is deeply versed in.
^^l a. See ^^^. 2 Poig-
nant, satirical — speech.
'T^r a. That is as if dying
— a man or animal.
^^K prep, (s) Until : up
to : ^j^S To TT3TT %^ ;
^T^ To. T^'^To.
iT?TR-flR-c7-5r a. Respect-
ful, of deferential deportment.
^^k\f A boundary; the
end ; — used of time, space, ac-
tions. 2 fig. Restraint. 3 De-
corum, decency ; reverential de-
meanour.
^^ m. n. (s) Dirt, filth. 2
Excretion of the body ; as serum,
blood, urine, &c. 3 Dregs, rust,
dross. 4 fig. Malignity.
Tc^C/. Noise and bluster,
clamor and rudeness (as resort-
ed to by persons overcome in
argument), v. ^^, Tf^, 'RT^J'^".
2. Boisterous proceedings (of
any assembly).
^^i f. (h) Cream.
^^S"K ji. (s) 'I'he anus.
^^T^ V. i. Poet. To walk
along with a light, gaysome
reel ; — used esp. of a child : to
wair about.
^^fS- n. The fly-leaf.
^^^iff a. Relating to Mala-
bar.
^^*T n. m. (p) Salve, oint-
ment, plaster.
^^^^^iJ f. A plaster.
^^^^f. (h) Muslin.
^^1^ n. (s) Discharging
before and Ijohhid (tlirough ter-
^^m^rr a fine sort of san-
dalwood of Malabar.
^^r^
334
ir^rrr
JI?5-ff^^ (s) Discharging of
tlie l)o\vels. V. mx, ^T.
JT?^'^ /. Cleansed state
(of the bowels) from its f;eces. v.
iTc=^HH n. Ablution simply
for the cleansing of the body : as
(listing, from ceremonial ablu-
tion.
JTc^RF ^lEJ The rectum.
Rc^^Tf^f^-T Constipation of the
bowels.
i]^]^^ s The rectum.
m^^\ (i>) A cake made up
with milk, sugar, &c. esp. as
offered at the shrine of a Ma-
homedan Pir. 2 fig. Any mash or
mess.
Tf^=T a. (s) Dirty, foul. 2
fig. Vitious. depraved. 3 Sloven-
ly, nasty. 4 Dull, rusty — learn-
ing, Sec.
^'^^ a. (.\) Wan, haggard.
2 Downcast, dejected. 3 Feeble,
in nni. 4 l'"lacid, soft.
Hc^h^ET^I Discharging of the
bowels. V. '^v, =iT.
^p5" (s) a wrestler : a boxer.
'2 fiL'. An athletic person.
flci-jTi^ The jiillar in a <jym-
MMs uui wheic'iai the athlette
pv rlorm their feats.
^^^'^ n. Athletic contests.
^^iT\ An incarnation of
Shivi,.
^^\t f. Poet. Softness.
^^^ a. Softened by tlie
mixture or ap|)lication of unc-
tuous substance. 2 fig. Soft.
Tuihl.
^^r«ify. Any iin!",ent sub-
stance. 2 fig. JMildness.
WH^ s. A gnat or mosquito.
*^^^*^ f. (A) A silk and cot-
ton stuff with waving stripes.
JT^R^ /. (a) Labor, toil. 2
The wages of labor. W^
5?o -gcji-avf %. :i Working up.
JT^R% a. That lives by
Iai)or. 2 Laborious, banlwork-
ingw
if?TR"l=[e5" a. (a) Above men-
tioned ; — used of the name of
a person in notes.
^^r^ /. (a) a torch r.^cT,
'tra:, WTW.
IT^rc=5-^r -fr (?) a torch-
bearer, a linkboy.
^^r?/. (a) a mosque. 2
Ai)p. to a huge building scanti-
ly furnished or thinly tenanted.
JT5^^ See^^^.
mj f\ s pop. 3wr /: The
black of cidinary vessels, rrocA" :
soot gen. 2 The black residue of
burned cloth, &c.
^^ m. f. A mole : a soft
rising in the flesh. 2 fig. Slur,
blot. 3 Soot, lamp-black.
^^=fj /. (p) A leathern water-
bag carried under the arm.
JT^^fr a. (a) Relating to
Muscat,
^^^r (ri Butter.) An amal-
irnm in gen.
IT?T^2" (id. An adjunct of en-
linuceniput to the word «fiTo5T:
cRT^T^'^'fi'^ Black as soot.
^^"^ n. A burning or bmy-
iug ground for the dead.
^^''^mi f. a hoiiow place
used as a TfTruy. 2 fig. See
Tl^il^ sig. 2 ; (jobliu-liall.
JT^''^^'2r A term for a huge,
sturdy fellow without family or
];arents, and liurdcned but light-
ly with learning, wit, or i;u)iiey.
^trq^a: J. .Z] m. S. e ^^^.
iT^'^r A term used |)etulant|y
in s]ieakiug of one of whom we
know not or choose not to men-
tion the name. 2 k term of
angry and contemptuous address.
^^^^T?r (p) A jiulgc or ma-
gistrate. 2 App. to a member
of a TT^-|fT.
'iT^wcf /". (a) Holding cfinn-
sel upon; planning. 2 A i)lan,
plot. 3 ('ouusel. ?'. ''RtJT. 4
( "lover coritrivai.ci' ; =?t ^T^FT-
JT^T^cr^TIT r. A counsellor. 2
also fl^^«fTi a. Oue saga-
cious and shrewd ; deep of coun-
sel ; fertile in schemes and ex-
Pl'^'ts. [ment.
'T'FnT f. (a) Land-measure-
^^r^r (A) Drues, spices. 2
Condiment, pickle. 3 Ingredi-
ents of compositions : '^^gj'^T
fro 4 An exaction levied by
Government from one summoned
to answer a charge. 5 The fee
\vhieh the ])eon sent to collect
the revenue is authorized to de-
mand. 6 A mulct, forfeit.
fl^^r (a) a sketch; a foul
copy.
^^ f- (s) A sort of pulse.
JT^^fr /. (a) Joking and
jesting ; fun, sport.
•"T^^ n. (p) Into.xicated, lit.
fig. 2 Fat, bulky. 3 Abundant,
lii.-ntiful.
T'^dTiT 111. n. (s) The Iiead or
skull. 2 The top of any thing.
JRcTfr?^ a. (p H) Haughty,
disdainful.
JT^^r -^^?Tr n. (p) That is
coir.mouly under the influence
of intoxicating drugs. 2 fig.
Rude, riotous. 3 Excited — a
horso.
^^^m a i. To be inflated;
to be pui!'ed u]) with pride.
^^^r_/-; (p) Intoxication, lit.
fi'j;.. pride. 2 Misehievons tricks ;
the pnndvs of oiu» inebriated or
otherwise exlularated. 3 The
state of an ek'i)haut, camel, &c.,
in YwU
^Q J^r y. (a) Sus]iensi(m (of
a work); stojipagc (temporary
o£ final). [pe,l.
•Ro.!.^ p. Sus])cnded, stop-
^^^T: (a) a title deed grant-
ed by the Kmperor of Hindus-
tan. 2 A written statement of a
suit and of the award upon it.
JT^cT 7/. ^1:R m. ^K^\ f. (s)
Great, big. 2 fig. Great;
»T^T ■'^f^JiT'T. «J Very, e.x-
cceding : H^jvi"^*^.
^^^ The chief of an order of
Gosnvis. &c. 2 .A]ip. to the head-
>i;mi among Devotees, &c.
^^^r^ /. A kuid of fire-
work. 2 A term appl. to a
beautiful uoinan.
^t^
335
?r^5r
fl^cfry*. The condition, quali-
ty, &c. of ?i^?r. 2 lig. Great-
ness.
^G^ n. (s) Greatness, lit. fig.
!!?■?■?[?: //. (s) A great dis-
tance.
Hti< a. (A) Of which the
bounds liuve been destined :
fl?"S^iTcT a. (s) Extraordinary,
singular.
JTC^ a. s Dear. ^^^^\ f.
Deavness. 2 Dearth.
*^
ITC^I^ s The sphere ol the
sun and luminaries.
^?"f% s A ^i*^ of a high
order.
Tg"c7r (a) a quarter, ward.
2 Masala as given to a horse, &c.
JTC^ a. (a) Notorious, cele-
brated.
JTCg^r a. Relating to the
revenue.
ITC^?5" (a) Public revenue.
JT?T a. (s) Great, big. 2 A
great one ; ^ ^* *To 3TT^*T-
r
. TCr^^^ ^' A thousand mil-
lions.
JTrrq:^K^r /. a term for the
eleventh day of 3TT^T^"Jr|^
and of ^rfrt ^3j^.
fl?"r^^T The whole period of
the ViCe of ;^?Tr.
^Km^ in poet. ^^\W^^ A
name or form of Shiva in his
character of the destroying deity.
Time personified.
^^T^RT n. (s) Space, im-
mensity.
^?rjc^ a. Of great family.
Tg'R a. Dear, not cheap. 2
Wanting: ^^T^iTo,^^T^ T*.
^^RT"^ V. i. To become dear.
^CRH a. That sells at a
dear rate.
^c"RrH f. Dearness. 2
Dearth. 3 Compensation-money
(as to soldiers) in time of dearth.
^mfr / A vessel of
burden.
^^TsT-T A virtuous nicin. 2
A merchant. 3 also fl'^T«j«fT.
A hereditary officer in a village.
JTrR=[fr /. The office of
HWl^ -^ (h) An elephant-
"'''^*^''" [noble-minded.
^^Wr a. (s) iVlagnanimous,
^?r^^r f. (s In casting a
horoscope.) The rule of the pre-
dominant planet, qualified by
the 3T??^3TT.
^^K^ (s) Shiva, the thn-d
deity of the Hindoo triad. 2
The board forming the u])per
member of the Weaver's comb.
iTCr^fr /. Durga, the wife of
Shiva.
T^^R M. m. (s) Great, big. 2
Late ; — used of corn and grain.
^?fT^ 7)1. The great road, i.
e. death ; " the way of all the
^f""^^'-" '[millions.
^^fCTCr (s) A million of
iTCr^rcT^ n. A crime of the
highest degree. Five such are
enumerated,-killing a Brahman,
drinking spirits, stealing gold,
adultery with the wife of a
spiritual teacher, or incest with
one's mother, associating with a
person who has committed any
of the four (-^^f^^qr, ^^T^TW,
2 Great crime in general.
^Ffr? n. A place of extra-
ordinary sacreiiness, on account,
)n'obably, of the falling there of
a limb of the cut up body of
^^\^m The Supreme Being.
2 Any great saint. 3 A term app.
to a fqiJT'^ supposed to be
the spirit of a deceased Brah-
man.
H?"I'Ts[r f. Solemn worship
upon great occasions.
^CfiTfTcf n. The great sacreu
epic poem of the Hindus, na;
rating the war which occurrc;
amongst the descendants ol
^?^1^^?«. A primary element,
as air, fire, water, &c.
^Wm\^ a. s Noble-minded.
rTg"R[irr/. Anameof Durgd.
2 Worldly illusion. 3 App. to a
woman hated as a shrew or scold.
JTCRin / Cholera. 2 A
name of Durga. 3 Vehement
exertion.
iT^Tjfr / (p). Abundance,
exuberance. 2 The state of culti-
vation (of fields). 3 Closed and
shut up state (of doors).
^W\^^ a. (A) Abundant.
^?"RRr/' The great pilgrim-
age to Benares.
^K See q^f rfr.
iT€"IT^^^r Vehement and
clamorous contention.
ffrr^^r /. The office, rights,
&c. of the village-Mahar.
JTCr^JTSric^/. Vehement voci-
feration.
JTCrr^^r -^^r The ward
occupied by the Mahar-caste. 2
fig. Any promiscuous and [>ollut-
ing assembly.
^^JTm A term for eight
grievous maladies :— '^T«T, 5IT-
ftj, '^■^T, &c.
^CRF^r (s) A sovereign, an
emperor. 2 Appl. as a respect-
ful compellation to superiors.
'^Gin^ n. ill. The country
of the Marathas. a. Relating to
it — people, language, &c.
^r^f^ The ocean. 2 n. fig.
A great contest. 3 Notoriety :
much ado about nothing : T^-
^Crc=5- (a a place) A subdi-
vision of a Taluka. 2 The hall
where he business of the f^a
is conducted. 3 A seraglio. 4
A pahce. 5 The whole business
of a banker.
^gr^^a A revenue and
piiice officer in charge of a
Mahal.
HCr^qrr a sub-district un-
der a TT^^^^l subject to a
^gr^^T (s) A place of re-
fuge, an asylum.
T^^
336
jrmi
JT?r^^"JTt / (s) The wife of
IJiahma.
JT?"f?r^^ H. A term for any
sentence of the Vedas.
JT^tP^^? n. s The vernal
equinox.
ifrTr^q-ll'T Black leprosy.
iT?"r5T^ Ten millions of
millions. 2 One of the Nidhis or
treasures of ^^^- [ifl'^.
iTcrTT®? A covert term for
JTg'n'^^n^ /. A great fes-
tival in the month of Magh.
^?7o5" The shiadh performed
in the latter fortnight of «T -
T?^ to the manes of all one's
male ancestors : this period.
IT^ lob^l -fft y.Common citron-
tree. sT^rai n. Its fruit.
^fk^ (p) A month. 2
Monthly pay.
irfl'^f^ a. Monthly ; hired,
pai<l, &c. hy the month ; — used
with such" words as '^T^<1,
^]^^\^ ad. By the month,
per mensem.
^fk^\ m. f. (s) Greatness,
grandeur, majesty, glory. 2 m.
Mac^nitude. [lit. fig.
Tfl^^ n. Poet. Greatness,
^['k^ s A buffalo. ^iWr /.
A female bntfalo. 2 The crown-
ed wife of a king.
^€l f. (s) The earth.
^€[^ s A mountain. 2 A
title of the Wf upholding the
earth.
irfTfTT^ (s) pop. -^ A kiiii,^
JT?W /. A female buffalo.
JT^3T Poet. A cloud.
JfT^ s See ^K^-
if€^F^ Any s^reat festival
or great rejoicings.
^^ See ^^.
^o5^ f. Alluvial deposi-
tions. 2 The garden thereon, '.i
A large fishing net.
»75r^7 a. Rather dirty. 2
Very dirty.
^c^^Z^ V. {. To become
<lirty.
T^^r a. Dirty.
IT3T[> -fry; The fixed or per-
manent part of the Bazar.
^a^^ „. That hides dirt—
a color. 2 Long suffering. 3 Foul
with a fair outside ; a whiled
sepulchre.
JT^iiTr f. The operation of
treading or of beating out
corn ; thrashing, &c. v. ^T^,
^T, ^i^. 2 fig. The thrash-
ing time, pudding-time.
^^^ V. c. To tread or beat
out (corn). 2 To knead
(dough). 3 To press and squeeze
(in order to soften) ; to knead
the limbs ; to rub down a horse:
to rub unguents upon the body.
4 fig. To tread out ; to form by
treading (a road), v. i. To get
dirtied.
^T^^ n. c Cloudiness.
JTanr^ /. Qualmishness.
V. ^. 2 Mental inquietude ;
restlessness (as of distrust), v.
■^^, gr^^, fxTi^, 5IT.
if^JTS-of ^_ i^j)^ To be
qualmish : to keck and heave :
iT^JT^r /. Nausea.
^^^o^\^ a. S washy, sloppy
— a preparation of victuals : wa-
tery and weak — a friiit : simple,
silly — a person : vapid, spiritless
— singing, speech, conduct : dull,
dim — a metal vessel : slovenlv.
^^^Z The daub on the fore-
head of a child (at its vT?I,
^31, &c.) of ^^ or n'^, form-
ing a bed for ^^rfT to be
stuck.
^^^t\ f. A roll (as rubbed
up) of the sordes of the body.
^^r^^ V. c. To dirty, soil.
^^'^^ w. A screw.
^'<Z^^\ ^^ Screwed.
T^l An orchard.
T3:r^ fer The rectum,
^^r / See ^oS^i\. 2 AWa-
vium. 3 Sugar-skimmings :
skum, gen,
^rarrq- a. Dirty, filthy, lit.
fig. 2 Rusty — learning, &c.
^'^\^ p. Trodden out — corn.
2 Kneaded.
q-RT^r/ (s) A fly.
^r f. (s) A mother.
^^tf. A mother.
^r3-c^r/. See ^r^^.
rrr3rcr See ^rrrcT.
iTr3r^^r"^/. a female cou-
sin on the mother's side.
^l^^ n. m. A baboon, a
monkey of short tail and red
muzzle.
irr^^Frsr/. Comiskkug; a
firm clasp.
irr^T^r / a term for a
mountainous region,
^r^"^ n. A frame of wood or
iroa in which pitchers are set
and carried upon beasts.
m^m a. Bearing a ^f^^
— a horse, &c. 2 That drives
such a beast.
^r^'H" n. Butter,oil, unguent.
2 Besmearing.
^r^'^r V. c. To smear, daub.
^R A loom. 2 (^F^) Trace,
track, t'. ^T3T, ^T^, *T^. 3/.
c A large fishing net.
^1^ A low race.
^r^rS" a. That traces out
(thieves, &c.)
m^'^f a. Anterior, ante-
cedent. 2 Hinder, posterior. 3
Posterior, following in time :
^\^^J f. Asking a girl in
marriage. 2 The ceremony of
betrothing a girl.
^\m\ f. A female of the
Manw-race.
^]m V. c. To ask for or to
beg.
JTR^f nd. Again.
JTr^FT^r, ^R^, iTR^^r a
beggar.
JTRiT^-^r^, iTR^a Trace,
vestige, appearance oi. v. flffT^,
^I^, fifw, qr^, q^.
jan^
337
Wf<
JTRo^/. Retreating, draw-
ing back (from a danger, an
engagement), r. g. 2 Back-
wardness ; unfinished state (after
the lapse of the due i)eriod) ;
the buck (/round, v. ^^^, ^laR :
*T^T ^'aiof 3^T# ^^ »r*I *TT-
3TrTTc=^^^ V. i. To fall behind
— a work.
*TRr^r a. Anterior, antece-
dent. 2 Hinder, posterior, of a
place behind some other place.
^[ITc=?[3?Tr a. That traces,
tracks (thieves, &c.)
Tfn?^ n. (S) A festive oc-
casion, as a marriage, &c. 2
Good fortune, welfare.
*r[JT^ a. Late : opp. to ^TfiT^
Early ; — used of crops, &c. 2
Late — paying.
mn^^ V. i. To be late ; to
be delayed : ^^T ^T^^ ^T«-
W^r. 2 To fall behind— a
person or a work.
Wir^q" a. (Having the heart
of a Mang.) Merciless, cruel.
^\^ See ^\W\.
irrrprr -^r %^ ad. Again.
^f^, JTRr^ ad. 6r prep. Af-
terwards, subsequently. 2 From
behind.
v
TTT prep. 8f ad. In time
past. 2 Behind. ?> After. 4 fig.
In dependence upon : f^\^ «TTJT
^V^^ nd. Behind and be-
fore ; in both directions, cases,
points of view : «tt» ^T^^
^T^ ^Xm ^ ^?:. 2 Sooner
or later: g?fl 3^^ ^f^-
<lt ^^H" 'IT* ^T'^vT. 3 Con-
fusedly, disorderly, histeron pro-
teron — things lying, matters
spoken or done : f T ^'^ ^TTir
5^ WT^T 3?T^, -^^ ^X : ??}t
4 In a hesitating way : ^JTIT<»
JTrnWR ad. Immediately af-
ter; in close consecution.
43
fiTF^r a. Given to begging.
m^ (s) The eleventh month
of tlie Hindu year, January-
February.
irr^R/." Drawing back, re-
ceding, lit. fig. V. g. 2 De-
clining, waning (of affairs, or
fortunes), v. ^. 3 Retreating.
V. ^. 4 Reverting, o Retvtrn
(as of a fever) : ^i:t-^ TiT'
^\^\T\ -TX -fr -^ ad. Back,
back again.
m^^ The frame supporting a
stack or rick ; a rickstool : a
frame or erection on a tree or in
the field (as for watching the
crops, for a vine, &c.) ind. An
affix to the words -^33^ or^s"1
denoting unity, and thus corre-
sponding with Head ; as V^^
TT^ ^^^1^. It applies only
to tlie numbers above 20.
irr^'T/. The filling up, kc.
V. ^K-
^f^^ V. c. To fill up (the
central portion of a terrace, floor,
well, or any hollow) with stones,
&c. : 5I?ft^ -fwf;^ -TTT'^^l.
^I'^r A bedstead or cot.
^r^ Desire of copulation,
heat, rut ; as prevailing perio-
dically in the brute creation, v.
^, ^^. 2 Inflation, besotted
estimation of self. 3 Luxuriancy
of produce. 4 Narcotic quality
(in drugs, &c.) 4 (?T'=5 s In
Poet.) \Vaist (of the body, a
hill, a house). ??T5J^^ n. The
central apartment of a house.
^\W\ V. i. To be drunk,
tipsy, boozy. 2 fig. To swell,
grow big, rise into arrogance
and insolence. 3 To get fat and
gross and refractory (as by good
living). 4 To grow richly — crops.
5 Laxly. To spread abroad :
^T<T*t1 *TT^^: to enlarge— a
business, a town, a wilderness:
to swell or advance beyond all
bounds : «[Pr3f *TIai^" : to
wax free and bold — the tongue,
hand, &c. ; i. e. to take to abus-
ing, striking, &c.
^f^r c. (n. When used with-
out advertence to sex). A cat. 2
n. The core of a carrot, wf-
«Tt;ig't^./". The time of perfect
evening twilight. Tjfoi^ ^Te51T
a. Cat-eyed.
mWJ a. Narcotic: ^fo
'^^^. 2 Puffed up, disdain-
ful. 3 Become fastidious or
dainty.
^iiin^r iirwr /. a term
for the musk-rat.
^mT]^ qi^r pi a confused
piece of writing, a scribble.
^Tf^ft /. A paii»ful tumor
arising in the armjnt.
^r^t 71. The stupefaction
resulting from eating grains or
herbs of a narcotic property.
iTlsTr (P) A gall-nut.
^f^r p. (a) Gone by; pass-
ed away; superseded; become
obsolete, v. x?^ : ^T5ft 'CToiy-
^rra^r a. Addicted to eatino-
*TT5fTr. 2 Mixed with tR]^^ —
sweetmeats, &c.
JTlsprCry. inflation, conceit.
^f^tf a. Puffed up, conceit-
ed.
JTr^T:?? n. (s) a gall-nut.
*rr^ f. (a) An inebriating
preparation of Bhang.
*ir^ a. (a) Known.
^r^r pron. Mine.
JfriTffr prep. Poet. In, with-
in, among.
^\^^Z ad. Pifpat : ^Tr^F tlf
iTT« ^K?iT My heart is in
great flutter, trepidation, &c.
^r^ m. f, A pot-lierb. 2 m.
A broad and spreading jar.
^15^ V. i. To fill up and
heal — a wound or sore.
m^^^ V. i.To heal — a sore,
&c. 2 To become dull and heavy
— one's mind. 3 To cease growth
and lose vigor — a tree.
^13" A Cocoanut-tree.
11^ /. A disease of tlie
thigh. 2 The proper posture or
seat (on horseback, or of a
writer), r. 5?iT, ^¥, ^TW. 3
UTT
338
TTiWl
A charge by a body of horse.
^\^ c. Disposing in order
(implements, &c. for a work) : the
dispusitiou made. 2 Settleil-
iies'j, at, in^ on, about.
JTiS-'JirfSST y; The price of
layiiijT out.
^l^^l\ f. Laxin^: out ; setting,
arranj^liig. 2 Regular disposition.
'i The frame of a building.
^\^^ V. c. To spread in order.
2 To set up (a shop, a trade).
3 To note down ; to enter. 4 To
set up ; as ^^l «t^^r, ilo?
sr'r^^T- 5 ^'- imp- To lull into
ac;reeable order : X\^ '^^'^
^^m %ri^ Tt^^'- (J V- i- To
form in the ear, to set : ^W-
^\^'V^ n. A deed of adop-
tion.
irilQ'^ An adoj)ted son.
m^i^^x s A prince ruling
over a if^wj or circumscrib-
ed region ; an ordinary poten-
tate.
^\1^ See H^7.
JTiT^qr^t^r f. The entertain-
ment given by tlie father of the
bride to the bridegroom upon
the conclusion of the wedduig
ceremonies.
irfT^r f. A custom-house.
JTfToS" /'. Tlio ring whicli
binds the head of mallets, staves,
&c.
^r?r A sapling.
^f^r A certain preparation
with wheaten flour.
'ir't'T f. The exudation ob-
tained from the Cocoanut-tree.
2 An upper story. '6 A loft.
irrfr f. The thigh. 2 See
♦itf sig. II.
^f 2" A kind of weapon.
^R^r /. A small ruljy.
iTRii^R / Clayey soil.
iTRq-;^ot or -^f^^ V. i.
To become or be accustomed to
man ; to become tame and fami-
liar— wild animals. 2 To become
ravenous after man ; — used of a
tiger, iV-c. that has once tasted
human blood.
Terms for a blockhead.
ITIR^^ n. s pop. iTr%^
A ruby.
JTl^r /. A ferrule.
JTR[^-?r^ The enclosed aiea
in front of the houses of great
men.
ill^^r /. The qualities and
affections, tlie ways and man-
uers of civilized man; civility.
])oliteness, orderliness of deport-
ment.
^rW w. /. 71. A man, ;i
person : man, mankind.
?jli74lT -'WTOT a. Misanthropic,
unsocial.
3T[OTPfq3T n. -T^F m. See
^I'^^^fw ??. Strength of num-
bers, coml)ined force.
JTroT^^P^rr «. Homicidal. 2
Ox
fig. Cruel.
^f^ /. At chess. Checkmate.
2 Poet. An exploit, feat, ii Poet.
.\n affair, v. noT^, ^3^, ^^^.
4 Ecl.at, splendor ; a brilliant
dis;])lay : JTTO^T^t -^^BTT^V
^FcT-^'^ V. Grain with which
dirt is mingled. [pottery, &c.
JTrcRTR n. Earth-work—
m^^ s An elephant.
HicT'T V. i. To lie puffed up.
2 To become riotous and refrac-
tory from rich feeding. '6 To grow
luxuriantly — a plant.
'^\^m a. (a) Kespcctable,
wortliv. 2 Large, big.
^^^r /'. Eminence, great-
ness.
^\^\f. (s) A mother. 2 The
))ersonified energy of a deity,
his wife. In coinp. ?iTS, as
irr^frqciT n. Parents.
^i^.^C s A maternal grand-
father.
^\^\^i\ f. The wife of a
maternal grandfather, or a mater-
nal grandmother.
^f^r /. Earth. 2 fig. Utter
destruction : ^1^1^ ^^T^T'^t
^Trft ^^"5r ^I^ST^. 3 A term
for the body (esp. as dead).
^l^r^r^rrs- a huge and
burlv person.
5Tr^l% 5^ pi. (Earthen but-
tocks). A terra for relations who,
lacking some strong bond, do
not hold together in time of
difficulty. [uncle.
Tf^^ s pop. -^ A maternal
iTfJ^f f. pop. Corruption of
^If ^r f. (s) A letter of the
alphabet. 2 A mother : a nurse.
3 A divine mother, a personified
energy of the deity. 4 A vowel.
JTf^^^'T 71. Incest with one's
uiotlier.
m^m\ -IR% a. That has
committed iTlSiT^T'iT.
mm^ Matricide. ^IJ^fJ^
a. iMatricldal.
^rf^^ n. Motherhood.
^TicfXr^ Hatred against one's
mother.
^[^^r f. A respectful
compellation for a mother : for
any elderly female.
^[cT pron. Poet. To me.
^f^^r Having dirt mingled
with it— grain, sugar, &c.
^r^r^iTl See iTf^^r.
irrcr^qfF^ -HF ^ ad. Again.
HF^ n. s The invisible type
of visible elementary matter, 2
The whole, the entire thing :
ITF^' fi(L (s) Only, barely :
^^'^i f. {^) The oblique line
raised upon the horizontal limb
of the Nagari characters, con-
veying the })Owcr of the vowels
^ or ^rr ; ?is i^ with the *n^r
becomes ^, ?ST becomes ^T. 2
A short vowel. 3 A syllabic foot. 4
irr^rT
339
Trrqr
A medicinal preparation of metals.
5 A small quantity. 6 Wealth,
substance. 7 In the Vedant phi-
losophy. Any object of the affec-
tions or appetites. [mother.
TP^f^^'T 71. Incest with one's
^f^r The upper part of the
head, the ciown. 2 The fore-
head. 3 The head. 4 The crovvu
of a hill.
^[^^Z n. f. A term for
wearisome, vexatious, and unpro-
fitable labor. 2 Incessant prate.
iTTst'^r^/. See ^m^.
TK^ a. 6 That intoxicates,
\'t-^S- [ness.
*^\^^\ f. (p) Fatigue, weari-
^f^TT^rT This word of
obscene origin is applied to
persons, animals, and things, as
an abuse, without any obscene
implication.
irr^qra: a kind of doth.
^\^aS-^\ A tabor. 2 The
nave of a wheel.
m^\ f. The female : op p.
to ef^; The male.
^RT a. (p) Languid, list-
less. 2 Sick, ill.
Hf^K (s) The coral tree.
lTf2rr^55"l" /. A white variety
of Gigantic swallow wort.
iTifr /. Poet. A circle. 2 fig.
A company ; a band (of pupils,
friends, worshipjiers).
JTKf /. See HI^F. 2 See
^i^ 71. Animal fat.
^f^ n. (s) Slowness. 2
Sluggishness, coldness (of
3TSffT, ^ff, 3f\fri); apathy. 3
Languor. 4 Dimness, lovvness,
(as of sight, light).
^f^^ (s) A name of Krishna.
2 The month ■^?^T'§.
^I'^tr A personage of the
stage. He is the Buffoon or In-
ti'ilocutor with the audience
between the acts.
^f'"^^r /. Spirituous liquor
distilled from honey.
Hl^^^r/'. Dressed food given
in alms to Brahmans. 2 m. One
that subsists on victuals obtain-
ed by begging from door to
door.
^l^^ n. (s) Sweetness, lit.
fig. fragrance : gentleness.
^\^^^^ See ^^^*K^-
m-^'m^ See ^'^W^.
^\^ (s) Respect, reverence.
2 Arrogance, conceit. 3 Right,
claim : ^^TfI?S ^m^T'-^T '^^
inJZrr^T »TTo ^I%". 4 Place,
province : •IT^ =^1^ ^ctpht'^T
5^T^ tTT^^TiVi-. 5 ?.-. Mag-
nitude, amount ; measure: that
bv which a quantity is deter-
mined. 6 Warrant, authority. 7
Detiniteness (as of time, place,
agent) : '^T^T'^ Tl'q ^t^l^ff
"iTTTf. 8 Propriety, expedi-
ency. 9 Rank, stage : worth,
value : HJI ^r^^j^i ^T«r '^'^%
^1% ; *TI^T'^' -tn^T%" -3IT-
^R /. The neck. 2 A di-
sease of the neck. '6 (Incorrectly.)
The throat.
JTR^ff The ])erson entitled
to certain honors and presents
rendered at courts, councils,
weddings, &c.
Hf=mfr -iTl^r /: a light term
for the neck: ■^TSII'^ *TIo
^R"^^ f. A vow ; a promise
to an idol, god, or devil.
^R^ V. c. To obey. 2 To
believe, admit. 3 To hold, view,
regard, 4 To value, care for —
■^ ^ml 'TTsTtfT ^i^t. 5 To
agree with — air, food, &c. 6 To
please or suit : ilSTT 'RT*f^ ^'
ifl ^x:1»r- 7 To engage cue's
self (to give, to do) by a vow.
JTRcTF/. A vow.
^IW-T n. (s) Wealth con-
sisting in honor. 2 attrib. Whose
dignity is his wealth.
iTR^rq" a. Worthy of obedi-
ence, credit; proper to be honor-
ed, believed. [fll'Sf^STt.
JTl-ni^ The riohts of the
^\^^ Treating with dis-
honor. 2 Dishonor.
^\^^\^ ( -fR/.) An hereti-
cal order, or an individual of it.
They have community of women,
observe mendicancy, dress in
black. 2 fig. App. to one who
covers a vengeful disposition
under a smooth exterior.
J^RlTf^rCr s: /. (Because the
^T»l*TT^ on catching a louse
will neither kill it not let it go.)
A person entangled in some
grievous condition.
^[T^r^r^r W\m\ a term for
a wife who maintains herself by
begging. 2 App. to a person,
thing, &c. which serves us free
of expense.
iTRJT^Tkf /. (s) Respect,
regard.
I1R%^/. Breaking of the
neck. 2 The toil and drudgery
of writing, sewing, &c. 3 Disho-
noring. 4 A steep declivity.
3T[^fCrcrifr f. a term for a
little girl aping the airs and gra-
vity of grown np people ; little
grandmother.
^\^^^ v. L To shake the
head in consent, permission.
3TR^c?rr^ s The earth.
jff^fq-oj y^ f.^ 'Pq bring over :
■^^■\. 2 To please : '4\ 'TTg
^R^r o.. s Human.
ITR^ n. m. (s) The mind. 2
The heart. 3 Desire. 4 In law.
Tacit consent, a. s Mental.
^IRq-^r /. Worship by
abstract contemplation.
iTReirTa"/. Ideal pictures.
JTRRT^ a. Mental or intel-
lectual. 2 Chemerical, wild. 3
Doubtful, n An exceedingly
small quantity : *T^ '^^t?i
JTR^FR/. Dishonor.
*TRr (a) Purport, scope. 2
Tiie complimentary forms of
address in letters. 3 Fitness,
i^RMI
340
mr
reasonableness : ^^ ^iT^TJIT?"
m^l'^l a. That holds title
to ^T«T or certain honors,
as^T» '^'^ -•qi^^.
JTRF'^^F'! ?i. A term for any
^ift or privilege by which, of
however slight pecuniary value
it be, honor is conferrecL
JTRlf^'Tr. c. To honor,regard.
^RT s A man. a. Human.
^R'^ n. s Manhood.
fTR^r ^^^ The head. v. 5^,
JlR^r^f3:r The apex of the
spiriil coliunn, processus dentatus.
JlR^r^[?lr3T Adam's apple.
JTR€r T'^^\J\ The cavity
alon^ the back of the head.
^Fq" a. (s) Respectable. 2
Acceptable unto. 3 Ready, vvill-
iTF^-^r / (s) Obedience. 2
Believin;;. 3 Honoring. 4 Re-
spectability. 5 Allowing.
^fT n. Measurini^. v. ^,
'^TvT^r. V, ^t^, ^R. 2 The
Dieasure : ^T^T^^t 5?m *T^#.
.3 A measuring instrument :
portion measured ofiF.
^TPT'^f V. c. To measure.
^F'R ». s Measurln<r.
^RfS^r or ^FTrfr An official
grain measurer. 2 A measurer
gen.
^rrqcT p. (s) Measured.
^UTf a. Determined by a
measure of ca])acity. 2 Of capa-
litv ; opp. to W^l"^.
JTT^i^ p. Measured.
^I^ p. (a) E^ardoned. v. W>^.
^ITT^ n. (a) Agreeable unto.
■-' -Middling, so so.
JTlTTf y. ^v) Remission,
nl):\tcmcnt.
fllfr ^^R/. (II) Land free
of assessment.
iTI^im^ n. (A & p) The
year of waved claims (as on
lands to be brought into cultiva-
tion).
iTIiT3"iTJ A term for a sloven-
Ij- person. 2 Ap]i. to a fellow
])rofusely liberal with the proper-
ty of others.
^m^^ f. (a) a public
l)usiness; esp. the collection of
the revenues and the rule of a
district. 2 An enterprise, gen. 3
Lii\lv. Importance, weight.
iTR^^cT^K The officer hold-
ing a ^PT^rT.
iT[JT?r^^r /. The office, Sec.
of ^TT^rf^T^.
^FT^r See ^We5"cr.
^f^r A maternal uncle. 2 A
resi)octful compellation for one's
^I^^T '• foi' a person gen. 3
A term of abuse for a person
unlettered and unversed in busi-
ness, l A facetious name at
night for a rat,
^fTf f. The wife of a mater-
nal uncle. 2 The mother of
one's wife.
iTfiTcT w. qriTc^ ^r^ / (A)
Custom, usage,
^r^^ (t. Usual, ordinary.
3TR^froT /. The daughter of
one's maternal uncle.
mmi-S: The son of one's
maternal uncle.
JTf^m^n The maternal
inicle of one's wife.
irrwi^ /. The wife of ^m-
^R /'. A mother.
^I^^r ^cT Mother's son. A
term used in remarking upon or
in calling for some exploit of
heroism. Used also in nuinerous
])hrases of abuse, or ridicule.
^imi f. A ferrule: the
luumlar lining of the pin-socket
of a handmill.
Hi^T?^ a. (Vulgar) Many,
much, heaps, lots.
^r^^r (.v) .Meaning. See^l^l
HRim /. Bastard or false
^\'^^\Z n. a term for any
place of great peacefulness and
security ; an asylum, haven.
^\^^^ n. (H) A gallnut.
^\m\^pl Parents.
^\m[^^Af, a term in en-
dearment for one's mother.
^\^^\\X n. The maternal
home emphatically. 2 An asy-
lum : rendering asylum . v. i^T.
*TRr /. (s) Creation-illu-
sion ; the illusoriness of the
appearance of the universe as
material and of distinct subsist-
ence, being in reality spiritual
and the evolved substance of the
eternal monad Brahma. *TT^|
is personified in mythology, as
a female and the consort of
Brahma, and the formative
energy of the Brahma-expan-
sion and disposition misappre-
hended as a creation. 2 Deceit,
trick, jugglery. 3 Affection, love.
4 Compassion, pity.,, , ^
^rqrr/. (p) stock, property. 2
(In joining together by the
edges two pieces of cloth, &e.)
The portion left along and
without the seam.
^m^W> n. (s) The net of
?TT^r as cast over the under-
standing and senses, producing
belief in the luiiverse as mate-
rial and distinct from Brahma.
J^r^fl^ n. A term for the
body.
^\^\^^^ f. a general term
for compassion, tenderness.
,5T(2irc^rq-^ 71. s The art of
I flT^T as appears in her im-
posing upon man a system of
Brahma-expansion for a ma-
terial creation.
ITRI^ a. (s) pop. -\ Fond,
affectionate.
^nrrfr a. (s) a conjurer.
App. from his wondrous art
dispkiyed in the universe, to
the Deity. 2 False-conduct.
m[^^ a. s pop. JTRF^ Illu-
sory. 2 Untrue.
^IK A beating, v. ?. 2 A
firing at ; bombarding, &c. 3 fig.
A rushing upon. 4 Exuberance:
press and vigor or great quantity
of any action or work. 5 Used
e.\pletively and emphatically in
«rrr*
341
m^w
phrases expressing vehemence
or extravagance or heedless-
ness of action : V\K ^JI^ '^-
varying measure of land.
HJl^ a. s That kills : fig.
that counter-works — a medicine,
&c.
^K4ji a. Rather given to
butting or kicking.
^IT^r a. Given to butting
or kicking. [fetina;.
ITR^ /. Beating and but-
RR^r3r a. That constantly
undergoes beating.
^Kn A road.
^PCmfr /. (p) A vigorous
firing at ; battering, &c. fa[f-
Skill at hitting a mark. rj^^
JTR^^r^ /. Beating, thrash-
^l^'^ n. s Killing. 2 Incan-
tations to destroy.
mi^\ f. Poet. Striking,
beating : an assault.
^\l^ V. c. To kill ; as ^^
ifKuf. 2 To beat ; to strike.
.'3 To overcome. 4 To destroy
the active qualities of, to kill
(lead, &c,) 5 To attack (houses,
&c.) G To rob or seize with as-
sault : ^^T^T TT^^T. 7 To
master, tame (lusts, &c.) 8 To
drive in (nails, &c.) : to fix,
fasten (locks, fetters). 9 Used
in the sense of Do or Make,
conveying an impression of force,
smartness : ^^^ ^Tfl '^kWt
3?ffur ^?iT. Involving this
bold sense and expressed bj
^'[kM are the applications : —
^K^ V. i. To strike ; to act
or bear upon with a quick or
strong effect: ^t ?le5?jT=^t ^Trl
7^,^ 3^T^ flRfft. 2 To shoot,
dart : ^^irr-'jr^ fiW^-
mV^r[ f, (a) The instru-
mentality, authority, or know-
ledge of a person to an action :
^ §W^^ ctJT^T *TT^T?ifn^
%T^T. 2 Relating to : ^ rqfT-
■^t ^TT^«ft'? ^T^T I am
come from (in the name and on
account of, or as authorized by)
him.
iTl^^^ra.Relating to ^K^\^.
2 Native of that country. 3
App. to a cunning and knavish
fellow.
JTRCr^r/. Hitting and strik-
ing ; beating and banging.
^in An attack (upon a fort,
&C.) 2 A Hue of fire, a line in
which guns bear : r^j ^T^C-
The range of fire. 4 A violent
and general destruction, a.[sweep :
fr -^^ ^fc{■^^f ^^ JTT^T ^wt.
5 A beating: 5?H"T ^^^R^^
«TKT ^THT. G (Or JTT^) Over-
bearing profusion (of any thing).
mT^^\ f. See JTK^.
JTRW^-n/. Mutual fight-
ing or beating. 2 fig. Varied and
toilsome efforts : f^^^v?^ ^T*
^\^^ s Air or wind.
JTr^fcT A nameofrjiTR.
RF'^'T «(/. An emphatic exple-
tive formed from ^TT^Tn. It
expresses vehemence and com-
pleteness of action or vast a-
bundance : Tijo ^^ ^T^ ^TlfjT
^TI'^So ; ^lo ^T^ '^TrTT ^^T-
iTl^^ff^-5iTf^-32:f=r ad.
With many and various arts
and eiforts ; with much toil, af-
ter repeated trials — performing :
^"T^^^r An assassin.
^\%^^ (s) The name of a
sage, the reputed author of
'Tl^'t^ H^T'T. App. to a very
old man.
^1=^ (s) A road, way. 2 A
ri'ligious order. 3 fi<:. A mannt^r.
mode : n fashion, usage. 4 A
road unto or way of obtaining
^T85 or ^if ; as ^^^TJl"-
^R^R'T n. Journeying.
^rifsT 8 Poet. A highway-
man.
iTR3Ttr^r/. Expecting or
awaiting the coming of.
fim?fr^ (s) pop. mmK The
ninth month, November-De-
cember.
^f^l^^ a. That is on a jour-
ney ; a traveller, way-farer.
r
^rnF3-r n. s Journeying.
^f^^ n. (s) Sprinkling. 2
Cleansing the person by bathing,
washing, inunction, &c.
^r^-iry. s a broom, a besom.
^fslK s The common cat:
the wild cat.
^r^^ s Poet. The sun. 2
Pop. A name of Khandoba.
^ffe See ^W & JTJT'
^rc7 (a) Property. 2 Goods,
wares. 3 An article considered
with relation to worth : "^j
^1^^ (a) An owner : a ruler,
lord. 2 The rightful person.
^r?^r /. Proprietorship,
ownership.
^\^mi\ a. Of full value— a
^«"'- ^ [schools.
fTl^^fHTf ■Z^\ A monitor at
JTr^iTT^r /. (h) a prostitute.
JTlc^^fR^^ /. The office of
JTFc^^fHR A security for
goods or inoney,
m<^^ V. c. To extinguish (a
light). V. i. To expire — a light.
m^^\ f. (s) Great-flowered
Jasmine.
nmmi The owner of the
goods or article. Fcake,
mm^\ A sort of rich pan-
JTfoyiT^r / A term for the
items constituting one's proper-
ty; monies, goods, furniture, &c.
JTRf^
342
m^sr
JTr^[JT?5"^cr /. (a) Goods and
chattels.
JTfc^q"^??" n. An article equi-
valent to expenses incurred or j ^r^^lf-^T/". A maternal aunt
Tr^c^^r f. A respectful term
for one's mother or for any
elilerlv female.
monies advanced upon it : ITTIJ
JU^irroy a. Priced at its
worth ; bonght, sold, or set at its
value : ad. At a price according
to worth — buying, selling, &c.
^]^^^ V. i. To go out — a
light. 2 fig. To cease, subside.
irrc^f^^T V. c. To extinguish
(a light). 2 fig. To extinguish
(a race or family).
^ro^T / (s) a' garland. 2 A
rosarv. a necklace. 3 A row.
JT[c^r^^-^r ^r^T a term for a
Miser. 2 App. to one who
obtains wealth without laboring
for it.
^U^''^ n. s Dirtiness.
m^l^ c. (a) Aft owner : a
™=ister. [Master.
^r^W (a) a ship's ofhcer,
JH'^f^ -^ /. (p) Grooming
(of a horse). ^^^^ serpent.
^f^T m. n. A double head-
^{^y^ a. (a) Known.
"^r^ n. The pecuniary aid
towards the payment of an
imposed fine, or rescue of a
relative from prison, or recovery
of a sequestrated land, which the
sufferer seeks by traversing the
country with a little plough sus-
pended from his neck, and stat-
ing his case from door to door :
^T^T'^T -^UK Jisajf?! II ^t^-
^\^ f. Guile, deceit. 2
Sorcery. 3 Falseness. 4 c A
scar, a pockpit.
^I^ V. i. To enter and be
contained (in a vessel or place).
JTT^? or -^ n. Presenting of
oblations to an id(d and enter-
taining of Urahninns after return
Irom a pilgnmajje.
ITI^^??"!'^ /. A female
cousin on the mother's side.
fTR^^3r A male cousin, &c.
i^rf^TThe husband of ^F^^F-
^1^^ ?i. The region along
the eastern side of the '^'fJTflf
range.
H\^^^ f. A paternal aunt.
•\«
m^^^ v.i.To set — 'a heaven-
ly body. 2 fig. To subside — boils,
small pox. 3 To fold up its
petals— a flower. 4 To sink, set
— glory, life.
^r^5Jcr" /. The west. ad.
Towards the west.
^T?^r A maternal uncle.
^f^r (n) Milk inspissated
by boiling, a. Of a yellowish
green color.
mfRi a. Illusory.
J^r^^l a. False, guileful:
unreal, illusory.
lTfft4^^??. Hollow preten-
sions, humbug, pretence.
^m^ Sfrs- n. a fish-net. 2
fig. A term for a flimsy and
open-te.xtured cloth.
JTl^Tr /. A fly. 2 The bead
or sight of a gun.
JTlTfr a. Relating to the
weight *TT^T : ^*TT3l1, ^^TT^.
^\^ s A bean called ^t[^.
Tr^ (s) A month.
^W n. (s) pop. Jir^ Flesh.
iTr^i"3" n. Flesh, revilingly ;
or flesh as lying about toru and
mangled.
irr^iT^ a Fleshy or pulpous
— a fruit, &c. ^
^^^ a. Fleshy, musculous.
2 fig See ^TT^M^.
^r^^r (a) a sample. 2 A
fashion, shape ; a model.
JTl^'^^K a. Of a good sort;
of an eU'gaut fashion.
^WSty. Fish collectively;
fish as exposed for sale. 2 A
small fish : a fish geu.
^r^r A fish.
^r^S- See ^W^.
^ira"^ a. (s) Monthly, n.
Monthly wages. 2 A ^T^
peifonned monthly for a twelve-
month on the recurrence of the
lunar day of the death of.
^m^l f. A fish. 2 A fish-
form ornament.
^r^T^f^T ?i. (s) Greatness,
majesty, glory. 2 A. narration of
heroic deeds; a legend.
iTrfl:?riTr?: a. (p) Acquainted
with (matter, places).
3Tffl"cFqKr /. Conversancy
with ; knowledge of.
^r^r m.f. See^f^.
m'K\^ f. Acquaintance with
(matters, sciences, places), a.
Known : knowing.
^r^t n. p!. Fish as caught,
brought, exposed for sale, &c.
ITf^cr(H) See^^FcT.
^rl" (p) A month : ^ft" ^F-
irfl"^?-^^ (p) The past
month, ad. or -^t- In the
past month.
JTrlr, ^\km^ n. The ma-
ternal mansion of a married girl.
2 fig. A refuge, an asylum.
^\K^\l\ f. A monthly settle-
ment. V. -^tv, ^j-q-iT t, «^^.
2 A monthly register of occur-
rences.
mi\ (Vulg.) See TF^.
^\^ f. A garland. 2 A row
of petals, a coral. 3 A necklace,
a rosary. 4 fig. A string, series.
5 A day of the si^'tT^.
^F^An elevated and extend-
ed tract of ground ; a plain, an
heath. 2 A loft.
JTF^^F/. A string, train (of
things or of living creatures), r.
fir^^irri^ f. Plains, downs,
heath. 2 App. in revenue-
msrgr
343
fvrm
matters to land on the ascent
and summit of hills, meaj^re yet
praoticahle to the plough.
iTlS'fi'rt. Abounding in elevat-
ed and meagre tracts — a coun-
try. 2 Similar to ?lToJ— earth.
3Trs^ n. Garden-stuff.
m^^^ n. Cowdung of the
heath.
'R'loST The room formed by
overlaying with slight sticks the
cross heams of a house, a loft. 2
A stand in a cornfield for the
person that watches it. 3 Scaf-
folding (of a building).
JTrs^r^^r qkr a ddt.
^fSTf y, A florist, a gardener.
^TcZ^vj.f.A female gardener- 2
A painful pimple that arises in
the nose.
^\°^i f. An upper story.
m^i] -iir y. Common citron-
tree. ^raJT n. Its fruit.
\H^^Z a. Dirty — a vessel.
2 with eSTHT j)refixed. lutense-
^ly black. [-j^^^^^^ ^^
m^^Z^ V. i. To be foul—
nr^^"^ V. i. To close and
open (%T^) ; to close and
press (;^'t^). ftr^^T^ui^ /.
Bhnldng. fiT^Bfif^^iy. e. To
blink.
l*T^^r a. Ever blinking —
eyes : attrib. audf«'^^T «. A
blinkard.
nr^r^T^/. (Imit.) The sound
emitted in eager eating. 2
Blinking, v. ^x, WT^}^, ^T5I.
H^r^r f. (p) Fastidiousness ;
airs and affectation ; high no-
tions and fancies.
r^^r The sticking too-ether
(of the lips) : glued state or
closedness (of eyes, flowers,
leaves, &c.) 2 Close hugging :
RHr^lf^^ V. c. To close fast
(eyes, hand, flowers, &c.) 2 To
IJrick up (the ears).
r^^T^r /. A smack, v. ^K.
WZ^ i\ c. To close together
{•^I'S, '^Tfl, ^TT, T?Tfl, W^
&c.) 2 fig. To conclude (?if-
^T, ^t^UT). V. i. To subside
— a sickness, &c.
V^Z^^\ n. Brine.
RJI%^ V. i. To imbue with
brine.
r^jr a. (h) Sweet, lit. fig. ;
f«^T^/. Sweetmeats.
fJTJrTr A salt meadow con-
taining salterns.
\HZm\ A caste. They pre-
pare sea-salt.
\^Z\^ f. (h) Sweetness.
m^\ f. Cloyedness after eat-
ing sweets. V. ■^^. 2 A hug. 3
2)1. A scramble, u. ^'^ : ?j^T
fiT'^m/: Low, faint speech;
murmuring, v. ^T¥, ^^•
pj^qiiToiaj- ^_ I -x^ buni dimly
— a light. 2 fig. To speak in a
low tone.
mR'nr -"^qr «. That bums
dimly — a light. 2 That speaks
faintly. 3 That lingers. 4 fig.
Oppressed by and sinking under
concealed sorrow.
R^R"^! a. Dimly burning
— a light.
R^ p. (s) Measured, 2 fig.
Moderate : fijrf ^>l\\^^^ -^t5T«I-
Rcrr^rfr/. An artificial and
secret speech consisting in inter-
substitution of the sounds of the
letters ; as in sounding ^ as
'i, ?K as JT, &c.
R^r/. Measure : weight. 2
Deteiminate amount. 3 A speci-
fied lunar day considered as a
date. 4 fig. Interest (on money-
loans).
R^ (s) A friend. 2 The sun.
a. Friendly : fff^ ^X^^^ -'^rfl-
^-j .i^ [against a friend.
T^'^^\K Malice indulged
\W^^ V. i. To agree together.
[IT^'T n. (s) Congress of the
sexes. 2 m. A sign of the Zodiac,
Gemini. 3 //. A cou()lc.
R^^r a. Sr ad. (s) False,
falsely.
R^^rqsrr^-m a false charge.
R-Tcf f, (a) Earnest entreaty.
V. ^^, with ¥ff of 0.
R^TcT^rr ad. With earnest
and humble entreaty.
1^^^^ ad. (In bonds and
notes.) Without reservation; ab-
solutely, wholly.
PiT^l^T p. Poet. Met, united.
R^^ a. Sf ad. Ca) Of or in the
aforesaid month.
Fl^r (p) Enamel.
R=Tr ad. (a) Deducted.
R^^J" f. Black pepper
powdered.
riTrfS: n. See J^fST.
R?:Tfr /. (H) The epilepsy. 2
Giddiness.
Rr^r/. Chilli-pepper.
R^^r a. Relating to the
^country Miraj. [A&v^di.
R^'T^/. Black pepper pow-
[jR^qf -% -OT^T/. Slow, ma-
jestic march ; proceeding with
solemnity and state, v. ffi^.
\mW[ V. i. To march with
slowness and pom])ous exhibi-
tion ; to parade — a royal train,
a marriage procession. 2 To
strut : to parade it like a king,
i. e. to be carried (upon an ass,
&c.) around a town in disgrace-
ful exposure : ^TSi t?3T^ ■%■
3 Poet. To be graceful — a seat
on horseback, &c. 4 To play
about ; — as sunbeams : f^T^-
^^' Tf^^"5] ^3115 \ ; |i.
mi^^f. Black pepjier-plant.
PiT^trn/. A pod of chilli-
pepper.
\^Tm -^ (h) firn^T^r (p)
A person enjoying a ^liras.
Prn^ /. An hereditary of-
fice in a village. 2 Land-tax.
fflrrTH
344
xr^WT
r^rrrH^r /. An additional
tax levied once in three years
upon the Mirasdars.
riT?:f^^ n. The title-deed
of a Miras.
rdack-pepper.
[JTc^r^ m. f. (a) Harmony,
concord : an agreeing (as of arti-
cles of food). 2 Junction, lit.
pTc^f^ a. That agrees with ;
that is of the same mind with.
l^T^rr /'. A term for the mous-
taches. 2 App. to the feelers or
tentacula of animals.
frr^ J), (s) Mixed, blended.
'1 In arithmetic. Added.
ffT^^q'f^ Mixed fractions.
On
R^nf^cT n. AUigation.
X^^^ n. s Mingling. 2 In
arithmetic. Addition.
fq^qfiT a. s Miscible.
r^^r /. (h) Sugarcandy.
IWT n. (s) A sham, pre-
tence. 2 Fraud, trick.
f^3" a. (s) Sweet: savory,
sapi'l- [ness.
nrarf /. Sweetness. 2 Tasti-
PT^CR a. (a) Poor and de-
stitute. 2 Mild, gentle— csp.
used of animals.
fjf^R^rrST -n\m\f{ Terms
for a mild-looking but villainous
fellow ; a wolf in sheep's cloth-
ing.
HTFT^rT c. (p) A feigner.
RHf^TSTtcT a. Soft; soft from
solution ; not elastic— paper,
cloth, &c.
r^^^^ n. A contemptuous
form of fwi^T Moustaches just
sprouting.
f^^T^ /. One's proper place
(in an assembly),
f^ff^- /. R^r55T m. Mixture ;
mixed state. 2 A mixed mass.
'3 A company.
Ht^^'^ f. Mixture. 2 n.
Matter added to make the mix-
ture, o The mixed mass.
Rr^TSJ'Jir /. Mixing.
T^^oS^ V. c. To mix. V. i.
fig. To set to or fall upon (a
fight or work) vehemently.
rfIS"^rr f. Earnings, gains.
Tn^^f. Combination, alli-
ance : "f ^1^ ^^T f*To3ufl^
fe "^ /. Poet. Union, meet-
Jng.^2" Mixing. [Mixing.
R3''^f /. Union, meeting. 2
m^^ V. i. To mix or min-
gle with. 2 To come together.
3 To agree with. 4 To suit,
tally. 5 To be gained. 6 To
encounter. 7 To be found. 8
To come (into the hand of); to
be facile: ^T f^53T ^T^q^
Jfl^rT ^\^J. [procured.
fJT3"cfr p. pr. That may be
fiT^crr^rS" Prosperous times.
\^o!:^^\ /. Addition. 2 The
addendum. 3 The sum. 4 Suit-
ing-
tef^^ V. c. To mix. 2 To
acquire, earn, to amass ; to
bring together, lit. fig.; to cause
to meet. 3 To persuade, win. 4
To overtake. ^ j-^^j^^
H3"T3^ «. That wins, ob-
FT^^ ad. Together. 2 Al-
together; on the whole,
^r p7'on. I.
^r? n. Salt.
mz k'^X n. A wharf for the
landing of salt.
M\E m^X f. HJZ irrrT 7)1.
Lowly terms in which one's
dinner or entertainmentis spoken
of by the host. [Pisces.
^R (s) A fish. 2 The sign
MT'^'T ;/. EfTotism, conceit. 2
Assertion of personal existence ;
consciousness of self as distinct
from ■g?T-
#Rfffr /. (s) A philosophi-
cal system of the Hindus. 2
Research, study.
^R" (p) A king or grandee.
2 At cards. The king of a suit.
^fW n. A sham, pretence. 2
Fraud.
5°^r A silken article of
dress, worn by either se.\ in the
state tT^oJT.
^^■^1 a. Sullen, close.
J^f^rC^r An elephant with-
out tusks. 2 fig. A short and
round-bellied person.
5^^ V. i. To lose : ^f ^1"
5^^iTr (a) An atfair, a mat-
ter. 2 A case civil or criminal.
^^C^ (A) A title of the
^T^^ ; of each of the qr<T^-
■^T^. 2 The head man, chief,
of a caste or body (as of peons,
guides, &c.) r„^^^^
^^^If. The office, rights of
5^^«. (A) Settled, fixed.
ad. Certainly, surely.
5^ a. Dumb. 2 Mute,
silent. 3 fig. Wanting a head,
blind — a boil, a guinea-worm :
not having its kernel yet formed
— a cocoanut ; that do not readily
germinate on being stteped —
pulses, &c. ; that remains hard
by steeping — a grain : unexpand-
ed — a bud, leaf, sprout : work-
ing without noise — sugar-mills,
&c.
5^r A kiss. V. ^ g. of o.
5^RJTf, 5^I2jTHr -^ od. Si-
Icntlv. quietly. [crudge.
J^r^ffT Silent hatred,
5?;Rc^r (a) Confronting,
comparing, v. ^^. 2 Vicing
with. V. ^K-
J^W (a) a place of alight-
ing; a stage. 2 Encamping. 3
(In notes; as ^o ^uf). A
place of residence. 4 fig. A
pause or stop (as of a work in
])rognv<s) : a stage or single step
of gradual process.
^^mJX -H Destroyinnf, in-
juring covertly (as by cliarms,
and incantations, by language
offesive to delicate feelings, &c.
&c.)2 Any muffled kind of l)eat-
iiig so as to avoid the shedding
of blood (and thus furnishing
evidence of one's deed).
^?;r^, 3^r sr^r^r Revil-
ing terras for a person stupidly
taciturn or sulkily silent.
^52" (s) A tiara, a crest.
ifJJiroTr The chief of any
body or assembly ; the Cory-
pheus. [tively.
5^^ ad. (a) Certainly, posi-
5^ p. (s) Released, freed. 2
Liberated from personal exis-
tence and absorbed into ^?|.
5^^f^ n. Free access and
egress.
JtFITTcT n. (s) A pearl. 2 fig.
Fine writing. 3 A custard apple.
rv
^\^ f. (s) The enlargement
of the spirit from individual
existence, exemption of it from
further migration, and re-absorp-
tion of it into its source, the
divine Brahma. 2 Liberation :
liberated state.
^^^K See JI^WR".
5^ n. (s) The mouth. 2
The face. 3 fig. The entrance
into a building. 4 A means,
measure. 5 s In comp. The
prime part : the leading person.
6 In arithmetic,&c. The first term
of a series. 7 Tbe opposite side to
the base of any quadrilateral
figure.
5??^c7 71. ^^^ m. Poe-
tical terms for a fine counte-
nance.
S^^nrr /: The liveliness,
lustre of the countenance.
5^^fr% ad. Orally, viva
voce.
^^i\^ A helmet.
^^^\ (h) The countenance.
^W^^K a. (a) Absolute,
free ; a plenipotentiary. 2 An
hereditary officer — tlie agent ap-
pointed by the co-shareis of a
•g^*T»» to carry on the duties
of the office.
5'[^^2nT=ffiTr m. -^ n. A
power-of-attorney : the creden-
tials of an envoy at a foreign
court ; of a vakeel with reference
to his client^ &c. &c.
44
345
J^I^^irr/. Full powers or
authority delegated : absolute
state, &c.
^^^\Z a. Known by heart
5^^ A cant term for one's
speech, v. ^^'^oS• 2 Slabber,
spittle.
^T^^Z\ A face (of silver.
&c.) made to cover as a mask
the face of an idol. 2 A mask.
3 A bust. 4 Fashion or cast of
countenance, visage.
^^^^ n. The cloth spread
over an idol at the conclusion
of the worship of it. It is then
(without irony) supposed to go
to sleep. I kings, xviii. 27.
2 A cloth to wipe the face. 3 1 he
name of the upper paper of a
packet of papers. 4 Tbe outer
slieet of a manuscript book, the
fly-leaf.
^mjft f. The eating of
'RT'f ¥^T^, &c. by way of de-
sert after a meal : also the
TiTT, &c.thus eaten.
5^^r f. See J'lW.
5^ ad. Under the head
or form of; under the character
or appearance of: 3I'^?J^«,
fcf^T ^» .
^^m See ^mZ\.
J^IJTcf a. (s) Known by
heart, ready at the tongue.
5^^ a. (s) Chief, juincipal.
g^i^r^T: ad. s Chiefly.
5^71 See 5^2:r.
5ns r /. An ear-ornament
of females. ^ [red ant.
jnST m. "5rr /. A black or
J'lr A disease of horses, —
1 impas. 2 Seizing and twisting
round of the upper lip (of a
horse, &c.) in order to bold him
in restraint, v ^j^, ^T^, ^t:.
3 The cord for this purpose. 4
Proud pranks, v. ^K, ^T^.
^T=si^, fsr^^, ^T^. 5 An
emulative or a sudden impulse.
V. V, ^TT'T. 6 A large (black
or red) aut.
jfTr/. An ant. 2 fig. The
tingling of a limb asleep, v.
^, ^"S. pi. 3 The stinging
experienced in the tongue from
eating certain substances. 4 A
sudden itching (for, after, or to
do). V. ij, ^TW.
5^'=T a. (s) Stupid, dull. 2
Also ^n(T, a. ind. Vague,
ambiguous, undecided — speech,
an affair, ^niT/. s A maid.
3"^c55^ (h) a written en-
gagement under a penalty.
Generally app. to that exacted
by a government from culprits
and from witnesses. 2 A bond
of record, a recognisance. 3 The
bond of agreement furnished by
the parties to a Punchayat.
5^ /. (s) The ceremony of
investing a young Brahman with
the sacrificial tliread. 2 »n. A
grass from the fibres of which
is prepared the string which is
worn around the loins during
the ceremony of munj by the
Brahman the subject of it, and
until the ceremony of ^T^*far,
which is performed about six-
teen years afterwards. 3 The
string so prepared aud worn.
^'^'^^ -^ ad. (p Quickly)
Expressly, directly; with full-
ness of design and bent of pur-
pose.
5^^r (a) Respect, obeisance.
J^fJT a. (A) That opposes,
stops. [matter, consequence.
jsrr^ -m m.J. (a) Moment,
JsTfiFrr^ (P) Expenditure
on account of presents made by
Government. 2 Expenditure
made by one Subha or Mahal
on account of or at the debit of
some other Subha, &c. 3 Ex-
traordinary expenditure in gen.
^arTT^TrfT a. Relating to ^SfT-
J^lRcf /. (a) Courtesies,
civilities, v. %-H, TT^ g. of o.
2 Reserving or keeping back (a
matter). 47. x:t^, ^t.. 3 Misused
as ad. in the sense of ^^^rf.
5^1^ (a) a sweeper of a
mosque devoutly fixed to it,
^'SIT^^I/. The office, estate,.
&c. of ^Tfl^ri'C-
5[sft-
JW f. -t^ n. Investiture
of » young Brahman nith the
sAcrificial thread.
3*^ A young Brahman ar-
rived at the fit age to be invested
with the sacred thread : one still
wearing around his loins the
^'ST (sig. 2). 2 The disem-
bodied spirit of the young Brah-
man dying before the ungirding
ofthemunj; viewed as a fiend.
3 .A name for the fq^iaf Ficus
religiosa.
JffJ^ .^, kc. ar/. In a trice ;
— used with "^Twf -t?^ui -^^-
vf, "St^ ^UTof, &c. 2 with
f^5I»l or t^^jf To lie drawn
up. ^
^^^ V. c. To beat with
gentle and reiterated blows (a
languid limb, &c. to promote
the circulation).
^^oS^ V. c. In measuring
cloth, &c. by the arm. To grasp
the cloth after each measure-
ment of a cubit, and, by doubling
the fingers inwards, obtain an
increase of a hand's length. 2
To play with one's food (boiled
rice,&c.) by grasping and squeez-
ing portions of it. 3 See g^^ul.
Md*l Beatinir with gentle
blows (of a limb, &c. m sham-
pooing it). 2 A blow with the
fist. V. ^TT:, ^. 3 The fist as
clenched to strike, v. '^jitt:.
4 Spasm or cramp, v. "^dS.
^E\oS\ -5?r or 55^ «. Round-
ed, not pointed — used of a
kind of plantain.
53- n. (s) 5^^ f. -^ n. The
liead.'^^ww.Grain(or money)
in payment for a tenure of land,
or for the use of cattle, or as a
consideration for a money-loan.
a. Wanting or exempt from
interest — a money-loan.
J3"'Tf n. Shaving (esp. of
the headV 2 fig. Reviling ; load-
in? with abuse ; wigging.
5^°T V. i. To shave (esap
the head). 2 fig. To receive
through recitation of mantras,
&c. into the state or function
of a disciple, to matriculate. 3
Cant. To pluck, fleece; to
shave.
346
^i^ f. Vehement scolding.
^TZ\ (p) A corpse.
J^S^K a. (p) Dead and rot-
ting, carrion ; — used of flesh. 2
fig. Foul, filthy. 3 Used with
numerous nouns : ^o ^T?I'3'
71. Dead skin ; go -g^tj n. Cla-
rified butter remaining from a
quantity which has been consum-
ed ; *r9-^»g. n, A dead, dry or
fungus nail ; go «T^ n. Dead
flesh (as of wounds). 2 Flesh of
an animal that died without hav-
ing been slaughtered ; go K^.
n. Extravasated blood : gore.
J^^f^r^ -§n n. (P) Li-
tharge.
5:??"tR[^ (P Layer out of
the corpse.) The supplier of the
wood, &c. required for corpse-
burning.
5^^ n. (s) See j^'^- 2
Tonsure of the head of a child
to form the shendi. "5^^^
T^-|Tjf\y. The season for shav-
ing; i. e. when Jupiter is in
Virgo or Leo. Hence a holiday
or a vacant day in gen.
5^1 m. It. (s) A diadem,
tiara : a turban. ^^f ^^^,,1^
^^^m f. (s) A necklace
j^^'T/. Gulled state: be-
witched state. V. T}^, ?T^. 2
See *f^nr fig.
->
^^ An oval bundle formed
of layers of grass, containing
grain : the quantity of grain so
contained. _
J^r See '^r^^ir sig. 2.
J^iT^S" -Sf /. Flowers, &c.
bound around the brow of a boy,
as bridegroom at a marriage, or as
the subject of the thread investi-
ture. 2 A chaplet of flowers in
p"- [head, &c.)
^^\m V. c. To shave (the
j^r^ u.-^\m.{H)A turban.
jf3-cT p. (s) Shorn.
?tf /: A small bundle, Sec
See g^T.
J^r /: The head. 2 ///. (Be-
I cause they uhave their heads
ivholly). A contemptuous term
for a Gosavi or Sanyansi, bald
head. 2 Kings, ii. 23.
52"r a. Deprived of its head,
crop, top, tip, horns, point or
end — a tree, a finger, a knife, a
beast. 2 Wanting its edge, rim
— a vessel. 3 Mere, plain, want-
ing the usual percentage of
^ilffT^ and ^st; — used of
the ■^^^T or hundred, and
opp. to ^TT ^eR"^! the full
hundred. 4 Naked, void, want-
ing the usual ornament, append-
age. 5 Of which the horns are
turned back and down. m. The
region or round of the shoulder.
2 See ^^T '^Trf. 3 See 'g^^?:-
JST^TcT A measure of length,
— the fore-arm with the hand
clenched.
5^T a. Smelling of urine or
foul with urine — a place, cloth,
&c. : charged with urine-effluvia
— a smell.
^n'n^ V i To urine r • •
^ > V. I. iu uiiuc. [urmmg.
J^Ha. That is constantly
3^r /. The urine-hole dug
in a stable : the gutter to it.
^cTfr /. A little rill.
^cT^fr (a) One of the public
officers — an accountant.
JcTf7°T 71. The urethra, v. i.
To be aff'ected with a difficulty
of voiding urine.
Jcfl^^ a, (a) According to :
ffT'c^'i ^ ^t^^kI go ^i^
131 a.
9^^ A term for the two
club-like pieces of wood used in
the exercises of the Athlete.
5?"^^ or -^ (A k p) A
kitchen, esp. a public kitchen.
5?^<tr A cook.
^^^ n. Principal, capital. 2
In the loc. case (g^^T^) A
the outset : g^^t cqT«I^3
5?-c^fJ^^ ad. Without in-
terest or profits. ». ^ ^.
5^
5^r /. A ring (for finger,
&c.) [a terra.
5^^ /. (a) a space of time,
5?"^ n. Principal, capital, a.
Primary, primitive. Compound-
ed with such words as wf^'T-
5^?^r(A'> Evidence, argument,
just grounds (on which to con-
vict). 2 Clew, guide.
^CI^tTF a general term for
Evidence, trace, sign.
5^fT ad. (a) Expressly,
positively.
J'S^r /, (s) A seal ; a signet.
2 The mark of a seal ; a stamp,
a print. 3 A seal-ring. 4 A figure
made (as by the "^wi?, &c. on
thebreast,&c.) withi?T'?1^'5'^,
&c. 5 A coin. 6 Stamp, cast, air. 7
A mode of interwining the
fingers during worship. 8 An air
or a disposition of countenance
during meditation. 9 A person
as to shape and bulk: IJT^ ^<»
jrlr^r/. See ^\ sig. 1,2,
3, 4, 5, [struck.
jrlcT p. s Sealed. 2 Marked,
5=T^r An off-shoot of a
Plantain tree.
J-f^Tr (p) A Persian secre-
tary. 2 pop. A teacher of
Arabic, Persian, &c.
iT^^^-^r^ (a) a Native
civil judge of the lowest class.
^^^%\f. The office of^Ffg^.
5'Tr^^ a. (a) Right, proper.
5^r (s) a holy sage. 2 An
ascetic.
5^nT (a) a factor, agent ;
a foreman, esp. of a ^I^*T^.
JTicT ad. (p) For nothing,
gratis. [Embers.
5^, 5^^j 5^^j 31^ n. m.
5"^c7^ a. (a) Abundant,
plentiful, n. m. (a) Sum (of an
account or an addition).
5^f-iTr/. (a) Full permis-
sion ; unqualified licence.
^'^^\^ The boundary-stone
of a village.
347
^^^'T^ V. i. To turn away
from coyly ; to affect modesty,
flehcacy.
5^r Averting the face
away from coyly, v. 'RT^.
^rf It /. A light terra for
the body. v. ^t^, ^T^, "T^,
'Jo3rifT. 2 Used also of the
bodies of persons rushing and
crowding upon eagerly and emu-
lously. V. X(:s, ^\■^ : cgi'^T^^-
■q^ffTrT- 3 A kind of posture.
5^^ n.f. A mosquito, sand-
fly. 2 App. to a trifler.
gTHaT'^T V. c. To twist, con-
tort.
JT^TTS^r Twisted and wrung
state (of paper, cloth, &c.)
»'• "1: [under, &c.
^^rS'i'Tr f. Doubling over,
3"^3°t V. c. (h) To double
over, under, back ; to gather up
in folds : to crimple. 2 To turn
round (the head). 3 fig. To turn
back. 4 (when used with •Bin,
■JTT^, %T3', "flT^, &c.) To turn
and wriggle.
5^^r A wrench, twist. 2
The gripes. 3 Blight crisping
vegetables and fruits.
5^5rT-'T n. A piece of land
irregularly winding and turning.
2 A quantity of ground plough-
ed with a turn of the plough.
3TIt^ p. Crimpled at the
edges.
^l^ V. i. To soak or sink
into. 2 To be saturated — pickled
fruit with the pickle; to be duly
affected with the coagulating
matter — milk. 3 To mellow —
fruits : to ripen and dry — seeds.
4 fi". to become mellow — cloth,
paper, &c. 5 To become sober,
staid. 6 To become conversant
with through practice : "^l
fiir^ 11T ^ITTrr g^^T. 7 To be
resolved — a fever, a tumor, &c.
8 To subside— anger, lust. 9 To
be absorbed (in any contempla-
tion). 10 To be swallowed up
and lost.
iJ<<r^'^ V. i. Generally with
^•RT; as ^r5fT^^?[rffui To
twist round; to wrench off (4
he_ad, top). [preserves.
5^<s^r (a) Conserve of fruits,
5^^^r (a) a patron; a
friend. 2 The head or principal.
^B^ /• Muttering, grum-
bling.
5K?^°t V. i. To mutter,
^f^rr Husked rice soaked
and parched. r •„„ „
L [rice, &c.
jrjricT a. Crisp — parched
<?^^^/- (a) Awe or fear of;
care, regard, v. -^t, -^Tojn,
3^^/. A female dedicat-
e<l to the god Khundoba.
5^^" a. (a) Much, copiouk
5^ (p) A disciple.
5^^ A fissile kind of stone.
2 m. n. Eruption upon the face,
about puberty, of pimples con-
taining a maggy substance.
3^rST c. The person that
is sent to accompany a newly
married boy or girl to or from
the parental mansion, the house
of the father-in-law, &c.2m.c
At marriages. The brother, or
person representing the brother,
of the bride,
5^*1" a. Home, native, in-
digenous. 2 Relating to revenue
matters.
5^2^ A boy, a son. 2 A
male child of a female slave of
the State, gsiifl /. A girl,
a daughter. ^rHr n. A child.
5c^^,5r^r^ (A) A Mahome-
dan jurist or theologian. 2 A
schoolmaster.
f ^JTOTcT f. (A) An intervie#.
^t^r^Jf/: An eager or
lively host of little children.
J^r^r (a) Regard for. 2
Overlooking, forbearing (a
transgression), v. qf^.
5c7Rr(A) A gilding or plat-
ins- re
^^\^\ a. Overlaid with gold.
^^«h -^ (a) a country or
retrion.
ir=51Jr'rfft f. A term for the
campaigning: of troops tor an
expedition to enforce payment
of revenue, for the roaming of
travellers, traders, orfor journey-
ing in gen.
5^*^<iH n. A heath, plain,
i'^'";, ^ V. [collectively.
^tT^FS" -c=^r n. pi. Children
^^JTRB" V. pL A term for
one's entire family and train.
5p5T(A)See5^=^.
^^\^ a. (a) Difficult,
^hard. 2/. A difficulty.
5^rN^ (a) a traveller.
J^TTfl" a. Relating to tra-
velling or travellers,
^m^^r^ c. (a) a servant, a
hireling.
5^rn (a) Pay : stipend.
Jj^ f. The name of a fish.
5% /. m. (s) The fist.
Rl'^'TR'^ A jocose term for
the fist. V. '^.
^r^ /. The extremity of
the face of beasts. Hence, con-
temptuously, the mouth of man,
muzzle, chops.
XT^ J3^ V. c. To strike (a per-
son) upon the mouth.
^^^ f. pi. (h) The arms
as pinioned, v. '^f'^.
5^^ A torrent. 2 fig. An
impetuous and headlong rush
(as through a crowd), v.
JCRTTf f. A vehempnt rush
(as into a crowd) with the Ijodv
inclined forwards and head de-
pressed. V. *TTr, %, ^^^^
m or fn^. 2 The body and
» , . " .
head so disposed in preparation
for rushing.
jcrgsfl, 5^^/. Poet. The
fire und Hush of youth.
JfT^^fcT a. Glowing under
the ardor uf puberty.
348
5^^^ /. Sobbing, whim-
pering, &c. ; crying softly: mur-
muring.
5^5901 V. i. To be under the
excitement of puberty. 2 To be
highly incensed. '^ To sob, to
mutter siippressedly.
5^c7tipf (^) ^ Musulman.
5^c^Rr a. Relating to
Musulmans. /. The Musulman
rule.
5^^ n. A pestle. 2 Abeam
of a sugarmill.
5^5r^r? /. Pounding (of
rice) with a pestle.
5^3Tfffr /. A term for a
rude, bold, masculine woman.
J^S^Ky. A term for heavy
raining or rain ; raining cats and
dogs.
^tla5<r1H n. A term for ablu-
tion in which the customary
mantra, &c. is not recited.
5^ /. (A) Season (as of
fruits, &c.)
3^Tf (s) A thirtieth part of
a day and night ; an hour of
forty-eight minutes. 2 fig. The
fit time. 3 Commencing upon.
?'. ^'C. 4 The second mar-
riage of a Shudra woman.
^^T^'^ n. A root or part of
the root.
55?^ A Plantain-stole.
J3"q^3" f^ Dubious speech.
2 A drizzling rain. 3 Teasing,
begging, or piteous whining.
173^3" or -^ ad. In a whin-
ing manner — crying, begging.
2 Drizzingly — raining.
K^^^^ V. i. To mumble.
5'^3^'^ ff. AVishy-washv,
sloppy. 2 Vague. 3 Vapid,
frigid.
J'^r A radish. r . .
J'^f5C^'^ «rf. At the very be-
^•^K^ The very outset.
5^m V. i. To take root-
plants transplanted.
5^r/. A root.
J'^T „d. (Loc. rase of ^)
In the vefy beginnings in the I
first, least degree, &c. ; as the
first point towards : ^o5^ HIT
JoT prpp. On the ground
or reason of; on account of.
Joo^r A vender of medici-
nal roots. 2 The village astrolo-
ger. 3 An old resident. 4 (Be-
cause born under *TSI •TS^T^)
A mischievous, vile child.
^ A grain.
^J/. The fist. 2Apalmful
of grains of ^^^, &c. over
which a magical formula has
been recited, cast against the
oliject which it is designed to
injure, v. ■^T««f. 3 A handful
of grain, given as his perquisite,
to the keeper of an elephant,
horse, &c. out of the daily al-
lowance of the animal. 4 A
handful of rice-stalks (as pluck-
ed up for transplantation). 5 Rice
sown by the *T3. v. ^T, ^I^ :
The pastern joint. 7 The haft,
hilt (of a tool, &c.) h The
foetus in utero.
^5" A bullock's packsaddle.
^a^rnt f. Burying, throw-
ing earth over a corpse, v. "^j
^'^- [stupid.
^5" a. (s) Ignorant, dull,
^ n. m. Urine.
^rf^^T A disease, Gravel or
the stone.
^^ n. (s) Urine.
^f^ n. s Dysury. 2 The
disease Gravel.
^^\^ A diuretic. 2 A
scouring by means of a diuretic,
^^fq? s A kidney.
5^^ s The urethra.
^^^mf. s pop. ^^'^f.
A catheter.
rhe bladder.
^ f. A concealed vent. 2
liooseness of consistence in a
soil or a substance; porousness,
3 Oozing. 4 Wastage, loss by
leakage. 5 Loss iu tr^de. 6
349
JlTSTt
Room, capacity. 7 (In wood or
stone.) Crack, dryness.
^ a. (s) Unlearned : dull,
foolish.
ff^ii^r /. 8 Fainting, ^^-i^^
/. (s) Fainting. ^^TT?T,
^T^ti P- Fainted.
^^^p.s ^f^^TH (s) pop.
Jrf^'irr a. Endowed with form.
2 Real, solid. 3 Incarnate.
^FtT /. (s) A statute, an
idol, any figure of definite shape.
2 The body. 3 A person.
^^ a. Cerebral.
^^\ f. s The head. 2 In
j^eometry. Base.
^^ n. (s) The root of a
tree. 2 The original, basis ; the
first cause. 3 The first ancestor,
progenitor. 4 Origin. 5 The
original text. 6 m. /. n. A child :
a son or daughter of. 7 The nine-
teenth •TS^^. 8 In arithmetic.
The root of a quantity. 9 Capital
or principal.
*i"^*l w. s Price.
[cious.
i^^^R a. Dear, costly, pre-
^^ s A mouse or rat.
irq* /. A crucible. 2 A
matrix. 3 Mould, form (of a
machine, plot, council) : ^J^l'-
K^'^Tll^a^ ?TOT^ ^i^n ^TfT-
4 R Trace, track, v. 5TT^, ^T^,
"T^ w. See ^T^. 2 A person
sent to summon a newly marri-
ed boy or girl to the parental
mansion, to the house of the
father-in-law, &c. ; a person sent
to summon the bridegroom to
the wedding : a messenger.
ip^T^ n. The first letters
(in instructiug to write).
J^ipj The original book.
2 fig. The foundation, basis, first
principles.
^aJMlS" n. The place at wbich
any deity first manifested him-
self, 2 The seat of one's an*
^estops.
q'^'fri'^ f. The origin. 2
I'lie whole, all the particular
points (of a business, &c.)
q-STT^q- The head of a tribe.
^T3"q"^|qy. Original nature.
^^^m^:i or 3To5-5?Trr"^/. pHes.
^^iT The first stake plant-
ed at the commencement of a
buildino;. 'foff'^MT^liqtrr n. The
planting of the first stake, — the
" Laying of the first stone."
^^ (s) A deer, an antelope.
2 The fifth ^^^ : the rain that
falls under it. 3 s A beast.
iTT^o?" n. Vapour floating
over sands, &c. and appearing at a
distance like water, mirage.
^mm .^^ (s) Musk.
^^^ /. (s) Chase, hunting.
^n^^ n. The year of which
the commencement is dated at
the time of the occurrence of the
«TiT«T25'?, about the .5th of
June. This is the Mahomedan
official year.
^^, ^ s A lion.
JTcTp. (s) Dead, defunct. 2
Calcined.
q^cTT^ n. A written will.
^cTqR a. As if dead ; in
extreme distress.
•\
^cTc^T^S" Any piece of writ-
mg of a person now dead ; a will,
bond, &c.
JTcTT^^ w. Impurity con-
tracted through a death in one's
family.
^pFT^r /. (s) Earth. 2 Any
particular earth.
^^H" (s) Death. 2 ^^ or
""Into, the Judge of the dead.
ipjit^Tff w. n. Peril of life.
^'S'T^ n. A written will.
5^<^ A sort of tabor.
^J a. (s) Soft. 2 Tender. 3
fig. Mild, easy.
JT^r^ n. Mildew.
*\
^^ n. m. The mucus of
the nose when hard,
^^ f, (h) A pe^, a tent-pin,
a small stake. 2 A nail (of metal).
3 fig. A huge and sturdy man or
beast.
•\ »*
JT<^ci?'T V, c.'To fasten to a peg.
2 fig. To cause to stop (a work).
^^^\ f. (s) pop. ^f^a^ A
triple zone worn round the
loins by the three first classes of
Hindus. 2 A woman's girdle.
^(ir^oit^ '^?^riT^ ^m' To
sit in dogged determination of
,.^^^^*'°°- [snake.
^^ /. The slough of a
Wf^^JT V. i. To cast
its ^JI — a snake. 2 To re-
treat meanly and pusillanimous-
ly; to flinch.
^^TRR^rfr A terra for a
simple-looking but artful fellow;
a wolf in sheep's clothing.
^ (s) A cloud.
^^H" s A term for hail.
mi^T, mi^Wf: n. (s) The
lowering of the clouds. 2 Empty
menaces ; vain bluster.
^^;?c7 n. The clouds col-
lectively. 2 The atmosphere,
^nr n. (p) A table.
^^, ^^% Hw\ See Jfr^r.
^2: n. The knee-joint of
the knee ; — used mostly of that
of the horse.
*\
^/. A forked stake used
as a post. 2 The Polar star.
^S-^r -^^ A shepherd.
HS"^ n. A sheep.
^I^r^r A sheep-fold, a flock.
^2T A male sheep. 2 A
crook.
•\
^ST A stake, esp. as forked.
2 A palisade. 3 fig, A backer.
4 A curl Or snarl.
^^ f. A small ^3-.
^^ry. An ewe.
H5" n. A sheep without re-
ference to sex.
k'^^lm A tr^fr who keeps
account of the ff{fi^, &c. by
driving stakes into thq
grounj.
irs^
350
^^PT
iTTtot f. A barricade, stoc-
^'''I'l'^- [bard.
^^ n. Wax. 2 (p) A scab-
^^^ n. Oily flirt (a« ad-
hering to brass lanipstands, &c.)
a. Besmeared with dirty oil or
ghee.
m^Z^ r. i. To be besmear-
ed with dirty oil, &c. — a vessel.
m^q:S n. Waxcloth.
^^^^ a. Flat, vapid :
wanting granules ; — used of
JfXK. 2 Soft and waxy — ^TrT. 3
Soft and flacid — food. 4 fig.
Slow, languid. 5 Miserly.
^^^r -^FcT /. A wax-
canille.
mm, m\m v. c. To be-
smear (baskets, &c.) with the
dregs of oil, &c. 2 Cant. To
make plump and sleek.
m\^A palanquin. ^^^^^^^^
JT^^rST pi Purulent oph-
^r^WZ, H^Z n. A kind of
sauce ; ^o fiT3^ g. of s. & o.
To form a close friendship.
•s rv
*T^r f. (s) Fcenugreek grass ;
^the grain of it. ^^^^^^
JTf^T^r f. s The terraqueous
iff^R^Ff n. s The ocean.
^r^ Marrow (whether of
the bones or flesh). 2 Brains.
3 fig. Fruits, fiesh, &c. reduced
by corruption to a soft and oozy
state.
^•-J s Sacrifice: ^WT, ^-
^^^ a. s (Proper, purposed,
&c.) to be sacrificed. 2 Pure.
^r f. Edge, verge (of a
field, &c.)
^^ (s) The sacred mountain
Meru in the centre of the seven
continents. 2 fig. The large
middle gem of a necklace. 3 The
stalk or standing tube of a
Hc»5T m. or a. A dead person,
or dead ; a term of abuse by fe-
males to or of an offending
male. 2 Dead, i. e. flat, stale.
vapid, &c. : ^STT^«TTDead lime
— lime that has been wrought u|)
into mortar and applied in build-
ing, ^'sl^I^'! Dead bread —
food obtained without labour ;
hread of idleness. ^^JTTfTl
Earth that has been used
(in building). 2 Dry, unctu-
ous earth. 3 Rotten earth.
^^^^ Dead provision, —
food got without labour (i. e. in
the dishonorable way of spong-
ing or begging), v. ?gT : »l^
«^ --r^ -^'35. See under 55^-
^K ; ^% mijft Water depriv-
ed of its air through heating.
^^^f p. Dead, &c. 2 Lost,
sunk, bad — a debt.
^^r (p) Fruit. 2 App. to
^ unserves. ^^^^^^^
A^\ -^r a. Sheep-faced, im-
m (s) A ram. 2 The sign
Aries. ^^/. An ewe. ^%T%'sf
s Shutting and opening ; fold-
ing and unfolding (as of the eye
or a flower).
»\
Htcl* 71. A book of arithme-
tic ; tables or a table to facilitate
calculations ; a book of rules and
sums ; a book of directions and
patterns for writing.
^^fr (Port.) A designation
of honour for a head smith, or
carpenter, or mason, or armourer;
also of the man who makes up
the ))read in a bakery. Ap|).
often to a superintendent gen.
Ajjp. further, out of abounding
courtesy, to Portuguese servants,
^esp. cooks. [Urining.
^W s Urinary disease. 2
^=Tcr /. (a) Toil, pains. 2
Labour or work. 3 The price or
wages of labour, ^o v{'srfC\f.
Hireling or mercenary bodily
labour, ^o TJCCTIfl/. A com-
prehensive term for toils, pains,
cares, endeavours.
industrious.
a. Laborious,
H^</. (p) Favour, kindness.
2 m. The settlement made upon I
a widow by the man taking her
in marriage.
^r^R -^R a. Kind, graci-
ous ; -«rt/. Kindness, regard,
condescension.
^?TR -q /■. A little recess
(as in a wall), a niche.
^?^n/. Numbness, deadness
(as of a limb).
%^r Poet. A cloud.
%m A wife's brother. 2
A sister's husband.
^f°Tr/ A maternal uncle's
daughter : a paternal aunt's
daughter, a. c Wife's sister.
^^ Agreement, concord. 2
Agreement, tally, balancing (as
of an account). 3 A band of
musicians. 4 A couple of ser-
pents in coitu. 5 The efflores-
cence of the bamboo, &c.
T2rr A concourse of people;
a gathering ; esp. as at stated
periods for religious or com-
mercial purposes ; a fair. v.
■Jf^, aiH. 2 A company of ar-
bitrators : hence, Judgment by
arbitration, or a judgment pass-
ed.
t^ A friend- ^^tr T^tr, ^-
'^/. Friendship. *r^pfl or f^Trft
/. A female friend.
^^'T n. (s) Copulation, con-
gress. 2 Union, junction.
^T? An individual of a par-
ticular tribe. They waylay and
murder travellers. 2 A hypocrite.
a. Heavy, doltish.
H?r (n) Fine wheaten flour.
^^I'i n. (p) A plain, a level
tract. 2 The body, ground (of
a garment, &c.)
t?Tc7^?~r /. (h) a drug,
Oriodaphne ojjifera.
^^r /. (h) A kind of jay.
^^^ a. (a) Extinct— a
family. 2 Deceased, dead. 3 Blast-
ed— a crop, &c. f{o ^^T^ vt.
Investigation of the cause of a
death, coroner^s inquest. JTo
'^T^sit /. Inquest upon a
death, f^o fori'^jit/. Property
left by a defunct. 2 Property
"km
351
HTsPTr
wanting heir, ^o tr^^T«T »'•
The judgment of an inquest up-
on a death. ^0 tf;'?of1/. In-
spection of crops reported to be
blighted. «o ^t^ /. Inven-
tory of the effects of a defunct.
2 Record of the judgment of a
death-inquest.
n'^r a. (a) One hundred.
*I^T«T'ST a. Two hundred.
H^ m.f. (h) Dirt. ^^'Jr
a. That hides dirt— a color.
JTc^rnr A sort of sanders-
wcod.
n\i^ f. (a) Settledness,
fixedness : determinedness (of a
number or a quantity) : certain-
ty (as of an event or an act). 2
Established salary ; fixed allow-
ance. 'S Annual pay; in contrad.
frotn -^^^T^T.
JTf^H^Rcrrrhe writing drawn
up upon the occasion of fixitxj
salaries or an establishment : a
pay -roll, a servant-roll,&c. 2 The
voucher of a contract.
JTrf^K A stipendiary of
the State.
^ff^Wrq" n. Settled measure.
ad. Fixedlv ; certainly.
^r^ See W.
Tr^?5"''T V. c. To set free, at
large, loose. 2 To ejaculate
(f^«, "q-pq, ^^, a scream or
loud cry).
^f^^ /. A quantity (as
of hay, flowers, &c. ) lying
loosely ; i. e. not made up in-
to bundles, bunches, balls, &c. :
such loose and scattered state.
2 Liquidation (of a debt) ; clear-
ed state, ad. Loosely, freely.
2 In open [i. e. unclosed, un-
sealed, &c.) state — a letter, ac-
count ; in unsettled state — an
account.
m^arot See ^l^m.
^r^n^l a. Free, unbound. 2
Open, unshut — a door, &c. 3
Loose, distinct. 4 Untenanted,
empty. 5 Free (as from the pres-
sure of any serious disorder,
danger, distress, or painful ani-
mal urgeocy); relieved: ^nil^
Tf^off^ f. Liberation ; set-
ting or getting at liberty. 2
Liberty (granted to do). ^T"
f^^/. A bill of release ; a
deed of acquittance. 2 A writ
loosing a sequestration.
ms-^Tf^ -^5:R n. (An open
tract.) Clear room or space, lit.
fig. i/ull scope ; free leave, v.
^]^^R Z ad. Loosely, at
large. 2 Lavishly, profusely.
^f^K ad. At prime cost. n.
Prime cost : ^f^ ^'T^t'^ ^T«»
irr^rar -#r, jfr^r^r^R c. The
holder of a Mokasa, or the
farmer of the revenue of it on
the part of the person holding
it or of the State.
ifr^rg"^!^/. The share in
the revenue of the #r^Tift.
JTr^r^r (a) villages or lands,
or a share in the rule over them
and revenue arsing from them,
granted on condition of military
service or in Inam. 2 The share
of the state or government in
the rule over a village and in the
revenue arising from it : a village
or the portion of it ruled by the
state and yielding its revenue to
^*- [loosely, &c.
^r^rS" a. Sf ad. Free, loose ;
^r^ Kernel in general, 2
The soft substance in the
centre of a betelnut, &c.; the
edible susbtance sprouting at the
head of a youn^ cocoanut ; the
pulp of the fruit of the ^^^ ;
the lump to be felt within a
boil ; any crumb or soft inside.
H Sprout.
^ni A germ, shoot.
ITR^ A mallet. 2 A little
knob [as at the extremity of
a f^old wire, as closing the bore
of a pearl, &c.) 3 (Or flTJT^)
A pavior's monkey or rammer;
a washerman's beater, &c.
^UKi (h) a species of Jes-
samine. 2 A mallet or a ram-
mer. Hence app. to a silent and
dull fellow, a loggerhead. 3 The
snuff of a wick. 4 The knob of
a sword-sheath, by which it is
hung on to the belt. r
^Rfr /. (h) Jessamine. 2 A
small mallet. 3 The seed-vessel
of the radish.
^rnffiTR Beating (of clothes
in washing them with a mallet).
2 fig. Banging soundly.
^\nt n. The flower of the
plant ^TJIK:!.
iTRTc^ n. Oil scented with
flowers of the ^TJl^t-
mT\^ The pulpous portion
of the Cashew. 2 (p) A Mogul.
^Rc^rf a. Relating to the
Moguls; of the rule of the Moguls.
/. The rule of any Mahomedan
ruler.
^IW\^ n. The country of
the Moguls. 2 An insurrection
or any irruption among or
caused by the Moguls.
^R'^r a. Relating to the.
Moguls.
^1^ a. (A or h) General,
undefined : undeveloped, un-
explicated — speech, &c.
^rar A kind of pitcher.
*Tr^^ a. (s) That frees,
looses ; as tjin^T'^^.
^r^^ V. c. To set free.
'Tf^'T n. Liberation ; freeing.,
'jr^r (H) A shoe.
ifr^riTrCr / General or
mutual slipper-beating.
^rl^^ p. (s) Freed.
^r^r (h) a shoemaker.
nfsf n. Measure, v. ^. 2
Measuring, r. g. 3 The quan-
tity determined by measure-
ment. 4 A measure (of length,
&c.) 5 Anything taken to
measure with, j-^j ^ Moderate.
m^^\ a. Measured ; i.e.limit-
^R^f /. Number, measur-
ing. 2 Land-surveying.
Tr^°r[?fi: c. a land-surveyor.
jfhfSf
352
'Trr^fi'
^\'^^ V. c. To number, count.
2 To measure. 3 fig. To regard,
esteem.
ifrsT^fT -2r -^ /. (a) Count-
ing of houses or articles of pro-
perty.
J^r^p^r a. Measured, i. e. re-
stricted to limited, particular
quantity or amount stinted :
m^ (p) A stocking or sock
2 A glove gen. with ^T^T^^T
in the first sense, and with
^TfTT^T in the second.
^\Z /. The bucket of a bul-
lock-drawwell. 2 A load, tress
(as of grain, &c.) ; a quantity of
things bundled together. iJ The
receptacle of the wa/ers or liquor
amnii. v. ^, ^^, ^"Z, f^g. 4
fio-. The state or form of a beast
thrown down with its head and
legs tied closely together; or
of a man doubled and bundled
together under demoniac pos-
session.
A\Z^\ m. dim -^F/. -JST n.
A rude bundle or pack in gen.
M\Z\-Z\a. Laroe.gieat,lit.fiir.
2 Exceeding : ^T3T ilT^WT-^T-
o3^. ad. Very, exceedingly.
^[ZmZ\ -^m Large and
lusty ; big and gross. 2 Strong,
coarse — cloth, &c.
^I2Tr a. A porter.
^(5r* y. Largeness. 2 fisr.
Greatness, v. ^r, i^^, ^t^^
m'^ Broken state (as of an
army). 2 Gernunation, v. ^,
xfiz. 3 A term for the fins in
the disease Pde. 4 /. Old metal
vessels, &c. fit. to be broken up
and sold. 5 The Mor or common
business character of the Ma-
rathi. 6 The line formed l)y
doubling over, a crease : the line
formed by diviiling tlie hair : the
line through a cornfii'l(l,&c. 7 A
bend or turn (of a road, river, &c.)
8 The leani sg or direction ; the
line of proceeding, acting ; the
general course, lit. fig. : ^€t
'^ #TS ^ilsi'ST i. 9 A turn,
cast, style (of speech, composi-
tion, action). 10 A deluging fall
of rain. 11 Change or small
money. 12 /. m. Stiffness and
pain (in a limb) from much pres-
sure of a burden or from stoop-
ing : 'fTffT^T-fll'^^T-^T^
^\'J^aS f. Exhaustion, spent
or knocked up state (through
age, bard labour, &c.); broken,
or ruinedstate. v.V, ■f T, ^T^,
jfr^^SJ^ V, i. To break down
or knock up (through age, &c.) ;
to fall into ruin ; to be decayed,
lit. fig.
•\
irrS'^S' a. Broken, decayed :
breaking, failing — houses, trade,
&c. 2 Routed — an army. 3 Im-
paired. 4 Friable.
flr^^r a. Broken.
Rf^^r^T^f A retail-dealer.
^\^^\ /. Breaking down ;
breaking up, &c. See the verb.
2 The way or course ; fashion,
style.
^\^^ V. c. To break. 2 To
destroy. 3 To break by bending
(^T^, &c.) 4 To break up
Nj\?^, ^^W^T<1, &c.) 5 To
disband, dismiss (^T«TK, ^^-
^) : to disperse (an army)-
G To break, change (^q^) :
to break down ; to reduce into
the metal (-JTiTJff, ^Tfir^). 7 To
disturb (-^ixj, ^IH). H To dis-
please («T5f, ««rf). y To des-
troy the structure,order of (tii-
JIl^, ffi^T, &c.) 10 To de-
populate (^f^). 11 To con-
fute (xj8^, iTfl). 12 To spend,
kill (a^, f^^^). 13 To break
the force of ; to quench (?I^T-
^,w^, vr?j,&c.) 14To subdue,
suppress (^\^, V^). 15 To
crush, compose (^io^T, 4*)'
16 To infringe (bti^T, "9^^).
\7 To abolish {^■{^). 18 To
reduce to bankruptcy. 19 To
efface, annihilate. 20 i^l^W,
as signifying To break down into
some other form or state, is con-
trad, not only from ^J^vi
To break by cutting or sudden
piiUing, but also from '^t^^
To break or hurst open.
•\ »>»
^r^^ V. i. To break ; to
break or bend under force. 2 To
break ; to suffer impairing in
health. 3 To break up — a town or
village ; to dilapidate — a house. 4
Tobreakup;toaolve — an assemb-
ly. 5 To break up j to discon-
tinue— a concern, an employ-
ment. 6 To fail, become bank-
rupt. 7 To pass away, lapse —
days. 8 To follow after the
course of: f{X.\Z\ ^^^^^ ^^HT-
^«5TfT ^T? 9 To lie, be,
or pass in subordmate connec-
tion with ; to follow in the wake
of: ^^BT^ilT^T^If 55^^ ^T^^;
1T5iTf^ ?I«^T 3?^?lt 3I5TT'^T
^^[t\ ^4 ^sq qu ^l^rfTVf. 10
To fall into oblivion — practices,
fashions. U To break down ; to
yiehl, fall (as under infirmities,
or through fatigue). Used simply,
or with «u?, and of the body or
limbs : 3^1*1 ^T"®^ ^Tl.^T'lt^T^
^l^«T^<riTfTTlie body.&c ache
and fail, as if broken (as when
fever is approaching). 12 To
break; to lose force, intensity*.
^r^^r /. Prevention ; any
interposed obstruction. r.^T^ '•
gT?T^ ?iw^ ^if^^f. 2 Pre-
vented, obstructed state.
Jn^cTrS" /. Changing or sell-
ing (of old trinkets, metal vessel*
&c.) 2 Old vessels, &c. as de-
signed or fit, to be sold or chang-
ed. 3 Compromising or com-
pounding : a compromise (of a
del)t, &c.) 4 Repairing, mending.
MVS^\ f. Cholera morbus
^^r Prevention ; debar-
ment. V. m^. 2 Prevented
state. 3 An intermission of any
regularly proceeding work, a
break, a c/ap. v. ^^, ^T- 4 A
liigh stool.
3Trfr /. See ^1^ sig. 5.
T[?rf a. Capable of being
broken up into its parts : that can
be double*! up. 2 P'itto be broken
wp for sale. [disturbs.
5TR^r a. That breaks, mars,
3T(cr/. (a) Death, v. ^.
HTcTirrr 1 , , .
> (p) A o-room.
^mm -qr /.Mother of pearl.
3Tfc[IT/. (a) a certain quan-
tity ; a settled allowance. 2
An allowance. 3 Proportion. 4
In comp. with a noun in ace.
prefixe<l. One subjected to a
stint Or scanty measure of;
^■^l^ ^TrTT' One having
but a pittance of food. r ,
^FcTKr a. Moderate, temper-
^FcTf n. A pearl, 2 An orna-
ment for the nose consisting of
a pearl or a gold bit. 3 Cataract.
V. ^^, ^fiX.
^r^m^ See ^Cf^^rc.
^r^ /. A fragrant grass.
^f^^ (s) A sort of sweet-
meat.
TK"^ V. i. Poet. To rejoice.
JTKST A truss. 2 A lump
(as of earth).
^rfr (h) The steward of a
great man. 2 A coruchaadler :
a petty grocer.
^TflJIRF (h) The commis-
sariat department of an army.
mi f. The end of a Plan-
tein-leaf. [a brute.
^[•T^TrcT f. A dumb creature,
JTR^r, ^Rr The spike
which issues from the middle of
the Plantain and of trees of the
Palm-tribe. 2 A Plantain stole.
^r^r a. Dumb. 2 Mute.
45
353
^FT a. Vulg. Many or much ;
^^'^I'y- [favour.
m^^ -^ f. (a) a kindness,
^j^^^i, ifr^r^^r (a) Ex-
changing. 2 Items of one head
of accounts transferred to an-
other, prep. In change of.
^r^ m- n. A peacock.
^R'^JT (n) A Jew's harp.
Hr^=^c7 -=^?5" n. m. A brush
of peacock's feathers.
^K^r (p) A battery : for-
tifications. 2 Rust; a bare spot
on a mirror, &c. f-^.jt^;^,i_
^Rf^-^ 7n. n. (n) Blue
^f^t^fr /• (p) Erection of
batteries. 2 A range of batteries.
^\^] or -^r /. A blade set
in a fixed stock. Vegetables and
fruits are scraped or cut ujjon it.
^f^r a. Of white spots on a
dark-red ground, grizzled — a
beast.
if[n§7rcrrn a. Elderly and
white-spotted here and there. A
respectful epithet of a senescent
person.
5TK[^r In building. St. An-
drew's cross.
^FH/. c A little channel
to carry off water.
^Fff^ n. (a) The seal of a
State affixed to a document. 2
The stamp made by it.
iTPTF^fr r?^c^F /. (Because
the calf of a bull of the colour
^r^T will, at least, have a fz^-
^ or white spot on its fore-
head.) Used where the son of a
learned or wise father is an
ignoramus or a blockhead all
but absolute.
^F^ n. Price. 2 Wages, hire.
iT[c7^n A man hired to per-
form any work ; one that labours
for hire.
iT[?5-iT:^n J. A loose term for
the little jobs and works by
which day-labourers earn their
subsistence.
I^Ti^in^ /. A char-woman.
^\H\a^ n. A calf-muzzle.
^l^ m. See ^'^ sig. 4.
^\^] (a) An account ; a
statement of expenses. 2 fig.
Actpiittal.
jfr^l]" or ^fo ^FFT^T /. A
species of orange.
^r^^TT^ (p) An accountant.
^r^JT See 5T^JT.
^rC (s) Fascination, infatua-
tion, whether the allurement of
objects exciting love, pity,
sympathy, &c. 2 Loss of con-
sciousness; fainting. 3 Ignorance,
folly; — app. to that spiritual
ignorance which leads men to
bebeve in the material reality of
worldly objects, and to be-
take themselves to sensual en-
^joyments. ^^^^^^
^F^ n. tn. A bees' nest and.
^F?"^ a. That allures, en-
gages, as ^«ri^['^^.
^(C5[F^ 71, The snare of the
.^^'°J^- [captivate.
^FCOT V. c. To bewitch,
mC^rSee 51=^sig. 1,2,4.
^g'cF^T^F Tax on the shop-
keepers and artificers of a village.
^F§"'T n. (s) Fascination, al-
luring. 2 In medicine. Effecting
stujior. 3 Clarified butter poured,
in order to soften it, over dough
in kneading it. a. s That allures.
^F?:^ n. (^F=F) Poet. Silence-
V. T^iK-
m^'il f. Enchanting, charm-
ing operation to besot, v.
gitl' 2 The charms and in-
cantations used for the purpose.
3 A certain fabled goddess.
RF^^cT/ See W^^T.
HF§:^ / (p) A gold coin. 2
A seal. 3 The impression upon
a coin.
^\K^ Blossomed state ; the
blossom (of the Mango, &c.) 2/.
Front : the van : taking the van.
m?:T^FsqT, i?F?:^^F, ^\w^.
■q^a. That leads the way ; esp.
app. to the bullock of a train that
irrrr
354
irrsr^r
bears the bell and lenil#,tbe leader.
LMit;. The lieail of any assem-
bly; the blaster of ceremonies.
^r^T^r -c^r a. Of the front,
van. 2 Future.
^\^V^ V. i. To blossom— the
mango and similar trees. 2 To
be fuU-vipe and be on the turn : —
used of a croj) : to be mature,
fiill-])reparc(l, and on the turn; —
used of l)utter or sugar under
process of clarification. 3 To get
aliead, forward. 4 To be rising
— the moon. 5 To play the life.
JTr^^t^ a. Sealed.
^l^U^ (a) The Mahomedan
month Moharam.
^\KT\ (p) A leader, a chief.
2 Countenance, visage, ii A term
for a handsome, valiaut man. 4
A stone, &c. as a rubl)er to polish
paper, &g. 5 A gem found in
the head of the VfTT. (j
Front : the van. 7 The stamp in
the middle of a sheet of jiaper.
Rr?<r f. The mustard plant:
its seed. 2 Poet. A fife. 3 (h)
A little channel to carry off
water. 4 The bead of a gun.
^fH'^'T 2^rep. Sf ad. From
before.
^(^C prep. Sf ad. Before or
in front of. 2 Beyond, forwards.
^r?:^Rf See irr^^f.
^\W^ or -55" See ^[^IST.
^rCS" n. A bees' ne.st, — the
whole mass, both nest and
honeycomb. [besotted.
^If^^ p. (.s) Fascinated,
^11?%/. s Bewitching, de-
])riving of sense or understand-
ing.
^itm /. (a) a military ex-
pcditioii, a campaign. 2 tig. A
tour, excursion.
^If2" A side of a roof. 2
The caves of it. 3 A grass.
irrST Way, method : charac-
ter of deportment. 2 Style,
habits. .'J A muzzle.
^r^r /. A fagot (sticks, &c.)
^r^ 7z. See i^r^rir.
TRT (s) Final and eternal
happiness; the deliverance of
the soul from the body, its
exemption from further trans-
migration, and its absorption
into the divine essence. 2 3
Liberation.
J^rSrTT^ ?/. The degree, post,
of ^18?. Hence applied to
anv great reward.
iTflTR^ 71. s A pearl.
^f^ /. (a) Play, sport; acts
or sights of excitiug merriment.
2 Pleasure, delight. ."3 A sudden
fancy; a mere humor,
^5fT (a) a village. Used
mainly in connectiou with ej\-
flisrr^r a. Sportive, playful.
^I^r f. (s) The sacrificial
thread of Brahmans; app. to
the rite of investiture.
JT|5f[^q''l;i. The lite of invest-
ing a young Brahman Avith the
sacrificial thread.
m^ ad. At or in the village
of; as *TT^ ■pf^T^fff-
^f^ /. (a) Death : any great
calamity.
^R n. (s) Silence. 2 Taci-
turnity. «. s Dumb or silent.
^R^cT n. A ^^ of a period
of silence, v. f^X-
^TRlf'^ V. i. To hold silence.
^[^r a. s Silent : taciturn. 2
A religious sage.
^if*^ n. Silence. 2Tacitiunity.
*T(^^ n. s Foolishness, stu-
j^.idity. 2 Ignorance. q^^j^^
^fc^^r (a) a Mahomedan
^Fc^r /. s The head. 2 A
lock of hair on the crown.
^\^^ n. s Price.
^^R ri. (p) A scabbard.
*^Rr (p) A palanquin.
^•^r f. The mewing of a cat.
int'. Pus !
^^m a. (s) Languid, wan. 2
Faded, drooping.
rc3Tfj(s)corrup.*^'^^ Thege-
neric term for a barbarian or fo-
reigner; that is, for one speaking
any language but Sanskrit, and
not subject to any usual Hindu
institutions.
^•T A proverb. 2 A rumor.
§3"(JI^ That is to say; name-
ly. 2 Also laroT^^ ad. Then,
indeed; that being the case.
51'^'^f /. Saying, reciting,
&c. 2 A mode of reciting. 3 A
single recitation (of a Veda,
&c.) 4 A popular saying.
^m V. c. Sf i. To speak,
utter. 2 To recite. 3 To read
or study ; to go through or over
(the Vedas, &c.) 4 To name, call.
^t^f^aT V. c. To cause to
speak, utter. 2 To cause one\s
self to be called or termed ; to
give one's self out for : 7^ fsu;-
^^ ad. Therefore, on that
account. 2 An expletive. It
follows up and closes any par-
ticular aliirmatiou, rendering it
distinct and prominent; and
indicating that that is the matter
which is stated to have been said
or (lone : ^Tt g^T 'Eltf ^1^
^o sfmirfT.
^^f. A she-buffalo.
^m^^ The name of a de-
mon.
^K\^ An elephant-driver.
fg'Rf^^or Dotage.
*I"Rrr^r a. Contemptous
form of the word ^IrfT^T-
ff R[rr a. Old, aged. 2 The
old fellow. A term amongst
agriculturists for tii^-^^ the
sevciith ^^^^. "[elderly.
ifRRr ^rcTRF a. Aged and
^rRlfr /. An old woman. 2
A term of slight for a shorn-
widow whether old or young.
'g-RC n. c Fish.
J?:i^Fir\?f/. The name of
the wife of ^il'^T. Hence
app. to any huge, burly woman,
1 with a gorgeous daub of '^^*
on the forehead.
5|-rTT
355
TsT
^ifcTr (p Prince) A sweeper.
2 A term for the hereditary
Mahars of a village.
%cT?:tr /. The office of
'^cfn^T/. A female sweep-
er. 2 The wife of a ^rT^.
^ 57r A form of the word
IT ^' Used in angry reviling,
as huge and ugly, a male
buffalo : app. in reproof of a
laz3', luberly, and filthy man.
Crg- /. A she-buffalo.
^^iTR'-qTa.A term of revil-
ing for an inexpert barber,
a scraper : a bad writer, a pen-
scratcher.
ii^ A male buffalo.
ilmw^ The name of a
demon worshipped by the lower
classes.
^ The twenty-sixth conso-
nant.
3T'^^^, ^Ti^r^cT a. s Some-
body, some one.
q^^TfcT ad. s All whoso-
ever; all altogether.
"^'sf'T n. s Sacrificing (in and
for one's own person) : in con-
trad, from ?}T5i»f. 2 Offering
or making oblation (of any sub-
ject).
^T^HTR (s) A person per-
forming a sacrifice. 2 fig. A
patron, a host. 3 A compellation
by the wife for her husband.
q-^R^R/. (s) The wife of a
^J^^ (s) The name of the
second of the four Vedas.
3Tf% A follower of the
^R -^r (s) A person of
subdued passions. 2See5lf?T.
^rn^Rcf ad. (s) Somewhat.
^'^ (s) Effort; exertion : an
effort.
^^^^I^ The doctrine that
good and evil depend upon
one's exertion,
^"T^R a. That makes effort ;
assiduous, diligent.
^^ V. (s) An engine, a
machine. 2 A plate or paper on
which are written the names of
certain deities, &c., and which
is worshipped, or suspended
around the neck (for the accom-
plishment of some desire). 3 A
diagram of a mystical nature.
^2|r ad. (s) As, like as.
2I2Tr¥4r^cr ad. Any how, in
whatsoever way good or bad :
^I'^Tl ^*«l f^^f^. C07rj. poj)
^^T^-^rf'^W If possibly ; if
as an extreme case : ^I ^T'^ :
W-^m^, T4\^m ad. At the
fit time, seasonably.
^'^\^^ ad. Regularly, order-
ly- [how.
^^-Tfrr^rr ad. So so, some-
WcT^^ ad. Really, actually.
?T51-R^r% -^^rr ad. Accord-
ing to one's ability.
JT^R^^T ad. pop. ^'^R^ffR
Regularly, orderly.
^W^\^ a. Justly, rightly.
^T^r^ ad. According to rea-
lity, truly, justly. 2 Descriptively.
^T^Tf^^rJJ ad. pop. -^ ad. At
leisure.
^^r^R ad. Completely, en-
tirely ; — a ceremony, any act.
^^rFt^cT ad. Suitably with
(the requirem.ent of) circum-
stances ; i. e. properly, conveni-
ently. 2 As things stood before;
in statu quo.
5T^^£5" ad. Accordantly with
one's desire; plentifully, copi-
ously : lawlessly.^ ^f^,ij^,
^^l^^^ See ^"^-£5". 2 VVil-
q"^S"^Kr a. That goes where-
ever he wishes; wilful.
5T^"ST=^K Wilfulness, heed-
less proceedings ; attrib. lawless.
^^^ ad. (s) For the reason
which.
^^\ ad. also^f^R^r^r In
the current year,
^f^^r/. s Casual course;
chance. 2 Wilfulness.
^^VJ conj. (s) Although,
even ir. [away, decamping.
^■M^\^ n. (s) Running
^^ (s) The deity that judges
the dead ; the Indian Pluto.
^^ s Restraining, confining.
2 Restraint of the senses, affec-
tions, &c.
^^ m. n. f. (s) Allitera-
tion, rhyme. [Yama.
^^^^^ A messenger of
?TiT[^7rr The south.
mr^n^ The acts of self-re-
straint.
^^5^r /. The city of Yama.
^^^\^^\f. The torment in-
flicted by Yama on wicked spirits.
^TSTo^l^ Tartarus.
^TJ^ry. The Jumna river.
^^ (s) Barley. 2 The mea-
sure of a barley corn.
^^^ (s) An Ionian or
Greek ; hut now app. to a ?rla-
homedan, and to an individual
of a foreign race.
^^% a. Relating to a ^^.
^^^R (s) pop. ^^^K Ni-
trate of potash.
^^ (s) Felicity of destiny ;
luckiness. 2 Success, 3 Credit,
honor.
^T^^fT^^Tw, Fame and in-
famy; honour and dishonour.
"MAIt^r a. Glorious, honor-
able.
^^T^r a. Renowned, famous.
2 Lucky. 3 Of which the pos-
session, or with which the
connection, brings success and
prosperity.
^^ (s) A class of demigods.
'Ejf^foT /. A female of the
class ■JjgJ.
W (s) Sacrificing ; a sacri«
fice : an offering (bloody or
bloodless). 2 An oblation.
mr^
356
m^
^Tsfj^ n. A pit for sacrifice.
3T5T^f^r /. s Engagement in
offevinfr sacrifices.
q"Jf^[?:r^^ A term for Fire
viewed as a deity.
^T^^rr^r/. a place of sacri-
fice.
^T^mfcT V. The sacrificial
thread worn by Brahmaus.
3Tr cn?}j. (H) Or.
^rjff /. (ii) A preparation
^fn s Sacrificing : offering
ill gen. (to a god).
^T^^ a. (s) That begs; a
beggar.^ [dicancy.
5TR"^frTr/. Beggary, men-
^rr'^r'^ v. c. To beg, petition:
to beg of. [beseeching.
^[^•T n. -'Tr/. (s) Begging,
^iT^^p. Begged ; — the mat-
ter or the person.
^\^^ A sacrificer ; i. e. a
procurer or etfecter of a sacrifice,
or an oificiating priest at a sacri-
fice for another.
'^\^'\ n. s Conducting or of-
ficiating at a sacrifice for an-
other, or procuring of a sacrifice
for one's self.
qrcT, ^]^\ f. Division or
distinction among men, caste .-
a caste.
'm^'{\ f. (s) Torment, agony.
2 Pain inflicted by Yama; the
pains of hell.
5T[cT[2Trcr /. Vexatious and
wearisome going and coming.
2 fig. The constant coming into
life and dying (of all earthly ani-
mate beings). 3 The toil and
turmoil of life. [hensivelv.
57[^r^(^ /. Caste compre-
^n^^, ^\M^\, ^^^^, ^\-
f^^ c. A pilgrim, an observer
of ^m-
^rr^r/. (s) pilgrimage. 2 A
company of i)ilgrims. 3 A peri-
odical festival in honour of an
idol, to which pilgrims resort. 4
fig. A fruitless tiip. "> s Journying
W^^ n. Rightness, fitness.
^K ;. (p) liemembrance :
recollection : recalling to mind.
2 A memorandum-scrap; a list:
a jotting. V. ^K- 3 A petition.
^]^m\ or ^rraWf. Remem-
brance. 2 A token in remem-
lirance.
^K^ (s) The patronymic of
the descendants of ^'^ an
ancient king of India.
^K^R n. The paper on
which are recorded the day and
other circumstances of a nativity.
?T[Cr /. See ^R".
3TfT^ s (^: -€r -^) As like ;
how like; which like.
^R n. (s) Any vehicle, car-
riage, beast, ship. 2 Going,
travelling.
^FT s The eighth part of a
day. 2 Forbearance. 3 Cessa-
tion.
^TFq'f^^rf^ n. s The sol-
stitial colure : any meridian,
^f^ (p) A friend, associate.
2 A gallant.
m^^ prrp. (s) As far as,
unto. a. As much ; as many. ad.
All whatsoever; totally.
^n'^cTrrrfcf ad. Moderately,
sufficiently : so so, poorly,
^R^r a. (s) Relating to a
^U^^ s A sacrificer. 2 A
conductor of the si.\teen ^-
JTlflr^r /. The office, duties
f>f ^Tt%*- a. Relating to ^T-
3^^ /). (s) Joined, united,
lit. fig. 2 Endowed with, pos-
sessing, as f^' riT-%i^-?T^x;T-^^
3 Intent on (a study) ; engaged
in (a work). 4 Suicable, becom-
ing.
jf^ f. (s) pop. ^"^ f. In-
genuitv, contrivance, cunning. 2
Art, skill, tact. 3 The art (as of
a ])icce of mechanism) ; the
secret, key, &c. 4 s Junction,
nnion. [ventin-
OTlcp-?T n. s Truth, reahty.^ l^fTf^^r^^^T n. Skill at in-
^r^^qfjf^ /. p/. Arts, con-
trivances, modes.
q'fWITR a. pop. -^f=T -^*cf In-
genious, clever; fertile of re-
^""'■'^^s- [suitable.
3"Rr^IT o. ^ ad. Right,
5^ n. (s) An age. 2 The
period comprising the four ages.
3 A couple, pair. 4 A yoke.
"^m^ Thequahty of the age;
the spirit of the times. [age.
5"^rj^iT ud. From age to
^JR /.(H) See 5r^(^s).
^^^ s A pair, brace. 2 A
male and female. 3 A couple of
stanzas connected by the con-
struction, the two together com-
]deting the sense.
^■^ n. (s) Battling, fighting,
conflict : 31 si^f .
^^^^y. Martial eagerness.
J^^^*! n. Battle-slaughter.
3^^5fr /. Line of battle ;
an arrayed host,
5^^?" The rage of battle ;
martial fury.
^\tm (s) The name of the
eldest of the five ■qf^^ prin-
ces. Hence, appellatively, an in-
trepid man, an Achilles.
^^ The sound uttered in
calling^a dog. [woman.
5^(^-dr /. (s) A young
^^^1^ (s) pop. ^Wf:m The
heir a])parent to a throne.
^Wl^^ See fr^n^^T.
^''^^Ut^ proji. Your worships,
your great and noble selves ;
?f f^W^t ^K '^IT^ ^^t ^»
1 See ^.
If3Rsfr3r^ ad. As an oc-
casional comer and goer ; oc_
casionally : ^ xjisf ^^€1 ^T^-
THT^ ■511'^, ^o ^rt^r. 2 At
the last ; after all : ^Tsfi^ "^T-
<1 ^T^fT ^'^^ ^Tflt ^^ Wfl^
'Cir?^. 3 Coustautly : ^o
q-^
357
rri?
^r^ a. One. See ^.
^^ /. See ^l"^-
^°t V. i. To come. 2 To
be come. 3 To draw near. 4 To
come unto ; i. e. to be known
unto. 5 To arise, to be excited
—anger, lust, passion, &c. 6 To
happen unto, to befal. 7 To spring
forth from and on — flowers,
fruits, &c. 8 To come up to :
^T lt^ "If ^ ■^TT ^m ^i¥.
\) To turn out ; to appear in its
final form or state : ^ ^TJri^
'=gtJI^^T%'. 10 To become
to have reached any condition ;
3TT^- 11 To be possible, ad-
visable: •V^sjT^Tf ^Tl^ ^fCflt
^fT •ITTf- 12 To come up
through or along (a duration, a
course, &c.) : W^T^ ^^r\ ^T^
<?IT SlflW 3TT?ft ^<1fr =3TTil-
13 To arise from ; to be
produced or formed out of; — as
butter out of milk. 14 This verb
is used to express Going or de-
parture by people taking leave,
the use of the verb sttoi on
this occasion being viewed as
unlucky: and, further,it intimates
the intention of Coming again. It
thus agrees with the French
Au revoir.
^^ 11. Money due.
gcfTSfroT n. Coming and go-
ing ; i. e. visiting, intercourse
with. 2 Monies due to and from.
sicrfsrrcir ad. Always, con-
^stantly. Qg^^
STcTr^rfrr a passenger, travel-
's
5TcirfTRr A thriving footing.
5IT, 3T^ pron. Poet. Other,
the other, that one,
^^=T[?:-^R-^R:/. a weari-
some trip or journey; going on
an empty errand, v. ^j^.
•\ «
^T^ See under T.
3T?:^r^r ad. Betimes, early.
^^r Coming. 2 Coming (i. e.
ovifing) state (of monies) :
3TT^- 3 fig. Gain. 4 Grace,
seeraliness comeliness of mien,
carriage: '^T qi^l^^T ^T^ ^^T
^T^r-sTnr Coming and going;
frequent resorting or repairing
^^'^V £, [goings ; traffic.
?r^r?^r y. incomes and out
^T^f^^ n. Fame and infamy.
^r^ (s) Junction, union ;
close connection. 2 Concatena-
tion, conjunction (of the affairs
of the universe) as established
by the Deity and as swaying
human concernments : fW^l
^^ ^T^" ^Tfui f?!^! ^^^T
il^T^T ^^T ^R %T?IT. In this
sense ^T^ ^TiT, ^^ ^Tff, &c.
3 Spiritual devotion ; union with
Brahma through abstract me-
ditation. 4 A way, means, esp.
as a way of attaining unto the
fruition of Brahma : vrf^-^^-
m^ ^To, &c. 5 The twenty-
seventh part of a circle measured
on the plane of the Ecliptic. 6
Ajjplication or address. 7 Pro-
priety, fitness.
#m^ (s) A duty, virtue,
&c. of a ^fft-
mr^^l f. s The great sleep
of Brahma during the period
between the annihilation and
the reproduction of the universe.
^m^im See JTfqr & ^^.
^\mm (s) Opportunity and
non-opportunity. 2 Used also
as ad.
mmf f. (s) A female fiend,
attendant on and created by
Doorga. 2 A female devotee.
»\ .-X
mW (s) A performer of yog.
2 A devotee.
^^^ a. (s) Suitable to, be-
coming. 2 Fit, proper. 3 Fit for,
deserving of.
^r^r^ a. (s) That invents. 2
fig. That arranges. 3 That joins.
^1^ V. c. To put to, to set
on (a person or aminal to a work) :
tJiSf^; ^m^ ili ^T5T%. 2
To contrive, dispose (business,
measures, &c.) 3 To devise,
invent. 4 To appoint or designate.
^f^'T n. (s) A measure of
distance equal to nine miles, 2
Joining, applying.
^r^T^r f. (s) Arranging, lay-
ing in train. 2 Devising, con-
triving. 3 Putting to, setting on
or at, lit. fig.
^ffsTcT p. Arranged, dispos-
ed, &c. 2 Devised. 3 Put to,
set at, united, lit. fig,
^I'^r (s) A warrior, hero.
^fP^T (s) Vulva. 2 Place or
seat of birth or production;
spring, source. 3 A form of be-
ing ; a class or nature of created
existence, animate or inanimate:
^5ft ^^t'fT^'^ ^Tf^r. The
^jfsr bearing speciality are
§lf^, ^^^^ ^Tf^ ; then ?g-
■lilTgiTfV, &c. The vegetable
kingdom, the mineral kingdom,
&c.
^If -f n. 8 Youth ; puberty.
fr^Tl^q- n. s The office of
^ The twenty-seventh conso-
nant. /. (The initial letter of
X^vi) Crying, piping, v. ^x.
^ (s) A destitute or a
mean person ; a poor wretch.
^^^ n. (Corrup. of ^tF)
Blood.
^^^r (a) Grounds pertaining
to a village, district, or tract.
^^^ f. (a) An item or article
(of an account). 2 An amount
(of money). 3 An appointed
quantity ; a dose ; an allowance.
?:^^<|^ .^K ad. Article by.
article ; piece by piece.
^^^r a. (p) Fixed, settled;
— used of the land-assessment.
^Ti7 n. (s) Blood, a. s Blood-
red : red. p. Coloured, dyed. 2
Attached toj fond of.
Ttf:^
358
r»RT
^Th<tii-^"l(s) Mountain ebony.
^tF-^^^ Red sandal-wood.
Sappanwood.
r^?^[ a. Relating to ^'^-
'^5''* [horse.
^T^-T^ a. Of red eyes— a
^^fTTcT Bloodshedding.
^^Rr^r /. Black leprosy.
^TfrrTTT m. n. s Spontaneous
hoemorrhage from the mouth,
nose, rectum, &c., with fever and
evacuations.
^tFST?^ Bloody cataraenia.
^^IH?" 77?.(s) pop. TW7^H n.
Passing of blood m the urine :
hloody urine.
^tF^P^T Red discoloration of
skin with blotches, &c.
^TF^RfoS'j^^TTi'^^raS" a. Stream-
ing with blood. '2 m.f. The state
of streaming with blood.
"Trfr^loS" Gum-myrrh.
V^H\^ n. Blood and flesh,
i. e. one's flesh or muscular por-
tion as one's vital substance.
^tF^C m. (s) pop. ^tF7^^ n.
Passing of blood in the urine :
bloody urine.
^tF^R a person who gains
his hvclihood by selling ink.
r=?F?Tf¥/. Blood letting.
Vr'hmm Flow of blood;
hccmorrhage, &c. ^^^^,^ ^^^^^^
r^V^{ W^f. An oath upon
rrFi'^ a. Wearing; red gar-
ments ; — as a devotee, &c. 2
Freelv. Covered with blood.
^^TFF^nr (s) Stoppage or con-
gestion of blood.
^^FRf a. Of red eyes — a
horse. 2 Blood-colored.
^qf^JTrarS" Gum- myrrh.
T^^^ff f. Drasf^inii, linger-
ing, &c.
•T^^^T V. i. To linger under
obstructions ; to move in heavi-
ly ; to drag along. 2 To hnger
(under sickness). 3 To move
along on the buttocks.
^?3^^ f. Glowing, burning,
ardor, fierce heat, 2 Ravenous
hunger.
^^^1^ V. i. To be affected
with T'i^^. 2 To become
dry and thirsty.
^J^rr^^F^" Excessive and mor-
bid hunger or thirst. 2 Arid-
ness.
^<^?r^ircr a. Dry, hard, poor
— an article of food. 2 Arid,
parched, wild and waste — a
country.
r^^c^^lT c. A person em-
ployed to guard or take care of.
X^m^ /. (u) Protecting,
guarding.
?:^r/. Ashes.
Tm^'^ See ^^T^I^t.
^n /. (p) A sinew. 2 fig.
Haughty stiffness, high bearing.
V. t(T, ■^To3T, ^. 3 Spirit,
pluck, mettle. 4 Force or active
power (as of disorders in the
svstem, of raininess, windiness,
&c.) 5 An ache or continued
pain (in the trunk, head, eyes).
t^ (s) Color, hue. 2 A color-
ing substance ; a dye, paint. 3
Splendor, brilliance, glow and
glitter (as of a public exhibition
or entertainment) : 3TT'5I^
Beauteousness or excellence of
State : -^Tir •-gt'T^I ^=^^?r
^\^. 5 Appearance or seem-
ing ; hue and posture of af-
fairs, t'. f^¥ : ^TT^ ^T^^ ^¥-
^¥T til f^^^T ; "^ ^K «K
^T'^T# <HT¥ 3TT# 3TT^ ;
f^^^ *i^ ^r:?tt ^f^. 6 A
color or suit at cards. 7 Fun,
frolic, pleasure : VJ\ ^^ t^,
^■^ ^<1 '^ToST, rimm -^iq^T
r^"? /. Abundance, pro-
fusion, lots, heaps. 2 See
^^^'T r. c. (h) To press and
rub roughly and rudely. 2 fig.
To lay violent hands on ; to
snatch up and make off with :
to seize and appropritate (in an
off-hand fashion) : to cram down
and make nothing of (articles of
food) ; to do generally (in a wild,
reckless style) ; to drive on i
^n^fjf. Exuberance. 2 Ra-
pid and rough working, doing,
&c.
^ri^§5" A term for a rude,
overbearing bully ; or for a heed-
less, rough fellow.
^^iTefr /. Rapid and rough
work. 2 Bullying and blustering.
^iT^f Press, throngedness :
crowding. 2 fig. Press, throng
(of duties, cares) : masses,
heaps.
KU^'\ ad. A form of the
verb K.'Jl'S^- It accompanies
almost every verb when force,
ardor, or vehemence is to be
expressed ; as T» ^W'n-^T''^in.
iTTT^' To eat a bellyful, To
draw tightly, To beat soundly.
"Ul^} a. That tears away
through thick and thin; that
dashes headlong on (in a heed-
less, dare-devil style). 2 That
works roughly, rudely from na-
tural irajietuosity and careless-
ness ; that blunders through.
t^^^ n. A trick or prank, v.
t^^ n. A circus, court, or
place gen. for sports, en-
tertainments; a theatre, arena.
tn^^^S" y. The cost of dye-
ing.
t^^ V. c. To color, paint, r. i.
Also Tl'l^Tof To delight in ;
to be enamoured of.
T^r^ n. Blood.
TiTcfnfr/. A term for the
^Iditary service because life is
jeoparded. 2 Inam granted in
acknowledgment of military ser-
vice.
l^\^ a. Spirited, lively,
brisk — a man or beast. 2 Con-
ceited.
t^W a. (p) Painted ; csp.
rn?
359
t^
having a beautiful color. 2 Gay,
niry : a pleasuiist.
t^kn^Jf. (s) The divinity
conceived to preside over sports,
diversions; the Genius of plea-
sure : the Genius to the inspira-
tion of whom any success is
ascribed. 2 Spirit, tire, life.
tiJlTR /. (s) A palgestra,
arena, circus, theatre.
t^H^I^ A saloon, drawing-
room, banqueting room. 2 pop.
A sleeping apartment.
"t^^^ n. (s) The color and
figure, the character and general
appearance (of a living being, a
fruit, a business).
t^t^ (P) A dyer.
^^f^^ V. c. To make to dye,
or paint : to color, paint. 2 fig.
To slap so as to make red. Used
with a fem. noun understood :
^W^ ^^ST ^li^.
tiT^KF, tnm n. (s) See
^TJIRf w. ?:TI[tr/. See ^T^r.
2 ^JIT^T is further A rude rub
(as on a mzj). v. ^, JTK,
"^TTJT.
tJirfr (h) a dyer, Tim\
a. (h) Fond of amusements and
diversions.
^Mfn a. Colored, painted.
^^ a. Spirited, brisk. 2
Conceited.
tV, tn^I a. (h) Gay,
merry : a voluptuary.
T^m See Tm.
^=^% k ^^"^Z. Arransiin?,
disposing, lit. fig. : the disposi-
tion.
^'"^^ V. c. To arrange ; to
pile up. 2 fig. To contrive, plan
(measures, &c.) : to compose (a
book, verses).
"T^'^r /. (s) Arranging, dis-
posing : arrangement, lit. fig. 2
Concerting or planning.
<\^^ a. Arranged, dispos-
ed. 2 fig. Contrived. 3 Compos-
ed, strung together — verses,
flowers, &c.
^^ n. m. (s) Dust. 2 The
pollen of flowers. '6 The men-
strual discharge. 4 The second
of the three properties of huma-
nity, that of passion or foulness.
5 Blood. 6 7M. A particle (of
metal, earth, &c.)
T.'^X f. (p) A quilt or a
quilted garment.
T^^ (s) A washerman.
t'^^ a, (s) That charms,
pleases.
^-^^ f. (h) Priming pow-
der. V. VK,^. 2 The match
of a rocket. 3 The train of pow-
der to a mine. v. gT^, ■q'BK:.
T5r:^"T (s) A particle of dust
or powder : JinrwftT "^^'^ T.^.
See Is. xi. 12.
t^^^R n. -?Rr/. (h) a flask
or horn for priming powder.
r^^r^r^f^y. Priming pow-
. ^'A i-K - r^ [firing the priming.
y^*r^r m^]f. The match for
^■^Tiisf Rust, mould (upon
metal, cloth, wood, &c.) v. '^^,
^^■T V. i. Poet. To be ravish-
ed or enraptured with ; to be
transported (by beauty).
t^ n. (s) Delighting, di-
verting.
T^^f f. s Night.
T^'ir'^ s That moves at
night ; — app. to owls, bats,
thieves, rakshas, &c.
^STJcT A tribe of Hindus in
Hindustan. [woman.
^Sf^fc^r f, (s) A menstruous
^^r f. (a) Leave gen. 2
Leave of absence. 3 Dismissal
(from service).
^STTcT^jIcT ^m -^\K^ -WFl
To be ready to obey a sum-
mons ; to be in attendance. 2
Laxly. To be in regardful or
earnest obedience.
T^jim -tfR ad. (p) With
the acquiescence of; by the
permission of. 2 (Used in
bonds.) With free will and full
.]l^^'^y- [cinated.
tfiTcT p. s Enraptured; ias-
t^ft^ (p) Grieved, vexed,
displeased, es]). from disappoint-
ment : tired out.
t^^ /. See t^T^ /.
?:%0T (s) The second of the
three properties of the creature.
Passion. To this are ascribed
sensual desire, worldly coveting,
pride, falsehood, and pain.
^trj^jfr a. In whom ^m is
predominant, i. e. passionate,
lustful, &c.
^sfl^^^M V. The first appear-
ance of the menses.
^5^^ n. The seventh Ma-
homedan month. r^ fibre.
^"^^ ./• (s) A string, cord :
^JF^r or ^^■^J' a. Coarse,
gross, thick — a thing in gen. 2
Big, bulky — a person. 3 Rough,
rude — a workman or his work.
^? -^ A crowded multitude.
2 App. revilingly to a thick cake
of bread ; and to huge, massy,
misshapen things and animals.
T^l -2irr A heavy or sound-
ing blow. V. *TT^, ■^^j ^T^,
^T1. 2 A press (of business,
duties, &c.) V. "q^, ^^. 3
An impetuous and headlong
rush (as through a narrow way).
V. ^]T.. 4 App. to coarse,
gross things, a. Any thing vast
and monstrous : 'c:f T *ll^^-
^5", tJ a. Hard ; — used of
wood. 2 Hard — unripe fruits.
3 Coarse — flour. 4 Rough — the
tongue. 5 Hard and unyielding
— a soil. 6 Hardy — a person or
a body. /. A long crying, v.
^, W^, ^Tn, ^T^, ^ZS, ^T^,
3?^T'*- 2 A whining com-
plaint. V. ^fJI, 3TT. 3 A cry
after : ^.XmT^^T^'^ K^ f^^ffl.
^j^^rr, ^^^rc^fr /. a taie
of woes.
^^^\ a. Given to crying and
whining. 2 Melancholy, sad —
countenance, language.
t^^\ a. Widowed ; — used of
man or woman. 2 fig. Void,
bare, naked : poor, mean.
t^^r, t^^m^Cr /. Terms
rr^
360
K^m
of contempt or of pity for a
widow.
^3-frf ^cT /. (a) a term for
a jjerson ever wearing a inourn-
ful visage ; for a ])crsou ever
crying. 2 A inouruful visage.
T^ifJf "^r a. That seems on
tlie i)0int of Imrsting forth into
tears ; rueful,ilisinal.
^^^^^T V. i. To move on
heavily and sluggishly ; to
drnr/ along.
T^^f^ n. Piteous moaning;
piteous representation of woes.
t^^\^^ (s) A caste of
^^^ V. i. To cry. 2 To be-
wail, lament, regret. 3 fig. To
undergo destruction, to be dished,
swashed: '^T^T f^^^ '^T^'TI
^T^ H$ 'Q'^fl. 4 It is used
with the utmost licence in re-
viling the mode of doing or be-
ing of a matter : ^T <ft«r T^
^ff T^rflL^W ^tff ^T^ "frTTf ;
T^cT?^:?^, T^^^^ ad. With-
out vigour ; with a thousand
stops and pauses ; mournfully;
sluggisldy.
terra for a jierson ever weeping
and mourning.
T^^^r^^J -m^^f. Terms for
a ))erson ever ready to whine
and weep ; Knight of the rueful
countenance.
T^^J p. a. Crying, dolorous.
^^'cTH^r a. Of a visage ever
gloomy and mournful ; one who
has ever got a long face.
^^fr See ^^r.
^^l^"^ V, c. To make to cry
or lament. 2 fig. To blast, marr.
•3 fig. To vex, sour.
^^ /. 8 A widow.
t^liV^^ A term for a bold
talker and boaster amongst
wonu'u.
^TS'RT f. General weeping
and lamentation.
^^r f. A female ever ready
to burst out into tears.
^^r f. A term for females
that are prostitutes ; for a danc-
ing girl.
t^T^f^ (h) a wenclier.
^ST^Tsrr / Wenching,
r^r^r^^ a. Given to crying,
^■^ n. Crying, v. ^.
l^ m. n. (s) Battle ; ^'^-
^'T^^ n. Poet. Desperate
I)attling.
mm^ A pillar erected be-
twixt two armies about to en-
gage ; to serve as a landmark.
^'^If'ST A gun-carriage : am-
munition-tumbril. 2 fig. A large
loiul-cart.
l^mi /. The impetuosity,
hurriedness, and vividness, or the
clamor and confusion of battle.
Hence fig. Brisk, lively action, v.
^tT^T^r An ensicrn as dis-
played on the field of battle.
?^'^S'f^ A war-drum,
^^tT^^oT n. Furious fight.
^(JT^r^r f. The tumult of
battle.
•T'T'ff n A term for a warrioi-
who is privileged to have music
played before him whenever he
moves about. 2 A champion.
T^^^^ a battle.
X'^m^ll a. Wild for war. 2
fig. Wildly impatient.
?:qi^frr/. a field of battle.
Xmi\ f. A war kettle-drum.
^a]-45'c=5' n. A form of military
array, — the hollow circle. 2 The
field of battle.
T^t^Tf?: a. Heroic.
T^^^ n. A general term for
instruments of martial music.
l'nl^^ See TfTO"!^
^^ n. (s) Coition, p. Ena-
mored of; foihlly attached to :
^cltT V. c. Tf) sport or wan-
ton. 2 To sport carnallv.
^^^ n. (Corr. from ^^) A
gem.
^^=igR# A judge of gems.
^^^ (a) a weight of twelve,
fifteen, or sixteen ounces.
?:cr[3T y; Sweet-potatoe-
plaiit. HTrTlH --^ n. Its root.
^T^f. (s) The wife of ^FT>f.
2 Love, the tender passion. 3
Fondness, attachment.
<^l f. The seed of Abrus
Precatorius used as a weight. 2
Fortune, luck.
^^rf (a) Nutritive and fat-
tening diet (esp. for a horse, &c
out of condition). 2 A certain
quantity (as of an article of con-
sumption) taken daily or regu-
larly and settled for by periodical
payments : such practice. 3 X re-
gular quantity of food, an allow-
ance. V. ^T^.
^•T n. (s) A gem, a jewel.
2 A common terra for the four-
teen precious things produced
by the ocean when it was churn-
ed by the gods and giants. 3 fig.
^J''Z^- [gems.
T^^^^r^cT a. Studded with
?:RqR?:?r c. a judge of
jewels and gems.
Vr^\^l A jewel mine. 2 A
descriptive term for the ocean.
^^ (s) A war-chariot, a
^^^- [of chariots.
T^^X A caste. 2 A maker
^'4r A warrior that fiights in
a car.
^ ^"^ee ^?:. r,._ gj^.
r^^o5--^r/. Entreaty for.
T.^ a. (a) Cast off, laid by.
2 Rendered null and void, can-
celled. 3 Rejected, refused.
?:?"51^f^ (i>) In law. A reply.
^Cr Tram])led and prepared
earth for pot-making, &c. : a
mixture.
"T^rr /. Cancelled wiitings;
fig. thick mud.
W V. c. To plane.
r^r^
361
r^T
^^'f n. s Dressiii'^ (of pro-
visions) by boilinfj.
tHTT n. See Tfqq.
im A cook.
ty^^ fp) A carpenter's plane.
2 I'laiiinj;. i'- «R't:-
^^ w. (s) A lio((% a bore. 2
fi;;. A iliuv, defect ; a kok.
XmZ^ V. c. To despatch or
do in a ])rompt aud smart, or a
hurried and wild style; to drive
on. See K«f^^.
imil A smart smack or
slap. 2 App. to tilings of un-
common size; like ivkeiicker,
thumper. 3 An action in gen. of
whicli the rapidity, smartness,
and wild veiiemeuce are the
features.
T^fEOT See TT^^r.
^V / (h) a term for the
daily gJilloping (or ivalking) of
Europeans by way of exercise.
^-?/« '^'- (P) Darning. 2 The
part darned.
^:5^tr, V^mX a darner.
T^r'ST A mass of mud.
Tf|c7r^[?: (A) The fourth
month of the Mahoniedan year.
^ff^r^cT The third month
of the ?vlahc>ined:in year.
Tfr, ?:sfr, ^i^^r-^ n. (a) The
vernal cro)) ; tliat which is sown
towards tlie close of tUe rains
and reaped in the beginning of
^spring.
'T^rr /. (s) A courtesan of
jstjx or Indra's paradise. 2
The Plantain.
T^'^H (a) The ninth month
of the ]\Ialiome;hin year.
X^^ 11. (s) lloamingj for
pleasure; sporting. 2 Coition.
'3 m. A husband, lover.
^JT^r A pleasure-ground ;
a park. 2 An enclosure for
gathering Bralunans to receive
^fguTT- 3 The distribution
there of ^f^WI- ^^i.^^^
T^^\^ a. Delightful— a
^JT'jfR a. (s) Deli^ihtful,
charming.
46
'^'^r^/. Rambling for plea-
sure.
X^^ ?\ i. To deligiit one's
self in ; to sport, wanton in, 2
To loiter idly; to ramble. S To
tr)v with.
^cTfTr^ A wanderer or
rover : a traveller. r^y.
^^^ (a) a sort of geoinan-
X^m V. c. To lead about
divertingly: to divert, amuse.
^^[T^ -#r/. Equality (of the
amount left in hand after trade,
&c> with the original stock ) ;
equality of profits and expendi-
ture. 2 Equality of ricli and
poor (soils in land-tenures). The
word answers in use to One with
another, taking all togetlier,
average. ^ [i^g.
^^^ a (s) Dehghtfid, chrirm-
T^^ f. (a) a subject (as of
a king) ; a tenant (as of a land-
holder. &c.); a Ryot.
'^^^nC/. Subjects, tenantry,
peasantry.
Xm^ A silver coin ; a I\iaL
^X f' Crying-, piping, v. ^X.
^^ (s) Noise or .sound. 2
fig. Fame, renown.
^^, r^^/ 7t. A line (of men
or animals) in progress, a train.
X^'4 n. 7tK Rumination,
cliewiiig the cud.
^^^^ V. c. To ruminate,
tf?55- /. t^^oS\ m. Tram-
pling down (of fields, a r<)ad,&c.) :
trampledness : muddling (of
water in a |»ool or a vessel), v.
m^. '^X, ^^, %r.
im^TZ'^ y. r. To trample
di)wn,&c. See -C^^T^J.
[a hell.
m^^, Tim (s) The name of
^^rf</r/.Svvarmingly ; — used,
with f*^ ^^^, of the lively
thronging and bustling of worms
in a sore, &c.
Xm^ or IV:^\ f. The tin-
gling (as of a limb asleep); the
biting (ujion the tongue) of cer-
tain substances ; the incipient
))aius of fever ; the lingeriiiu-
remains ; the gnawing of swal-
lowed poison; the throbbing ache
of a scorpion-sting ; the swarm-
ing of worms, fleas, &c.
X^T^^ V i. To be affected
with k:^^^.
Xm (h) A granule (as of
sugar, &c.); a grain (as of
sugar, &c.); grit (as in meal).
2 Granulous wlieaten flour. 3
A piirticle (of gold, &c.) 4 A bit
of turmeric as used in pre-
paration for "^W. 5 A spoke
of a wheel.
Xm^l f. (P) A gift to a
visitor, &c. on sending him away.
2 Sending otF ; dismissmg. 3
Ex|)orts or an export.
^^r^T^lMr /. A pass for
ex|)orts. 2 A pass gen.
Xm^ll p,a.ind. Set out; depart-
ed. V. ^x, 'f r. m. A pass or
pertiiit.
Xm"^ a. Granulous.
Xl^ (s) The sun. ^^^^
XM^^ n. The disk of the
Xp^mX Sunday.
ri^^^^T'T 71. The passage of
the sun through a sign of the
zodiac,aud,by eminence, throusrh
Lapncoruus.
X^\ f. A churning staff.
X^^ m.f. (p) INianner, fa-
shion.
X^ (s) Flavour, taste. 2
Juice, a sap. 3 Sugarcane juice
or mango juice. 4 Liquor ob-
tained by decoction. 5 The pri-
mary fluid of the body, (> Metal
in the state of fusion. 7 Taste,
sentiment; or a sentiment, anj'
affection of the mind. 8 fig.
Spirit, fire, ])athos (as in a com-
position, a business), d A me-
talic salt ; as sulphur borax, &c.
T^'^FT?: White sublimate or
suhrauriate of mercin-y ; made
with sulphur, quicksilver, and
common salt.
X^^ f. (p) Grains stored up
for an army. 2 Money paid into
tiip treasury by the orattIW-
^T'T, raised from his district.
3 Cashacconipaninga cam[)ai(!:n-
ing army : cash sent by a banker
to his correspondent. 4 A train
of grain-cattle following the
march of an army.
r^^
3^2
n^^
TH^rr /: s THStlng. 2 The
tr)n^-^ue. [tasting.
TE^V^'J n. s The O'gaa of
?:^^*^ (s) Destruction of the
spirit, beauty, fire, &c.
rJ3"iTltcT a. Full of sap. 2
li<^ Full of spirit, lire, beauty,
^tm"^ a. Juicy, sa[)py.
'il^'^TCt si^TfT/. (h) Transit- X\^ f. Ashes. 2 A mistress.
^ii!;!!- , . Tmi\ f. An ornament for
^c,m^ Constant intercourse tlu- head offemales.
with, practice. '-' Resilience.
,TKl^ n. (s) A secret, a mys-
terv. 2 Friendliness, cronyshlp.
3 iMav ; jocund repartees. 4 riie
I involved moral or beauty ; the
sling. 6 Spirit, flavour.
k^T/. (p) Way, method.
?:fTT^r^ ./. Full of sap. 2\tW\Z (h) a machine f
n^"^ f. Preserving, ke'^p-
iui^. 2 c. A person set as a guard.
',i f. The \va§res of sncii person.
4 .\ present of a "sit^qS, &c.
made monthly or yearlv, to the
tutelar deity of a village, to se-
cure its protection IVoin demons
and evil spirits.
Full of vonthfn! freshness and
vigour. 3 Glowing uith heat.
^er^^ V I. To abound in
sap. 2 To glow fiercely— file. 3
To be burning hot— a thing, t!ie
bodv or eyes in lever. 4 To be
flowing with youthful fire. 5 To
i)e in its full force and vigour — a
boil, a i)ioduet of the season.
?!^tir f Speech considered
as a seat of flavour, taste, elocu-
tion. 2 The tongue.
?:^K^^ (s) Selling of the
stimulant or sapid items of pro-
vision (oil, butter, salt, &c.)
^^^Trf.^sjCapahle of discern-
ing and appreciating the spirit,
fiavour, beauty of.
r^r A sauce made of spices.
^^r^^ n.(s) pop -S" The low-
est of the seven divisions of
?:fTiTr^ (s) Pseudo sent-nent;
faUe taste.
?r^rir'T/z.(s)pop.-^ A medicinal
preparation in gen., but esj). from
metals and minerals. 3 Alchemy
or chemistry. 4 fig. K.xcecding
m-gency. v. f«TT^, ^Tfl-
r^f^ s pop. -^«., Juicy, snj)py.
2 Piquant. 3 fig. Tasteful — a
discourse. 4 Humorous. 5 Soft,
slimy.
rPfrHct See ^^^^•
T\f^^ a. (s) Savory, tasty. 2
lig. Tasteful, sharp — a speech, &c.
;< That has intellectual relish. 4
Sentimental. 6 Jocular, witty.
'"'^'^r (p) A road, way.
r^'ffT^^r ad. Along, upon,
in every road. [a cord.
^^Hf /: (ii) A thin rope ;
rC^Kf /. (p) Passiige to and
tro (on a road) ; tiullic. - or
drawin.^ water. 2 The wheel of ^ftf ^^^f m. <K c. T\T^^\ m.
a machine in gen.
^rrrJ^r^"^ n. a wheel, with
a wreath of pots around it,
erected over the mouth of a well
to draw up water. 2 fig. The
wheel of fortune. 3 fig. Dealing
with. I
Tgrrr f. A water-wheel
worked with the feet. 2 fig.
(bourse, custom. 3 Poet. Be- 1
bavior.
X'^[7S f, n. Close intercourse.
^G"l^''B"roS' a. Social, sociable.
2 Free, easy — speech : courte-
ous, conceduig — dealing.
rfl"cT./.(s) Void of; as 5r?^^o.
^fl"^r^ Residence, stay.
Kf%^TtfUI ''• i- To reside, a-
bide.^f^^t^l a. Inhabitant of.
^ft^ a. Remaining; iyini:
over from the former account.
2 Left, lying.
^^^ (I. (s) That preserves,
keeps. 2 fig. A miser.
^ST'^ 71. Preserving. 2 A
person set to guard.
r^fJlR a. (Proper, worthy)
to be kejit, guarded.
T^^ V. c. To preserve, guard.
r^,Tr/. (s) .Ashes. 2 A twisi
of thrcail boiuid as a ])reserva-
tive (against evil s])irits) around
the wrist. 3 A k&pt woman, a
mistress.
Tf<u"cT p. Preserved, kept.
T^^ a. (Purposed, fit) to
be ]n"eserved, &c. fo-rove.
^i f. Mustard. 2 A thick
^f^^'T A trooper. A term
ai)p. to a man of the Mang class.
^r3:55- n. A palace. "'J A
temple.
A person set as a guard or kee])er.
2 A person set to keep cattle.
Pr. K\'^^\'^ fr ^T^¥^ ?T:t^
\» <\
"JififT ?T*]^ ^T^ ' John X. I I,
13.
?:r^0Trf ^ f. The wages of a
person keeping (esp. of one
kee])ing cattle). 2 Keeping.
^[^"^r /. Keeping, &c.
X\^^ V. c. To keep, protect,
guard. 2 To save ; to lay up for
some future time : mj ?:ntft1-
7f5r^f<:?lt qioagi ^I'a'aT ^TT^fT.
3 To hold back : =^lfi-«TK
TTII^T. 4 To reserve: Hl^j-
K]^' '5!%r. ;") To let alone : #T-
^T^T'^T«JTTTTX:i?§ 3{TfPr ^^
fWfT ^ITI^. f) To ni<nke,
lay, set : ^:^ ^jFT^I ^f^ ^«[I-
^T Tl^asff^ ? 7 To hold as
one's concul)ine or as one's para-
mour; to lieep. 8 To retain,
maintain. 9 To keep in order.
Xml\^mf. utter devasta-
tion, ruin (of a country, field,
family, &c.) v. ^^, ^T-
X^\
siq;. -:.
rr^r/. See
5rr#5^^/. The '^ay of full
moon of 'SiT^iT.
rr^?f^5^ /. ». A vulgar
name for the south, r ^j^ ash-pit.
^r^TF A heap of ashes. 2
rni'it /". An ignited and
quenched bit of cowdung. 2 fig.
Rice, bread, &c. burned in the
dri'ssing. ^ [the south.
I ^f^^ *T[?Tr Tf ar/. Towards
rr^TT
3G3
rrwr^
^"F^s^r A mini in keeping by
a woman.
^R (s) Aiioer, rage. 2 s
Mental affection in gen. 3 A
mode of song.
^R /. A taiii< or row ; a line,
series. 2 X ridge or long line
gen. declivons on both siiles ;
the surface along a wharf, &c.
'"iTIT H A term app. in
abuse of person or speecli judged
to he rude.
^\W\ V. i. To crawl or creep.
rr^'T Song and sport. 2
Signs aiid indications : m^-
TfT^'^r V. i. To be ani>rv.
'TRR'^I' V, i. To get angry.
^fmr /. (s) A modification
of a musical mode. 2 A wanton
Trm?, T\m a. Passionate.
^fffr a. s Having affectit)n
or passion.
^1%/. s A grain.
TRrST f. Powder made by
j'.oundiiig particular soft stones.
Used in drawing lines and figures
on the floor before an idol, or on
the Hoor where an entertainment
is to be given. 2 A figure drawn
with tliis powder.
^\^, TNI Redringed parrot.
LI .A. lover, a gallant.
"Tf^r^ST Gr-riin, su^arcnnes,
&c. stipulated to be given at
the seasons by way of interest
upon money-loans.
n^^R'^ n. A State-council ;
a deep and secret project.
Tl^^Rf^r a. Deep in council.
rR?;R:f4R n. A royal
scheme, policy; a council ol
state.
TJ^^m V. State-affairs;
roval business. r , ^
• ^. [state.
ri^r^^f;^ A servant of the
^\m\^ a. Royal.
^f^JiTK A prince. ^fSTprfr
./. A princess.
^r5r^lr% /. The depredations
and devastations committed by
1 an invading foe. App. also
to war uiul to its ravages.
rfsffiyrr A grass and its seed.
rfsTr^'^ n. An en«ion of
royalty. 2 A mark or trait which
denotes the possessor as destined
for the throne, o The royal
seal. 4 Any scrawl: or scrib!)le.
^r5[tJr A large enrthen water-
jnr.
rr^^T Piniishinent inflicted
by the king. 2 Fine imposed by
the king.
^r=f?"^ A common term for
the incissors.
rrsT^rflT ,/. 'I'he royal court.
2 Tlie royal audience-chaml)er.
r
^fsf'?"'?!'? 71. Interview with
the i<ing.
rfSfflT n. The roynl mansion
considered as a court of justice.
2 .\ gate of a palace.
rr^T'-T^ A law as prescribed
in the Shastras for the guidance
of kings in the administration
of government. 2 A virtue
befitting a king. 3 Kingly duty.
!■' n5f'-^Rr,rf^=rJTfr/.The metro-
polis.
Hsf^rr^ /. Regal jurispru-
dence or policv.
rfsf-ir^ n s An emerald.
^rsTT^ n. Royalty.
n^^f? V. The royal seat;
the city of the throne.
TlsT^^^r a. (H) or royal
race. r-
r^ [some person.
n^rr? ¥r a term lor a iiand-
n^qjcT n. The voyal circle,
court ; the noblemen and gran-
dees arouiul the sovereign.
^RiTKr n. A palace. 2 A
pleasure-room, the seraglio.
^r^RPq- a. Worthy 'to be
honored by kings ; excellent.
Used in notes and letters.
n^^R 'I'he king's highway.
2 fig. A fashion, custom sanc-
tioned by general approbation.
n^T^^r -xm f. (p)^ Pubiic
and free permission : ^Ktq ^-
^r^^e- -ff?T ad. Openly,
publiclj'.
TmH A person of the reg;il
tribe tliat^ has e.\alted himself
into a ^f^.
Tim^] The period of the
reign of. 2 Laxly. The period of
the influence or prevalence of.
3 The ordinary way of; the
custom of: ^TiT^T ¥^TSff
^^ngi^T \To -STTTf. aJ. Dur-
ing the rule of: ^fg^f-^T 'CT-
T\^^\^\ A palace.
n^n?5-r^ Hoyal delights
and diversions; superhitive plea-
sures and sports. r • •
r^ ' [sieian.
<rfs[q"q' \y^ eminent phy-
rrsfP^-^rr^rir^rFT «, Adorned
with majesty and grace;— used in
letters.
TV^'^l A title ofkings, Ma-
jesty. 2 A term of slight courtesy
for a i)erson in gen. Used esp.
in notes.
TW\^ s In whom or which
is predominant the property
T^TiTiJT ; passionate, lustful,
&c.
T\^^ a. Delicate and hand-
some; softly elegant, graceful.
Tfir^lTq^K A royal (/. e.
a mild) measure of medical
treatment.
T\^^^ m. n. s A sacrifice
performed by universal monarch
attended by his tributary prin-
ces.
rfsfC^ A white goose with
red legs and bill. 2 A lover, a
sweet-heart.
n^r (s) A king, prince. 2
The head (of a company). 3
App. to the planet of the day on
which a year commences ; con-
sidered as governor of that year.
4 A term for a silly fellow. 5
App. to the Queen of white ants.
rr^rriTO^ King of kings.
immk^ Regal inangura-
tion.
rr^rm'^y/. a line of kings: a
royal dynasty.
rriffsfr
364
mcfl-
T\-s[m f. A royal edict. 2 A
positive anil pererapton- injunc-
tion. '•'> til. One of the ministers
of stiite.
l\^\ a. (a) Willing, ready.
?:rfr<f iO'r f. Good win ami
pleasure; full consent.
<T5f[^Frr (p) A written ac-
knowledgment given by the ])l;uii-
tilfof a cause beiu;^ iinally set-
t'leil; a deed of aequittauee. 2
A written deciiration of one's
Avillingness to follow the direc-
tions of.
^f^r^r^^R ad. With the
consent of. '2 (Used in bonds and
notes.) With free will and full
liberty.
Tr^_^ Rope, a cable.
TR^ A king of kings.
^rfsf^siwrj J)], Kin<is and no-
l)lcs and j^randees collectively.
^f^rrq^R An act or item of
kiMu:ly honors. 2 See ^T«J^1-
TV^n V. (s) The office of a
king. 2 Government. 3 A king-
dom.
?:P^W"^rT Amhition of
foreign conquest, ambition to
reign.
TP^n^T^^ Inauguration to
a throne.
Tn'^^l^Ff w. A throne.
T\E a. Rough, rude, savage :
hardy: dry and hard ; —used of
eartli.flonr, &e.: rough or coarse
— the hair ; rough from austere
substances — the tongue ; ill-ton-
ed, harsh.
TT^ y. iNluckinePS, slop. 2
The pit of the %\-S\.
T\^ a. Foul, turbid — water,
&c.
riJ f. A widow ; — used con-
temptnnusly. 2 A female slave ;
a coiu-tesan;any woman gen. when
used in auger, or with reference
to weakness, desolation. &c. .'5 lig.
Spoiled stale : ?^flt?T ^Twfl fvr-
T^-i{ ^T^€r t;!^ fTT'Tlt. 4 A
term of reproach for an al)ject
w re tell.
Tf^TiT*!^ Petticoat-govern-
ment. 2 .Vnv inglorious rule.
Tl^^r A widower,
n^^r /. A widow.
fi'S'TiT n, A generel term
for the iubrsbjtants of a place.
iuclud;i)g tlie women and child-
ren. 2 A light term for one's
wife and chihh'en a* composing
a family. '6 .\ widow's chiUl, an
()r])han on the fathei-'s side. 4 A
bastard,
^f^irsr(H) A whoremonger.
UT^rfr /. Whoring,
\V.^mTf,t\ widow revilingly.
'n¥i7# /; The phmipness
I and vigour asserted (by tlie Hin-
dus) to cmne to a widow upon
the death of her husband.
Hence any fieshness, and brisk-
ness, or sanciness arising to a
person iipon the removal of his
controller.
T\^^\^ n. See ?:i^^^^.
^f^5^/. A widow. 2 A
wi<low, a shorn wencb.
li^XiZ or -T\Z\ (ii) A mar-
riage settlement in provision for
wi'lowhood, a jointure.
v»
ri^c^"^ A term answering
to Whoreson or bastard.
l\^^ a. Widowed. 2 Bereft
(bv death) of liia wife.
rr^^?r An assembly of
women. Used contemptuously
of a househohl in which, from
the absence of a male adult, fe-
males have the rule. 2 A vehe-
ment strain of abuse in whieii
the words whore, strumpet.
&c, are lavishly employed, v.
JIT, 3TT>?W, ^S'?.
n'?r A press of engagements
V. aTSl, ^^. 2 Deep mud. .'5
Wild wailing of a multituide of
people (as at » death).
Tm Poet. A king: a chief.
^[°^ _/■. A queen.
U'T'I^TI^ ad. Loo9ely,dispers-
e<lly.
HcT /. Night. 2 A cricket.
^r^ c Bloodshotten state of
the eyes.
^[cTT n. Rather red— kinds
of corn, fruits, the eyes, &c.
n^^ i\ i. Poet. To be en-
amnre<l of. 2 To hold amorous
didliauce with.
T\^m The fruit of Hcfifr. 2
A red kind of mango.
rl^rt n pi. A general and
familiar term for the inferior
members of a family ; also for
the ])Iebian classes of a com-
nnmitv.
UmJ a. Libidinous. 2 Ef-
feminate. 3 Uxorious. 4 Also
^lUTTjiiT^T-TT^^ A gos-
siper, a cotquean,
r\^ See ^R.
TT'^f^The royal gyneceum.
ncTfi^cT /. Used as s and
ad. implying — There are times of
darkness, (ianger, want ; or For
or iu such a season; as^To
?:[cTr See^rcT¥.
Hrfi'^r Afflicted with ni^lit-
bhndness.
ricrr^"^ v. imp. To draw to-
wards night.
rrcTrST f. Sweet potato-plant.
'CI??!^ -o3' n. Its root.
rr^KFcT f,d. In tlie night-
season; at night, notwithstfuul-
ing tlie night ; in the actual or
very niuht (without waiting for
day, &c.) 2 The whole night :
In the night-time : tjs^T f^-
tjTrJT^ fiK x;to «}T3Jisf. 4
also x:i^T^Trff At night ; in
the middle or deej) season of the
night.
Tl^f. Night, 2 also ^F^fef
III. A criket.
?:rC?"^^ nd. Vuhr.mi^^ By
niirht and day.
nr^ /. (s) Night.
Trf^Hct! ad. At night,
ntf ad. s By night.
Tim V. c. To cook by boil-
iug. [of food boiled,
^'"^T 71. Seething. 2 A nicies
T\m\ A cook.
rr-TT
365
rrgr
Xm\ A man tlresspd in
woman's clotlu'S as a dancer.
^f'^r A preparation (esp. of
metals or minerals) for medi-
cinal pnrposes or for paint.
Tm ri. A wood or forest ; a
wilderness. 2 A wild, a waste.
,S A weed. 4 A thicket, a grove :
x;TiT. .") A couiitrv, quarter :
lleirion or tract : $T»IX: K:T«r,
TH^tl A woddmnn.
TR^irq"/. The cow of Tartary.
TR^rq'cT ji^ A rural feast; a
P'^"''^- [taneonsly.
TmZ^ a. Wild, growing tspou-
nwfr -^ a. Rtui off and
taken to the woods — a beast or
man. 2 fig. A man that has
left his wife and children to rove
about for pleasure.
ri^fffiir n. m. The M'ild cat.
^R^f^^ n. An ouranix-out-
Cn . . .
ang. 2 tig. A wild, boorish fellow.
^R^^Ta.Wild— land.2Ch^wn-
ish, rustic. 3 Growing sponta-
neously.
^R'^*? n. A comprehensive
term for the rural parts, or for
■ wandering therein.
T:^^-^^[f. Cowdung as
it dropped from the animal :
contrad. from ■^oS'SW.
^imm^ ad. In the woods
and wilds ; dis|)ersedly. 2 fig.
As strewn or lying about : ^T-
■^T^ ^T31^ ^T" ITT^-
^TRKI^ ad. Throuoh woods
o
and wilds.
^FT, TFT The property of as-
tringency : the astringent and
austere juice of certain iruits and
plants. V. '^'S, ^, '^^.
Tm, im V. i. To blacken
through exposure to air or by
contact with iron — an astringent
fruit, &c. : to be well iml)ucd —
pickles, Ike. with the brine : to be
imbued ami mellowed with the
lieat of tlie 3f^ — mangoes,
&c. : to enter deeply into and
stain — pickle, a dye : to pervade
the whole system — fever, poisDU,
a drug, &c. : to undergo such per-
vasion,— the body : to become
general, and assume a credible
shajjc and color — a report: to
look florid, lively — a person under
convalescence. 2 To occupy
tlironghly : tt^??T^' ^cf ^N# ;
^,r^'^ ^rf^^ ^TTTSfT. 3 tig. To
become conversant with.
^m^ V. c. To feel ; to press
and squeeze in onler to discover:
^r^r f. (ii) An imi)lement of
curriers.
^f^ f. JNIohisses or j agree.
2 Sediment of oil or ghee. 3 m.
Frequency of coming and going.
■Tf^^r /. A kind of custard.
2 Thin gul or thin mud.
^TR'^r/. Culture or tillage.
2 Coming and going, frequent-
ing, living. 3 Becoming habi-
tuated.
^R'T V. L To come and 20
on customarily (a road, plain,
&c.) : to frequent (a place): to
live, continue, to pass life (in a
house or place). 2 To labour.
n^"^ V. c. To till, cultivate
(the soil). V. i. To become habitu
ated. inured — a cow, &c. with a
strange herd, a boy at school,
the back to a load. 2 To be well
trodden — a road : to be seasoned
— a vessel
Tm^\ (A) Frequency of pas-
sage; thronging traffic. 2 The
practice of exacting work, on
the ]iublic service, from the Ma-
har : the money exacted from the
Mahar in lieu of service.
Tf^crr -^^r The Mahar upon
whom certain work is imposed
on the public account.
^R (s) A name common to
three incarnations of Vishnu,
viz. xrK;^K:T«r, ^Tfl^'?, "^^^T?!.
niT^ls:^ n. (s) The bow of
Rama.
T\^^^ (s) The seventh iu-
carmtion of Vishnu.
U^f^ Proper name of a
saint. 2 A covert term for one
anna.
niT^l^r -^ A follower of
Rrimdas.
rfJT^cT A term for a monkey.
^l^^^^\ /. The ninth day
of the light half of ^^, the
birth day of llama.
^f^q^r / Bastard mace.
^Rqi?:^r a term for the
first watch, the three first hours
of the day from sunrise. A
solemn season.
TmT>^\,im'T:^ f. Bullock's
heart-fruit-tree. T;ifl^S n.
Its fruit.
n^^t^ (Arrow of Rama) A
term for a promise, prediction,
&c. that is sure, infallible.
^R^R The form of saluta-
tion among the common classes
of Hindus.
n^^RF /. A mutual giving
and receiving of the salutation
TT^rnH. 2 See ^^T^T^^I,
sig. I.
^F^F /. s A beautiful woman.
2 A woman.
^F^FJsT A sect among the
tlie worshippers of Vishnu.
Tmm^ n. (s) An epic poem
by Walmiki, recording the ex-
ploits and adventures of Kama.
2 fig. A long story ; a long yani.'.i
App. in the sense of litter, dis-
orderly strew: "^T^T^I^ ^TJI-
T\^\^\ -# A caste. They
are wild men and robbers.
rrq" A king.
^m^ V. A sort of seasonino'
or condiment.
^f^^«^«.Common or jungly ;
— certain timbers. 2 Wild, com-
mon—mangoes, &c. n. Jungle
timber, as prepared and lyiHw
for use.
Uf A king. 2 It is affixed
to the names of persons eminent
as soldiers, clerks, &c.; as ^oS-
■^rl^T^. 3 A tribe among
Shudras. 4 A pretender to feats
of arms, a swingebuckler, a
Hector. App. freely to any
Would-be-somebody,
rnr^fl"
3GG
fr^nn
X\W^{ f. The state or quali-
ty of K.m.
l\^^^\ a. Fissured — a lip.
2 fi'_'. Giipinj widely ;— useil cf
anv void spiicc.
Tl^T^J V. A hare-lip.
TRsif A nutne of respect for
,1 male.
?"I^ff/. (h) a small tent.
^f^'T (s) The sovereii:n of
Lanka or Ceylon. Hence, ap-
])ellatively, a huge anil ugly
telluw.
Tf^'^Iim ^ff /. A term for
anv all-i'cvoniiiig, all-engiilpliing
(pi;ice,l)iisiiu'ss';— such asliousc-
keepiii<j tor little one's, the helly
of a glutton, &c.
Tmr/: \ tan-pit.
T\^T^ Kino- and beggar.
^r^r or -^i^r a parrot.
nP^ (S) a sign of the Zo-
diac. 2 f. A heap or ))ile ; as
5UII TilffT, ^TfT^lfw. 3 All un-
distinguished mass. 4 Sum,
ainonnt. 5 The heap of c;)rn,
the ]n();!nee of the first treading
of the ears.
?:n'?T^7 n. (s) Tlie two signs
of the zodiac ascendant at tlie
hirth of any two jjarties, or the
auiilv or hostility of then), as
investigated when a marriage,
&c. is contemplated.
rTr%^^ 11. The zodiac.
rrf^T'Tr^ w.The name (ijiven
to a child) taken from tlie name
of the zodiac-sign under which
he is born.
T\f{\ a. Of the heap; mid-
dling.
Tl^ n. {?) A country, a re-
gion, a tract. 2 An assembled
ninltitiule; a host.
^r^ /". A sis:n of the zodiac.
2 .\ heap; a stock.
T\^ (p A head) Used in
xtating the number of horses in
the souse Aluad: ilir TiTtT
^T?T ; as ■^'C (i') is used to ex-
press A head of b\ills, cows, &c.;
•jqit to exj)ress A head of
camels ; and •rai to express
A head of elephants.
'^r^ A festival held in honour
of ^toj & ■^^^\.
n^^f^r /. The circular
dance performed by Krishna and
the gopis.
rW^^r /. Worship paid to
tlie thrashed out heap of corn.
rm^ (s) A mide ass. H^ifr
/'. A female ass.
T\^^\^\ r\^^\^^\^ n,K After
tlie corn has been gathered in.
thras-hed, and heaped. Used in
connection of receiving advances
from the money-lenders : '^\
?^l^?Jr The remains of corn
upon the thrashing floor after
the removal of the W^. This
is a hak of the M diar.
V^^ a. (p) True, just — a
person, action ; honest, just — a
weight or measure. 2 Truly.
"Tf?^ V. I. To stay, abide.
2 To continue in a state : ^^r
To tie contained in (as in a vt s-
sel). 4 To stop, end : ^T^^
Kir^^T- 5 To be left for the
present : cSJT'i ST^ d^T Tlf^-
^. (i To lie over ; to l)e left
as siu'plus. 7 To refrain from :
'Tl^'SJt f*f^T^ ^T^OTT'C "SflTf-
8 or 'CT^^ ^TUf To lose
their p<jwer, vigor — the limbs :
to fail — strength. \) To come
and stay as a servant : T^ tj^t
rrr?^^^ n. s The state of want-
ing, if««Y/Hy;/^s5 .- ^3j TT».
X[^ (s) The ascending node.
2 A "^SJ. To him is ascribed
the eclii)se of the sun.
l\^ f. Kesin. 2 A cricket.
?) fig. Ruined, spoiled, &e. state.
4 An ingot of gold, &c.
l\cSm'^ a. Ivefuse, rejected.
n^r Panic seed.
IV<^^ (s) A demon or fiend,
vari(HiKly described as a Titan
or enemy of tiie gods in a hu-
man or superhuman form ; as an
attendant on Kubera and guar-
dian of his treasures ; as a tierce
go!)lin haunting cemeteries, ani-
mating dead bodies. 2 App.
to any feioeioMS, monstrous,
gluttonous, slee|)\-headed man.
ing tiie south, southe ly.
n^^l'^^r?- A form of mar-
riage, — seizing of the girl a-
gainst lier consent and that of
her parents.
ri^^l^ n. Devil-corn. A term
Ldven to ^I-5f?0, ^i)^, T^^,
&c.
^r?T^r pop. ^r^§r^/. a fe-
male w^-q.
T\^^\a. U(datingtoan5T(T.
2 tig Outrage(ms, dai'ing — ac-
tions : violent, Iiarsh — remedies :
gross— -food: ^T«> cFrJj -■'ij:)! -
^T^^lm^r /. A sort of gii)-
berish formed by corruptions
from the Sanskrit. and ]jut iiitothe
mouths of ^ejg. f'CIVIT'^, ^c.iu
dramatic representatious.
^f^^f^^^ A name for the
country isouthwards of the river
n'^^lf^^r/. The art of exor-
cising the fiends.
Pr^fr/. (a) a stirrup.
R^iJT^r See K^m.
Tl^m^mf\ f. A meetiuir-
])lace of idlers, gossips; ale-
lionse, barber's sho[).
fr^riT%r/. t:m[)ty and idle
actions in gen
ik^min pi. idle tricks.
ployed state; vacation from bu-
siness.
rt^RlcTUr Vain conceit.
K^m^RF See K^Rf.
rt^Rr a. Kmpty, void. 2 fig.
Hollow, vain, — as jn-aise, ho-
nours : unsound — jirotestations.
3 Vacant — an office. 4 iMuitless
— action, speech, f) Uufiinushed
with the necessary materials or
means (for a business contemp-
lated). 0 Unemployed ; wanting
ftf^t
3g:
^"RT
service, work : nnengagetl — ve-
l)ic!es, &c'. 7 Not bearins^ or
having: <r1 g^flT ^^T fil^T^
fro ^TITTTC ^T=^.
TlMl s. e Tr^:^-
r<CTF (s) «. Empty. "2 fig. Des-
titute.
R"^qrf% a. Empty-lmnded ;
— used es]). of one ])roL-ee{ling
unfurnished witli all (iHerini^ or a
present, to render liouiage to a
kint; or an idol. E\. x\iii. lo.
^t^\ f. Soapnut-tree. ft'T n.
Its fruit.
fTW^ V. i. T.) penetrate. 2
To enter i;en. : to come at, unto,
upon. 3 To set out.
ftm^ Entrance by force or
stratao:em ; passage through
obstuetion.
R^irl od. Slowly, gently.
R^^f^r/. Emptyi.iu, See.
K^r^^r r. i. To fall asun-
der or into its component parts ;
to tumble down — a pile : to
pour down in torrents — rain:
to he precipitated in showers — •
fruits, flouers : to gusli forth
from a sack —contents of Ijowels.
2 To be em])tied out of the
saddle — a rider.
R'^R'T V. c. To empty (n
receptacle by pouring out. the
contents) : to pour out (the con-
tents— grain, &c. out of its sack,
liquor out of its vessel). 2 Laxly.
To toss or throw down carelessly
or contetnptnously ; to emptt/ or
rd one s hands (if : ^K\r\'^
"*TT<:t ^igrof irr33T2f>'?;"ST ^m^?:
Klf<:=^^; ^^I'J x^ffT ^fl^ 11
fc^:;^ ^^^ ^TTTCf II.
V:m V. i. (n) To be pleas-
ed wi^i. [please.
ftm'^^ v. c. To o ratify^
\tE\ m. [^51 J\ See itni and
^^^- ^ [A debtor.
K^^ -^a A creditor. 2
Ftoy^r Se« ^^%.
Trrrr a. Empty. 2 See ftWW.
'6 Devoid.
K^r^/. A body (of bea.sts
or ships of bui'ilen, of carts, &e.)
discharged or emptied. 2 Emp-
tied or empty state.
Rf^/. (s) Wealth, ric-lies.
ITI^lHf^/". Tiie names of tin-
two ;^I€l ofniiu, signifying
rros])erity and ]ierfection,or For-
tune and consummation.
rrq^q./r/. Imit. of the soft
and continuing falling of rain,
of piteous and importunate beg-
ging, of whimpering, of a light
running from bowels, &c. /. A
whining for ; a piteous begging.
2 Ill-humored cliiding. '6 Pitter-
patter. Verbs throughout ^T^,
r^J (s) An enemy.
iT^fsf (a) Usage, custom.
it^r^^i^ (p) The coiriman-
der of a Risala.
pr^r?5T (A) A troop of horse.
k^ or fr^"/. m. See f^rq-f^.
m n. Debt.
ricT f. See fn%.
ricTirrcr y. Manners, ways,
customs.
rifl?:l^(p) Custom, way, kc.
2 Civility, manner.
ri(cT /", s A manner, way.
2 rial)it, custom. 3 Fashion, po-
]>iilar usage.
rffcrr^TcT/. Ways and man-
ners.
m /: A lath.
^r^ A bear. 2 A term for a
dirty or lazy fellow ["ust
n€r/.(H)Offence,huff. 2 Dis-
r
^C /. (h) Carded cotton.
^r, ^^r The twelfr.h pan
of an anna. 2 A measure of
<lands — five bighas.
^^IT Assent (as expressed
by some word, look, or sign).
V. ^. 2 The mark '^, iiuirnat-
ing that it has ijecn passed, affixed
to a))aper of accounts, &c.
'5'^r^'T' V. i. To express con-
sent to. V. c. To admit.
^J^^ia /. Disquietude and
ve.'cation ; regret (as at a loss,
&c).
^^^"f/. (a) Leave of ab-
sence. 2 Discharge, a. Dismissed.
^*^r a. Plain, dry, hard
— food ; arid, adnst — a country !
dry, cold — language ; harsh,
roMirh-^a note, tone.
^^^5"r a. Stuffed with cotton
— a garment, &c.
^JT a. (s) Sick. ill.
'^^^r See ^r^^r.
^^^ V. i. To be luscious,
savory. 2 To be tasty, agreeable.
^f^/. (s) Flavor, relish. 2
Taste, perception by the palate.
-.'> Relish.
^1^??!" a. That makes taste-
ful ; savory, tasty. 2 Entertain-
ing.
^r^f^ a. See Ff>^r.
^^°T ^'. ?*. To siioot, sprout.
2 To shoot up — a plant.
^'^^\^ f.(x) Confrontedness
(as of disputants, an account,
paper.s, &c ) v. g, s^K, ^l^,
'^r, '^T^, f??ar.
^\a. (a) Ready, willinfi (to
do). 2 Prest-nted, introduced,
appeared : ^Tt ^r*?! ^T^O ^^
^? ^'Cl. 3 Accepted : ap-
proved and passed : '^"gt^?:
''531 =|;^r. 4 Technically.
Admitted, avouclied. 5 Correct-
ed into: TTJTT ^af ^»3T. ()
/. Used with ^yj, tjT^Jl, ^t-
s?oi To compare together.
^^g^R^r (a) Confronting
or bringing together : confront-
ed state, v. ^r, ^^t.
"^^l ud. Dully, heavily,
tarddy.
^^ V. (s) pop. -S" The head
as separated from the body.
^T'^g'^-^r acL Imit. of the
jingle of toe-ornaments, &c.
^"^Wl f. The jingling of
oruauients, &c.
^5r^?T
368
rwr
^af^"^ V. i. To tinkle—
toe-ornaments.
W^^-^ /. A yieMing spot,
as a boj^, niarsh, \c.
^cT'^ V. i. To pierce ; to run
into. -' To sink into (as in
imul).
^ See =Ft5.
^? a. Broad.
t~^Z a. Broadish, widish.
^?=T n. (s) Crying, wailing.
t'^lZ -T a. Exceedingly
broad.
^^n'T" V. i. To increase in
breadth, v. c. To make broader
or wider.
^r^r Width.
^^r /. Breadth,
^c^r a. Wide.
for tyinj^ up articles). 2 .A budget
or l);»'j; of papers of accounts, ii
A tla"- waved in indication of
yielding or of soliciting a truce.
;•. f^K^, ^^^- -4 A grant of
land to the ^^qt"^T or |i53-
^^f ^, ^^^/. (p) A bribe.
^2" p. s Angered. 2 Dis-
jileased.
^H^ v. i. To be offended ;
to take buff.
Wm J:^^ v. i. To sulk and
swell.
WB^\ Taking offence : of-
fence conceived.
^K{\^^ V. c. To offend, huff.
W^^ V. i. To roll or trad
alou» : to roll in. 2 To sbake
^ . „ <• > irracefulK.
^ (s) A torni or name ot i_ • ^j-r^r
Shiva. 2 An allusive term fo. ^^ «• (s) ^ee ^^F
any aggregate of eleven.
^^^J^ /. A burying or
burning ground.
^^r^cTIT An incarnation of
Shiva. 2 tig. A fiery j)erson.
Wa\'^ a tree sacred to Shiva.
2 The beny of it.
^n?^ H. (s) Blood.
Forms of the word ^q^[, ex-
pressing scorn.
^!i n. Poet. An elegant
sluipe.
^qoy ,,. See '^^'^.
?rq^ Sec ^^^•
"f^T^r A rnppc.
^^\ a. Tluit has dark (red
or black) s|)()ts uj^on a white
irronnd — a bnlloek, iS:c.
*rq n. Silver.
^Wrt. (h) Plated or washed
with sdvcr.
^^^, ^^"^^ *ad. 6f ])>■(']).
I'ace to face.
fnTRf^Cr /". Gum mastich.
W^l^ (I') A handkerchief, a
towel, any square ))icce of cloth
(for wrap[)ing round the hciul, or
^ (h) Carded cotton.
^<^ (|^ s) A tree: a pol-
lard or a tree without branches.
^^/. See ^1%.
^S" o. (s) Commonly known,
])()pnlar — a meaning or a word in
a particular sense. 2 Popular, —
a 'TfT.'^^^T'ST, Xc.,a sentiment,
usage, .'i Notorious, famous.
^S'f^^r V. c.Poet. 2 To make
jjublic.
^fS"/. (s) pop. ^3". Cur-
rency of ol)servance ; i)opularity
(of a custom, &c.) 2 Traditional
or customary meaning of words.
'A Fame, notoriety.
^Tn. (s) External apf)ear-
ance. 2 A form or figure ; a visible
object. 3 Conntenance, visage ;
the form of the i'ace or system of
the features. 4 Form, ])articular
model: qET^oQ W rf ^qj^ ^T-
^ K\"^^^- 5 Beauty, grace,
lustre, Jii/ure : ^"JEJT %' "^^
(') Nature ; the natural constitu-
tion. 7 An inflected form (by
in algebra, a known quantity. 10
In cotnp. Like : f^S'¥^ ; or
Of the very form and essence
of:^I?i^t:t. 11 In medicine.
The second of the five divisions
of fsT"^TiT or Pathology, — the
Form (of a disease).
^"T^ n. s A class of rhetori-
cal figures.
^tri" 7«. Poet. A beautiful
countenance : an elegant form.
2 A mark. '3 A visor.
'^'I^^ The form and the
color ; the general appearance,
^^q^fqaq- ^^ ^ Shapeliness,
comeliness.
'^^^^{ f. A handsome wo-
man.
^^^R rt. (s) That has shape.
2 Beautiful.
'^'ir a. Having the form of:
'^^^ v. s Silver.
^^^ See ^^^.
t A particle of calling (a
male) ; Oh you ! you fellow !
Sirrah !
^^^ V. i. To grunt — a bid-
falo. 2 fig. To sing, speak in a
harsh voice ; to sine/ like an old
cow.
*^ *^*
^^oyT,^^c7r (n) A sort of car-
riage. 2 An implement to cover
over sown seed, ii An instrument
used in blasting rock.
\T^Z'^\^Tm\f. Ruling, tra(>-
ing, describing, &c. 2 ^^suft
A ruler.
T'^rr'T ?;. r. To draw lines or
figures, to ride ; to mark with
lines, &c. (a ])aper, isic).
m^ V. c. See "^^J^. 2 To
rub and smooth ; to trim (j)aint-
ed lines in the forehead, plaits of
a garment, curls and tresses of
the hair). 3 To descril)e, im-
print, ike.
•ra^r a. According to rule ;
exact, just : neat, ))retty ; — used
of actions, speech, thing.
declension or conjugatio.i) of a \'i. ^ , ^ . ,. o Ti r ^^
nounor verb. S In gram. Mood, j ^^^ ^ (s) A Ime. 2 Ihe hrst
U lu aritli. The number one : 1 meridian.
rmm
o
()9
rr^
r^RRcT n. Geometry.
?:^tcTr 71. s Distance, east or
west, from the first meridian
(the line drawn from the equator
over Laiikii to Meru or the north-
pole) ; terrestrial longitude.
t^\^ s Longitude.
^t^^ V. i. To crawl. 2 To
itUe, dawdle.
■^^^ f. Exuberance, plenty.
W/. Aline.7;.^"r^,^f^,^r^.
^Tl^rr /. (Vulg.) A line.
t^ A disorder (cotisistino-
in nausea, vomitint^, &o.) occa-
sioned l)y the influence of an evil
eye, or by the abrupt entrance,
upon the suhject of it, whilst
takini^ his meal, of a person of
unaiped feet, or of craving and
■Lvateriag mouth, v. vl^, ^fT'T,
'fiiii, ^^. 2 i'ride or conceit.
?^^, ^^'T n. (s) A purgative.
2 A purge. '6 Exhibition of pur-
gatives.
»\'
'^^'^fii n. (s) A cathartic me-
dicine, a. Purgative.
"TSf A particle of metal.
VsTw V. (Rema, Port.) A
ream of paper.
<^, ^J f, m. Pressins; upon;
pushing. V. ^T, ^H. 2 Throng-
ing and pressing, v. qi^, '?!•
\Z^\ or IZ^\ f. Shoving- ;
driving on.
\Z^, XZ^ v.c. (h) To push.
2 fig. To keej) back (an evil). ',>
fig. To maintain agaiti.st dif-
ficulties: to perform (a difficult
matter) : to drive on ; to 'pusli,
alonr/ (a trade, a livelihood) : to
cram down (cakes, &c.) v. i. To
start from its place; to slip
a.side; — as a pillar under pres-
sure : to be exceedingly plentiful :
XZKZ -Zl f. Pushing and
shoving uuitually, or l)y numbers,
or with violence. 2 fig. Pushing
away from the attention : push-
ing on, along, hurriedly.
\^^\ A male buffalo, ^tl
/. A female buffalo-calf.
"^^^1 n. A buffalo-calf.
^ 47
^^r A male buffalo.
^J s Dust.
^^ ;/. (.s") The senunal fluid.
WfI -% /. (H) A vessel
to hold sand.
^cl^ff s Seminal gleet.
Tm f. Sand. 2 Gravel.
T^ f. m. ^^r c rn. Sloppy
mud, mire; fouland dreggy water,
oil, ghee &c. ; any slop or filth.
^'<T fi,2:- Tiie nauseous mass
of materials from which spiri-
tuous liquor is extracted. '3 A
distillery.
t^ n. m. R. w. A monopoly.
^^HCr A distillery.
^a^ a. Mixed with fdth—
water, oil, &c.
X'^ (s) The letter ^ with the
inherent short vowel drop])ed.
2 The mark by wluL'h it is denot-
ed, and which is placed over the
letter following it.
Tf^r, '^^i'l^qr a. A dull,
dawdling fellow, a spooney, noo-
dle, slow coach.
it f. Crying, piping, 2 fig.
Giving up from faint hearted-
ness. '3 Dawdling along (in
one's way or work) cryingly.
V. ^X. throughout. 4 Crying
out unto suddenly or sharply.
tT^ITXX An interjection of
grief.
1^ f. (h) Abundance, exu-
berance. 2 Fine sand. '6 A flood.
J-$- ^ . [dance.
Tc^^c^, XWZ^ f. O vera bun-
<'^'^ V. i. (a) To sink and
fall out — a wall, &c. ; to rcc-l — a
man, &c. 2 To crumble down —
a mass of sugar, salt, &c. mois-
tened ; to ooze along — sweat,
bloods.
l^, ^'^ /. Fine gravel. 2 The
grit (of sugar, milk). 3 n. fig.
Cirro-cumulus state of the
clouds.
>'#^ff SeeVTimr.
graced state ; utter discomfiture
and disconcernment.
^^^ f. A sort of glacis. 2
Material for filling up (a well,
ditch, &c.) 3 A bog, marsh.
^^'^1 V. i. To sink down — a
wall, a well : to fill up — a well,
hole, &c. 2 fig. To enter in and
occupy the system — a disease,
&c. : to continue long and deep-
ly (in any place).
"^^^ n. (p) Rhubarb.
^\^^ a. Sandy.
\^m^\ f. Rhubarb,
"^^[pql^^r r^n Gamboge.
T^\^ -25" 77. Grit, sand, and
dirt (in grain, &c.) 2 Gravel and
sand as alluvial. 3 The cirro-
cumulus form of cloud : dense
haze. V. ^K, ^■^, oj?r, f^T^, &
f^T^, f^^. XmSS a. Having
grit and dirt — grain, sugar, &c.
\m\ a. Silken. 2 fig. Sil-
ky, soft. 3 or T3i5ft ^r^r
Having a silken border — a cloth.
r^R[f%^r The silkworm.
Sandy.
"C^^r f. A kind of sweet-
meat. 2 fig. Exposed and dis-
l^m n. (p) Silk.
m^\^\^\Z f. An indissolu-
ble knot or bond of union.
V^\ f. A line. 2 A fibre. 3 .
•pi. The fibres (of mangoes, &c.)
^^ (Rees, Port.) The tvven-
tv-fifth ]mrt of an anna, a rae.
tc3T c A little stream oozing
along (as of dissolving pamt,
sweat, blood, &c.)
\^^ See ^^cT.
IX^"^ f. Casli, ready money. .
2 App. to gold, silver, &c. as
convertible into cash.
n^?r a. Ready, consisting
in cash. 2 fig. Prompt, sharp — a
reply, abuse, ad. Instantly, pre-
sentlv, at this momenr : WT
^?IiT ^^l" irSTT ^T% f?3T^sgi T:T«» '
n^flf^r/. A bill payable'
at sight.
^f^ (p) Inclination; bear-
ing ni»on ; aspect, aim, lit. fig.
2 .-\ngry fixe<!ness of eountf-
nauce. 3 fig. Drift, design, mind.
fr^
370
rr^T
?:r^5f^ a. That is told down
nt once ; on the nail ; — money in
payment. 2 lig. Prompt, smart
— an answer, &c. ad. Outright,
flat.
Tm^l f. (a) a carpenter's
plane. 2 Smoothing, planing.
l[W\ V. c. To point or
direct; to i)lant or set (guns,
eyes, &:c.) against. 2 To smooth
with a i)l!ine. v. i. To look in-
tently with a fixed vision.
fr?5ir^^fr /. Sale for ready
money. 2 Ready money receiv-
ed in j)avmer.t of articles.
n^f (a) a written acknow-
ledgment of debt. 2 An order
from the State u])on a subject,
or for the revenue due, or to
furnish some required supply. 3
A deed or an agreement-paper.
nc=fr f. Ready money deal-
ing. 2 Coins, cash (as an article
of merchandise).
U^T (s) Disease. 2 A dis-
ease. 3 A diseased part (of
fruits, &c.) 4 Anything viewed
as causing disease. 5 Vexation
at another's success. 6 App. to
any person or beast viewed as
hateful.
mi a. Sick, ill.
T\^Z^ V. i. To be sick.
T\m n. (p) Varnish. 2 A
coating of varnish.
HT^r a. That is smeared
with KTHTTT.
T[^^ V. i. c '\o sink thronoh
the influence of some disease;
to droo]), wilt.
mm^^r /; A disci se and
its symptoms.
<r|lTr a. u r)f a sullen coun-
tenance. 2 Sickly-looking.
ffin? a. Of a sickly con-
stitution.
T\i\\ n. Diseased. 2 Insalu-
brious, morbific.
^T^T^r, T.V^\ a. Valetudinary.
^r^^ a. (s) Sapid, tasty
— seasonings, &c., tonic. «. Black
salt.
'"r^(p) Adiiv.2 Wa-es for a
day. 3 The sum paid daily to the 1 ^^V ^^hich he designs ruin to an-
messenger of Government or of other, rums himself; "di-amtr a
pit for one's neighbour and fall-
ing into it one's self." Used
also to express Waste, profu-
sion.
creditor sent to dun. ad.
^l^'i'lv. [by day.
TRS"?^ ad. Every day, day
Tf^^fr A person employed jHS" .^r -m a. Thin, lean.
.!'>' !!'^ ''''^>' f\-Z^^ a. Rather lean.
Xm^K f. The daily ex-ijN,-;. .?v^rrr;^
penses and receipts. 2 The daily l^^^^^l ^^^^^^^ v. l. lo grow
wants and requirements. ^l^n and lean.
^f^^[t"^f r /. A day-book. ^rtl^-T^T /. (ii) A weeping
countenance; a rueful visage.
^R"'i n. s Weeping, crying.
^r<^ s Obstructing, imped-
^f^T^f^T A tradesman's
journal.
^r^^R Service for subsis-
tence. 2 An employment as a j ^n?. 2 Blocking up.
^neans^of subsistence. m^ v, i. To block up, Stop.
'Cr'^^F'Tr a. That has service. ! (a road). 2 To hinder.
2 That supports himself ^y ! ^[g fjq nqr A young tree or
service. ' ' j o
U'SfiTsTrn The pushino- on of l-rvrrnJ. ' -n,, ,• i • .
^ I- 1 1 ti„i^f'^^". Planting or laymg
each revolving day under the • ^ .- »
enjoyment of 'the vVants of life. i(a charge against), v. ^K.
V. ^r,or with g. of s., %r, ^T^. ^PTF A plantlet.
^l^^Trsr ad. Daily.
l\-mm\ A ledger-book. 2 In
law. The written proceedings
of a case.
d^R^rr /. Diary.
trsr^rrr mki -^n Wages,
J''^.^;^ [accounts.
rr5j[Jf55" Daily balancing of
rrST^Kf /'. A revenue-term.
A register of daily occurrences.
frsfr Fast.
5^ir5f!^5'K A day-stipendiary. '
ni^r, TVm\ a. ^^ ad. Daily.
m. Pension or wages paid daily.
n'sTF f. The diiily expenses
(of a family). 2 Hire for a day.
3 Daily allowance.
^RT (ii) A puffed mass ol
dough baked in embers.
l\I\ (ii) A large cake of
bread.
i\'^\ f. Bread : a cake of
bread.
m\ m. njr^qrfr/. Betelnut
cralhered after being full-ripe.
^IJ^fT f. A phrase used
where a man, by the very act
U^ n. c ^f^r /. A cupping
instrument. fbodv.
Tin n. (s) A hair of the
Tf^^J s A pore of the skin.
T\^i^ 9?. See ^[^f5- Ex.
vii. 1.").
?^R^^ s Horripilation.
TRi^oTlcT (id. At every hair ;
per, bv, or w\i\\ each hair.
l\^V^ s Horripilation.
^r^ V. A cupping glass.
X\W\ V. The noise made by
several baudikote r.ats uttering
their cry at once. 2 fig. The
hallowing and vociferating of
several children ; a clamorous
Jjrawl. [j,i..iin.
11"^ Germinated seed or
ffW /. Softness and pene-
trability (of ground to the foot,
pegs, kc.) 2 Sunhen and wasted
condition (as of the banks of a
river). 3 The having of many
holes from excessive planting or
stake-driving to be sunk into
the ground.
fr^^
371
^ryg
tm, Tm V. c. To plant, fix,
set (a post).
^(^^T ji^ in. Rumination.
l\^m V. i. To ruminate.
<m^\if. (p) Splendour, lus-
tre, light, as from a multitude of
lamps : illumination. 2 fig.
Liveliness, gayness (of a scene
or prospect).
frq" (s) Anger.
^rr^rffr/. (s) The fourth lunar
mansion. 2 An unmarrietl girl
of nine years.
M? a. s Relating to Radra.
2 Formi(lable,fearful. 3 Wrathful.
m. Wrath.
tl^^ n. s Silver, a. Of s iver.
^'^35:r f. A rupee.
^f?^ n. s Roughness, dry-
ness. See ^£j.
^ The twenty -eighth conso-
"?«*• [much.
^t a. (Vulg.) Many or
^^^ f. Overflowing abun-
dance.
c^^^"^ -^^ -^T &c. ad. With a
tbsb. 2 In a trice.
^WZ^ See ^TJ^.
c73fj;g-^f3' (^jj) \ stoccade, a
imling.
^^flf. (II) Wood.
^m^m a. Tall and gaunt ;
a kiiif/ht of lath.
c^^^ii u. Smart, tidy, trim.
^^^ /. (a) An inhabit, a
vice : a contracted (vicious)
taste for.
c^^55-^ «r/.(Used with ^^^ k
"^TJi) To glitter, gleam, flash
— lightning, &c.
F^^c^^^ V. i. To flash, &c.
^^{^^\Z Brilliance, radiance.
^^^^ f. Sparkling, glitter.
^^'^Cl^T a. Bright, glitter-
ing. 2 fig. Clear, clean, nice —
persons, clothes, furniture, &c.
3 (Ludicrously). Clean; bare,
naked : fwf%'>rt"?T '^Tufl 3TT<1
"Im ?f ^T'CT^ ^^, =3^TrTt <f\
^=Kr /". (s) The capital of
^T^IT in Ceylon. 2 Figures
of gaints, monkeys, &c. made of
gunpowder (as fireworks).
tT^mr/. Gleaming, flash-
ing.
5''^r^^ V. i. To aleam, alare.
^^■^[^r /. Brilliance, reful-
gence.
c=5-^Ri%?5rr -r^?^re[c^r «. co-
vert terms for a liar, rogue,
scamp .
^^r?^7 y*. Acquiring of ex-
traordinary wealth.
^%T f. (b) a line, a stripe.
^^iH /'. Lustre, gloss. 2 fig.
Charm, grace, style (in speaking,
singing, &c.) v. ■?TT':. 3 A
smack, tang, tincture (of some
foreign quality), r. ^]X. 4
An edging (of lace, silk).
^^ 71. A flash. 2 A sudden
fright ; a shock, a. Clean, &c.
See ^HS^cR^fT. 2 Stark naked.
o5"^f|rcr A millionaire.
c^^^?^/. Sparkling: flash-
ing. 2 Eager hunger, v. '%'S.
^ii^^^^ V. i. To sparkle :
to ilash. 2 To be keenly hungry.
c^j^c^^jrra: See ^^^^\^.
^i^^\ij A term for any ex-
ceeding and extraordinary acqui-
sition : 5Hiq^T ^^^r^l %\-=^
=3nsn^ ^o -^T^T. 2 An ex-
pression in the cant of Shop-
keepers in delivering over an ar-
ticle bought from them, indica-
tive of their desire tiiat the arti-
cle may prove worth a lakh to
the purchaser : 5JT '^] S^T^-
^^r^r A closed letter, &c.
^^'^m.f. A vehement and
determined setting to,after, upon,
(an object, lit. fig.) ; an intense
application of one's powers and
fi\culties. 2 Closely following or
adhering to. /. Litercourse with,
^^Z^ V. c. 'i'o cause to ad-
here. 2 To mingle Avith : ■^^-
Vl ^3T^<TT<T. 3 To push along,
in, at, vehemently or recklessly.
n. i. To stick together. 2 fig. To
cluster thickly upon — fruits,
flowers, &c. : to be studded with
(fruits, &c.) — a tree. 2 To draw
nigh unto ; to ajjproach closely :
to arrive at ; to come upon.
^^^f.A bar of metal. 2 A
frame of wood, &c. in which pit-
chers are carried upon beasts.
#^^^?T^ -n^^f. Imperfect
execution of a business; slurring
over. 2 Various scheming and
contriving, ad. Slurringly.
Q^Jr^'cTf^ c. A facetious term
for a limping jjcrson.
m^^li -tl f. Walking
lamely, v. tjt^. 2 c. Terms
for a lame person.
c'-^^^r a. ill) Lame, disabled
— a leg, &c. ; the person or ani-
mal. 2 fig. Halt, hobbling — a
lousiness.
^m V. i. To limp. 2 To
become sickly.
^^^ f. Junction ; juxtaposi-
tion ; bordering (of land or of
bodies in gen.) 2 Affinity. 3
Intimacy, ^j/'e/). Close to: oqj
JiHt"^ ^o ^<^ ^T%. ad.
Connectedly : in close succession
(of time or space): ^o <ft«f
c^JiTcT^S^r /. A hundi having
its letter of advice pasted to it.
^^crr See ^^cT /. 2 A bor-
dering country.
^^cffa. Related by marriage,
^*\'^ n. Marriage.
^^^^f. Hurry and bustle.
^m^ .i\\ ad. Hastily.
VA^m -^m a. That is ever
hurried.
KTTf
372
5r?^
^T\^^H ad. Hurriedly.
^^K (p) An anchor. 2 A
large iron chain. 3 fiir- A term
for articles (as personal orna-
ments, chains, ropes, &c.) that
are massv and lunviehlv. 4 An
appanitiis for iioundinji; hme, &c.
5 Victuals distributed among
Vakirs.
MX^\X A cable.
c?fllf[fr^ n. -A lerni for a
huge and clurnsy fellow.
^.^y'^ ad. With haste and
despatch. /. Hurry, precepi-
tancy.
^^r A prop. 2 fip;. Connec-
tion or t'e (as subsisting be-
tsveen parties) ; athreail, line. v.
c^^r^^^r Connection willi ;
tie (as of relationshi-* or friend-
ship) : ^l??Tg" ^*f ^"I'J'^^I^T
TtTHTrf???^ ^?^r[1 1 '2 Fate : ^o
c^iTI^ /. m. (p) The bit of a
bridle, b.tmouth. 'J A bridle. '6
fi;;. TIic reins, guidance.
?5"i]ir^fJr V. c. To ap[)ly
lay on — a whip, a stripe, a cut
[Mari-iace
cTni^fJin: A friend of one's
bo\ ish days.
c^3Tr?^JT -^^ prep. Close be-
liind; immediately upon. ad.
Continually.
c^H V. (s) Marriage : nup-
tials. V. -^K, ^T. 2 The niar-
riaj^e-union as effected at the
auspicious juncture, v. ^T^,
'S'TJI- [tached to.
^'"'T ;;. s Joined. 2 fi^;. At-
^JT^IcT 7?. An epithalamiuni.
??r^q"R:^r /. 'I he hour or
juncture declared in the Joytish-
sliiistra to be auspicious for the
commencement of the main cere-
mony in the celcl)rntion nf a
marriage Oi' thread-investiture.
2 Till! time-measuring cup as
]daced in water to fill a jieriod at
the completion of which the
l)arties in a marriage are to be
joined : the period thus determin-
ed and brought round. 3 fig. Any
critical moment.
c^Rl'^fr -E\ -Ir /. A mar-
riage-licence. 2 A letter of in-
vitation to a marriage.
.^ c^JTTl^^r _/; The paper on
\^incll is noted down tlie ^^-
4\ for the celebration of a ^^^.
c^^R ??. (corr. from ^^^) c^vTf^TS'lH/. JVlatch-making.
c^iT,;,,^ A word of encourage- !^ff^^y-;y; ^he season for
ment or e.\citcnient ; at it ! j jnarria"-es
_J-'!^v L";'y; ; cTST^rCSrr Marriao-e festivi-
^i\^f\^i^^ rid. In a hurried ,•
1 ties.
^^"^ V. i. To become <!e-
^'*l^m ad Snartiv, d)arplv.
V. '^^j -bTf^, 5IT, XI.
^^^^ ad. Hastily, hurriedly,
I'cc. /. Hurry, haste.
wfl^Icf ad. (h) Whilst the
hand is in it ; whilst (yon, &c.)
are about it : rf^ gigTT':'!'^
bditated and infirm : to be fagged
and jaded (from disease, fatigue,
fasting).
^'^•T n. Fasting, esp. die-
titically. v. ofi^, ^f^, tj^. 2
Crossing, passing over.
^'^ (I. (s) Light, not heavy.
^TrJT'^ 31T^T rl*?^ ^ » ^j£ ■ o Small. 3 Short ;— as a voweL
5iT^^ rqiH ^55)1^^ 3TmT- 2 4 Light, trffling.
At the moment of another's do- ^^^^ v. Levitv. 2 Sniall-
ing a thing ; just upon or after :j ji^ss. 3 fig. Littleness; absence
?37T ^^^ fvfgrlN ^o rJJTtJT; of dignity.
^K^. ^J^^r/. Making water
^TO/. (ii) A f.ierc of cloth
worn round the loins covering
tlie privities, v. ifig.
«^^r /. (s) Urining. 2
Urine. 3 A fairy.
[ ?'^?i /. (ii) A sprain, v. ^^■
f^g, ^tT: the shooting paia
arising from it. v. ^i^.
c^^'^^'^r /. Undergoing a
sprain. 2 Springing.
c^"^^"T V. i. To leceive a
sprain. 2 To spring.
^^'^^r A piece (i.r flesh, kc.)
torn off from a mass l)y the hand
or mouth, r. ij, '^1"§', ^T'Si
TTK, ■fci'El, cfiT- 2 A sudden
strain, r. ^^•
c^^¥, c^^f^ n. A perjdcx-
ing affair ; a difficulty or tremble :
scrape, hobble, mess. 2 Freely.
Scheme, speculation, wild pro-
ject.
?y^¥^^Tr, c^^f^r a. One full
of plots ami ))rojeets, or ol in-
jurious and mischievous pranks ;
mischievous.
c^sref /. (a) Flavor. 2 A hk-
ing contracted ; an evil habit. 3
A smack, tang.
«^5fr f, (s) Shame, modesty :
bashfnlness.
«^5ir?TJT[^ a. Ashamed,
w^ifr^ s The sensitive
])lant.
c^cir[^[q;^[c^ a. Modest, de-
cent : bashCui.
c^^^rr^r^T See ^Rri:f^.
c^l'^^cT p, Asliamed.
c^-^sl^r a, JModesl, Sec. 2
Slnxmeful — air act : ignominious.
^d^of r. /. (ii) To hang or
depend : to dangle.
r^HT^ir^^r i\ c. To suspend.
^d^r (I. False, not true. 2
Dishonest. 3 Vain, idle; — used of
la!)Our, 5;c.:5i^T^^T, ^^^ ^IT
4 Unjust : TRr^] ^o fsi^T ^t
%r{j2 ;") Unsound, wauliuu;
the power of performing its
functions — a limb, &c.
c^^i'+;d?ir T^z^i -^i^f a.
Fahe, deceitful, &c.
f^J^nfo'r V. i. To hang up.
2 To put on in a stylish manner
(a turban, a shaul, kc.) 3 To
snap up and appropriate.
5r?«T
373
^^7l
^JTJ f. Lively motion ;
<iuick agitation (as the rapid
feats of wrestlers, the figlitinu;
of hinls, the vivacity of dispu-
tants) : restlessness. 2 The agi-
tatioii of tenor : ^T^ '^T'^flt'^
i=gT^ ^o "^T^l. 3 Alterca-
tion. V. ^^, ^TJT.
^7T2" od. Iriiit. of the sound
of the shakini^ of a siackly fixed
post, peg. i>cc. V. '^ThT, epr.
c^J^T'^r/. Hocking-, shaking.
^Z'^Z^ n, i/Vo rock— a post,
nail, &c. 2 fifj. To fail; to he
smashed, blasted. 3 To be thrown
oiF(as worthless or unnecessary) ;
to be rejected, cast: '^T%-
c?r3:fTJg-?r (O bird! hop a-
bont.) A word taught to parrots.
2 f. fig. {Swaggering, swelling.
^Zm?, a, Tliat rocks. '2 fig.
Tottering, uncertain — speech,
eonnsel.
^Z^Z■^\ a. Of quick and
smart action; active, lively. 2
Forward, officious.
c^2,"^?r -S" ». Baggage and
train. 2 Any multitude (of follow-
ers, cattle, &e.) or any mass (of
articles) considered as encum-
bering: any aifair viewed as con-
fused.
^^ZT:^Z1: n. Sundries.
^.Z^Z .Z\ ad. Imit. of the
somnl r,r expressive of the manner
of quick shaking.
wIc^Jf^T V. i. To hang vvav-
iugly; to dangle; to shake tre-
mulously and (piiekly. 2 fig. To
interfere. '6 To look bright and
glittering ; — used esp. of a pearl :
to look beaiiiing — a countenance.
^Zni\ See ^z^z,
^ZK^l a. Great, huge,
^rlr^r a. False, &c.
^fCii) A cUib : a rude log.
2 fig. Any extraordinarily large,
stout (person, limb, rope, &c.) a.
Monstrously large, stout, thick ;
coarse.
c^ffl^r^T -^l"^ Terms for a
big, burly fellow.
^^/. (h) a string (of pearls,
&c).
^^ (h) a term for mem-
brnm virile. 2 App. to a deeply
designing and knavish fellow ; to
a refractory child, &c.
?5"52T3" /■, A disputed mat-
ter; (esp. in accounts): dispute
subsisting. 2 Confusion, mess.
?5'3'§T3qT a Litigious. 2 Busy
and bustling in trade.
?^?T -^ a. Sturdy, stout.
cT^q[2" f. Slackened state ;
relaxation and enervation (^t-
JIl"^!' ^•) ; distraction (firr-
'^T'Ct ^<»). 2 fig. Officious in-
termeddling.
c^^^S" ad. Siackly, dang-
liiigly. V. =^T^, ^T^. ^r. 2
III a slovenly manner, t'. '=^1^,
^"I^, tT¥, ^f^, ^^.
c^^^^^"^ n, c. 'I'o rock, shake.
2 To meddle with vainly ; to be
officiously busy. 3 To be smear-
ed with.
c^^^^^rr rL That intermeddles
in a fumbling, awkward, blunder-
ing, and bothering manner.
c^l^^r^ m. Poet -^r /: Coax-
ing, fondling. »gfe'^Tc2f «.
Dear, precious unto. 2 Fondling
— language, &c.
^"^r See ^^•
^''^r f. A term of repronch
for a coward, an impotent, &c.
^^f S A sweetmeat-ball of
numerous varieties.
c^S" See ^^.
^^^ V. i. (h) To fight with
or to fight. 2 To contend. :i i\^.
To cope or vie with. 4 Freely.
To grow thickly; — used of fruits,
&c.
^^^i -m a. Warlike, mar-
tial. 2 Fit for war — a man,
horse, &c.
^^cT^^r A warrior.
c^3"l?'^r V. c. To set fighting.
2 To make to contend, co])e
with : 'i ^jgr: rqr ^gi:Tsit
^«?^^ tfi^T. 3 To practice,
apply, use (a device, effort,
means).
c=^STC/. (H) Fighting. 2 A
fight. 3 War.
c^5"13r a. Fit for fighting — a
man, beast, &c.
^^FjT. (s) A creeping plant.
^Tir/. (s) A kick. c^^r3Tl"K
7n. (The striking of a kick) Vigor-
ous kicking, v. '^, ^^.
s^ST^of, c^^r^of V. {. (ii) To
be besmeared with. v. c. To
kick soundly. 2 fig. To over-
throw and cover with shame (an
opponent in fight, &c.) 3 To
reject. 4 To dash to pieces.
vf^^./". General confounding,
quashing, dishing: slubbering
performance (of a work) ; hud-
dling over. r. ^^l^g. ^[^"gq^^,
5T^^^3?1^ ad. In a negligent
manner.
^^^r A lump of any thing
moist and soft (as of mud, butter),
a dub.
^^Z a. (s) Devoted to
women and worldly pleasures,
a gallant.
wq^ct See ^'m^.
m^m m. M^\i f. The
play of Hide and seek.
^^'^/. A hiding-place; co-
vert. 2 Hiding one's self. v.
^^°T V. {. To hide; to lie
concealed.
^^iVr V. L To hide.
^^^m^ad.(u) Clandestine-
ly, slily — acting; secretly — ly-
ing, staying.
^^ m. f. (ii) A coating
around (as of cloth, mud, j)aint).
2/. Girth, com|)ass. 3 A coup de
soleil ; an attack as of an epi-
demic. V. ^. 4 A general dis-
order. 5 Artful involution or
ambiguity of speech, v. ^JX..
^'^^Z^i f. Rolling up.
^^Zo\ V. c. To roll up ; to
envelop. 2 To wrap around.
^Vr See mz sig. L 2
Glass-bracelets of a certain kind.
c^cq"
374
^^m
^tq-^cq- jj ^ term for
vnuiitinc: talk, fraiuUilmit ex-
cuses, ice. V. $TI^. '^t^, ^^•
c^'^r (h) Brocade. 2 A slab.
.'^ A neck-ornament of females.
^Tjqf^T^ a. Tliat has a border
of brocade.
c=^W -'■^rr fl. Clever at or
addicted to vaperiiig, putiini;;
also at getting up plausible
excuses ; also at extravagant
and euii)ty promises.
^T3T 7/1. -i" 71. See ^"^f^-
^'^j cT^^ (s) A plummet. 2
In geom. A perpeiuliculai'.
^?r a. s Long.
^^^ f. See ^^^. 2 A style,
fasliiou, air (as of drawing,
speaking, &c).
• t
?''^^'T A term for an ass, a
bare, or an elo])baut.
^^^r See ^'^^^.
^^^^ f. Gabble, clack, v.
^K, i'Trf, "^T^. Or -^r f>(^-
Iniit. of tlie sound of tlie li))S
in rapid speaking or eating, v.
?5^7r5ffcT a. Thin, watery,
sloppy.
^^^'^-^^'^r^R C7. s Cylindrical.
c^^r ad. (II) Laid at full
lengtb; floored (as in de.-itb,
.swoon, &c.) - lig. Consumed —
casli, a store: fallen and lying
piostrntu — a wall, &e.
^^rS" (I, (h) False, untrue. 2
Used (as tiie English Rnr/up,
lidacul) in endearment to ebild-
''^■"- [fraud.
^^ri-^Tr /: Falsehood. 2 A
^'Wi\ f. Falsehood ; want
of ventv. 2 A lie, fraud. .":! .\
contrivance (a stick inserted to
twist) for e()tn|)ressing and tigh-
tening a bulky loa<l.
^^fT A caste. They arc car-
riei's of grain, &c.
r^y^l'^inST A respectful term
for a ^'^lUT.
'^'m^^\^ a. (s) Of <;reat
length.
'^'^Kr (A name of Cninpati)
Long-bellied.
c^s''^;?. (s) Acquired, o'ot. 2
Obtained — as a (piotient by tbvi-
sion. 'A In eomp. That has gain-
ed : ^SifTf^^t':.
^fsq" f^ Acquired slate, gain.
2 Profit. 3 \i\ arith. Quotient.
^>q" a. s Ol)tainable. 2 Ob-
tained. .') n. Gain
■^^^R p. -jir. s Gaining.
^>^i^ (s) Gain, profit.
^■^ w. f. (s) Extinction,
absorption: consumption through
use. 2 m. Destruction (reduc-
tion into its origmal state) of
the universe. 3 n. Attention, the
mind as intent, v. ^TT, "?T.
c^iT a. i^ ad. (Vulg.) Very
m.any, very much ; abundant :
very : ^^ ^T^T-
^ir, ^^^?^ /. Overflowing
abundance.
c^c^^^^Tr /. Bawling after.
2 Calling out.
^^^R^ V. I. (ii) To call
after loudly. 2 To call out (as
in singing, proclaiming) loudly.
li To bawl and shout (as in urg-
ing a beas't). 4 To bawl and roar
at (as in scolding).
?5-?r^(fr /. Bawling, &c.
o^c^-Tf f. s A wanton woman :
a woman gen.
c^c^c^c^ Interjection of dismay
or amazement.
^^\Z n. (s) The forehearl.
2 Pop. The space between the
eyebrows.
•\
pyoTfJ^qr f. The writing upon
the forehead ; the destiny of.
c^fc^cT (s) See c^^fcT. a. s
Beautiful, lively. 2 Wanton; —
used of females.
c?r^TJ, ^pTfl'J //./Coaxing,
cajolnig.
?^^, c^^/. The hair of the
body, down. 2 Wool.
05"^^^ ad. (Quickly, rapidly.
2 Soon, early, n. Early time :
31'^=r Sfo ^li, \^\^ ^^\-
o^^^r, ^^^r Sec ^T^r.
^^^r a. Flexile, j)Iian(.
c^^^ f. (s) The clove-tree.
2 A clove.
57^1'^ n. Oil of cloves.
f^^^^l^ a. Flexile, litlje.
^A^^ V. c. To upset. 2 To
spill by turning over. V. i. To
recline.
^^^B^fIad. (Poet.) Smart-
ly, sharjil}".
^^^\ (Vulg.) The penis.
c^t^F f. (h) a female slave.
^^'^ ?/. (s) Salt. a. Saline.
^^•T ti. f. A low spot (in
the ground, &c.) ; a hollow gen.
tll^T^I -«T^^ ^o. 2 A
winding (of a road, river, &c.)
^^T'^^t 5f=r n. Making pro-
fuse demonstrations of rever-
ence or of humility.
^^^ V. i. To stoop ; to
bend. 2 To submit, yield. 3 To
flash — lightning. 4 To twitch —
an eye. 5 To incline — the mind.
?yq-^E[of ^, I {^^^)^Yo wrig-
gle—a serpent, &c. 2 fig. To
twitch or iick with eagerness lo
speak — the tongue.
^^c^ffcT a. Flexile, pliant.
2 Soft and yielding — butter,
flesh, mud, &e.
^^^\, ^^^Vi\ -I" ad. Poet.
Smartly, (piiekly.
c^^*^^ A bit, a whit,
^^r See ^°^l
^m^m -T^^l (a) Servants,
domestics ; the train of a great
])ersonage.
"^^l^ (a) An umpire; an ar-
bitrator ; an arbitration.
c^f I?"r /". Umpirage.
^^^\ A rush-like grass. 2
Rock quail.
^°WK Sec ^{WIT.
c75T?;?:^c^Cf^^ n. (p) An army.
2 m. A lascar.
c=!>5T^?r a. Military.
^^ /'. (m) Sauious running.
^^^ 71. f. Garlic. 2 The
root of it.
^^^\ ~^^\ Milky qunrfz.
t^^yfi"
375
^mf^
^^^\ a. Shaped like a clove
of earlic — a jewel, &c. 2 Relat-
ing: to garlic.
c^fTT m. f. See ^^'^.
cTC^i^r f ^r/. A bill obtained
from a merchant who has fnnils
ill the hands of the person on
whom another, who has not
funds in his hands, has given an
order, and sent to that person to
ensure his acceptance of the
order.
c=^?^/. A wave. 2 fig. A con-
vulsive affection of the hody (as
from intoxicating substances,
from anger, lust, &c.) ; a throe.
'6 A puff of a zephyr; a
breath of air. 4 A whimsey, freak.
^ A sudden seizure and overcom-
ing (as by sleep).
crFI"^^C^ f. The prime and
vigor; the fulness and flush. 2
A whim, freak.
^€"fr /. (s) A wave. 2 A
convulsive affection of the body.
a. That follows the irregular im-
pulses of his desire ; freakful,
fitful.
^^^r^fr a. Whimsical, fan-
ciful.
^'^\, c^r^?T ad. Imit. of
))anting. /. Puffing (under the
. excitement of heat). 2 Imit. of
the undulating of the air under
fiercely glowing sunbeams.
Hence imit. of tlie quivering
glare of ripening crops, v. "s^X-
throughout. 3 /. Panting ; un-
dulating; tremulous glistening.
c=^§rR a. Little or small :
siiort.
^5'ff'l'Tr a. Lower, shorter,
younger; less comparatively (in
height, length, age, &c.) : low,
^'ihm n. -mi m. Child-
hood.
c=^Rfr f. Littleness. 2 fig.
Lightness of estimation.
c7CRfr4n:fr /. Disparity of
two persons or things com))ared
(esp. with reference to age).
^g"R^^ a. Smallish.
^?"R^?:R a. Little, small.
^=^Rr a. Little.
^CRl^"^ i\ i. To grow h'ss,
smaller, &c. ; to diminish — as an
expiring liglit : to shrink into
small dimensions ;— as an eye
imder swelling of the parts ad-
jacent.
^?^t^^ n. Travelling equip-
ment ; baggage and followers. 2
fig. A multitude of beggars, boys,
idlers, &c. : an establishment of
herds, flocks, considered as cum-
bersome.
^STf Fond affection towards
(as towards a child or animal one
has fondled or fed.) v. ^^, "^T"
^n, iqi^, ??IT^. 2 Coaxing on
tlie part of the child, &c.
^^rs^^qr, ^^mJ a. Skilled in
performing ^o3T«T.
c^oSTcT n. A dramatic enter-
tainment on the concluding
night of the ^^^T^. 2 The
songs composed for the occasion.
3 fig. Calamitous conclusion ;
the catastrophe.
^^" a. (s) A hundred thou-
sand. 2 n. fig. A joyful event.
3 A butt, an object of aim, lit.
fig. 4 Attention, v. ^7^3", ^t^-
^5T^ //. (s) A mark. 2 A
sign ; a token, symptom. 3 A
definition. 4 In f^i'^Tfi. The
svmptoms. 5 Handsomeness, (i
s' Sight.
^^"^r /. s The aspect or
bearing (of a word or phrase) ;
figurative import : ^TTI'^ ^-
■?JT^ ITJ^ qSSI^T, ^^" srt? 'fjT
^mm f. Worship (of an
idol, &c.) by offering a lakh of
flowers, fruits, &c.) 2 See
?^^iTr3['T n. The oivins; of
an entertainment to one hun-
dred thousand Biahmaus us a
religious act.
W(^'^: nrL By lakhs.
c^^l^r^TJ^^ A supremely
excellent man.
^^r^f^ A millionaire.
c^^^TfJ^^ a. Consisting of
lakhs ; very numerous.
W^\m ad. By lakhs.
^"r^"^ V. c. To behold. 2
(esp. in poet.) To expect —
■^T3 -^Tjf, &c. 3 To know^,
perceive (a matter) from the
signs concomitant. 4 To discern
(some latent truth).
^1^^ p. Beheld ; perceived;
discovered, &c.
^^^r/. (s) corr. ^^iTr The
wife of Vishnu and the goddess
of wealth, prosperity, &c. 2 For-
tune, success. 3 Poet. Beauty,
elegance.
c=?5:^(fT5^ n. -'T^r/. Worship
of Lakshmi by the bridegroom
and bride after the bride has been
brought to her father-in-law's
house.
c^^q'r^-^^ a. Wealthy,
rich. 2 Prosperous.
^St^T n. (s) An object of aim,
a butt. 2 Attention. 3 The
sight (as of a quadrant, &e.) a. s
(Possible, proper, purposed) to
be looked at, attended to, noted,
&c. 2 Understood.
c^Si^iT^Tf a. Of perspicacity;
of just perception. 2 Of good
aim. 3 Intent upon.
^^^f'4 s Meaning to be un-
derstood, noticed ; implication.
^S:^r?r s Matter to be ob-
served, &c. : matter observed,
regarded.
^f^sf a. Wooden.
^r^^ or ^\^J n. Wood:
any piece of wood, a common
stick.
c^r^^T^fJ n. A general term
for the minor liml)ers and sticks
as required for building ; also
for wood, sticks, &c. considered
as fuel ; firewood.
^'\^ f. A red dye, or the
insect which forms it; lac. The
nest is formed of a resinous
substance which is used as seal-
ing-wax. 2 App. to the gum
of certain trees. 3 m. One hun-
dred thousand, a lakh.
o^IlIJOT V. c. To besmear
with lac.
?5"|?=fl75"q" f. Smearing and
plastering ; ])atcliing and doing
up (as of impaired walls, &c.)
vTF^^^
370
^TTiftr
r^ra'c^rfj'T w.-2rr?«. An earthen
pot i^lazed with Uic.
^\m Mildew.
^\^l ad. (ii) By or in lakhs.
^r^rrr (h) a dosed letter ;
ii letter sealed or icafered. 2 The
envelope of a letter. 3 A mass
(of papers, hairs. Sec.) sticking
tosrether : clojj^ed state.
^r^^fflfrr A nallionaire.
c^riff^r^aT ad. Lakhs iij)on
lakhs.
c^r^R'^r f. An ao'P rebate of a
lakh (of fruit.s, j^rains, &c. for
^STiC'fT). 2 fig. A volley of
curses.
^r^^r a. Worth a l;'ikh,.saj)er-
excelleiit — ^a ])erson, tliintr. 2
Worth apliim, tirst rate — a bank-
er, &c.
^m Harmonious or ron-
gruons relation or disposition ;
appositeness (of time, place, of
means with an eml, of appearance
with a fact, of one matter witli
anotherj ; consistency, coiicnr-
rence : m'^H ^'^<^\^'[ ^jr,
2 An application of the mind or
the eneri;;ies ; an effort, v.
riX ^^IT fiT^-^. '■> All aim, a
view. V. -g^, -^t^ ■• ^IH ^T'^T^T :
The object is <;ained ; the aim
snccecdeil, /«*•/: fold. 4 An attacic
of ill-fortune : BTIof tfii-^t
•^[■^r SITTT f?r^T3^ S^Trft =?!
vfllT ^31W; fsi^T ^^^T t^TJT.
;> A crop : T^'^l^^TT^T^ vlT-
31 ^J(1 ^Tii^T. () The state of
bearin<: : -^IXoS V^'S r.^sfi^
^UTTH ^fT "?n^T. 7 A shoal.
8 Catch, hold. 9 A local af-
fection : ^t^ ^TH. 10 Season :
tjT:uft^T r?TT. 1 I The hitting :
^Ti^l^l siTJT. 12 A piece of a
woman's '=91^. 13/". .\ leap,
bound. V. ^■\<:.
^\*\i a. Determined (esp.
in a bad sense) ; addicted to. 2
Imjiortunate. ii Slijrhtly impair-
ed ; — as grains, &c. by worms.
^m V. i. General defini-
tion. To come or arise unto; to
come into contact; to have sui-
tableness ; to meet, befal ; to
touch, hit, refer to ; to fit : I To
touch : Tt rqi^T ^Tl" ^*T,
T^3To3 "^tI^- 2 To be plant-
ed, set ; — plants ; to he plant-
ed with — ground : '^Tqil vT'"-
^r. ''> To take root — plants
set. 4 To hit, strike — a weapon,
&c. : to touch fig. ; to come home
unto ; — as abuse, reproof. 5 To
shut; — as doors, eyes. 6 To be
duiv joined to, lit. fig. 7 To suit.
8 To get on foot; — as fashions.
9 To be contracted by — a vice;
to hapi)en unto — a disease. 10
To arise upon and form an af-
fection of; — as hunger, cough.
1 1 To arise and proceed ; to
take origin and contimie :
^Til^T ; ^sf t ^T^,'^ ?SJT^T ^-
^^ s-Il^. 12 To appear as
to its (jualitv, unto the senses
or mind of: ^fi TJ-j'S' rffl?l#
<T^ ^T, cqisiT 'i) iris ■gi^'5
rJ5rJi^"T. 13 To be found or
got by; — as service. 14 To
bo related generally : HT'il'ST
iTIo ^TT^T. 1 .") To rricet, fall
iu tlie way of: ^l^'if "iT^I
vlTHivfl. 1(» To bear — fruit.
17 To be tainted, dirtied — a
thing. 18 To stick to. 19 To
bite; — as snakes, pungent sub-
stances. 20 To fall upon ; —
blight. 21 To act upon; — bad air,
water, intoxicating substances.
22 To be exi)ended in or ui)on —
money, time. 23 To be wanted
— a thiii'z : to arise unto — a
want. 21 To be duly ))itclied —
a voice. 25 To be kindled — a
light or fire: to be on fire. 2ti
'I'o begin indeed — a wedding, &c.
27 To stutter. 28 To ))egiu to
w nk — an engine. 29 To work
on, in, at : =?? "^t^ ^inrf ^]-
^. 30 To be whetted : '^T'T
^T^ ^iJT^ ^nin. 31 To be
fixed upon : 3?T03T^ ^'^ ^KV\
SfTiT^"^ ^T^- '^S To be ap-
plied unto. 33 To set in, — rain,
cold, heat. .'34 To have an in-
tended effect ; to answer. 35 To
bear npon; to gall, pinch,
rub; — as a load, the saddle, the
back of a beast : to receive ab-
rasion— the back. 36 To be
joined with the female in sexual
congress ; — used of birds and
beasts, and reviliiigly of man.
37 To appertain to ; to be the
concern of. 38 To be arrived
at the proper stage ; — an ani-
mal that has begun to yield
milk, a tree that has beuim to
bear fruit. 39 To be : tfl ^T
siT^t ^T gruTcrt WT. 40 To be
fixed npon ; — an act as criminal,
&c. 41 To be incumbent upon :
g"??!^ ^^ 5TI^ 'illir^ ; Tr»JT
^q^ ■^\^ "tjIIJim^. 42 (In
conjunction with \fi or ^TW-
■?JT^) To begin : ^T tjt'^ ^t-
JT^ilT ; "^^r^^TH ^T3T^T. 43 ?T-
'qfT'? ^TJI# To get the de-
sire to stool. 44 To be with help-
fully : '^ €^Ti| f^^] ^f}^ 5*IT3T.
45. To come to anchors. 46 To
come to a stand still.
^\^^lmT.^^f. 'Ihe opera-
tions of ploughing, sownig ; hus-
banding.
^]^^.\'^ nd. Instantly after.
^\^^\^^l a. InLienions in
devising expedients ; fcu'iuing
schemes and plans.
?5"ril?? f. Agricultural oper-
ations ])reparatory or pertain-
ing to sowing. L' Cost (of bring-
ing land into cultivation, of re-
])airin;? ruinous i)uilduigs, &c.) ',i
Cultivated giound.
?5"Rf j)r("p. Poet. At, unto,
to, with, about : ^ST^irff,
■Ef^Tviflt. 2 Oil account of:
f^^TfT'tliiTt ^y^- 3 Fitly,
usefully luito : ej;i;i^f^f%t;a(-
^\^R a. Worm-eaten. 2
Susceptible of being worm-
^in^t
377
«^i4"f
eaten — wood. 3 Susceptible of
corruption, damage, taint. 4
Adlieriug to. 6 Having narcotic
quality.
^'m^, ^r^H See ^inr.
^fT^tt. That has hit, touch-
ed, arrived at, lit. fig. ; that has
succeeded, has not failed ; — as
a thing, effort, or measure direct-
ed to an object, v. ^^, ^I,
^\^^ w. s A tail.
^RrTrJ ad. In quick succes-
sion ; one close after another.
2 prep. Close after or ujjon.
^Fm a. A gallant, leman.
^N^ n. s Lightness. 2 Little-
ness. 3 Meanness. 4 Delicacy,
fineness ; masterliness (of work-
manship). 5 Subtle, smoothness,
vli^^ «. Sul)tly smooth ;
craftily courteous. 2 Clever, sa-
gacious.
?^i^ 7n.f. A bribe, c^rqifl^.
'iiXT <^- A receiver of bribes.
^Ji^^^qcf f. Bribery and
corruption.
^r^cflT a. (p) Helpless, for-
lorn. ^T^tO/- Helplessness;
helpless and wretched state.
c^t^rf^^ V. c. To bribe. 2
To allure by holding out entice-
ment.
^r^£j*T n. (s) A mark gen. ;
the spots on the moon's disk. 2
A stigma, stain. ^ff^^T P-
Having a stigma, blot.
^\^ f. Shame, modesty. 2
Bashfulness. 3 Honor, reputa-
tion. V. ^^, x:i?§, ^"iTTSS. 4
Dishonor.
?5T^,c7r3rn a. Shame-faced,
retired : bashful.
c^F'^l'T r. i. To be ashamed
or abashed. 2 To shrink from
toucli ; — as the sensitive plant.
^[sf^r f. The sensitive plant.
brings dishonor and shame up-
on ; — a reproach, a disgrace.
^\^m V. c. To shame. 2
To disgrace.
^'^rCfiT s A burnt-ofFerins
48
at weddings of STT^jt or ^t^T
to secure the bride and bride-
groom from forsaking each
other.
^r5rrsj;^see ^f^J & ^Rfr.
^ir^r^r (a) a business, esp.
as unsettled, o. WT^, "^'^'j '^^-
T^, k:t^. 2 Business with ;
title in : fjr ^rrt«T "^¥1 ^To
rTTRR^fTr a. Ashamed. 2
Shameful. ^jfsit^TTJfl -v\ ad.
Shamefully, ignominiously.
c^r^lH a. (a) Incumbent on,
unto.
^\^\ An unsettled business
with. V. '^T'^, r[3.
^fST f. A wave. 2 The cro^s
piece of a hook-swing; also of a
machine for ])ounding lime, &c.
3 The roller of an oilmill. 4 A
roller for leveling ground. 5 A
large beam or jjiece of timber in
general. Interj. Bravo ! nobly !
^ri% /. Rolling out; re-
volvoing, &c. 2 also ^T3^*. n.
A rolling pin.
^\Z^ V. c. To roll out (cakes,
&c.) 2 To turn round and make
to revolve (a waterwlieel, &c.) :
to roll and throw out (the water.)
3 To form, (felt, &c.) by passing
the hand rapidly and reiterately
over the sized wool. 4 To thrust
along or in a violent, heedless
manner.
^[Z'^m a. Rude and reck-
less ; of a dash-away, tear-along
spirit.
^r^T A rolling pin. 2 c A
truss (of rice-straw, &c.)
^Z\^IZ f. Impetuous and
inconsiderate driving and forcing
along, on, in, among.
^rZ^\ See ^\Z^i.
^15" f. A contrivance to
draw water out of deep wells.
^15" a. Sturdy and rude. 2
App. freely to rain, crops, &c.
as overbearingly heavy or copi-
ous. 3 Poet. Bold, daring.
^r^ Caressing, fondling;
the loving Janguage and action
ofa))arent, nurse, &c. : the coax-
in<r of a child.
^r^^r a. Darling, dear unto.
2 Fond, coaxing; — used of the
language, accents, or manner of
a child; saucy or audacious; —
as proceeding from its presump-
tion of fond allowance. 3 Fond,
tender — ways or words. 4 Per-
suasible; not sternly imperative :
^f^fir A wolf.c^i^r/.A she-
wolf. ^t^ir^T^/. The biting
and tearing of wolves. 2 fig.
Vehement setting upon and
worrying (esp. of many at once).
^J^^ V. i. To be spoiled by :
fondness and indulgence.
^5;jr^r-^JTra.That indulges
the fond fancies and cravings of.
^t^r a. Tail-cropped or tail-
cut — a beast : cropped — a tail.
2 Top-cut or top-broken ; hav-
ing lost its top, tip — a thing.
3 Short ; of deficient length, &c.
^t^T^T^^T^ A term for offici-
ous intermeddling ; ^f^T^T^-
V[K\ An unsolicited and trou-
blesome meddler ; a disturbing
busybody.
^\^m^ See ^r^^rf^ot.
^\tm\f\ f. Soft and flatter-
ing langu.age ; tender coaxing.
^iff^^rtf -^Z^ f. Lyinir
and deceiving arts ; wiles and
tricks.
c^r^Cff^ n. -^r m. Fond and
soft words and ways ; blandish-
ments and endearments, v. crk:.
^r|^ A sweetmeat-ball.
^i|T/. ^t^K /. n. A pea-
hen.
c?r^^l^ ad. Poet. Fondling-
ly or fondlj\
^icT/. A kick.r.^rr,?-. c?rr-
ffST -^T «■ (jiiven to kicking.
^T«T^^ V. c. To kick sound-
ly. ^TfTS'^l ./"• Kicking and
cuffing. Pr. ^To ^ifuT 'g'^T-
^\^^\ f. Loading; the load.
^1^^ V. c. (h) To load, to
freight (an animal, a cart, a
ship). 2 To pile or heap upon.
3 To oppress with tasks or
I charges.
5rrfl*
878
f^n
p^f^T f. A hewn stone.
^\'^^ V. i. To accrue, come
\into. 2 To profit or avail.
^f^ o. Long. 2 Distant, ad.
At a distance.
^f^^ a. Longisli.
c^f^If^^ «, Long-legged.
^I^'T f. Length compa-
rative]}'. 2 A distance. 3 Spin-
ning out, protracting (by delay-
ing, &c.) : ^^^^ ^^, ^T'
^m^ V. i. To become dis-
tant. 2 To increase in length,
i.lnration — a thing.
?5r^cT^^ .^r a. Rather tall
or long ; gracefully or suitably
tall or long. 2 iig. Prolix — a
story or speech.
p^r^f^^ V. c. To make dis-
tant (a space or a time). 2 To
extend. 3 To ])rolon'j:, ])rotract.
4 tig. To dispose of fraudulent-
ly ; to make away with.
oJR^ a. Longish.
^ff r /. Length. 2 Distance.
3 A sort of putty.
c^l'^'T ad. From a distance.
?5"i^r^r a. Rather long.
^r^T (s) Gain. 2 In measur-
ing out grain &c. the first
quantity measured is called
wiTVi for the sake of cood
luck.
^\m V. i. To get. 2 To
Jiccrue. 3 To be of service. 4 To
be auspicious — a season.
V^]^llk f. Regard to profit
or gain : attrih. That regards the
])rofit, that has aii lyc tu the
main chance.
^m^r^ Desire of gain. 2
.Advantage. 3 Profit or love.
cTfvrr^r»T Profit and loss. 2
Dcstinv.
c^r^ a. (\) Proper, suita-
ble— words, action : capable,
%v()rthy — a person : fit, conve-
nient— a thing, a place.
^m^\ f. Propriety : capabi-
lity : fitnes3.
'^r^ a. (p) Red. m. A rubv.
2 A bird.
^syq- Soe^T^"^.
covet.
^r^^r a. Greedy, covetous.
/. Covetousness, gi'eed.
c=5"rc^^r f. An infciior kind
of ruby.
^[^'i n. (s) Fondling, caress-
ini;;. ^T^cT ^\17,^ v. Caress-
ing and cherishing. 2 Fondling.
c?rf5?"iT>^^ a. Flaming red.
?yr[^^¥ n. s Brilliance or
beaut}' (of thought or composi-
tion) ; elegance : ^'Ef -Sl^a^-
^r^r/. (p) Redness.
c^foT'^orr p^ c. To covet.
c=^f^5/. (11) Avarice. 2 A
bait, lui-e. v. ■^;i^sr, '^^^•
^\^^^\X c. A greedy per-
son.
^f^ f. A ^FiT^r worshiped
by the lower classes. 2 A hide-
ous and hateful woman ; a bel-
dam, a witch : a passionate wo-
man, a Lamea. 3 A bird.
^m^{ /. Verbal of ^l^^-
2 The setting of a field : the
bringing of lands under cultiva-
tion. 3 A kind of ballad.
^\m (The active of ^'\m)-
To place in contact. 2 To des-
]iatch, send ofl'. 3 To present (a
bill) for [)ayment. 4 To people
(a viUage, &c.) 5 To lay or set
out (a shop). G To bring to
anchor (a ship). 7 To let out
(land) to a tenant.
^f^"^^ n. s Beautv, loveli-
ness : gracefulness of figure. 2
Saltness.
^r?r EmbellishmentjVarnish,
drapery.
c=^rfrc^r-T -tr /. joining or
adding bit to bit, article to arti-
cle, item to item ; joining of
munerous particulars or ever and
anon. 2 fig. Adding circum-
sfanccs and matters (to a narra-
tive, &c.) to spin it out or to
cmhi'Uish it. 3 Tale-he.'.ving be-
tui.vt jiarties (in order to set
I them by the cars).
^1^ A mark made by ac-
tual cautery, v. ^, ij.
^W /. a' she-wolf. 2 A
Ilakshasi famous in legends. 3
11. A mole with hairs. 4 See
?^r^% f. Cauterizing.
^\^^ V. c. To cauterize.
2 To mark by burning, v. i. To
contract spots — a fruit, &c.
^\^^ V. f. Poet. To accrue
unto; to come unto as gain.
^\t\ f. (h) Rice, &c. blown
out by ])arcbing. App. also to
alum, borax, &c. thus blown. 2
fig. Swelter : BTT'TT^I n?T=^.
c^f'=>Q"^ 771. n. A sort of quail.
?^T§"r (h) Exceeding cove-
tousness ; iusatiableness. v. q.
2 Poet. Gain.
^1^/. Saliva: shiver. 2 A
di-^ease incidental to cattle, r.
^, 5?T.
^fcjTPI^ a. (s) Figurative ;
typical. 2 Metaphorical. 3 Indi-
catory. 4 Technical.
'^mf. sSee^r^.
P^^^l^ A play, Hide and
seek.
1^=^^^ f. (n) A hiding-place ;
a lurking-hole.
r^^"^ V. i. (ii) To hide.
r^ 1^ V»
f'?5"^K^cr| ^,_ ^^ 'Pq shine dnn-
ly ; to twinkle.
ic^^rc^lcf a. That shines
ixlimmeringly. 2 Sparkling.
r^^r^KF, r^Cf^in/. Stealth.
f^i;=[^r^^ ad. Claudes-
tiuely, slily — acting: m secret —
lying.
r^^Wl V. c. (ii) To write.
fw^r A written docimient.
I^K^^?«. (s) a letter; a piece
of writing./), s Written. 2 Drawn,
traced.
rc^r^^P-i s The sense or m-
tcrp'retation of an epistle or a
writing.
b^^ 71. (s) 'i'he penis. 2
Gender. 3 The Phallus of Shiva.
4 An affix to the names of wor-
f^W^
379
ship])ers of the lingam : ^t^-
f^JT, -^^f^'iV. 5 A sign, badge.
C Nature or Prakrati ; the active
power in creation. 7 fig. Any
clog or an encumbrance : a trou-
ble, ditiicuity. v. ^tit, ^^^,
f^n^ s The ethereal body ;
the subtil vehicle of the ^-
^Tfj?T or sentient soul, and the
causative principle and architype
of the TB^'^'^ the gross and
material frame. It consists of
fj-ij thehenrf,'?xf^ t\iejud[/me7it,
^"^fsfq the ten senses, and
XT^TTTW the five vital airs.
r^JTt^, fc^^lfcT An indivi-
<lual of the sect who Vvorship the
luigam.
fc^^lf ^ c An individual of a
sect who worship tlie lingam and
carry the representation of it
suspended around the neck.
f^^f^ n. A perplexing afFair,
a trouble : a ddemma, scrape. 2
Scheme, enterprise, wild pro-
iect; a calumnious invention.
r^JTrfr «. That is fall of plots
and projects, or of injurious and
mischievous pranks and prac-
tices: bustling, enterpriiiing;
meddling, quarrel-kindling.
fc^^T^^ ad. A formation ex-
pressive of the manner of the
sudden bending or yielding to
pressure of a slight thing (cane,
stick, &c).
r^^qryqfj^ ^^ Slight, tender.
2 fig. Feeble, weak,
\^^^ f. n. Plastering over
(with mud, &c.) 2 The coating so
effected, v. 'EII^. 3 iig. Aspers-
ing. V. ^\^.
Vm^ f. A hiding- place.
r^q^f, f^q^ V. c. To daub
over with, to smear. 2 To build
up (a little wall, &c.) by casting
dabs of mud together.
Tm^ V. i. To hide.
M^f. (s) Writing, a cha-
racter. 2 Fainting, drawing. 3
Smearing.
r^R" p. s. Plastered. 2 fig.
Soused over head and ears;
engaged deeply (in a trouble).
r^Frr^'T v. %. To be impli-
cated in (some criminal act).
1^^ The nimb tree.f^f^, &c.
See fifg-, &c.
\^m^ (a) Costume. 2 Dress.
3 Gorgeous pageantry.
m^^\ V. c. To write. 2 To
draw, trace. f^f%w g*3iJf n.
A general terra for the acquire-
ments or the arts of reading,
writing and ciphering. 2 also
F^r^^ 5H^?2. General terms
for law or official papers ; a
document, a deed ; for a writing
in gen,
r^ST /. Sport.
r^^r/. s A young louse or
the egg of a louse.
^r<^ /. A nit. 2 fig. A white
spot (or a peeping out of the
cotton) as occuring here and
there upon cloth worked with
silk, &c. threads.
^l^ /. The dung of ele-
]>aants, horses, asses or mules.
^^^ a. -s Absorbed into. 2
IJumble, lowly.
^fc^r /. (s) Sport, play. 2
See ^Wl^fTI":.
Wfc^f^cTR A common term
for the avatars of the Hindu god
Visbnoo. They being held to
have been movements for diver-
sion.
^WA^% f. (s) The name of
a treatise upon Arithmetic. 2
A sportive woman,
J^^^oy y^ i^ r^^ glitter;
sparkle. 2 To flicker — a li^ht.
3 To beam; — as the counte-
nance.
cj^^tr /. Glitter; sparkling,
2 The quivering of an exi)iring
lamp; and fig. of departing
life. 3 The bright freshness (of
the countenance, -I'c.)
g"-^%cr c. Glittering. 2
Flickering. 3 Beaming.
^fi^R 11. f. Loss : damage.
a. Weak, firm.
^^^[% /. Loss. 2 Weak-
ness.
^^^ n. A cloth worn as a
garment by women,
^^.T'^Tr / Plundering. glTT-
^of. V. c. To rob. ^?rr'^ a.
That robs,
^^'^ V. i. To undergo plun-
dering— used of persons and of
pro|jerty. v. i. To become de-
bilitated and infirm : to becomo
fagaed, jaded.
^^r^^f y^ ^^ To plunder,
pilh
^^ot, g^^ V. i. To suck the
mother ; — used of a beast.
5^^r V. c. To pluck up (the
hair of head, &c.) by pincers. 2
To tear.
V.
5^r^'^ V. c. To plunder. ^'
"xil^v^r, f. Plundering.
^qfj-^r -ij-g-f a. Bare or void
(of the usual ornamental accom-
paniments).
^^r a. (h) Dissolute, liber-
tine ; — used of persons.
^^it, ^%RCr/. Dissolute-
ness, profligacy.
5'J^f V. c. To plunder, strip;
to rob (a multitude, or of many
things, or with violence or law-
braving openness).
^EJ?:/. Wild or lively run-
uing about (as of children,calves,
rats). 2 Overflowing plenty, a.
Tittle, scanty; — used of affairs or
business : cursory, shallow — ^aa
affair or a doing, ad. In a trice.
^'^^^ -^ ad. Imit. of the
sound or expressive of the man-
ner of short and quick and light
steps in walking. ^s^TfrT a.
Tight and light — a person or
his body.
^rm V. c. Casual of ^-
ui. 2 To give profusely.
55"f37 a. Acquired by plun-
der.
^STlT n. A multitude of
plunderers.
^in -fr -^ a. That plun-
ders. |-ijjg_
^-^r^ /. General plunder-
^^% -51-^ «• ^ «'^. False,
feigned. Used in boys' plays.
380
t^TSR
^TJ^^r a. False, &c.
5^^J^/. Officious and vexa-
tious intermeddling.
^^lof y^ I 'Yq meddle
with vainly.
^¥|"^r a. That interferes
and troubles with bis prate.
3"^r^^ a. Old and infirm ;
— used of man, beast, &c.
3"^n o. (II) That babbles.
5^ /?. s Cut off, rejected. 2
Thrown into oblivion.
^^rr a. (II) That officiously
and impertinently obtrudes his
prate or otherwise intermedles ;
troublesome by unrequired inter-
ference.
^^^^ -^f ad. An imitative
word used in angry reviling and
repressing of a person's talk
considered as obtrusive or pert :
??T¥. 2 Imit. also of the sound
or motion of rapid munching (as
that of a goat), v. ^t : also
of a quick and light patter
of trotting v. 'gj^ ; also with
. ^x;ot, of a (shaking or brisk
agitation.
5^1^% /. Robbing. ^^\^^\
/-. c. To rob, pdl.
^'"^^ p. s Affected with desire
of. 2 Cupidinous. 3 Intent
upon.
^-^^ s A hunter. 2 The
liiuitcr, i. e. Sirius or Dog-star.
^~-A^ V. 7. To be affected
with greedy or intense desire
after.
^^"^^ V. i. Poet. To long
for, hanker after.
^^\ a. (ii) Withered or dis-
torted ; crippled, paralysed :
^^\^\^^\ a. Crippled gen. ;
wanting in an arm, hand, or leg.
2 ^rl'^tl^ pi- The handless
and Itgless, the crippled and
halt.
^^^1' ??51/(u) Coaxing.
5^^r ■^\f. Freshness, lus-
tre ; health in fruits, plants, the
countenance. r^^„
^^^^^rcTa.Fresh and bloom-
^^^fT'^r V. 7. To have a clear,
dorid, blooming or healthful ap-
pearance— fruits, plants, counte-
nance, &c. 2 To be highly eager.
^o5T See ^^r.
^oJr^^r a. Old and infirm.
^o^r^^r a. Crippled and
crazv.
^c5" n. The mobility, canaille.
^^ f. Robbing. 2 Booty,
spoil. 3 fig.Wastefid distribution.
4 Exceeding plentifulness.
^^ f. A cutaneous disorder.
^^ A son. 2 /. A daughter.
Note. ^^ is not Child, but
Child of.
^'^W 11. A child of.
♦.. *^«
eS'^fSST A male bastard- ^"
^^o5^/- A female bastard.
^krqf^ n. -^\ 7)1. Childhood.
2 Childishness.
^■^T^l^r -5?r a. That has
children ; a family-man. 2 fig.
That has a cross shoot — a root
of turmeric.
^^ (s) A writing ; an epis-
tle, a bill. 2 Handwriting.
55"?^^ A writer, scribe. 2
That writes, traces.
c7<^^[ f. A reed-pen ; a pen.
^ii'ni^q:! ^^ -j^r -^f^rjr a
pensman.
c=5"^°T V. c. To esteem, reckon.
2 To write.
c^X4'[ n. H Writing.
^t5r7^ m. Comprehensive
terms for papers of law, state,
^of'^^«- [dence.
c^?^q"iTI'^ n. Written evi-
^^r Estimation, regard. 2
A written document. Ffliinsv
^^rr^r a. Weak, siUyi
^^ 71. (s) A lump of excre-
ment of man, dogs, rats, cats,
and wild beasts. 2 A- lump of
I scvbala.
^^ /. (h) a nodule of the
dung (of sheep, goats, horses,
camels, rats, &c.) 2 A lump of
scvbala. 3 A crupper.
^'T V. c. To put on (trin-
kets) ; to lay on (pigments, &c.)
n. Articles of personal decora-
tion. 2 Figures (of city-gates
&c.) described upon the wall in
the month '^'^ in honour of
T[jx!\. 3 The excavations
found in several parts of India
ascribed to the Pandava princes.
o^^^^iry. Besmearing.
c^2^"^(J| y_ f,^ 'Pq besmear,
bediudj (an object) : to rub over
(a substance).
^^ (s) Plastering, daubing.
2 A casting (of paint, mud, &c.)
3 Materials to be smeared with.
^ or ^7 ?«. 71. A sort of
quilt.
^^^ V. c. To plaster (an
ol)ject) : to rub over (some
material).
^T'T n. s Plastering, smear-
ing. 2 Any material to bo
^smeared over. [.Hspute.
^M" 71. A litigation or any
^^m, ^^'m n. (h) a a
auction.
^^f ,^^r^/. (H) Borrovv-
mg and lending. [portion.
^^ (s) A bit; a minute
•\
^^ (ii) Ready or prepared
(for a work or action).
^?r a. s (Possible, fit, &c.)
to be licked, i. e. to be eaten by
licking; — used of a medicine
(as a bolus, &c.) : possible to bo
licked gen. n. A medicine to be
taken by licking, a linctus.
•s
"^f^ (s) People, mankind,
folks. 2 A people ; a class :
pi. Domestics, guards, &c. 4 The
world ; a strange person ; ono
of the i)Cople. 5 A world, a re-
gion. ^T^^^ Popvdar ap-
prehension or acceptance con-
cerning ; ^T^^^r/. Popular
talk : %{^TT'!J .4 term for God
or for king ;^T^^I^i3op. -55
srr^JT
381
5rr^Tr
A king. 2 A regent of a ^T^ or
region.
^l^^^J^' Common report.
^T^qf^"? a. Popular, ge-
■ neral ; known to the people.
^I^«^I^T /. Popular obser-
vance ; established usage, v.
■ xi^, H^, ^^o5, "KIT, ^To3Jr. 2
Deference to the people.
?n^r,^[^^/. Wool. 2 Down.
^T^^ «• Woollen.
c7(^5^^^ry. Regard to pub-
lic opinion. 2 The fear or shame
of the multitude.
♦\
c^r^^r?" Common report; po-
pular talk.
c^r^i^^^^f^ Popular usage.
»\ c-^ «^
cJI^f^TK^nf Common cus-
tom.
e5T^r^r$r ad. By oral com-
munication; traditionally— a
matter lieard, received. 2 By or
through the people — a matter
effected.
c^r^[^ See ^U^^.
c^f^[Tl?r a. (s) Transcen-
dent, surpassing.
c^r€^[^r^ (s) Salvation of
manlcind : saviour of mankind.
^l^m^l^ A public charity.
^raR^K The doing of any
act to conciliate the public; such
act.
*\ <
c^r^^ n. Iron.
^r^^i^r a. Composed of iron;
relating to iron. 2 fig. Hardy — a
constitution. 3 Close and hard —
wood. 4 Ardent and unyielding
— a fever.
^r^tr^r^ /. a red earth.
^r^l'rfJfCT A term for Lea-
den types and for Printing.
^\m^\'^T False brocade.
^f^l^r^^rr a railway.
^R^ n. A bunch of plan-
, tains.
^^{"^Z -^ a. Tough. 2 Elas-
tic. 3 fig. Persisting in spite of
denial; obstinate.
^I"^^ 71. (s) An eye.
^l^ A huge and impetuous-
ly-proceeding mass (of water,
air, men, &c.); a surge. 2 The
rolling (of a wheel). 3 The
pressing and impelling iniluence
(of a stream, and fig., of oratory) :
the bearing upon (of business
or cares). 4 fig. Overbearing
copiousness (of things in gen.)
^\Z^ (h) a species of pi-
geon ; a tumbler.
^\Z^ y. c, (h) To roll, bowl.
2 To push (along, at, in) vehe-
mently. 3 To urge on and cast
impetuously upon (as an ele-
phant, a horse, a body of troops,
upon the enemy). 4 To push
forcibly to. v. i. To roll over and
over, to wallow. 2 To roll or
sweep along. 3 To flow on ; —
used of time. 4 To tumble upon
bodily and overwhelmingly — a
building. 5 To roll down in
streams — tears : to come swell-
ing and rolling along — a river,
a torrent. 6 To drive towards
or in weighty mass ; — used of
dashing rain, clouds. 7 To
be overfiowingly profuse — corn,
profits, &c.
^r^r (h) An earthen pot
used on waterwheels, &c. 2 A
metal pot.
c^r^'f^T'^ 72. Proceeding (to a
temple, &c.) by rolling one's self
over and over. v. gj^fT. 2 A
roll (over the body or a thing).
^IZmZ -Z{ /. Pushing or
shoving. 2 Forcibly driving
along (of things, of a ti-ade, &c.)
^F'^f /. A metal waterpot.
^iZ\ -Zm a. Stout, sturdy.
^rjr^^ A term for a sturdy,
ignorant,and unrestrained fellow
^"^l^-^m. n. c A long bolster
for the back of sitters to recline
upon. 2 fig. A raised seam.
^FS""^ n. R A clog (tied
around the neck of a bullock,
&c.) 2 fig. A clog. 3 fig. Any
cumbrous thing.
^rST See ^f^" sig. 1, 4.
o5T^^ST a. Fresh, brand
new : ^t» "^^ -"^f^S? --gmT.
^R^r^r a. Used of a very
blunt weapon,
^m^ n. Pickles. 2 fig.
App. to a double-dealing man.
^RKF A casle. They are
charcoal makers and lime burn-
ers. [%}.
^F'^r n. Butter, v. ^15", R?,
^F^/. (h)' a corpse. 2 A
term for a bulky and lubberly
l)ody.
^[^ (s) Catting off; used as
agrammatical term for the elision
of a letter. 2 Cancelling, extinc-
tion : ^T^ -^Tf -mifrf -#Ttr.
^Fqof V. I. To be cut off, to
suffer elision ; to be cancelled.
c^F^^^^t ^^ I Tq dangle ; to
swing. ^T^^ST -«Slo3T Dang-
ling or swinging, v. $, ■^.
^\W^ V. i. To be suspended,
to hang. 2 fig. To be depend-
ing ; to remain unsettled — a suit ;
to linger, to be in suspense.
^f^^ n. R A pendulous
head of corn in gen.
^F^F$FRr /. Strenuous and
varied efforts.
•\
^F^ (s) Greedy desire ; ava-
rice. 2 Affection or favour.
^m^ -3:^ (a) Olibanum.
^fiTlffS* a s ^fTiTST, ^F^fr (s)
Greedy. 2 Stingy.
^FH n. (s) pop. 7)1. n. A hair
of the body.
c^r^c^r /. A small anchor.
^fc^^ (s) The pendant or
drop of an ornament.
*\
^Fo^r (s) The tongue of a
bell ; the penduluin of a clock.
^FC n. s Iron. 2 A medici-
nal preparation from iron.
^k^tcT n. m. (s) The load-
stone.
c^[^^'7^ The loadstone. 2
fig. A term for a perseveringly
importunate applicant.
^FC^^^ n. Rust of iron or a
medicinal preparation from it.
^F^^^ a. s Ferreous.
c^frr
382
W^^
^IK]T (n) A caste. They are
smiths.
^n:Rtr/. The business of
the hlacksniith.
^r^f^^r^/. A smithy.
^TCcT n. s Blood. 1 Red-
ness.
c^rs" Rolling over and over.
V. g, m^. 2 Worried or
wearied state : ^T^T'^ ^T^T
f^^T^T ^T^ ^^T. 3 A term
for a sqiiiit, thickset, and round-
bellied child ; for any over<rro\vn
nnimal : ^^"=^1 - g'JT^T^T '^ilo?.
;?5"f3:^3" -^ /. Rolling one's
self on the ground (esp. as in
urgent entreaty or in obstinate
resistance), v. if, *TI<C. 2
The jumping upon and rolling
over one another (of dogs
in play), v. ^. g. of s,
c^fSJq -tJfr / See ^l^4i^-
cffaroT y. 2. To roll over and
over (on the ground) : to trail
along. 2 tig. To lie about un-
used and unheeded — a thing :
to lie about without service — a
person.
c?[^^ /. The state of lying
and rolling about ; i. e. the state
of jirostrating sickness and great
distress las of peojjle during an
epidemic).
^r^ff^ u. c. To roll over
and over. 2 Cant. To knock
down : ^T?:t^1 ^^t tl^ ^f-
^l^\ Thccliipperofabell. 2
A piece of flesh as bitten or
pinched out. v. V, ^TT, ^TS.
3 The uvula.
^dc2T y. A small bell-clapper
or tongue ; a small ])en(lnlum ; a
pendant of an earring, a jewel, or
a chandelier ; (with f=fiiT^f)the
uvula; (iraajl^, JIesji^T^^I, or
a^l'^T JIS3TT 'HTSt^'O a dewlap;
^T^ff)the hard or cloggy mass
of food or of medicine in a mouth
dry from checked saliva ; i^^-
^r^-*TT^) a ball of viscid
snot or a pendulous gob of
phlegm. 2 (Or ^T5SV\ -Tjft)
The wild rolling or itch to roll
(as of horses, &c.) v. ^, ^T"?I,
*TK, ^. 3 Desire (as from
drowsiness) to lie down. v. ^.
o A small anchor of a particular
kind.
c^n^^ a. (s) Popular, gene-
ral, familiar from long establish-
ed or extensive prevalence — a
custom, practice. 7». Fame. 2
Publicity. 3 Public affairs ;
secular business, the world :
f^?ft a. Popular. 2 Smart in
worldly business.
^ The twenty-ninth conso-
nant.
^ conj. (a) And.
^^^ n. (a) Any branch (of
a business) ; a department, pro-
vince : the agents, iiistruuients.
^^^\^, ^^\^^, ^ra^r /. (p)
The duties, office of ■g^']^.
^^^r^^nTr,^r^?^rcr^i^rw. ^-
^s^Til^ n. Thc'Credentials fur-
nished to a vakil, a power-of-at-
torney.
^?jf^ (a) An ambassador,
envoy, factor.
^^^ (a) Cleverness, sense.
^tIT n. m. (a) Time, a space
of time. 2 A time. 3 A hard time.
^tK°^^/. s (Purposed, proper,
necessary) to be spoken, n. A
dictum : saying.
^tIT^R ad. According to oc-
casion, season. 2 Apropos,
^^1 a. (s) Thati-peaks. 2
Eloquent.
^Wr^r^sr/. A time of dan-
ger, difficulty.
^TF^f n. Ability to ppeak :
('I()f|ucnce, oratory.
^^^ 71. s The mouth : the
face.
^^ a. (s) Crooked, bent. 2
Of devious course. 3 Of back-
ward course — used of a planet
4 fig. Fraudulent, tortuous.
f^^^ a. s Wry mouthed.
^^^^./- Oblique vision. 2
fig. Malignant view. 3 Squint-
eyed : envious, &c.
^^^ A time.
^R^f'^ Z'. Ravenous hunger;
fig. Inappeasable greediness. 2
Tearing and worrying as by beg-
gars, duns ; the corroding (of
cares). 3 Teasing, deriding.
^^^mot V. i To be aftected
with ^^^^.
^^K f. (u) a w^arehouse.
^^T^^TT, -^^TKl The keeper
of a ^^K.
^^ f. Countenance, favour (as
of great people) : influence with
them, interest.
in n. s Tin. 2 Lead.
^n^ n. Grease applied to
the axle of carts. [cept.
^T^ 2)rqj. Without, or ex-
^n^ a. Bad, foid, nasty.
^^ /. Refuse, dregs. 2
Worthless, bad.
^IT^%/. Casting out; omit-
ting.
^^'^A V. c. To cast out ; to
(Imp disregardfully.
^^ (p) And the rest, et
cetera.
^5r Vnlg. See °^^.
^^aS<^]f^ verbal of ^^TST^.
^^^^ 0. c. To make to run or
slip, I. e. to slip ofl'[gems, flowers,
&c.)from a string. 2 To pass by, to
skip over, ^i To draw off (as a
portion of the rice, sugar, &c.)
from the flow of the daily ex-
j)enditure. v. i. To ooze, run. 2 To
slip ; — as a gem or bead from its
string, or from the ear or nose, a
ring from the finger, &c. &c. : to
stream forth ; — as grain from its
sack, any substance spilled: to
split up or run in its bore ; — as
the ear or nose ; to lircak nj), and
fall asunder; — as a string. 3 To
flow off ;— as earth under the
scouring cf a torrent.
^^ n. vS Speech, saying.
^^^ (ii) Awe; impression
5-=^^
883
^r?h7
of fear. v. iHT, "^TSfJT, "qToJ,
TT3, H^. 2 Sudden fright, f.
^, -^g. 3 Notion, tliought. v.
aiT, ^T-
W^ a. (s) That cheats ; a
f^'^^^'*; [di-cail of.
^^^^ y. i. To be filled with
t^^ ^^ c. To cheat. 2 To
skip, miss knavishly.
^^•T n. (s) Speech : word,
promise, &c. 2 A dictum, a rule.
3 In gram. Number : ij^qf^-Jr.
?^^ n. ^*^r/. (s) Cheating-,
deceiving. [oral compact.
^'^^^\^f. Oral stipulation :
^l^^cT p. (s) Cheated, impos-
ed upon.
^^, ^^^ ad. (vulg.) Slowly,
easily.
^^^ V. i. To get careful
treatment : «rfT xi'ta^ ^3T^,
^^'T 71. (a) Gravity, heavi-
ness. 2 A weight. 3 fig. Infiu-
ence. -^orvf^T^ a. Weighty. 2
Influential. ■q«j«r^T^ /•
Authoritativeness. «i^«fl a. Of
Aveight, not of capacitv.
^5f7r -^r Excess, deficiency
(of one substance, action, as al-
lowed for, and removed by deduc-
tion, or supply from, or to some
other substance, or action, or at
some other time), v. ^IS, g,
■^T^- 2 Counterbalance, com-
pensation : f^T'^ iT^T *ttt:^
^'^\ a. (a) Subtracted, v.^^,
"^T, ^^. 2 In the manner of:
^^[r^r^r /*. Balancing, or the
balance of an account, v. mK-
2 Subtraction. 3 Tlie result of a
subtraction.
^f3?fK See ^t^STK.
^r^fHcT/. The office of ^^R.
^r^lfr a. Relating to ^flC.
2 See qffai^TFr.
^^K (a) a prime minister,
a vizier. 2 The queen at chess. .
^^ n. m. (s) The thunder-
bolt of Indra; a tliunderbolt. 2
A diamond. 3 Lightning. 4 fig.
A term for an impetuous and
overawing man (of war or science).
Ex. of comp. ^^^3^ -S^-'^fg.
^^SffcT A thunderstroke. 2
fig. A severe loss.
^5^^?" A term for a robust
and hardy body; iron frame.
?S^5^r?" s Fierce and fixed
hatred.
f^T^^ An impregnable
hold, asylum, &c. (^TTj 91^-
TTfJI'TTrg ^o II Ps. xviii. 2.
^S^qff^rr /. Trying of dia-
monds. 2 fig. Severs examina-
tion_
^^mS" /. A weapon of the
athletse. 2 f. m. An iron or hard
fist.
^^^c^^ A coating of very
hard mortar. 2 A very bard
mortr\r. 3 fig. Ajip. to express
the durability, immutability, &c.
(of promises, decrees).
rv r
^S^^r^ n. The sperm a geni-
tale of monkeys.
^>^r jf, A hard and rough
stone or brick, or a metal-plate
of roughened surface.
^2" s Indian fis: tree.
^^^ V. c. To roll (cotton)
with an iron or a wooden bar to
force out its seeds. 2 p. To pile
(grass, stones, &c.) n. The im-
plement, with which raw cotton
is rolled in being seeded.
^Z^W\^\ /. The day of full
moon of ^2 ; on which the
■^3^ is worshipped amongst
women.
^Z^Z f\ Gabble, jabber.
^Z^Z^ V. i. To prate.
^Z{^'6\^ a. Large, round, and
full— eyes.
^Zi^^ V. c. To exchange
(money).
^jg-lWr /. The divinity
fancied to be in the ^^ tree
when worship is i)aid to it.
^^^^5 A circular order.
^ZR^ y. i. To stare at an-
grily,
^rf (h) Exchange, balance
of currencies, v. ^, x^^g-.
^Z\\^'^ See ^ZT^^.
^lt^\ f. (s) A bed (of a
garden, &c.) 2 A pill. 3 A cake
or ))at.
^^i^ p. Rolled for the se-
paration of its seeds — cotton. 2
Staked, piled.
^Z^Tm ad. Into the state of
subjection (reduced, brought,
come) — an animal by hard
labour, iron, &c. by beating.
«?3"[TTS' A reproachful terra
for a bachelor.
r
^^^r^ y; The manners,
ways, airs, &c. or the proper of-
fice of those considered as elder.
^5"^RR"^r a. Ancestral.
?^c^f7rrsTcT a. Amassed by
one's ancestors — wealth, &c.
^^^m^ a flying fox.
^^^m s A fabulous sub-
marine fire. 2 In mythology. A
being consisting of fiame, but
with the head of a mare, and
existing in the ocean.
^^^f(%fr See ^^Tl'^ff.
^^f A small and smooth log.
2 A cylindrical piece of timber.
^^1 A cake made of pulse.
^^-flRHFJ n. Sea-salt which
forms in large lumps.
^^K^i. A troop or company
of the ■g^TK^ people. 2 e.
An inilividual of this people.
^rV^Cr See ^^^rc.
^^r /. A pat or cake.
f^fcT An ancestor. 2 A se-
nior or an elder. 3 A superior in
age, wisdom, &c. 4 App. to one's
father.
^Sfr^gfn m -^ n. A person
of a family of whom it is the
business to punish, repress, and
keep the children in order.
^I^f^^qicqn/. The line of one's
elders.
^tl^qmiTcr ad. Come by
g-^
884
gr
desceut througli a line of ances-
tors.
^fTc^iTR A due of the elder.
^S" n. An act of revenge, v.
^, ^3T^, ^T^. - Amends.
^^ in. n. A scar ; mark left
by a wound, boil, &c. '^ Used in
public papers before the word
^l", indicating that ^W or
pasture-money is chargeable.
^^^ f. A mercantile excur-
sion ; a commercial tour.
^^^K n. -^r m. -fr/. a camp
of the ^TTlafTrt people: that
class collectively.
^^^K\ -ti A caste. They
are carriers of grain, &c.
qoyq-of y I Xo incline for-
wards, to stoop.
^^^\ Conflagration of a
forest. 2 fig. Furious e.\citement.
^'^^r a. Stooping.
^"^r A form of the word
■^\V{\ ; as T^^^S^^'^, ffl^^vft.
^arf. (s) As, like, in comp.
^^ .An affix signifying pos-
sessor : 55g^rT.
^cT c A share (of a patrimo-
ny, &c.) [tate, rigbt, due.
^^'T n. (a) An hereditary es-
^^^^K c. (p) A holder of a
vatau. •^ff'T^T^^/. The hold-
102; of a vatan. ■g?i«rq^ n. The
title deed of a vatan. ^ri^r^^
. A coheir; a fellovv-hereditary
officer. ^rT'ST^T^ ./". Estates,
and such like. ^rT^ <i. Ob-
tained by inheritance or pur-
cliase. 2 Relating to vatan — a
deed, &c.
^^otj^cTprot r.i.To enter into
and occupy — a devil.
^^^^ f. Idle roving. 2
Prate.
^f'r,^^R ad. On the part
of, on the behalf of.
^'<^ m. n. (s) A calf. 2 App.
in endearment to a child.
T^^ (y) A year.
^^^^ n. (s) Affectionate,
loving: ^^ ^o, ^-^-[^ ^o.
^^'•"I^ f' Poet. Confessing,
declaring : narrating, saying.
^^'^ V. c. To confess. 2 To
profess, avow. v.c. & i.To narrate.
• *^
^^^ V.C. To worship, adore.
^^^l f. Rumour, report.
^^^r /. Poet. Speech.
t^"? n. (s) Adoring, wor-
sliip]iing. 2 Laxly. Messing (of
one's dish at a meal) : disorder-
ly scatteriug about, v. ^x:.
^^•T5Tr55" a. Very respectful :
courteous.
^^^ n. (s) The face or the
mouth.
^^%^ a. (s) (Fit) to be wor-
shipped.
^^^ /• Constant and im-
pairing action (upon a road, &c.
n])on the clothes, &c.); treading
and beating, wear and tear.
^K^ p. s Worshipped.
^^ a. (s) An epithet used
with the -word xjg and with
the names (f|-<ff^T, <S^^T,
&c.) of the days of the lunar fort-
night, implying Dark, waning,
&c.
t?r See ^^-im.
^*^ (s) Killing : ex. of comp.
fqfT -TT?r -it]^y^.
W'-l'n V. c. To kill.
^T /. (s) A bride : a wife. 2
A female of any age between
that at which females are deemed
marriageable and the age of pu-
bertv.
*^
^'-T^^ n. pi. The bride and
the bridgegroom.
^'■^ a. (s) (Possible, purpos-
ed, &c.) to be killed.
^'■^ a. (s) Barren. ^^^F/. A
barren woman.
t^-^fj^ ^ term to express
an impossibility.
^'T n. (s) A wood, grove. 2
A wild. 3 In comp. Wild, not
tame, not cultivated : ^«r !??>
^*T /■ Price paid lor pastur-
age. 2 Pasture.
=H^f^r f. Sporting in woods
and wilds.
^^\^ f. The wild cow.
^•T^r That lives in woods
and wilds.
^^^^cTT/. A sylvan deity.
^ijr^-r n. Dining in a wood
or garden; a picnic.
f^WfcTry. A chaplet worn by
Krishna. 2 A garland of wild
flowers.
^^f ^, sr=r^=Tf r^r -^\ ad. From
one wood to another ; largely and
loosely about ; — used with fqf-
T^", f%Vm, VI^^OT, &c.
^=i"fr See ^"^^r.
^'f^f^ Dwelling in a forest.
2 A wild, unsettled manner of
life.
^•T^ w. Si" f. 1)1. A term for
a husband's sister.
^^'TfcT/. (s) A tree or plant
in gen., yet esp. one of medici-
nal virtues.
^['\'^{ f. s A woman.
^'^ a. s Produced in or be-
longing to a wood.
^^"7 n. s Shaving. 2 Sowing.
^Tf/. s Fat or suet. 2 'Vhe
])eritoneum. 3 The glutinous
secretion of the ilesh or hones. 4
The marrow of the bones.
^J n. s The body.
mT'T" v. c. To vomit.
^^•T 71. (s) Voniitting.
^^ 71. (s) Age, time of life.
^^/. A hedge.
^^^^ a. (s) Advanced in age.
^^^{^ a. Of mature age ;
adult. ■^?JTff1fT a- Very aged,
■^^qt a. Having age ; as 3T^-
■^■^\. -^^TJIfT a. Very aged.
■^iJRW «• « Aged.
^^ A bridegroom: a hus-
band.
^r (s) A boon, a blessing;
csp. in the gift of a Brahman,
[ guru, or god. v. %. a. In
^
385
^^fl-
comp. Best, excellent : rl^-
^r prep. Up to ; up to the
period of: ^Tsi'-^x:, ^Vl^'':.
^X^^ -2" a. The others, the
rest.
^^^'Hf a. That operates on
the surface ; that has only nii
iippearanoe; hollow, superiicial.
fTTic^ -^^ m.f. n. A test-
stouc for gold.
^^^W a. Fit only fur the
culture of ^?:^ij — soil.
^^^ a. Of the superior test,
of higher quality — gold. 2 Su-
peiior; coIltrolli^^ over: "g"-
^\m^. m. Superiority or ad-
vantage (as established, exercised
or obtained over), ■^^^,'^T^^,
^^^ /i, m. A conimnn term
for the infej-ior cereal grains aud
])ulses.
m^m, m^m^i a. showy,
specious; line, good: saperli-
cial : pretended.
^l^ (A) A leaf (of a book).
•J. A leaf (of gold, &c.) 3 A leat
or half-sheet (ot paper).
^r^^^'T V. c. To scratch ; to
lacerate the surface. 2 fig. To
plough superficially : to write
awkwardiy. v. i. To acquire a
smattering of.
^^vf^f A scratch.
^^^-4 Extra costs.
^rc=ff a. Covered with gold,
&c. — a leaf.
^f:^J^ ad. Up and down.
^^J]^ f. A dechvity.
^TSroi V, t. To roll down or
along. 2 To tumble down forci-
bly and bodily. 3 To roll along
in bulk and force — a torrent. 4
To stream, gush, or fall out in
quantities : -^urgi?!;^ ^TtTJT,
«T^^f?f The train or marriao^e
procession of a bride and bride-
grooni. [ing.
tT^ «. Excellinir, surpas-^-
49
^^qr (?r & p) A superin-
tendent. 2 fig. One that lords it
over. 3 Superiority over.
^^"^r a. Relating to the up-
' per part. 2 Western.
I ^^^f^, m^^m ad. Upon,
I up (emphatically ; up, &c.) as it
! was or should be; i. e. without
i falling. 2 In close consecution. 3
1 Quickly, in a trice.
I -^Xm See ^i^.
I f^rir^qr -sr a. Nearsighted,
] a myope. 2 fig. Lofty-looking,
! hftuglity. 3 That stares.
I^^'^V'a dish of pulse. 2
(■^^ii^*) Choosing or accepting
in marriage. 'S Appointing, se-
lecting. 4 m. (^tfT) An ulcer.
^^oj^icf A term for a rnar-
riage-couple, of which the bride
isohleror bigger than the bride-
groom.
^l^lf. Worship at a \^m^
or any ^?W5T*r that is con-
• 'J
ducted by several Brahmans ap-
pointed to succeed in rotation, v.
^, g. 2 The term of each
person thus deputed. 3 Clothes
worn by tlie bride oa the
wedding dav.
^■^^ V. r. To choose or accept
in marriage.
phisage on exchanging coins. 2
Excess arising on certain mea-
surements. 3 Balance over in
hand.
^r?rr,^cfr, ^r^r, ^u^ prep.
On or upon. 2 Over, above. 3
Beyond. 4 ad. Up, aloft, iathe
air. .5 In a superior rank. 6 Up, as
in English ; i. e. (along tlie coast)
— towards the north : or (from
the east) towards the interior.
^T? a. s G ran tin j^ a j)rayer ;
conferring a boon. 2 Propitious,
kiniUy.
^T^^j€ /. The fourth of
W^^m^\/. A benediction, v.
^T^^cTThe bountiful hand
(of the Deity, &c.) 2 App. to a
teacher who gets bis scholars on.
^'^T^ f. Troubling, Imrrai?-
sing, destroying: qCCT^rf -
^o ^T^^^'^ #5dl^ ^'^ '^T-
^. 2 See ^^^. 3 f. It.
Emergent gain ; resulting pro-
fits : ^?§ ^q^ ^5355ft ^' g«
^^^ot r. i. To rave at,
storm and stamp at.
f^^^Rr a.Tliat is in employ
or use.
^X^]mi f, (s) A present
made to the bridegroom by tlui
father of the bride in givin<r her
away. 2 fig. A term for^costs' sus-
tained in fruitless endeavours t4)
recover a loss.
^^f^ H. The granting of a
boon. r-,
7Tr^~ [boon .
"^^^i a. That has obtained a.
^^^ n. Any milk (given to
an infant) as disting. from milk of
the breast.
fn^^J5^ Thp determining of
a husband for.
^?:q?:rm-g%^r a. Outer or
upper; obvious or specious;
showy ; o.stensible.
^m V. c. To draw or rub uj>
(a mare or buffalo) ; i. e. to pass
the hand into her T^XVT and
work about, in order to e.vcito
her unto conception. 2 To draw
or wi])e along (a spilled liquor,
&e.) with the haiui. 3Tofiurrup
up (any liquid food). 4 To strip,
draw, tear off, esp. with rough-
ness, r^
f^ f^ rtree.
^Tmj -m^ a. Ripened on the
^^"^IT Exchange upon,
^^^iq" The father of the
briilegroom.
^^^ V. i. To be touched
in a tender or sore place, lit.
fig. ; to be pricked to the heart.
V. i. To abate or go down — a
tiuiior. 2 To suffer repression.
^^^R/. The mother of the
bridegroom.
^^^r a. Melating to the
upper part.
Wr^rqr?7 /. The curving ed.ge
of the auricle, the helix.
grr^
386
^^T
^r^/. The prevalence, the
state of being ill exceeding abun-
dance : ^mel ^T^SST]^ ^•- 2
Surplus arising or eHected. 3
Satisfaction. 4 A stock : ^^T-
^r^2T A stone roller (for
tbe comminution of spices, &c.)
2 fig. The roller over a draw-
welU 3 fig. A gathering up of
any irusculiir part throuoli
Kpasmodic contraction : this af-
fection, viz. spasm or cramj). r,
V, ^B. 4 A roll or longish
heap of stones formed by each
passenger casting one.
mm ad. Upnti the surface
only ; superficially. 2 In mere
outward show ; ostensibly.
^^^r See ^\^^.
^^m See ^toT.
^TfcT f The company com-
posing the homeward proces-
sion of the bride and bride-
groom. 2 (p) An assignment or
order upon the revenues or a
treasury.
^r^TTrt c. That bears or has
nn order upon the revenues. 2
Ai)plied jocosely to a peon com-
ing with authority from the re-
venue-collector to dun a person
for payment.
^^r^ n. The stern (of a ship
or boat).
^U^ See ^^^^.
^mi f. (p) Workini:^ out,
or the rule of working, arithme-
tically. Hence a monthly state-
ment of amounts now jiayable
(as to the establishment of a
^m^l^rT^TK, «^c.) exhibiting
the increase or decrease on the
amounts i)aid in the mouth
])receding. 2 Average.
^T[K (s) A boar. 2 The
boar-avatar of Vishnu.
^\l^\K nd. Superficially : os-
tensibly.
^ft'Z a. (s) Senior, superior;
surpassing in years, wisdom,
dignity, &c. 2 Greatest, &c.
^^r /. A grass bearing a
gi'ain : the graiu,
^n See ^^ yrej).
^fr?^ ■jn-ej). Relating to the
u])per or outer part.
^t\^ -^ 7?. A year.
^^^ (s) The name of the
deity of the waters and regent
of the west.
^'^^^ y. i. Poet. To rain.
W^ff Poet. Showering
down, lit. fig. 2 A shower.
q"^q prep. From the top (^f ;
from over. 2 From or through :
3 Upon ; in consequence ol :
1^ ^tfjTrl^T •^l^'T fTl ■ir#T. 4
From before or the front-part of;
by : ^ ilT^ Jlfwi^^^ ?I^T- o
Along the surfiice of. 6 After
or upon : ^T^ ^^aT'^^'T m]
iri'l'^l^ ^^#T. 7 Upon: -^l^T-
^l\■^\ See ^[^^f. 2 The
boundary-marking bank thrown
up by the field-surveyor.
^n (s) A class, order, tribe,
set ; a number of things or l)eings
ranged under a common de-
nomination: t}'SlT«T -'l^ -"^T-
^^if. 2 The square of a
number. 3 A chapter, section,
^;'ok. [-j.^,,,e
=r4^'T n. s The square of a
^W^\ f. A share, portion (of
an individual out of a number); a
subscription or contribution (out
of many). 2 The sum of a gene-
ral contribution.
^JT'^Tf^K c. A shareholder:
a^subscriber. [square root.
f^T^^^ 71. (s) In ariih. The
^n^^r^^t^ ?j. s In algebra.
A qundratic equation.
?rfWr /. Classification,
sorting. 2 Gradation ; advance-
ment by seniority : ■^ ^T^^«T
go -^ ■SfT^fTlfT. 3 Misused.
Shifting from and to : as of ^T-
^"^^j W^m n. Superiority.
=r^^fl" a, Superior, pre-emi-
nent.
^ J). n> Excluded. 2 Re-
jected.
TV.
^^^ V. c. To exclude; to
leave out; to omit, to pass by.
2 To leave otf ; to quit, leave. 3
po)). To forbid.
^4f^^r^ (s)An excluded day;
j a day on which works of piety
and religion are forbidden ; also
in which (on the supposition of
its inauspiciousness) important
works are forbidden.
^i^\^ a. See ^^^.
^^-f V. (s) Excluding, kc.
See the verb. ^\8ic
^|5[cf 2^. Excluded, omitted
_ r
^^^ a. (Possible, purposerl,
&c.) to be excluded : (possible,
&c.) to be quitted.
^^ s A colour, tint. 2 A
class, order. 3 A letter of the
alphiibc't. 4 'J'he colour of g<dd
upon tlic touchstone (as indi-
cating its quality). 5 In arith. A
co-efficient.
^^ An ulcer.
l^f^'^^^S'ir n. (8) The four
castes or orders.
^1"^ f. Laudinsr, mao;ni-
fying.
^^^ V. c. To extol, laud. 2
To describe or pourtray.
m^ n. (s) Extolling. 2
Describing, depicting.
^'^%^T a. (Worthy) to be
extolled, &c.
¥m\^\ f. The alphabet.
f°T2T* ad. Class by class.
2 Letter by letter.
^^T^Ff^r (s) A mixed caste.
2 Qonfusiou of castes.
^dtWjT pi. The four ^^
(grand divisions of the Hindu
body) and the four btt^H
(orders of the Brahmans).
^|5t^ /). s Extolled. 2 De-
scrilicd.
j ^t{^ An officer of a town. A
sort of Bailiff or Warden.
I ^t{^^ f. Deportment, con-
1 duct. 2 Living, getting on.
g-^Sf
387
^r^rr^r
^rfot V. i. To behave. 2 To
be, to subsist. 3 To be in force ;
to prevail. 4 To happen :
^Tl^ 71. s Behavino-. 2 Stay-
ing, abiding. 3 Livelihood,
vocation.
c
^tT^R n. s Extant, exist-
ing: having force, vogue. 2 In
gram. Present. 3 u. (s) News,
tidings.
^T\^\^^^ iu a newspaper.
^Tfrt"^ V. c. Active of ^Ti"^.
2 To calculate (eclipses, &c.)
^Tir a s Abiding at, in, on :
^^^ a. s pop. ^^^ Circular.
^Ifl", ^d?fr/. Living from
hand to mouth : ^« ^'^TT "^I-
v{^\. 2 Distributing or deal-
ing out: "yisqi^l ^o "f T?}]'.
r
^^^ a. (s) That increases;
that causes to grow, thrive, ad-
vance.
^^^\ 0. i. To increase.
^^•T n. s Growinir, thriving.
2 In medicine. Augmenting the
animal heat.
^'^'^R a. s (Proper) to be
increased, advanced.
^^m"^ pr. Growing, thriving.
^H' n. (a) a sore and quick-
ly sensible |)lace : tig. a touchy
point ; a vulnerable part. 2
See «K.
"f^f a. Poignant, piercing —
speecii. 2 That is acquainted
with the secrets, faults, trippings
of. 3 That is familiar with tlie
turnings and windings, the art
and trick (of a process, uiaclnne,
&c.) 4 That pierces into the
latent meaumg (of a passage, in
a book, &c.) ; that knows tlie
point. 5 That has tender or
touchy places : qr^ 5^^!^
^^ a. s (Possible, necessary,
&c.) to be chosen; eligible. 2
Chief, main : ^^^^, it'^^v. ^^^'•'ir/. Rowing
^^ V. (s) A year. 2 m. s A
division of the continent as
known bv the Hindus.
<--« ■'
^T'T" V. i. To rain. v. c, fig.
To rain (arrows, darts, &c.)
f^VfcTT?! /. The first day
of the year.
^TTTc^ n. The events of the
year as determined astrological-
Iv on the tirst day of it.
^^r^^ The rainy season.
f^l^ff^^^An anniversary
of; app. esp. to the great fes-
tivals severally.
^^\^^^ ad. Yearly. 2 For
years ; tli rough many years —
lasting, &c. ^ ^ [shower.
^^f^ Showering, lit. fig. : a
^^ra"^ pop. -^'1 n. An annual
allowance.
^^riiJIrrr arl. By years— rec-
koning, &c. /. Reckoning by
years.
ftW acL For years;
through many years. 2 Yearly.
^-Cr^- „. (^^ & -<H\^ Behind
the bridegroom.) A marriage-
procession. V. fM'^, ^]^, 5J^,
f»T5J, ^«Tr, ^T^. 2 fig. A
train of ants. 3 The roaming
about of n cow (csp. in the
morning) to eat up ordure.' ^^^J ^jj oar
Hence any dissolute course. !
T'Kii^i, ^^r[>Tr /-. /;/. The
female jjarly at a wedding.
^'?'r^'^ V. i. To be the sub-
jects of nuptials — a male and
female. 2 fig. To be engaged in
any festive occupation.
f'Cftr a. Relating to a T-^A^
— a follower, guest, &c.
^'gr^R /. A female attend-
ant at a wedding.
^^''^ (A) Son of: n^fir^R
^^^ n. (s) A circle (of me-
tal, &c.) 2 A vertebra3 of the
back-bone.
fc^q"rr^?r a. Marked by a
ring around ; encircled : '^g??
^^\^'^ v. c. To row. 2 fig.
To push on.
^f^'^, &c. See under ^•
^c^ffr An escort; a convoy.
2 The hire of an escort. 3 Row-
ing. V. mK-
^^rP^^ V. See ^^i^^.
^^r (a) A saint, sage, de-
votee.
_ v
^•^ n. An oar: a paddle.
^<^^n An oarsman,
^^^ n. s Tiie inner bark
of a tree : a garment made of it.
^?^^r / (s) Swaggering,
swelling, vaunting.
^^[^ 77. V}. s A hillock
thrown up by moles, &c., but esp.
the mound made by the white
ant.
^e5"? Son of.
^e^iT (s) A hur,band: a
lover. 2 A beloved m<ale person
gen. ^IHT/. (s) A wife : a
mistress.
^^r See?^r. 2 fig. A wild,
wilful, lawless fellow.
^P^r/. (s) A creeping plant.
2 In algebra. x\ series.
^^t'^^^ ^^\^\ see ^M^oj^
&c.
a paddle.
ubdued.
2 Charmed; fascinated.
^^ 13 .Race, lineage. 2 Pro-
geny. 3 A bamboo.
^^^R^ w. s A pedigree.
* _ "^
^^•^3>? m. -•? n. Destruction
of a family, extirpation. 2
Bamboo-splitting.
^5T^ a. s Sprung from a
(good) race.
^2r n. Greasiness. 2 Any
nutritious substance. 3 Vulg.
rie*h meat. a. Greased or oiled.
^^^t^X\ f. The order of a
race; progeny.
fTT^^'tTTRr? -^TlcT ad. Come
unto by descent through the
race ; hereditary.
t^^r^T 71. (s) A flute.
^^ p. 8 SuMJected.
srarr
388
^^r An overseer of fields, |^-q^r /. s The eartl
crops, and the operations of ^ ^
reaping, &c. einijloyed by the
jjroprietor as a {riuinl against
the appropriations of tlie actual
cultivator.
^3Jf3T f, Desolatenes?
^^T Dren. s For,
^3^^f ". Relatinpjto revenue.
ll Yielding good revenue or rent
— land.
^'^'['TETr The grain-revenue,
or on ^9'^f^^'' J- 'llie actual re-
prep
account of, suI)jection to;! ^'-""^*
thiou{,'h the sway of: ^T^- j ^^^c^f^ff^ /". Nett revenue
^5TRr?y / pep. -^^ -3^r
The line of a tribe; the series
of progenitors : a genealogical
table.
^PsT"^ (a) Connection with
great personages, as a means of
{lower or profit, interest : an in-
riuential person as a medium of
u.lvancement. [nent Rishi.
^(TTS" s The name of an emi-
^35T ri. (s) Subject to.
^^"^ n. Rul)bish brought and
left bv a river or stream, alluvion.
^^^^ See l^f^Hn.
^?T^ A bull-calf set at liber-
ty. 2 w. f. also '^^ n. A
ring or band of iron around the
head (of a mallet, rammer, &c.)
to ])revent it from s])litting, a
beetle-ring. 2 The iron lining
within the nave of a wheel or
any roller.
^^^ (a) Revenue, rent.
^^"5^IT c. (n) A collector of
the revenue.
m^m\ f. Balance due of
the revenue.
^^t^^OTj^-^'^I^'Jr V. i. To talk
in sleep or delirium, to rave.
^fT^^I^n^^ n. The register
of the realized and the outstaud-
3-iTrTT • fT« , 1 • 1 : '"- revenue. ffij^ revenue
^^PT r. z. 1o Stay, abide : i^jn-^arrr^ra- ^ Lt"*- le^enue
^ >.. -. - ' -[''d'^qm^lcl f. Account ot
~ =l^w^ltT^l(eveuue, rent, kc.
^f^^ ^^"T. 2 To be located.
•'"> To become peo])led — a country,
&c. V. c. To ])erform or observe
^esp. by vow) some religious rite.
^^Tcf (s) The season of spring;
— ^^ & tsTjI. 2 A xjw or
musical mode. r^g
^TtfcTfy?. a. Inhabited — atov\n,
^#^ft ^\^^ n. Shuffling
speech; jiromises t:) beguile.
'T^'T n. s Clnthes or cloth.
2 Clothing. 3 A dwelling-place,
a mansion.
^^^H;?^ n. (s) Attire.
^^c^lcT .^j\ (a) An heredi-
tary disposition ; a characteristic
mark running through a tribe.
^^Wr (a) Awe: apprehen-
sion. V. QT, "SITS^JT, qioJ. 2
Notion, fancy, v. sir.
^'Ti'^ot ,;. c. To people.
^^^ -? /. (a) Inhabited
country: peopled state.
^^ (s; A kind gf demigod.
^^^ /". A trinket gen. 2 An
article gen.
^^^irr?/: Trinkets, toys, &c.
2 Minor articles of house-fur-
niture, rattle-traps : kit.
^^"Trr (p) A razor.
m^\'^ (p) An adept, a master
(in any art)- 2 A master or tea-
cher, esp. a teacher of singing,
«lancmg, Mrestling, &c. 3 The
man or mutch for.
m^i^rmf. The l)usiness of
a master. 2 Masterliness.
^r*^^^ /". Abiding, stay ng. 2
An aljode. '6 Peopled state : the
|)eople.
^^^ n. (s) A thing in gpn. :
any article ; any affair. Thi^
word is often used in the lern
in-\u\<-r. [tioii
^fJ'P4^H. A faithful niirra-
^fa^^r«f/. In fact, verily.
^^fJI^ n. s The skeleton (o
a discourse, &c.) 2 EverythinL
whatever.
^^m'^f. The natural dis-
position ; the nature.
^^n. (s) Cloth: a cloth. 2
Raiment : apparel.
^f^ms:,^^^?Tr6?|^ a. Strained
thiough a cloth.
^-^^Ki-TR n. Dressino-.
^
^^E-^f^ 71. A comprehensive
term for the articles of apparel,
the culinary utensils, &c. ; one's
traps, kit, S:c.
^^^C[r-:[?:oT n. A t-^rm for the
ordinary articles of apparel.
^^Ffp) A razor. 2 A|>p. fig.
to a sharp, prompt speaker.
^^^ V. (s) A vehicle. 2
Conveying. r,
,-., • " Lborne.
^K^m a. s (Proper,&c.)to be
-7^JTr, ^(CRf (a) Suspicion;
apprehension regarding, r.
^^\Z^ -T^ f, A whirlwind.
^^ffT/. Stream, flow. 2 A
brook. 3 A sandal.
^fC'^r /. A resiiectful term
of address for an elder brother's
wife.
^Twm a. k ad. Poet.
Sejiarate, distinct. 2 Quickly. 3
Certainl}'.
^f?"^Rr f. Administration
or management of. 2 Skill in
carrying on, despatch. 3 Busi-
ness, traffic. 4 Enjoying, using,
use : 'si^K Vi|-5?t ^tjI^T ^o -^
^^"trT 3TT#t. ;'' Praciice: fiir-
=^t-C Intercourse with. / (For
^f^^TS-Tq^) .A rejiort (as of a
public otncer) of las conduct.
^ir^rs:^ V. i. To be holding
inttrcDurse with ; to be working,
acting (in, with, at). 2 To get
over ; to come well out of (a
danger, service, a use), o To
proceed under the conduct of:
to pass on, or to be under the
enjoyment, wear, use of. p. c. To
conduct, manage. 2 To enjoy,
use. 3 To employ : ^T ^I^T
4 To avert or dispose of; to
carry awav or over (a calamity).
^iW^
389
m^^
mW^\^^\X c. The officer en-
trusted with the administration
(of a province, &c.) ; uith the
collection of tlie revenues ((jfa
town, ike.) ; with the conduct (of
an extensive concern) ; a vicege-
rent, a manager, a factor.
^^^f. (H) A Stitched hook
(for accounts, &c.) ; any book
(l)lank, Avritteti, or printed) con-
sisting of a few sheets stitched
together.
^€fJT See ^CJTr.
^^ f. (h) An appellation
for a daughter-in-law.
^<^ A tuiuor arisino- in the
groin, &c. 2 Twist (of a rope,
&c.) 'Am. f. The mark made by a
lash, a weal. 4 Cramp in the
hmbs, 5 m. Impatient, eager-
ness ; itching.
^^ f. A line, row. 2 A line
as drawn by the pen. 3 fig.
Coursdj fashion.
^35^?r/. A roll (of paper,
cloth, &c.) ; anything rolled up.
2 A fold, crease'.
^55"^^ a. Twisted — a rope.
^^m, ^^m^ q^^^ ^, c.
To clasp forcibly or eagerly ; to
grasp, cling to. 2 To 'climb
(a tree), and clamber up. 3 To
grasj) or cling to (a country);
i. e. To waiuler about, v. i
To hang from; to dangle: to
cleave to closely.
^3-=^^/. The hottoMi of a
W^qr. V. elt-iT. Uaderstood in
the sense of Eaves.
^^'^ f. n. Outlines the form,
cast of. 2 A turning ; a bend
(of aroad,&c.).'j Fashion; a line.
4 Intercourse^ dealing with :
^^^T^ffT ^« ?it-^H 7T3I fqr-
^K *<:i^1. -i Disposition,
bent (of the mind). 6 Training,
managing : "^[^^tT '^atirtfi
^^\^. 7 A l)ank raised to
turn the course of a stream.
fS^q^STTT .^^OT n. Inter-
course.
^S-q^-fr a. Well-formed,
neatly shaped. 2 Regular and
correct — a letter. [form.
f^ajg^ «. Of symmetrical
^^"T V. c. To turn ; to move
round. 2 To tend (sheep or cat-
tle). 3 To form (esp. by twisting,
lilatting, &c.) V. i. To assume the
due fm-ni. 2 To turn, bend. 3
To form — the handwriting, 4
To draw u]), in — a linih. 5 To be-
come kiinlly disposed towards:
■^^^- () To become mileh
again — a beast.
^3-q^r, q^iZlf, A roll.
^^^^ -S"f ad. Windingly,
wormwise : with rolling— going.
2 Hurriedly.
^^^^, ^^^7^l y. sinuous
course (as of snakes, &c.) 2 Rol-
ling Irom side to side; writhing.
3 fig. Uestless an.\iety; fidgeti-
ness. V. mx, ^. 4 Fretting. 5
Great itchnig jas of a boil, &c.)
^^^^^ V. i. 'I o wri<jg-le. 2
To writhe. 3 To be restless, lit.
fig.
^^r^"^* V. c. To form, fa-
shion. 2 To turn or incline. 3
To form (the hand at writing,
&c.) 4 To incline or di^^pose to-
wards.5 To form (letters in learn-
ing to write) by drawing the
pen over the letters of the copy.
6 To form (by twisting, plattuig,
&c.)
^^^^r A round ; a turn round
(as with a rope), v. ^, ^i^, q;§-.
^*T f. A line, row. 2 A line
as drawn by the pen. 3 fig.
Course, fashion.
^^Tf p. Twi.<ted, plitted. 2
Strongly twisted. 3 Thick-set,
well-knit. 4 w?. Z". or ^^j^^qj
^^ The rain which falls to-
wards the close of the monsoon.
^^or^5ri'rtf:?r a stallion.
W<^, q^WA'^ n. s The breast,
or chest. [Lipe
^r corij. Poet. Or /. j)l.
mim, ^r^er «. (Vuig).
Little, ad. A little, rather.
qri'^, mk^ «. (Vuig.) in a
very small degree,
^ft7 a. Bad.
mkzm\ a. Indifferently
good ; middling.
^\izm^\ -qr a. Rather had.
^f^^ m. n. The off-portion
of a cooking stove, the hob.
^FTiTi ,/. Bad aen.
^[^/. s Speech, utterance.
^l^ or ^1^ An ornament for
the arm (of females). 2 n. A
felloe (of a wheel). 3 A rib of
a ship. 4 m. n. Cnrvat\n-e, lit.
fig. ; ])erversion, bias. 5 111 terms,
grudge. 6 vi. The filamentous
integuments of certain ))lauts
(fTTJT, 3T^T^"1, &c.)
f i^^r or ^l^-?r «. Crooked,
bent. 2 fig. Hostile or opposed
to. 3 Perverse, wild, wrong.
^i^f\^^f,A i^^ of crook-
ed horns. 2 A cant term for
the tamarind tree.
^r^"^ 71. Curvature; devia-
tion from rectitude ; the bend (of
a stick, road, river, &c.) 3 An in-
let or gulf,
?f^'T V. 7. To bend ; to turn
from rectitude. 2 fig. To stoop,
yield : to be submissive.
/. Tlie office of ^t*«t1^.
^fTJHff^ -^ffr (p) An ofhcer
in a great man's establishment.
He corresponds with Major
Donio.
m^mi -2rrr «. (a) ac-
quainted with; versed in; ex-
perienced about.
fr^^Jirfr / Conversancy
with. _
. r-, V. Lcurve.
Ti^i^^ V. c. To bend; to
^r^'B" //. An adz.
^l^ff ^. Bent, lowered, curv-
ed.
^\pm, ^\^\9^\ f. pi Grin-
ning and mouthing in mockery
of. v. ?[T^^.
^r^^m"4 n. s Cleverness of
spei'ch.
^r^^R^q" n. s Volubility of
speech. 2 Rattle, gabble.
^^qflV^q- n. (s) In irony.
Ready eloquence : gift of the gab.
gr^nrr
390
5rr^^r7
^f^7r^'^ n. s Wordy vio-
lence ; scurrility.
^r^^ n: (s) A sentence ; ;i
sliort parai,'riipli ; a period. 2 A
rulf, inuxiiii.
^I^^rq" s A fault of the
sentence (a violation of grammar,
])uritv, &c.)
^^^1"^^^ f. s Syntax.
^r^f^^K s An expletive.
^^ See ^r^ sig. 6.
^r^r (a) Excessive and
general disorder of the frame
(under some violently-activi.'
flux, fever, &c.) : ^^^^1^I
^r':^r'^/. Praise, ^f^r'^^f.^r-
^TJ^msR f. ExtoUini;, lauding.
■gi^TtToi V. c. To praise, extol,
^m Caniableness : ^FJCf^r
^J3[ A load for eight. 2 m./.
See ^TTTI^. ^\J[ Numbness {n<
from a pressure, &c.) v. v. 2
(^V s) A dark discoloration
in the skin, a mole. 2 fig. A
black sjjot (as arisine; upon gold
or silver) : a mark of the form-
ing hammer (.upon metal ves-
sels. &c.)
^^'55/- Living or moving
at, m, amongst; dealing, acting
with.
^R°T V. i. To have vital ac-
tion ; to lice, move, and have be-
ing (in, at, with, &c.) : to be in
constant converse with : to deal
witli ; to walk, move, «)r live
amongst. 2 To be stirring; —
use\l of passions, lusts, thoughts.
6ic. in tlie mind : to be extant; —
used of writings, fashions.
^f^f^^r ?'. c. To hear, carry
^R n. A brinjal.
^[rsf?T m. -^r /. s Chatter,
prate.
^i^'^rr^ n. s |)op. -^ A conge-
ries of words, prate, galilde.
^[^^^ a. (.s) Betrothed. 2
Given by promise.
^RcT^ s Re pre man (ling,
ri'lmking. 2 Governing of speech.
^[f?R n. (s) Betrothing. 2
(living hv jn-oraise.
Wk^^j, ^[^l?r /. A name
of ?TT?5?n.
^i^cTfT s A fault of speec'n ;
viohition of grammar. 2 A sli|)
of the tongue, lapsus Vukjuce.
^\\^^^ a marriage-contract,
an affiance.
W^\^ s A term tor cuttinii
speech.
^F*Tr^4^ n. Sweetness of
speech. ^TTOlf n. War of
words ; angry'' or brisk contro-
versy.
^rrf£=5"f[, ^R^fTF /. Names
for Savaswati as the goddess of
ehxpience or speech.
q'f|r^?5T^ s Speech as a
sphere of play ; speech-diver-
sion. 2 Sjjeech as ])lay ; i. e.
easy, mellifluous, and graceful
speech.
^F=rfr s A word-hero ; a
Thraso or llodomonte.
m^r,^^ W.iste of breath.
^rn«^FTK Speech, talk,
^l^ A ti^jer.
q"f^3"|OTi[r a. Goggle-eyed.
^r^^ V. A tiger's claw. 2
A tiger's claw set in gold. An
(on, along, through) safely and ornament for children, ci A par
rightly, lit. tig. (a load, a bu^
siness, kv.) 2 or ^THi:^ ^^
To bear with ; to deal consider-
ately and liniently with (a child,
servant, <lebtor).
^[JTl^rr^r a. That is to be got
on w ith ; that is to be used :
ticnlar weapon.
*,. ^*
-^r^f,^Wr^ 7j. The ravages
of tigers.
qr^S" f_ n. A flying fox.
^\^\^\ m^\ f. The thicket
forming the lair or covert of a
tiger.
^FTl^r JTff^r/. A term for
the cat.
^mr/. Brinjal-plant.
^Wf- Chewing the cud. v.
^^./. n. c A 'flying fox. 2 ^r^f^ ^f^^ n. A term for a
A bdt. ' ' person whom, although his
authority and power are depart-
ed, people still view as terrible.
^[tr/. A bag of tiger's
skin. 2 A sort of fast-sailing
vessel. 3 A bodyclotii for a
horse colored as to resemble a
timer's skin. 4 A carpenter's
block .0 A double jioiiited nail,
a tnggel. 6 A smith's instrument.
^rfR/. A ti-ress.
^1^^ "/. n. A "flying fox. 2
c A bat.
^l-'-Tf A class. Tliey are
males dedicated at birth to Klian-
dohn.
^f^^ a. sin comp. That
declares or express : ^]^-
■SJT.-gg ^1=^^ 2 Verbal, m. (s)
A word.
^mr /. Reading. 2. A
lesson to be read ; a lesson as
written upon the M\Z]. v. '^\J\,
^r^^ r. i To live, subsist.
2 To live out ; to escape.
^r^-T n. s Reading.
^r^"^ V. c. To read.
^\'^l^^ a. Of which express
mention is made , declared — a
precept, &.C.2 Textual.
fr^^Cffer (s) A name of f?""
qfff.
^r^r /. (s) Speech. 2 A
matter spoken, esp. a promise.
3 A divine utterance.
^^f^TRT /; l':ioqnence. 2
pop. Power in reading.
^^fS" a. Loquacious.
ff^r^Wf^r /: Endless
chatter, v. ^l^, Jj\^, "m^^,
^\fn^ a. (s) Verbal, oral.
^f "^ or ^f'^'f pi ('I). VV i thout.
2 Except.
^r^^^ a. s (Possible, proper,
&c.) to be spoken. 2 Atribu-
tive, possible, &c. to be predicat-
ed of any subject. 3 Declinable
as an adjective. ?t. s A ])redieate.
2 In griim. A voice (of a verb):
^[^^c^^nr 3 A rhetorical or-
nament ", a figure of the sense.
^H^^
391
g^r^^r
^i-^%^ a. s Desiral)le.
^\'^B\ f. (s) A desire.
^ff^fJ'T V. r. To desire.
■^tf^<T/>. s Desired
^r^r*^ V. i. To emit a sound,
to sound. 2 To l)Ccomc the sub-
ject of public talk ; to be noised
abroad. ."3 To coniennd affect; —
used of cold. 4 To chatter —
teeth. 5 To blow — wind.
^Rcnrf^TcT /,.«f/. With shout-
ing and soundincj of nnisical
instruments ; with much pomp
and clatter — procession.
^fslcrr p. j)r. SoiiiKling.
^R^r^tT/. A tell-tale: a
''"!'''''^;; _ [instrument.
^r^'T -"^ n. A wind musical
^^^ A performer upon ^F-
^\m^[, ^F^l^/. (P) Inves-
tigation ; inquiry into. r.-io-lif-
rr "^ 5^ " Lllj,!!!.
^\'^^\ m a. (h) Fit, pro])er,
^rSfW V. c. To sound (by
beating, touching, or playing
on). 2 fig. To publish.
^f^r s A horse.
^t?r /. A barren female. 2
A male lacking ])ower of procre-
ation. 3 An unproductive busi-
ness.
^\^ a. Rather ^m.
^t^rr a. Barren. 2 Wanting-
the usual pulp, grains, &e.; — used
of fruits, ears of corn. .'3 That
does not bear fruit ; — used of
certain trees. 4 fig. Unprofitable
— a business, labour : barren —
time, season.
^\^^, ^n\ ad. Emptily,
vainlv.
^[5{rroT n. A name for cer-
tain kinds of rice raised in hot
season. [much. ad. A little.
^(^^ a. (Vultr.) Little, not
^f2r f. A female calf of a
buffalo.
^rS"/. (s) A road, way. 2
fig. Course, procedure. 3 Hard-
ness about the navel.
^z%\\^
-S^rr a. A guide.
^r^^^f /". -1^ m. Money
taken to defray the expenses of
a journey.
^THTfir A large metal dish.
^\Z^\Z f. liubbincr and
stirring. 2 fig. Negotiatin
Discussing.
^\Z^\ ad. c That is on the
part of.
^\Z^\ =q"ir Any scamp; any
knave you please.
^rr^r ^r?^^ a mere way-
farer.
^\Z^ n. Levisation. 2 The
matter levigated or taken to be
leviirated.
^\Z^\ /. Distributing. 2
Dividing. 3 A share.
. V. °
mz^ ^7. c. To distribute, to
divide amongst. 2 To divide.
^f-°T V. c. To grind finely
by rubbing with a muller ; to
levigate. 2 fig. To discuss, v. i.
To seem unto : ■afToT tJT^^
^#^^T 4T3^T. 3 To arise in
the mind of (as desirable, &c) :
^\Zm^ .^m a, A highway-
man ; a waylayer.
^\Zmm c A way-farer.
^JZ^\-^\ a. That attacks (to
kill or to rob) upon the highway.
^lZ^^n v. A cant term for
urine.
^\Zm (h) A circular hag (of
shroffs and goldsmiths). 2 A
bag of another kind.
?r2rr=r^ v. c. To pass by tra-
velling on : to cast behind on the
road : =?~1 ^^\k^'^ ^T3:f^^
^vxm 11%K K^^Tir-tF- 2 To
make to elapse ; to get over (an
epoch, a period) : T^'€\ BT'^^
^\Z^T: .^W c. a way-farer.
^\Z\^ mz\ A share, part.
^\Z\^[Z m.f. Vehement ef-
forts; toil, ado. 2 The state of
exhaustion resulting. 3 Harrass-
ed state.
^\Z\f\ -^^r A road-guide.
^IZm (n) A pea.
^\ZR^ V. i. To stare at
angrily ; to glare at.
\mzm\Z f. Distributing (a-
1 mong many bv many, hurriedly
3! &c.)
^\Z\^\Z -^ / Debating ;
discussing vigorously (of a sub-
ject) ; enjoining, interrogating,
&c. with closeness and reitera-
^'^"- ^ [orchard, &c.
m\Z^[ ■^\Z\ /. (s) A garden,
■^-F f. A saucer-form vessel
of metal. 2 A half of a cocoannt-
sliell; a hollow thing gen. like a
cup ; the patella or pan of the
knee; the cuj) of a flower, &c.
^Zm J), Levigated, mashed.
^f^T'^fr A sharer.
^r^^r a. Of the part of: 5T
JI^l" ^^t «TT??IT ^li^T %i^.
mz\a^\ a. R(uind.
f rfrarrmTT -'lf?r 'I'erms for a
subtle, slippery knave ; also for
one round and alike on all sides.
^f^ a. Poet. Large, huge :
131%' ^m ^l# ^l^ fl. 2 Vast,
extended : as app. to Brahma :
^3TT^T3IT'^0t^T^!1 3 Mighty,
marvellous: fVnvi[T'?T7^*? ^T^D-
/. Room, vacancy : leisure,
^^^r See ^r^nrr.
^f^^ n. A small yard.
^fSl'?r?5' pi Ancestors, el-
ders.
^]^^^ A tribe of Hindus.
^^r A large edifice, a man-
sion, a palace, 2 A division of
a town, a quarter ; in comp.
^*1K-^T?fl^ --^T^T. 3 A di-
vision of a village. 4 An enclos-
ed space ; a compound. 5 A pen
or fold : JT^Nt --sI-^it^I^T
^r^r/. An enclosed piece of
meadow-field, or garden-ground.
2 A hamlet. 3 A divisionof the
suburban portion of a city.
^r^n, See^r^'.
^I¥^ri ad. (Poet.) Fondly,
tenderly ; with dainty, coy, airs
and manners.
'9t2'
892
mn^
^rS" /'. ni. Growth ; iticrease
1)1' stature and l)ulk. 2/. Increase,
tlie iiicremeut. 3 Surplus (ol
iriain, &c.) ^riven in returning a
quantity borrowed : interest. 4
n.f. Tlint \Mxvt of a potatoe. &c.
on whieli is tlie eye or source ol
the sprout. 5 n. The head of a
suirarcane.
?rS^ tt. Servine; Tuod around
(at a meal). - The food taken to
he served. 3 A disli of food sent
out to a woman under her first
menstruation. 4 Vietuals iriven
(as to one of a lower caste, &c.)
to lie eaten el.sesvhere.
v
^rS''^r V. i. To increase ; to
advance in quantity or hulk. 2
To ijrow. 'A To advance, to sjet a-
liead. 4 To advance aggressively.
5 To be under tlie agitation
consequent upon the demoniac
possession, (i Used, esp. by
women (through superstitions
apprehension of evil from the
direct expression of the iact), in
the sense of To be expended —
an article of provision, &e. ; to I)e
winnowed— corn. v. c. To serve
(out or around the foodof a meal)
2 To administer alms, &c., to a
mendicant. 7i. A dish of food
sent to a •fl'^m*^.
^\^^J p. a. Growing:. 2 Aug-
menting : WT • 'W'^T -TT»^J -«So3T-
'frS'clT f. An auspiciotts term
for till- hiccough of ehihlren.
^TfTI^^^ The anniversary of
the l)irthd:iy.
m^ n, 'lUe victuals of n
nu'al as taken. 2 Serving the
victiinis at a meal.
m^l^^l The server (up, out,
around) of the provisions of a
uieal ; a waiter or table-servant.
^IJ^^/. A broom. 2 In-
crease. V. ^.
^[(Tl^'T" V. c. To increase. 2
To make to grow, li To break or
destroy (the marriage thread or
ornaments pcrtaiuing to women
in tiie connuijial state) : to win-
now (corn). See eflSiTi v. i.
sig (].
^\^[^^ ^=BR^ IK c. To fopter
and to order. A term for bring-
ing up and training ; TEil f?lT-
^\^^^ A lono while. a(L al^o
-c3f For, in, or during a long
time — waiting.
^IST Breed. /. Brood.
f-N j
^rST /'. Surplus (ofgrain, &c.)
given by way of compensation, j
ni returning a quantity borrowed. I
-^r^rf^S'r /. The practice of
borrowing or lending (grain, &c.) I
on tiie condition of returning or
receiving l)aek that quantity
with half as much over (or other
excess beyOnd the original
quantity (greater oi- less than
half).
^rS" n. The crop or leafy
head of a sugarcane.
^\h^ See ^rS^fe
^[^ w. n. Color. 2 A spe-
einien. ri. Fruits, &c. presented
on occasions, to ))ersons under
some religious observance, to
Bra'.imans or to married women.
/'. Deficiency, ■want, lack. v.
^IW'l V. c. To extol, laud ;
to sing the praises of : to [)our*
tray.
^m The woof.
mv^^^ 71. s Tradic, trade.
^nF A caste, a hnnyan.
f. (s) Speech ; articulate utter-
ance. 2 A name of ■fTT^cTl.
prep. In the manner of; as, or
like : i-5iT^TDTl ^T^ a-l^?iTq ?
^Rf3-T% /./. A oen. term for
dealers, traders, &c
^rcT/'. A wick (of a lamp). 2
Tiie channel fof a lampstand)
which receives tlie wick, .'^j
Abridged Croni ^tr) ^tft. Land
appropriated to the maintenance
of the light in a tem|)le. m. (s)
Wind or air. 2 Rheumatic atfec-
tion, cramp, gout; spasm, v. ^.
^f^ /. Vomiting. 2 The
matter vomited,
^r^^^ n. s The region of the
wind. 2 The atmispherc. 3 A
whirlwind.
^fcT^^r Fever occasioned by
the [irevalence of the humor
m^Z -^ a. Touoh. 2 fig.
Importunate : stubborn.
^r^?^ v.i. To 2et flat, flaccid,
stale and tough — an article of
food. 2 To get tough.
^rer^Tf?^/. Flatulent constitu-
tion.
^\^h^ (s) Rheumatism,
gout, &c.
^fcTf^, ?r^3- a. Tough, lit. fig.
^\^\^l^ v. (s) The atmos-
phere as investing the globe.
^rerr^cT -^\^ f. Dispersed-
ness and destrnetian lit. fig. (of
armies, affairs, &c.) : squandered
state, exhaustion through ])ro-
digal expenditure (of an estate),
&c.
^\\^^ f. (s) See ^i'cT.
^1<|^ a. s pop. -«2" Produc-
ing flatulence. 2 Flatulent — a
habit of body.
^fcTr n. A rag of cloth fit
to be made into a wick. 2 fig,
A tattered cloth. 3 A tennon of
a door.
^[^TJ^if 71. s Lovino-ness:
tender fondness.
^r? (s) Disputation, deliate.
2 Discourse, conversation. 3 Re-
port, rumor. 4 A suit at law, a
plain^. p lyj pj.g conversation.
^rcTRR^r?" A setdisi)utalion.
^f?l^-?r? (s) Dispute, de-
'^!'te. [storm.
^['TcS" jji^ 7?. A hurricane ; a
^r^r (s) A disputant. 2 In
law. A i)laintitK 3 Aw enemy.
a. Disputations. 2 That main-
tains any i)articular system of
doctrines : '^g^I'^f.
^rif/. A strap of leather,
"■ """g- [mcnt.
^r^ 71. (s) A musical instru-
fl^^liT /".Tumultuous sound-
in'/ of musical instruments; tho
c/77.s7i of a band.
^R*Tr/(H) A sample. 2 A
portion of a matter in j{eii.
^r^
893
^r?m
(seen, heard, tasted, &c.)
serving as a gronnd upon which
judgment is formed of the vvliole.
3 A portion of the goods passed
at a custom-farmer's stand
exacted by the hereditary
officers (over and above the
duty) as a smack or tnste :
the portion (of the produce
of a garden, &c.) which is
presented by the lessee to
the lessor. 4 Any rare article
(esp. as brought from a distance
as a present).
^R°t V. c. Poet. To extol,
laud.
^r^q-^ST (s) The Brahman
of the third order who has
passed through the conditions
of student and householder,
and has left his house and
family for lonely meditation in
woods and wilds, — the hermit.
2 also ^T^^^^ n. s The
order of the hermit-Brahman.
^f'R" m. n. s The black-
faced and long-tailed mcnkey.
^HT ^^^^ f. Injurious pity.
^Tf'C 'arT -^ n. A term for
an evil which is aggravated
by the attempts to remove it of
officious pretenders. ^T'lT-^^T
/. Monkey antics and tricks.
^TT^ ^ST n. A term for a
heavy reverse of fortune coming
as a retribution upon a sycophant
vvho, presuming upon his patron's
favor, has exercised his power
with cruelty or insolence, v.
^1^ g. of o. F^w g. of. s.
■^T«T^ ^f^y. Close and narrow
inspection ; peering : 2 attrib.
Having monkey-sight. '^^'S{X
Vt3T«T n. Eating like a mon-
key,— stuffing the month and
chewing leisurely. gt'f^^^'S^
f. A]>pliod to wood which
smoulders away without kindl-
ing.'^T^^f^'^^T m.The |)ulling
about and tearing open of a
wound of one of their fellows
by monkeys. Hence fig. the
marring (of a counsel, business)
by intermeddling counselors.
■^AMKT^^^'^^J f-2^1- Monkey-
faces; grimaces and antics in
mockery of.
^f*^^! /. (s) A female mon-
key of the ^T»r^ kind.
50
^\'{^\ m. f. Undecidedness,
uneertainty : ^Ti?=^T aJTifJIT"^
^T^^ ^To '^ =3?T^. 2 Yes-
ness or no-ness. i. e. certainty
one way or the other : «T ^rTT
^•ir An ingredient (esp. in
a medicinal mi.\ture). 2 A com-
modit}'.
^RfST An article of mer-
chandise. 2 The sample exacted
by Government and hereditary
officers of the crops and fruit
which first ripen. 3 A sample.
^V\X Bringing into use;
using (a thing), v. w^.
frT^"^ V. c. To bring into
use; to use (a thing) v. i. To
be conversant with.
ffW ad. (p) A term of
revenue. Back, in return. 2
-^Tui To deduct.
^R^^ V. i. To become
steamy, and thus in fit state to
receive the seed — ground. 2 To
get excited and wild; — as calves,
colts, &c. by running about. 3
fig. To conceive offence over-
sen sitively.
^rq^r Fit state (of the
ground) for sowing.
^r*^/. Vapour or sfenm. 2
Heated air as radiated from a
fire. 3 See ^m^T.
^fTTT V. c. To sow broad-
cast. V, i. To become ready by
steam ; to undergo steaming —
victuals. To spring up — seed ; to
ear — a crop.
^IT^r A bed or plot of a
garden or plantation. 2 The pit
which receives the boiled juice
of the sugarcane (for it to harden
into mass).
^nrrrr Fumigation, esp. me-
dicinal ajiplication of fumes, v.
^i^ (h) An eel.
-71^ a. (s) Left, not right. 2
Reverse, inverted.
^nr n. (a) Debt : ^k^\^.
^WfRT f. (h) Lying down
(usually ou the left side) for a
few minutes after the daymeal ;
taking a sieste. v^ ^X, '^T.
^R={ (s) A dwarf. 2
Vishnu in his character of the
dwarf, in which he appeared in
his fifth avatar, 3 A term for a
deceiver, rogue, cheat.
^FR^?%/. A dwarf: attrih.
dwartish.
^R^r^f A mode of worship.
Worsliip of the idol is performed
with the left hand, flesh may be
eaten, liquor drunk, &c.
^WJT n. The left side or
better half {oi the husband).
A term for a wife.
^^T^S" a. Empty, light ; —
used of persons, promises, ac-
tions. 2 Loose, lawless.
^^T^S^J] V. i. To become
crazy, wild. 2 To become liber-
tine, heedless.
^W^r Wind in the womb
or bowels.
fR=q-3" Graziness. a. WikI,
crazy. r
•^ V. Lcrazy.
^R=q"SOT V. {. To beconie
2 To become lawless, profligate.
^f^^r (a) a promise, aji^ree-
ment, esp. an engagement with
fixedness of term.
^R^RfT/ .^mm. A writ-
ten engagement with fixedness
of term. 2 fig. Terms for a me-
dicine or a remedy which, al-
though inadequate to the remov-
al of the disease or evil, affords
a respite or temporary mitiga-
tion.
^f^l^/^A whirlwind: a
gale. V. V, ^5^, ^t^, ^t^.
^r^^ See ^m n.
^\^^^ n. A barren blossom ;
a blind blossom.
ff^T^rr The firing of blank
cartridge : a blank charge.
^m^l a. (Vulg.) Separate. 2
Distinct.
^rW/.s pop. -^r The north-
west quarter.
?r^^ s A crow.
^^^f^^ (s) A lump of food
placed as an offering to the
crows, in performing funeral so-
lemnities.
^r^mr
394
grn^^
m^m a. (Vulg.) Little.
^RJ ad. Emptily, vainly.
m^ (s) Wind or air. 2 The
deitv-personification of wind. 3
A vital air of the animal system:
the vital airs collectively. 4 Air
considered as one of the humors :
disease attributed to the predo-
niincncc of this humor ; viz. flatu-
lence, cramp, rheumatism, &c.
^^"^^ n. The atmosphere.
^R (s) A clay of the week:
^TT'^TT- 2 A stated and re-
curring day for Airnishinp; a
meal to a mendicant, &c. wliose
subsistence is provided for
amongst many. 3 A recurring
day for a concubine to be brought
up to her lord; in conip.'^l^t'T-
•IL'^T^^. See Esther ii. 12. 4
A week. 5 (s A time). In comp
^rff^T^, rfl'i^lT. Once, twice.
6 De/mj ; -^t^ ^t^^^T-
^i^ (h) a wound : a cnt.
^TT f. c The secundines or
after-birth,
^f^ ind. (p) An affix signify-
in» Like : fTT^ifTs^TT: in, with,
or after the fasliion of detail, &c.
2 An aftl.K implying Possessing;
f^-qri^rl^T^ Advantageous.
^K^"Cr A man that performs
^TTI. 2 A man who obtains a
meal daily according to rotation
from the housea of charitable
people. 3 A sponger.
^K^ a. ^ ad. In lieu, room
of: ?n^T ^To AT JT^T.
^'^°T V. c. To turn back or
from ; to ward off or avert :
to prohibit : to remove (an
evil, &c.) Pr. JIo3T ^T^^T
^T^^T WTT^T. 2 To drive
away (flies, &c.) by waving the
hand. .'5 To discharge (debts). 4
To wave (around a king, idol,
Ike.) a feather-brush, v. i. To die.
^K^ V. c. (Vulg.) To call.
^\imi nd. (s) Repeatedly,
ever tind anon.
^K6^^°T V. c. To winnow.
V. i. To crack, warp by the
wind — wood, &c.
W.^ .^r (A) A heritage:
the proprietorship of it. Hence
claim, title.
^[^^^K c. An inheritor or a
proprietor of lands, &c.
^rn Wind or air.
^r^R'Tf f. (s) A concubine
(one of a series) : a harlot.
^Rf^^r/. s A name for Be-
nares.
^RFTf'^r w. Disregarded state:
^cf ^T^ rr%r. 2 n.f. Liqui-
dating : solved state (as of debts,
&c.) 3 Air, fresh air : '^T^
Wm^ V. i. To dry through
exposure to the wind.
^PTf^r^y. Dii^charging (of va-
rious debts, &c) : settling and
dis|)osing of (various jobs).
^rn^ir/. See ^f^r^f^.
^RF/. The practice of pro-
ceeding regularly at recurring
nu)iithly or annual periods on
pilgrimage to any sacred place.
V. ^X- 2 Alms demanded in
the name of Khandoba, &c. by
their worshipers. 3 Poet. Space,
room.
^itl prep. By, with, through :
T:?^T^l<t ?KT ^T^T. 2 After ;
according to : «T^T ^T ?rWT-
■^irf ^TSTHT. 3 Under, in, as
following after : ^iTHT to3 ^-
o5ogT^Trf ir^T. 4 Instead of;
for. .5 For the sake of : flt ^T-
^[^^ (a) a heritage.
^rrr^T^ir See ^R€?Tr.
^r^ A war-horse, a steed.
^r^S" n. A hillock cast up
by white ants. 2 An ulcerous
sore.
^R w. Wind. Used esp. with
reference to its quality, force, &c.
2The flowing breath (prevalency)
of, as of some epidemic : WT-
^T^. 3 An emanation from
some deity, or devil in occuiia-
tion of a i>erson ; an nffhittis of
some spirit : a blast of: '^^•
n\^ "^l* v.^, VK- 4 An air or
a cast considered as prognostic
(as of genius, future fortunes) :
the breathing or general forth-
going and acting (as of an affec-
tion or a passion) ^rPl^-TT
Jl'[M ^T"^ 3TT5Tm, &c. 5 Spirit
or quality ; inherent vitality,
vigor(as of times, places): nf"^-
^ ^T5i m^ ^q^ f^i53rl ^T^ ^
^031"^ ^T^- 6 Whimsey, fancy,
freak. ^' ^T^ ^T^, ^^^ ^fiNt
^rTTf /. (s) Tidings, news. 2
Rumor. 3 Talk. v. ^X.
W\\t{^ a carrier of tidings,
a reporter ; an envoy, an agent.
fT^^q" n. ^R^^rW^r/. s The
period of declining years and
old age.
^f^^r^RFS:/. A term for any
thing composed of numerous
members ; and of which there-
fore, the gathering into one
compass is viewed as impractic-
V •^•~« [sailing vessel.
?T'm^^r^ 71. A term for a
^Fl^^ a. (s) Annual, n. An
annual pension. 2 Any annually
recurring festival, &c.
^F^ A weight consisting of
three Hjsf. 2 A pulse.
^i?5'l<^?^ (s) A divine person-
at;e of a particular class. They
are eimmerated at sixty thous-
and. They were jiroduced from
the hair of IJrahma's body, and
they are of the size of the thumb.
2 n. pf- (^T^f'a'^). An as-
sembly of little urchins ; a
grouj) of toin-tliumbs. ^^^^-
f<§^7^\*i\- A term for a
grown-up fellow that keeps com-
pany with children.
fF^F, m^€\ (a) a protector,
]iatron. 2 Master.
fF^^F/. 8 Sand.
^F^^[nc7 n. 8 A term used
to express non-cutity, or an im-
possibility.
qrr?r^r
395
gr^fjt
m^^m"^ n. A sand-glass
for measuring; time.
^mm^ r^^cTR n. A term
for utter consumption (of uioiiey,
articles of 5)rovision, &c.) ; ut-
terly devoured state.
^r?Rr^ (s) The name of a
saint, the author of the ^i??T-
^f^/. n. A fathom. 2 m. (ii)
An eel.
^f^ (n) Wind or air. 2 m.f-
Room, space unoccupied and
available. 3 Leisure. 4 fig. Rea-
son, ground. 4 Poet. Vain,
void.
^r^^r a. Light, empty. 2
2 Devious, loose ; — persons,
speech, conduct.
^\^Z^ -Z^f. A whirlwind. 2
A gale, a Loose, devious, flighty,
fickle — speech : gadabout ; —
esp. a female.
^r^^r a. Flatulent — an arti-
cle of food. 2 That disagrees
with — an article of diet. 3 fig.
Hostile, adverse.
^\^^\ f. A paper-kite. 2 A
winnowing stand.
^r^?ar V. See ^Ksy.
^f^s^TR -^rcT n. A high wind
». ^H, ^^, '^T^, 'ii, &c.
^R^ c. Bustle, stir. 2
Domestic business and bother.
^r^^'T' y. c. To carry on, man-
age.
^r?f[^ a. (a) Deducted, r.
^^, '^T, t?^.
^W (s) Smell. 2 Scent,
trace, sign. 3 fig. The smallest
remains of: f^f^<t?T ^Ti^r^r
^W (s) Abiding, staying:
an abode. 2 m.n. s Cloth: clothes,
^r^^ a. Smelling foul;
rank, rancid.
^r^'T V. c. To open (mouth,
eyes) : to open out widely (a
slit, &c.) V. i. To become bank-
rupt.
^1^*1 n. (s) The wrapper of
a bale. 2 s Cloth : clothes. 3
Abiding. 4 A posture of abstract
meditation.
m^'^l f. s Disposition, mind:
^T^% ^K^ ^'^. 2 A desire.
f^Tpf -t^fi:^ ^I^sTT II • 3 Con-
versancy with : ^t"^ ■Rtt^t^'^
■^]» 3T'3T5^- 4 Specifically,
the dying desire, the last and
earnest longing of the departing
soul.
^^1^/- See^R^cT.
^r^r s A day.
^[^^ITPT s The sun.
^m^ or ^m^ n. A calf,
2 App. to a child, &c. 3 Nautical
term. The rope bent to the clew
of a sail, the sheet.
^r^^FcT .^/. (a) Revenues,
receipts, the account of them. 2
The story, case or afi^air of. 3
Issue, result (of an aflPair). 4
Issue or upshot, or the detailed
story of (as of monies laid out,
of materials consumed, of a for-
tune dissipated).
^r^r, mm a rafter ; a pole
viewed as fit for a rafter. 2 fig.
App. to the backbone, the bone
of the nose if e.\traordinarily
large, a thick and coarse writing
reed, &e.
mm^ m^ n. A bag having
only the smell (of some former
contents); i. e. a reduced man of
wealth. 2 A bag of smell ; i. e.
a man of wealth.
^rtr a. (s) That dwells in,
on, at. In comp. ^^ -iT^'^T^.
^F^^^(s)A name of Krishna.
2 An order of rehgious mendi-
cants.
^RcT, fRcTF/. (Used only in
conjunction with verbs implying
giving up; ^T^OI,^•T^ffj.)Ask-
ing about with care.
^R^J^cTy, (h) Inquiry about
or after, v. ^T., ^.
mi^^ a. (s) Real, true. 2
Solid, substantial.
ff^l^^ a. (s) Real, actual.
2 Accordant with reality ; just,
right.
^RcT5<T n. s Stay, residence :
a place of residence, a. (Possible,
purposed) to be abided at or in ;
to be fi.ved as a place of abode.
^1^5 n. f.H A house ; a place
of abode.
^fB^^cTF /. The guardian
spirit of dwelling places : any
divinity haunting in them. 2 A
small household-idol.
^J^^^ The ceremony of
entering into a new habitation.
^R^^ffcT/. Ceremonies to-
wards the composing of evil
spirits observed on entering into
a new house.
^r?"^ a. (s) That carries or
bears.
mWZ^ ~^^f. A whirlwind.
^r^ofr/. ^ n. Stream, flow.
2 The carrying of a reaped field.
^\K^ V. c. To convey ; to
carry. 2 To bear up ; to uphold :
^^T. 3 fig. To cherish in the
mind: <f T'T^T ^Tm^TTST ^T^
•T^I. 4To prosecute (abusiuess
as a means of subsistence) ; to
carry on or drive (any occupa-
tion): cgiv W '^f^^' ^^M q[T-
f?^ 1! f«T<T^ BTT^fV^' II : to
use. apply. 5 To offer in worship.
G To take or make (an oath). 7
To dedicate uuto. 8 To give out,
pay. Pr. STjiftsT ^T'?T ^TlfcT T[\-
^^■^T^T. 9To fix (a bowstring) .
V. i. To flow — water, air, time. 2
To let flow — the nose, a sore. 3
To lie along ; to run in a range ;
to trend; — as a road, a coast. 4
To be proceeding to play ; — used
of engines, weapons, &c. 5 To be
set — an edged weapon,
^f^cf^in A flowing spring. 2
fig. A continual stream (as
of expenditures, &c.)
ffCcTrp. a. That acts freely,
sharp, keen — a weapon, a genius,
2 Proceeding; as ^lo '^\u]\ A
mill under operation or in use.
^r§'cTfW/'.A (erm for a womb
that lias begun to bear, ■^l^ffl
ifJTT/. A term for the smart
proceeding of any business ; also
for the exuberance of any (good)
thing. V. 'qi^, 'It ff- ofs. WT-
'^ffl^T':/. A keen edge (of a
tool). 2 A rivulet : a stream (of
any liquid or of grain, sand, &c.)
as running from a pitcher, bag,
&c. 3 fig. A current of business.
^r^=r
39(3
f^^
esp. as hotly proceeding : ^-
■^T^fft ^T^/. A flowing rofid ;
a load ojien to and having passen-
gers. 2 A current womb. 3 The
be<rinning to proceed.
^i^^-T n. (s) A vehicle : W3"
^T» 2 c A stone-mortar.
^\K^^ V. i. To float down a
stream. 2 To flow from; to tric-
kle. 3 fig : To wander widely
(in speech) : to digress. 4 To pass
by ; to end in nothing — plans,
&c.
^lW^\ inf. (p) Bravo ! capi-
tal I excellent ! /. Applause.
^r^T"^ /. A sandal, v. ^.
^i\ a. s (f r -fc^r -Pg" m.)
f. n. That carries. 2 That flows ;
in comp : ^t»^ Wlf'?'^ ; —
used of rivers.
^[ffcT a. Not TftcT or
fallow.
^r^ a, s (Possible, neces-
sary, &c.) to be borne ; portable.
^V3^ f. Cessation of currency
(t)f' coins) V. ^^^, ti^. 2 Ejec-
tion from caste, r. ^T^ g- of o.
V. •fl^g. of s. V. ^\^, ^T^, x?^
ace. of o. 3 Witheredness, v.
T?^, ^T, 3?^g. ofs.
^[S^r, ^^5[r a. Dried up.
2 Thin, meagre.
^fa-^r V. i. To dry. 2 To
l)ecome meagre, v. c. To give a
twist (to a nail, &c.), to clinch.
^]'3^^Z -S" n. A sandy beach,
or plain.
^\'!Z^Z o. Abounding in
saud--a soil. [emaciate.
^]^\^^ V. c. To dry. 2 To
^srfl y. A white ant. 2
A disease incidental to wood,
cloth, &c. 3 Used as Canker-
worm in English, to express any
corioding disorder, aii.\iety,
&c. V. ^TJT.
^T3T A grass of which the
roots are fragrant.
^r^T A sort of bracelet or
anklet. 2 A ring (as of a fetter) :
a circular and Hat bottom (as of
a wine glass). 3 A creature of the
serpeat-tvibe.
^rsT f.A ring- of gold or silver
wire, for the nose or ear.
^]cS\^ n. Ejection of an of-
fender from his caste — the act
or the state, v. Zj^ with ^X.
of o. I'. ^T«r with <»ITof o. V.
T?^ or ^ with ^T or ^^, v.
'il^, ^T^ g. of s. &c. of 0.
a. Outcast.
^\f. Sand. 2 Gravel. 3
See' -^TESft.
^r^^ n. A wen. 2 A sort of
cucumber. [frightful.
n^ a. 8 Formidable,
f^^?:i■cf3^•^^^=^ n. Learning
up to the half of a certain
shlok ; learning that cannot
be pushed beyond Pons asino-
rum. Also f^ss^Tqs'IT^ A
dull scholar.
Ri;^ u. c. To sell. V. i. To
pass off" at a price, to sell. 2 fig. To
pass ; to be appreciated : tj$
r^^cT^^sff A term for a
quarrel which a person has
brought upon himself.
[^cT#^?5T A term for a
trouble procured through one's
own money or measures.
[f ^t^cT p. s Trembling, tre-
mulous.
r^^r m. -fr /. (h) Selling
or sale. 2 The produce of a sale.
{^^X\^ a. (s) Formidable:
hideous.
ff^T*^ n. s Drawino;.
m^^ a. (s) Impaired ; i. e.
broken, defective — a limb, &c. 2
Incomplete, wanting — an act.
m^>^\ f. s A sixtieth part of
a kala. 2 A second.
n^?1 (s) 0[)position or dif-
ference of opinion respecting. 2
A diff'erentopinion. 3 An alterna-
tive. 4 Suspicion, surmise, evil
api)rehension concerning ; an evil
thought. 5 Doubt, indecision. 6
A thought. Gen. pi. 7 In gram.
Admission of more than one form
or rule.
r^^^'T" V. i. To open, bloom.
f^^^iT n. s Expanding. T^^i-
f^ rl jt (s) Opened,
i^^^r a. Colorless, pallid—
^complexion. (-^^^g^
If ^r^T a. That is exposed for
r^[^ (s) Ciiange of form or
nature : ^'^^ ^T "^^I^T f^o 2
Sickness, disease. 3 Passion,
emotion : ^T'T-^T"*? f^ <».
tefr a. Sick, ill, afflicted
with some disease or mental dis-
J;urbance. [modifiable.
if^'M a. s Transformable,
ff^r^ in -'1 n. s Opening, ex-
panding, blow. fV^l^in V. i.
To open, blow. f^^THTfli-'. (s)
Blown, opened.
Pf f^Tof V. c. To scatter.
r^fr"^j9. s Scattered.
f^|icr p. s That has ui'.der-
jione a change. 2 Estranged.
r^frcT (s) pop. R"f ^/.Change
from the healtliy state; viz. any
disorder ; any passion ; a modi-
fication of matter; a chemical
transformation.
Ifficfr f. Disgust, nausea, a.
(fg^^.rT) Bought. 2 That is
for sale.
T^mm -^^r^ Used with
^\v\ To get into a passion :
to be aggravated by error of diet
— malady, wound : to be tx.is-
perated — a dispute: to be ruined
— an aff'ection ; to be marred — a
counsel.
r^^m a. That sells ; a ven-
der ; in comp. with fiT^ -^^-
ff^^ (s) Heroism, prowess.
2 The name of a prince.
r^3TiT5I^ The era found by
^^^^ (s) Selling or sale.
I^^#t a. That sells.
r^rar See Tf^Tis-.
r^^r See r^^r.
r^^rcT p. s Sold.
1^^^ a. s Saleable,
r^^ n. (Vulg.) Poison.
RfT^
397
f^m^
r^m^\ f. Scattering about
&c.
r^t^TT^jP^^^^ V. c. (h) To
sciitter about in a disorderly
manner. 2 To throw (the hair
of a woman's head, negligently
=^''»"t. [-^tate : litter.
f^J^rr Scattered and strewn
f^'3'^'T'r 71. Poison-water.
f^?^r?r Venomous quality
(as of serpents, drugs, &e.l 2
AfTection by poisou. r. %1. 3
Poet. A serpent.
ff ^[?^ V. i. To be poisoned,
f^^rrr -n a. Poisonous.
r^'^J? n. Poison. 2 App. to
anv thing exceedingly bitter.
r^^s^rrcf p. (s) Famous.
f^^\frlf. Celebrity.
\^^^ p. s Gone, past. 2 Sepa-
parated. 3 Of whom it is gone :
f^n^rf^T^r /. Poet. A widow.
rf^lc^cTy;. s Fallen, dropped,
cast — a flower, a fruit. 2 Of
whom cr which it is fallen, &c.
In conip. ■^'w -#?t-3ri^ f^o :
f^» ^f^ -^^. 3 Slackened,
relaxed, that has lost freshness,
stiffness, vigor,
r^5"^ a. (s) Diverse, dis-
similar. 2 Of adverse qualities.
,3 Of which the quality is viti-
ated, spoiled. 4 7w. An opposing
quality.
I^?TC (s) Battle, fighting.
2 The body.
R'=r^ Disagreement, dis-
united state, lit. fig. 2 Separa-
tion (as of friends)y. TJ"^, t}T^.
n^S'^ V. c. To destroy,
break in pieces. 2 To spoil.
r^q":jff^^i" /. General des-
troying : demolished state. 2
General spoiling.
f^5^^ V. L To melt.
rW'Sr 71. m. (s) An obstacle.
2 Used in the sense of ^qKf?j
and of ^3tTfT. f^^iTT^^. A
name of Ganesba. f^"^^'^!^ a,
That debgbts in the difficulties
and embarrasments (of others).
rt^^ a. Obscene ; — used of
s])eecii or speaker.
r^^qRJ^ V. c. To tear and
pull asunder ; to toss and stir
about violently, luirriedly ; to
mangle by picking, pecking,
rudely scratching.
[^^^3'[T^=q^Z /. A general
pulling, &c. See the verb.
f^'^'fi'TT f. Opening ; tearing
open. 2 (Abridged from ?il^-
fV'^eRxnl) Mocking Tjoith the
mouth.
\^'^^^ V. c. Sf I. To open or
part injuriously ; to yawn and
yape. 2 fig. To tear open ; to rip
up (the secret faults of). 3 fig.
To marr (a plot, &c.) 4 with
HT^, To make faces ; with
•^t?I, To grin ; with #?^, To
dishevel the hair.
rt^^r A mass (as of food,
fruits, &c.) disorderly tossed
about. 2 fig. Blasted, smashed
state (of a work, plot) ; destroyed
state (of a reputation, &c.)
r^^^^'^ V. c. To claw or
pinch.
r^^^^n Clawing with the
nails. V. il. 2 Pinching ; a
pinch. 3 The laceration made
by pinching. [-(.qj^i^
R^^ofr/. Combing. 2 A
l1^^ V. i. To comb.
\^^T^ V. c. Poet. To play
about, in, with wild action, — as
a demon in possession. 2 To act
outrageously. 3 To enter and
work in (as into the understand-
ing or the feelings).
r^^^i^ a. (s) Proficient. 2
That investigates closely and
shrewdly.
T^'^^^\ f. Minute and
searching inquiry, v. ^K, ^TW,
m^R (s) The exercise of
reason ; consideration, investiga-
tion. 2 The result of considera-
tion ; decision ; judgment form-
ed. 3 Regard or notice. ^-
f^» TT^fl ^TTf- 4 Perplexity
^or trouble. [„djudgable.
l^^rriTfq-a. s Investigable,
Tn^K^\ f. s. Considering.
2 A trouble.
r^^RoTl^T a. (Fit) to be
asked. 2 (Fit) to be considered.
T^^m V. c. To ask. 2 To
inquire after or into tiie affairs
and state of (kindly, &c.) 3 To
regard, heed. 4 To prize or
value: ^^ ■?;'C:WT^ ^TJi ^l^rf
'^K^T. V. i. To reflect.
•^^1^/- Inquiring and
asking about. 2 Inquiring after
(kindly, &c.) : how d'ye do? v.
r^^rnr^R «. (s) pop. #ct-
?rt^ (s) fw^T<t Thoughtful,
^considerate. [consideration.
r^R^iT a. s Capal)le of
r^f^^ a. (s) Variegated. 2
Wonderful, strange. 3 Poet.
Various, divers. [Pleiades.
t^^ A scorpion. 2 The
(^(^tJ^p. s Divided, served.
2 Broken, smashed. 3 fig. Vio-
lated— a rule. 4 Discontinued —
an hereditary estate, office, &c.
a state, a condition: '^fx:?f ^T^
Uo ^ft II
r^S"^ s Division, separa-
tion. 2 Shattering: shivered
state.
r^iT[q-c^f a. Of feeble con-
struction — a building, &c. 2
Temporary; — used of an account.
r^^^ (s) Victory. 2 The
name of the one of the door-
keepers of Vishnu.
r^3T?T^:^^ w. 71. (s) The
banner of victory.
r^5nTr?"5I3^r /. The tenth of
the light half of Ashwin, the
anniversary of the victory of
Ram over Rawan, the day of the
Dasara, &c.
f^^^r a. s Victorious.
r^^FcT /. A different kind,
caste, sort, 2 c. A wild, irregu-
lar, refractory (child,woman,&c. '
ri"^?!^
398
Rr^
n^IcTR n. (s) Strange, novel
and striking. 2 Of a different
kind, d Various, divers.
r?^ /; Poet. Lii;htiiin^.
[^■^r? a. Inharmonious. 2
[U-niiitohed.
Rgq^r^f See rtg'^^rrr.
mW^ V. i. To be quenched
— a fire or liiiht. 2 fig. To be
allaved, suppressed — a quarrel,
unser.
f=f?II%^ V. c. To extinguish.
fl^'^^rrr Air stirred up
by the agitation of a fan. 2
A fan.
1%-^r A fan.
r^J^m /. IMocklng : jeer-
ing;. V. ^T^^, "^l? g. of 0.
ff'J^ a. That soon fades —
a color : attrib. that is dyed
with a quiekly-fadin;> color. 2
Faded, soiled./.Brick dust./, n. A
brickbat.
r^^r a. Faded — a color, a
flower; sickened witli — the mind.
2 That quickly fades, perishes.
f^^^ V. i. To tarnish, soil ;
— a color. 2 To lose beauty ,* to
become stale. 3 To languish,
droop — a jdant. 4 fig. To be
disgusted with ; to abhor.
m^^, T^tm V. c. To ex-
pose to ridicule or shame.
r^rf^r or -"^r/. Disgracing ;
ignominious treatment : disgrac-
ed state.
i^^rs" Impurity as subsist-
ing in certain persons, animals
and things, and communicable
by them through contact. 2
Pollution arising from contact
with such subject. .'J The men-
strual discharge. 4 Humorously.
Tlie impurity consisting in, or
arising to tlie possessor of.wenlth,
wisdom, &c. Said with reference
to the absence of these things ;
as («S!T &c.) qsiI^T r^o ^T^.
(I. &c.) abhor money, I shrink
from the pollution of it ; i. e. I
have m)ne. |-,ute_
\m\Ti:^ t,. c. To defile, pol-
r^TTSrrfr -^r /. A woman
having the menses.
r^Sr^f t" f. A name of endear-
ment for the idol Vithoba.
f^ •v t-.
rfj , r^jr, If 5rir, \^^ The
name of a god at Pandharpur.
T^^^^\m'^f, a covert term
for a widow.
[f^R^'i^'^?*. A citron.
ff^r A roll of the leaf of
Piper-betel, &c. 2 The ingredi-
ents of this roll collectively.
l^sr/". (h) Tobacco rolled up
in a leaf to be smoked as a cigar.
2 The ring with which the head
of mallets, staves, &c. is bound.
3 See fqf^r.
f^^^ /. Texture. r>r^ft m.
A weaver. [weaving.
mfJII^S- /. The cost of
r^'I^ V. c. To weave. 2 To
interweave, braid, twist.
f^qf The Indian lute. prep.
Without : e.\cept. r i
mi^ p. Woven. 2 Braid -
rf^ V. i. To bear, to
bring forth young. 2 To shoot
out its i^TafiT; — used of the
Plaintain. 3 To get opthalmia
—the eyes.
r?cf J a. (s) Used with ^f^,
??»T. HT^iT, ^?IT, in the sense
of Ilypercriticism, caviling, carp-
ing, idle confuting or objecting
against, unprofitable and vexa-
tious wrangling.
rv r
IfcT^ (s) A thought, a fancy,
device. In this sense the use is
gen. pi. and the implication is
of Deviousness, wihhiess.
r^cra-ffr See T^^^.
KjSr w. (s) Variance, falling
out. ?7. t?^, 'ii-
(^fTSrof V. i. To melt : to be-
come fluid. 2 To fade away —
color, vigor. 3 fig. To disperse ;
to dissipate — clouds, armies,
errors, ignorance. 4 To evapo-
rate, fail — counsels, schemes. 5
To melt in compassion.
f^TT n. (s) Money. 2 Sub-
stance, property, p. s Known or
nnd^^rstood. [substance.
HfJI^Tq" (s) Wealth; riches,
T^i^f^ See °J?irTT.
f^^^ a. That deviates from
the perpendicular — a building
or a stone of it. 2 Composed or
made out of another batch, sort
— a garment, a thing, gen. 3 fig.
Irregular, informal.
•^ - *^*
K'iT?!"^ V. i. To turn aside
and walk deviously ; to become
lawless and disorderly.
\q^7^ p. (s) Burned to
ashes. 2 Half-digested, — food.
3 Half-scorched and half-raw
-dressed food. 4 Well roasted. 5
Clever.
fk^\'n -^ n. Craftiness,
guile ; a device ; a plot. 2 Cle-
verness (of making, ordering).
App. to the Deity, destiny, a
statesman.
r^^R"^ n. .^r/. (s) Tearing,
rending. 2 Sjilitting, severing. 3
Poet. Killing. 4 fig. Ripping up.
r^R^y. c. To tear. 2 To
split. 3 To slay, cut to pieces. 4
fig. To dissect (a subject).
I^K^ p. (s) Known. 2 S Re-
presented, declared.
rtST a. s Wise, knowing, 7n.
(s) The proper name of the
younger brother of Dhratarastra,
and chief counselor of the Kow-
rava princes. 2 A cant term for a
male child born out of wedlock.
f^2r5T A foreign country.
rf?"?rr-q" a. Relating to a
^foreign land. [Disembodied.
\^^K a. s Incorporeal, 2
"^ "^ "^
\^^?\ a. s Disembodied. 2
Weaned from the world.
it^ /;. s Bored.
rt^^R p.j)r. (s) Being, exist-
ent. 2 Present — time : in gram,
the tense.
f^^^f'T f. n. (s) In money-
transactions. Tlie presence, as a
witness, of a third person, prep.
In the presence of.
r^^r /. (s) Knowledge,
science. 2 An art (as of writing,
drawing, &c.j
[^^TRrS w. A seat of learning,
r^^i^^. A fellow-student, f^-
^1«JTH Study. f^^T^T A dis-
ciple, a pupil. 2 A student.
3 A studious person. f^^T^TST
«. (s) pop. T^^^^\'su Learned.
1^^^ f. s Lightning.
Pfg^TrcT The falling of light-
^Tiing. ["tijg zigzag flashes.
l^^eTcTf f. Lightning, esp.
KJIT n. s Coral.
l^r^sT^ n. s A learned man,
a philosopher. ftion.
l^'e^T^l f. s Learning, erudi-
K^rF'T a. (s) Learned.
1^^ (s) A kind, sort ; as
ffRT=r.
r^^T ?i. A bore.
]^^^^ V. c. To pierce, bore. n.
A sort of chisel.
l=f^^r a. s Of opposing re-
ligion. 2 That opjjoses or denies
religion : heterodox.
m^f f. A widow.
it^cfr a. s That appoints,
ordains. 2 A name of lirahma.
t^'^R n. Aiming, v. ^,
[^'•IR 71. s Placing, fixing. 2
Predicating : "^t ^s ^^
'^ f^o 3^1^. 3 Appointing.
4. A rule, canon ; an ordinance ;
a rite. 5 Applying (to, at, a work.)
6 A law, rule ; as '^[^JT, ^?f fw«>
r^i^T (.s) A sacred precept;
a rite. 2 A rule, form. lu comp.
Rf'^R'T'^ Notice respecting;
law delivered concerning (whe-
ther in injunction or prohibi-
tion). f^fiilf5f^^T<rt?I a. s
That is freed from the bondage
of religious ordinances and ap-
pointments. Used of one who,
through attainment of Divine
knowledge, and advancement in
sanctity and abstraction, is risen
superior to law and prescription ;
also ironically, of one who,
bursting all bonds, rushes head-
long, and recklessly into every
eaoi-mity.
399
I^RT^^tR a. Regular, normal,
formal.
Ffjr s A widower.
If^f^ s Fracture ; or rup-
ture and destruction thence
arising. 2 Destruction gen.
fe|54^ai V. c To break, des-
troy. f^M^T n. s Breaking,
shattering, &c. f^B4pfffr, f^-
"iaf^ p. Broken, &c. 2 Des-
^troyed gen. [Humility.
r^T'lfcTy. s Supplication. 2
l^-lcrr /. A humble petition;
a request.
l^'^ (s) Humility, lowliness:
condescension, affability.
I^#r a. Humble, lowly : af-
fable, gracious.
pf ^f (j[T -q^y^ Supplicating:
moaning, v. mK..
Tf^r^af y^ i To moan.
l^nr^'T V. c. To supplicate,
pray.
r^=rr prep, (s) Without ; f^F
^T'Cnr. 2 Except.
r^RT (s) Annihilation, ex-
tinction, loss of being.
i^^m a. That perishes, de-
cays. 2 That destroys.
nRJ^^T s Exchange, barter.
nn^^^ ;?. s Appointed, ap-
plied (to an office, use).
<-v c^ "N
I^R^ri^T s Appointment.
K'lifT p. s Humble, meek. 2
Governable, tractable. 3 Of
subdued passions and affections.
4 Trained, broken in — a beast.
rf%^ (s) Sport, play. 2 Jest-
ing, joking.
r^^f^q^ 71. A butt of ridi-
cule ; a laughing stock.
rv ^^ '^
mMa. Fond of jesting; hu-
morous. 2 That is said or done
in sport.
r^'5<^«. Averted. 2 fig. Ad-
verse ; — used of destiny, &c. 3
Ashamed.
'^^^ -^ /• s Adversity,
misfortune : an adverse occur-
rence.
T^^^ a. (Vulg.) Mischiev-
ous, vitious; idiotic.
mVr^ f. See tef.
m^mi a. s That walks
licentiously.
m^\ See r^TP^.
f^lftcf a. (s) Opposite, re-
verse. 2 Adverse, hostile.
r^qfrcT sri^rr^r i\^ a sprout
of contrary understanding, i. e.
Error, r. tR<E.
T^^^^ s Opposition. 2
Reverse.
^^^)^ 8 Contrariety. 2
Reverse. 3 Change, esp. dete-
rioration.
r^^ 71. (s) pop. -Sy The
sixtieth part of a tf^.
K^^ s An antagonist. 2 A
disputant. 3 An opposite. 4 la
logic. A syllogism in which the
projjosition to be maintained is
always wanting, a. (s) Contrary,
hostile. 2 Unsupported — a doc-
trine, &c.
l^^r^ s Maturing, perfect-
ing: ^-^ -^^ -^x: f^o 2
Cooked, or perfected state : the
thing accomplished; the result.
Rf7=T 71. s A forest.
f^J^ a. (s) pop. -oS' Many,
much.
r?q" (s) A Brahman.
If !T^[7 s Brawling, jarring.
2 Jabbering.
f^'T s A god. 2 A man of
,^ "■ [2 Separated.
r^^TrfT p. s Divided, parted.
I^HfTF^.s Inflection of nouns,
case. 2 Divided state : a divi-
sion, r • i
[majesty.
If^f s Greatness, glory,
r^^m (s) A share.
\^^m V. c. To divide, dis-
tribute.
PfiTim p. s Divided.
l^nit c. A sharer : a coheir.
r^^T^ a. s (Possible, pur-
posed, &c.) to be divided.
r^
r?ij a. s All-pervading (space
or time) ; omnipresent, eternal.
M^^ Military array.
r^^Pcf /. s Ashes (of dung,
&c.) with which Shiva is said to
have smeared his body, and
employed now by his devotees.
2 Grandeur, glory. \^ Snperliu-
man power consisting of eight
faculties especially attributed
to Shiva. 4 App. fig. to a per-
son distinguished for learning,
riches, &c.
W^^ s Error. 2 Whirling.
K^^fcT J), s Bewildered, err-
"'^'- [planet.
\^T^ n. s Tlie orbit of a
r^R^'?^^ a, s Sad, dejected.
2 Of estranged mind.
T^^^ a. s Clean, pure. 2
Auspicious — a season.
r^Tf (h") Insurance of goods
V. ^K, M^, ^fl^. 2 The
charge of insurance.
f^iTffrr /. s A step -mother.
r^JTR 71. (s) A chariot of
the gods, serving as a throne
or as a conveyance through the
skies, self-directed and self-mov-
Jng.
f^5^ P- s Fi'eed.
n^JIrfT f. s Liberation, esp.
filial emancipation.
f^^^ a. s Having the face
turned from,
r^^^^r -^^ c. An insurer.
r^Rf^'T n. s Liberating.
n^^TF p. (s) Disjoined,
f^^rn (s) Separation, dis-
j.inction. j-ji^jj
n^mm^ Tliefireofsepara-
Ut^ p. (s) That is free<l
from all worldly affections and
passions. 2 That is become
averse to.
HfTFrF" l\ Wean^dness from
tlio World. 2 Alienation of
muul from. [dawdle.
l^rTj^Z^ ^ I Xo idle; to
\mi\^[ A pastime or play-
thing. 2 Diversion, play.
400
\^m^^v.i.'Yo melt, dissolve.
2fig.To lose firmness of texture —
cloth. 3 fig. To be overcome
by any emotion (as by shame,
sorrow, &c.)
r^^^^ See ^^^.
f^Tf^cT p, s Arranged, dis-
posed,
f^
1^^^^ n. Any substance
used to coagulate milk. 2
A quantity (of milk) coagulated.
3 fig. Any bad practice or ill-
habit considered as sullying and
destroying the excellence of one's
piuty, virtue, learning, &c.
(f^C^'T V. c. To coagulate
(milk). V. i. To become cool and
composed ; to arrive at a mutual
good understanding and make
amicable composition — persons
quarreling, w. A vessel in which
milk is coagulated.
m^^ V. i. To melt, dissolve.
2 fig. To melt with compassion.
3 To become threadbare — cloth,
4 To melt away — clouds, &c.
K^^ a. s Uncharioted — a
warrior in battle.
r^t^^ V. i. To hang the
head; to be ashamed, &c.
\mH^\ V. i. To be touched
in a tender place, fig.; to be
stimr/ to the quick.
r^Tr^ a. (s) pop. -^ Wide
apart ; of texture not close —
cloth, teeth, any series. 2 Rare,
scarce.
mo^im a. Of unfrequent
occurrence, rare.
mM\^ a. Tlireadbare.
r^^^ a. Wanting juice or
sappiness — a fruit, a plant. 2
Dry, fiat. — speech: unenergetic —
action : that is without vigor —
a person.
KC^ (.-;) Separation, separat-
ed state (esp. of lovers or friends).
2 Tiie anguish of sepaiation. 3
8 Want of.
f^rgrffT See f^^RRc^.
r^Pg'fT a (s) Destitute of;
wauling. f^j^T fq[». p s Left.
i^Tq"! a.m. s Separated from ;
absi'ut from. 2 Deprived of; that |
is without. i
r^rST a. Rare, scarce, fid.
^Rarely. j-^^^^^. ^ Urine.
r^n^cf.?!^/. (A) Making
IW^ s Absence of desiie
or passion ; disregard to all sen-
sual enjoyment.
rfTRf a. Void of desire or
passion ; free from worldly af-
fections.
T^Tim V. i. To look well ;
to be splendid ; to shine .- to
grace.
r^^RfTR -f^TcT a. Glaring
with splendor ; gorgeous.
1 W^ s The first progeny of
Brahma and the producer of the
first Mann, who was the de-
miurge or secondary framer of
the visible universe.
i^rr^r?'^" s A term for the
Universe considered as the ex-
plication of the Deity.
ffrr^?"? -"^r a. Epithets of
the Deity as expanded and ex-
plicated in the creation. 2 App.
to any huge man.
r^rrSJ^q-sSeef^?:!^;.
RTr*T (s) Stop, resting. 2
Rest. 3 A pause. 4 Death, v.
\^W^ a. (s) Opposite or op-
posed to : contrary, p. Opposed.
K^S""^ V. i. To mount or
climb : to grow up high and vi-
gorously. 2 To take root.
R"^^ a. (s) Of ill-looking
form ; ugly. 2 Dissimilar.
f^^f'^(s) Opposition; anta-
gonism. 2 Inconsistency (in ar-
gument). 3 Contrast.
f^fr-^iir^/. A mode of wor-
shiping the Deity. Opposing
and resisting him in every way
practicable ; endeavoring, by
reviling, defying, daring him, to
provoke him to fight ; with the
view of obtaining destruction by
his hands, and thus necessarily,
absorption or some transceudant
blessing.
m^Nl a. Opposing, adverse
to ; that opposes.
T^^n a. Of ill adaptation
f^^^
401
R^G^
incongruous, unsuitable, n. Dis
cordance, discrepancy.
\^^^^ V. i. Poet. To lament ; ' [f^cr w. \^^^ f. (a) A
order. Tlie female parent being
of higher caste than the male.
to wail.
f^f (s) Length of time (as
consumed or to be consumed) :
delay, v. ^IJI, ^T, ^^.
f^r^^ p. Delayed, protract-
ed— a business.
T^^^\ a. Dilatory : tliat pro-
tracts or lengthens out.
ffc^rq" s Desl ruction; esp.
that of annihilation.
f^c^^^ 0. L Poet.Toolitter,
shine. [geous.
l%?5"rprrf a. Shiniiio;, yoi-
r^^T"^ (s) pop. r^^^^^n^
a. Extraordinary, strange, odd,
novel. 2 Other, different.
r=r^T (s) Lamentation.
Rc^rrqJT V. i. To lament,
wail.
r^^i^cT f. (a) a foreign
country, but understood esp. of
England or Europe. 2 Kative
country of production ; — used of
animals and plants, ii App. to
a>ty country viewed as strange
or as remarkable for any thing.
r^Rfl" a. Relating to a
foreign country, esp. to Englaiul
or Europe. ~ Sharp at acquiring
influence, clever, cunning. 3
App. to exotics of nature and
])roilucts of art viewed, not
jiimplv as foreign, but as super-
excellent, remarkable; as "Ho
l^?5T^ (s) Sport, play; diver-
sion, esp. with women and
dancers. '2 \Yanton pleasure, d
Amorous blandishments.
I^?5THr a. Sportive, wanton.
pTc^f^^ V. c. To view, be-
hold; to see. j-j^,^
l^c^f=R'T n. s Looking: bee-
R[c?5t^^q" a. (Proper) to be
looUed at, or seen.
class or head. 2 Rank, order. 3
A dependency, a department.
l^^K^K ad. Accordinii to the
class or department of ; classical-
Jy^orderly. ^f^.j^g
R^Cfltry. Assorting, classi-
revolve in the mind painfully (a
matter).
[f^'^'fr f. Ignorance and in-
quietude respecting the course
to be adopted ; jjainfnl indeci-
sion of mind ; distressing per-
plexity. V. t;^.
r=TfC ri. s A hole in the
ground; a cave, cavern.
fSf^q //. s Exposition, ex-
planation.
f^^^'T" V. c. To interpret: to
explain by note, comment, &c.
N"^^? a. s Of deteiioriited
color.
r^^^ffr, fk^vjl / A feigned
goddess, the author of all dis-
aster and mishap. 2 App. to
women whom misfortune is
sujjposed to betide, or whose
presence occasions evil ; an un-
lucky jade.
m^TF/. -flT^ 71. Cs) The
aim of the speaker ; the mental
reference to. 2 "Wish ; or want
iren.
RF^^rf^r^r^ -iTRF^rr, &c.
(s) Compound multiplication,
division, Ike.
r^^^ (s) Discrimination or
judgment. 2 Discretion. 3 In
the Vedanta system. Tlie power
of separating Brahma the in-
visible spirit from the visible
or objective system, truth from
untruth.
m^lZ^, R^^F a. (s) Con-
siderate, discreet, judicious.
F^^^^ a. s That discrimi-
^nates. ^^^^^
F^f "^-T n. -'FF/.s Disci iminat-
r=F^^%^ a. s (Proper) to be
distinguished.
F^^Fl^cF p. s Discriminated.
F^^ n. s Fearless; devoid
of fear.
r^F*^ a. s Twenty.
T^^\^ a. (s) pop.-^ Great
large, huge.
[=rF^S" a. s Endowed with
s:jme distinguishing and pavti-
cularizmg property or adjunct.
2 Possessed of, appended, at-
tached ; as 55^ Ro qT^,
faJi'lIT fwo H'5- 3 Particular.
R'SJF /. The a^e of twenty.
2 An aggregate of twenty.
F^?T^ jj. s Cleansed, puri-
fied, a. Highly clean, cliaste, &c.
r^5Tf^/. s Cleansed ness. 2
Purity. 3 Correct state, recti-
tude.
f=F?^[FHicr p. Beheld, viewed
r^^JT a. s Reverse, con- i p^^ff|;cr„. (g) Married
trarv, against the hair (grain). 2 | r- r^.^
That IS produced m the reverse 1 1 ^i^''-^ s Various, divers.
51
F^^FfiTcT a. Intended by the r- t> ......
speaker; regarded, desired. 2\^^'<''^ (s) A distinguishing
property, or niiuk : specific qua-
lity. 2 A particular thing. 3 An
exception.
F^^T s The sapof Boswellia
serrata, frankinceuse.
F^5J^ a. (s) Extraordinary,
singular. Used pop. in the sense
of Much, more. 2 Especially.
i^5T^"^ n. s An adjective. 2
^A predicate. [specially.
I^^F^cTJ ad. s Particulaily,
ri[5jq"^liT n (s) A proper
Considered as emineut; — used of
])ersons.
R^rcr (s) Discussion, debate.
2 Controversy. 3 Contest at
law ; a lawsuit.
r^^f^ot V. i. Poet; To dis-
]>ute or argue with.
f^FflS'F a. Disput;itioiis.
r^?F? (s) Matrimony.
[^^Fq.'^T v. c. To marry, to
take (a vvomau) in marriage. 2
To give in marriage
name.
IW-^i'^'^ n. s In gram. That
w luch is to be distinguished ; a
Rr^frfJnr
402
Rh^
noun. 2 The subject of a predi-
cate.
r? ^frf^cT a. (s) That does not
adorn, grace, become ; unbecom-
ing, ungraceful.
f^m^f. (.s) pop. r^'^l^ Rest,
repose. 2 Relief l after work);
diversion or recreation.
rf ^W (s) Rest, repose, v.
T?T^, i- 2 Rest. A title of the
Supreme Being.
ff ^-^^"^ i\ i. To rest, repose.
r^^Rr Kest (from toil or
work) V. g, ^'S, Mm.
r^^ n. (s) The universe. 2
m.A deity of a class in which ten
are enumerated, a. s All, the
whole.
r^^^T? (s) The son of
Brahma and the artist of the
gods. 2 App. to an ingenious
artist.
ff^fftr A name of the
Deity. 2 App. to a munificent
patron ; also to the father of a
numerous family.
r^^€[=R }i. Life of the uni-
verse. A title of God.
f^^^r5# ad. In the mouth
of the whole world; under uni-
versal talk.
n-'W'T^ The eye of the uni-
verse. .A. title of God.
r^^qi^, r^4iR s Nourisher
of the universe. TitU's of any
deity of the triad considered as
the Supreme.
If ^^^T s That takes or exists
in all forms. A title of Brahma.
ff^^^n^o, s Pervading the
universe, ubiquitous.
ff'^^^r^T a. s Trustwortliy,
^faithfuL [universe.
rt^TF^iT s That surveys the
ff ^Rr (s) Soul of the uni-
verse. A title of Brahma.
[q^'iTrfiT a. s Dear to the
universe. A title of the Deity.
pf^TlR^ (s) fa A mous saint,
the early ])receptor and counselor
of R;ima. 2 .\pp. to a great tor-
mentor.
m'-^im^^V^f. (s) The crea-
tiou of NVishuamitra. This saint
is fabled to have created several
things in rivalry of Brahma ;
e. rj. the fruit of the Palmyra,
the Ijuffalo, the ass, &c.
If ^r^ (s) Trust, confidence :
faitli, belief.
rf^raqr^ Breach of trust,
ff ^r^^rcT^ -^r ^.That abuses
^confidences [security.
rf^<?f^^RR kn assurance-
\^'^\^ V. c. To trust. 2 To
commit unto with confidence (a
business, &c.)
rf^r^r-^-?Tq[?a. Trustwor-
thv, trusty.
l^^^K s Lord of the uni-
verse. A title of the Deit}', and
esp. of Shiva.
Ff^f^R The salvation or
the saviour of the universe.
Pf^ n (s) Poison. 2 App. to
any thing bitter; to any thing
Jjaneful. [-g,|
mW^^ p. s Dejectedjdepress-
Pf^JT^fm Poisoning, use of
poison.
TfTq" (,, (s) Odd, not even.
2 Unequal. 3 Adverse, hostile.
4 Unparalleled.
rfTiT^fr A fever of irregu-
lar perioils and of unequal pa-
roxysms. 2 Remittent fever.
p^q-f[;j[^ Evil-surmising. 2
Holding to be luiequal ; holding
with bias. '6 Unfriendly feeling.
4 Holding one's lot to be
unequal. 5 Inequality.
ff^iTfrgnr/. An unlawful
desire.
mm^ a. s That stands in
adversity — that is in trouble. 2
That stands irregularly.
m^\^ A diet or food other
than is usual (and considered as
likely to disagree).
ff^^ (s) An object of sense
or the mind. 2 Tlie object or
sul)ject of the action of; the
cliject of any ])assion, affection, or
sentiment : ^l^r^^T f^o f^Tl-
3. The ollice, function, busi-
ness of : tT^ni "f T ^Tfjffsf-
^^-^T fio 4 Object, aim: g^
^I % ^^T3T ^f^flt cqi^T f^o
^Ttn? ^ A subject, topic.
6 Goods or things considered
as identical with or convertible
into money, mutter, money's
icorth : ^^r ^^T ^Sfrft "JJ^^
\^^l\ r^4. a. s Bound by ob-
jects of sensual gratification.
ff ^q^^^r/. (s) Desire after
the objects of sense (as means
of carnal pleasure). fness
m^Is^rqK Worldly busi-
Pf^W^ V. Pleasure deriv-
ed from the objects of sense.
Pop. understood in the sense
of rffj^T^.
R^4r «. Carnal, sensual ; a
sensualist. 2 That disbelieves
the existence of that which is
not cognizable by the senses. '6
That of which a thing is the
subject or the object.
\^^^\ ud. On the subject of;
in the matter of: tejktt^ f^«>;
pop. respecting about :^Tj-jf^o
fqisf^IxiHTJI. Enjoyment of the
objects of sensual gratification.
PfTl^f^rCn Bezoar.
If^TR" (s) Lassitude, dejec-
tion. 2 Aversion or dislike as
induced. f^^T^t «. That is
readily damped and driven to
dispondence : that quickly con-
ceives aversion and disgust. 2
Affected with dejection.
ff^lT (s) Venomous quality
(of serpents, &c.) 2 Affection by
poison.
(Wr^a. spop. S^ Poisonous.
l=rS"r /". (s) Fa?ces, ordure.
Pf^ (s) One of the Hindu
f''^'':, [Vishnu.
ftjOTfFJirr^ The heaven of
rfg"^c:^* V. c. To tear and
pull asunder ; to push, stir about
in a disordering manner. 2 fig.
To disorder, derange.
Pf ^^Jlff H^F:^: /; a cpneral
• tearini; and pulling asunder.
fte^
403
f%^^
r=f^llio5" a. Open, apart; used
of trees, liouses, &c. 2 Roomy,
spacious— a place. 3 Free, open
—speech.
I^^^oJ^ V. c. To spread
about widely and confusedly ; to
disorder.
r^^r^S^rcT p. Scattered,
strewn. 2 fig. Deranged — affairs.
rW^TTcT a. (s) Unconnected,
inconsistent.
m"^^ V. Cold water poured
into hot water to reduce its tem-
perature.
r^^=T€r^r a. Used with ^-q".
st^ -■'ft'S'T, &c. Venereal lues.
\^m -^ A sort of itch.
r^iET^frroT The seed of flea-
wort or plantain.
r^^^"^ V. i. To rest or pause.
V. c. To foro-et, i. e. to lose
sight of; to drop from the atten-
tion or care : r€^ '^^ "^t^T
^s^f^^T II.
\^^'K Fnrc^otten state, obli-
vion. 2 Forgetfulness. 3 Loss of
memory, v. ^'^, %'[.
\^^m V. c. To forget. 2 To
nco-lect. r«„,.«i„c.,
R^^ms^r -«^T a. Forgetful^
l^F^rifr^TTi ad. Tluongh for-
getfnlness and sim]dicity ;
through inadvertence.
K^rr^, r^g-U3- a. Forget-
ful. 2 Neglectful.
r^^'T (s) The soft aspirate,
marked by two dots thus : 2
Abiuidonmcnt.
r^^^ioj V. c. To abandon,
give up. 2 To leave.
K^3f^ 71. (s) Abandoning,
quitting: Tfiuf f^o 2 Dis-
missing : -ff^T -^^m Ro.
f=rHfe p. Abandoned. 2
Dismissed.
T^m^ V. I. To stop, rest. 2
To rest awhile. '6 To get stiff;
used of a limb, &c. 4 To sink
into lethargy. 6 To sink down;
to yield— as a well, post.
{^^oS^ V. c. To wash out,
to rinse, fg^^^wl "• Water
that has been used in rinsing.
r^^r /. A score.
I^^R -U Earnest-money.
r^m^, r^m^\ Rest, repose.
2 Refreshment or rtdief. v.
g. 3 Any thing which con-
J^^'"« '•e^t. " [pansion.
r-^^^^ s Prolixity. 2 Ex-
R^cR^ V. i. To be diffuse—
a discourse.
m^^ Fire.
r^^cTR (s) Expansion, ex-
tension. 2 Amplification, evolu-
tion (as of a subject.) 3 The
progeny of: a descendant. 4
Breadth as one of the three
geometrical dimensions. 5 The
sin-eading portion of a tree.
r^cTf^^'JT V. c. To spread,
am]i!ify, lit. fig.
l^^rTiRcT p. Spread out,
enlarged.
\m^\l\ f. A plate of leaves
tacked together.
to Fire.
J^^cTp. s. Spread out, ex-
pantled. fg^f?i/. Expansion,
diffusion.
q^^^(s) Astonishment, sur-
prise. V. seT, '^\'S.
'iHm'm V. (s) Forgetting;
uuretentivcness and badness of
memory. 2 Forgotten state.
ftR^cTp. Astonished, won-
derstruck.
r^^^cfp. Forgotten.
teTcT/. (s) pop. PR^^ For-
getfulness. 2 Forgotten state.
r^Cl^T 71.S H"^rr m. (s) Walk-
ing for pleasure, roaming. 2
Pleasure, sport.
ff?"^^ V. i. To ramble for
pleasure : to play.
f%CT?r a. That is taking
pleasure. 2 Addicted to pleasure
and sport ; voluptuous.
r^rg^cfp.g Placed or deposited
at, in, to, unto. 2 Predicated,
affirmed, or denied of a subject.
3 Appointed, ordained. 4 Suita-
ble, fit, proper.
r^lt^n A large hole dug for
water (as in the dry bed of a
river, &c.)
ffpT"^ y. The mother in law
of one's son or daughter.
I'^Si'R a. s Destitute or void
of; wanting; as "^•ff^o.
M\Tf. (H) A well.
f^^^ Military array; an
arrangement of troops in any
particular form. v. ^xf. 2 f^o
'C'^^ fig. To contrive or devise
schemes (as in worldly affairs).
3 Also f^o vgwi^^^ To plot
machinations against.
i=[°Q?5"^ RS^T^cT s pop.
f^^^ a. Agitated, disquieted ;
disturbed by pain or any
violent emotion.
KS'^r An embrace or a
clasp, a fold (as with a rope).
1^ rN
mcS\^'^^\ t7. i. To wrjoole or
slide along or over (the body
&c.) — a snake, worm, &c.
FfS-pq-^r^ a. Soft and flabby.
r^[%H" p. s Cast, flung. 2
Scattered. 3 Confused, crazy
(through charms, &e.)
l^c^T s Throwing up, out,
about. 2 Dissipation (of the
mind); scattered stnte (of the
wits or thoughts). 3 Bewilder-
ment. 4 Crazedness,
T^m, mm See T^r^m &
f^TlTq^IT.
f^ffFcT ;). s Known f^^TF^r a.
That knows.
r^sTR n. s Knowledge,
science. 2 Knowledge of. 3 Ex-
perience or experimental know-
ledge. 4 pop. Knowledge of God
or Truth.
rf^ri^rJT^rtl^ s The fourth
of the five ^tsI or envelop-
ments of the '=^H^ or Spirit,
viz. Sense of life in the midst of
material, substantial objects of
knowledge.
FtsTT^r
404
g^5rr
HflfRr^^r s The soul as con-
sisting in the knowledge of
objects.
Rf^ffqSR a. s That tcaclies,
imparts knowk'tl'j;e.
K^TR'^ 7'. c. To inform re-
si)ectfully ; to represent, to sub-
^'^- [structinjr.
f^sTfT'T 7?, s Teaching, iii-
r^irrq^r /. (s) Respectful
declaration ; linmble intimation.
2 ]\Iatter toUl, a representation.
n5TrfcrcT n. Respectfully re-
presented— a matter. 2 One to
whom a representation is made.
fWUH" /: Respectful declara-
tion. 2 Matter humbly slated.
=ir<^ //. A^ulg-. Poison.
^f^/. Lightning. 2 Used
for thunderclap : ^1^ ^^-
^^^"1 : thunderbolt : ^^-
^1^ Disgust, nausea. 2
Blight. 3 Disgrace ; subjection
to ridicule, &c : marred, blasted
state (of counsels, &c.)
tRT/. A brick,
^ri^*^/ Brickwork.
^R/. Littering: the birth,
brood. 2 The season of bringing
forth.
^f^/. Texture, weftage.
^fT" prep. Without : o.\cept.
=lMr/: (s) The Indian lute.
^Fcf/. A large span. 2 See
^FcT p. s Gone, departed :
^K (s) A hero, a \v;irrior,
champion. 2 One of the ^^
or sentiments, — the heroic ])as-
sion, valor. 3 A person of wiiom
some ancestor died in battle, and
who on the first of Phiilgun
proceeds, habited as n warrior,
and witii warlike pmip and state
to make obeisance to an idol, is
at such time so called. 4 Chief,
leading : ^3^"1r, ^fqff^. App.
also to any jierson, prominent
for daring or intrepidity, vigor,
enterprise, munificence.
4iTiT5" s On'^ of a class ofniSTn^ a. Advancing, grow
attendants upon Shiva. 2 Ap]i
angrily to an obstinate and in-
corrigible boy.
^m'^m s A term for a
champion of the notions and
practices of the ^^m\'^ -people.
fK^r /. s Poet. The glory
of valor ; heroism.
*f^ n. (s) Sperma genitale.
2 Vigor, power, virtue. 3 Hero-
ism.
=ir^ a. Twenty.
^i^^ n. s Looking. ff^T^ v.
c. Poet. To look or see. ■^f^«T
/). Seen, beheld.
1^ s A wolf.
I^^Kr a. s Voracious, raven-
ous.
1^^ 7). (s) Conduct, course.
2 Profession. 3 News, tidings. 4
A circle, a. Circular.
fTTicT (s) Tidings, accounts.
^rrfy. (p) Course, conduct. 2
A wuy, manner. 3 A profession,
practice (as a means of subsist-
ence. 4 Currency (as of a phrase
or word); application, use. 5 An
afiection of tlie mind.
^^lad. (s)Frnitlessly, vainly.
huge and sluggish man or ani-
mal. 2 App. also to any indolent
or good-fjr-nothing person.
^T V. s An assemblage or a
multitude. 2 App. to any emi-
nently great personage.
ftR^ n. (s) The little tower-
form erection of earth in which
the Tulas is planted. 2 A ])lant.
f^" p. (s) Aged or old. 2
Full-groan. 3 Advanced (in wis-
dom, &e.) 4 Increased.
^^<^X] f. The series of an-
cients and their course ; ancient
and venerable usage.
fs^F'^fr Ancestral custom.
f^fT^rS' Tiie period of old
age.
fCr^^^r/. Old age.
f I'? /. (s) Growth; growing
(in bidk, in age, &c.) 2 Interest
or increment.
ing.
sf^^-^ s A scorpion. 2 A
sign of the Zodiac, Scorpio.
fT"^ (s) The testicles and
scrotum. ^^ig^ Taurus.
fTiT (s) A bull. 2 The
I^R^jf (s) Setting at liberty
of a male and female calf (as a
rite in funeral solemnities : of
a bull (as a religious act gen.)
frS"/. (s) Rain. 2 fig. A
shower (as of stones, &c.) ; a
volley (of oaths, &c.)
f^ (s) A tree, shrub.
=?^R"?^r /. pi. Mimicry.
^^^ n. Orris-root.
"^^ f. Embrace, hug. v. ^f^,
^■T^ (s) Momentum, forceful
velocity. 2 Velocity. 3 Pain in
jiassage. 4 Sudden imjjulse.
'^nm^ n. (s) Swift, rapid. 2
Having momentum.
^T'^r a. Separate, 2 Dis-
tinct, diverse. 3 That is dis-
joined from ; that has never
done, l)een. In comp. as "t^fa
^iT53r That is beyond the
sight of. prep. Without^ except.
^ITS'RT/. Divided state (as
cf a family.) 2 Resj)ect of per-
sons. 3 Separating.
^nr -^ ad. Poet. Quickly,
sjieedilv.
^^^r V. c. To climb; fo
mount. 2 To press and bend
down (a bough, &;c.)
•\
^"^ Expending, expense.
%^^, ^^^r a. Picked out,
^culled. (-,.,,_
=r^^ a. Liberal, open-hand-
^^^ V. c. To spend.
%=^0T, ^i^oT V. c. To pick (up,
oil', out) one by one : «lt^ ^-
^ ^ifur M^T i^. 2 To
gather. 3 To select, cull.
^"^^r n. Culled, chosen, i. e.
considered, pondered — speech
&c. :pvoportioned, moderate.
gNrr
405
^^
^*^r An extract; or a selec-
tion. Used pi. 2 An epitome,
aljstract.
^5T, ^^ n. A bore (in a iiem,
&c.); the eye of a needle, &c. v.
'kz, tr m. f. A twist (of
straw, grass, cloth, &c.) 2 fig. A
contortion of the bowels (in the
gripes or in the yearnings of
tenderness), v. ^"3, ^oJ, ^,
f^t, fq^. 3 A roll or turn
(aronnd any thing) of a rope.
^E\^^ V. i. 1 o mock ; to
imitate irrisively.
'^Z\^^^\ f. pi. Mimicry ; izn-
maces and gestures in mockery
of. V. -^im^, ^T^, ^X. g. of. 0.
^ZJ^^]f. Encircling, v.^^^.
2 Binding up (of the corn or
grass reaped, &c.) into bundles,
the binding.
^Z\^^,^ZJ^^ V. c. To en-
circle (an object with the arms
&c.) ; to wind around an object
(a rope, &c.) 2 To twist in a rude
manner. 3 To gather together.
^Z\'^] m. ^Z\^ V. A coil (as
of a snake or rope), w. ^I^,
^iJTciT/. A twist of straw ;
a wisp.
^3^ f. Labor exneted by a
government or a person in
])ovver without giving remunera-
tion for it, press-service. 2 A
load carried by a person or ani-
mal pressed. ^ (In exchanging
old metal vessels for new.) The
money paid together with the
old vessels. ^5^^ A person
pressed (to carry a load, &c.) 2
A porter.
•\
'^^ n. Madness. 2 Folly:
a foolish act. .S fig. A violent
and unreasonable passion or
desire after.
^^^ a. Crazy, cracked.
^'^^'^^ v, l, To revel reck-
lessly and wildly.
^^^•^ V. i. To become mad.
^^r^'T V. c. To madden
or irritate (by mocking).
^^^^ a. Crazy, silly.
^^r ft. Mad, 2 Doltisli,foolisb.
3 ^Vild, frantic— speech, acts.
4 with g. of o. Enamoured of,
nifid after.
f ^ITIT A madcap, rantipole.
%^r^riT"?T a. Curved anfl
^crooked. ^^y^^ ^^.j^jj ^^^^
^ST^^Cr Fever of a putrid
^^[^■^f 7\i. To become mad.
n. also^^T^trfl n. pi. .Mocking
and mimicking; making mouths
at, &c. in order to irrigate.
^?[=rra^r *■/. Curved and
crooked. 2 fig. Perverse, way-
ward— a person : random, ramb-
ling s])cech.
^l\l^^ V. c. To madden or
irritate by mocking and teasing.
2 To make mad.
^^rto a. Mad and ugly;
wild-looking.
ffr^-^ST /. A. sort of tur-
r>ieric. 2 A term for an idiot.
f\^fr pi. Mad tricks and
pranks.
^I'M'f^ n. Wildly luxuriant
crop. 2 Wild growth, f^^^^%-
HT'if ^o. 3 A term for a
crop that either cames with
overflowing exuberance or fails
altogether (as is usual with the
crop of certain trees and plants).
4 App. to a capricious donor
ever in extreme*. 5 Whimsies,
freaks. 6 App. to a person of
wild excesses and extravagancies
and anon of absolute quietism.
^:S m^^ n. A term lor the
opvdence of a man utterly lack-
ing wisiiom or desert.
"kmi^J ^r^R a bear-gar-
den. V. vf^.
^S"^ V. c. To surround,
encircle. 2 To roll around (a
string, &c). 3 fig. To hem in, to
beset — troubles, &c. 4 (Usually
^^■•i ^^) To wrap around
(any garment) loosely and neg-
ligently. 5 fig. To embrace
closely and comjdetely; to occupy
thoroughly (a kingdom.) 6 (esp.
V. I.) ', To be covered with writ-
ing— a sheet of paper, &c.
^ST A ring around; an
encompassing line. v. ^T^.
2 A turn around (as of a rope
around a body). 3 A circle de-
scribed by a moving body, a ring :
a whirl. 4 A turn round upon
the levigating slab: ^o ^k:
m^'k^l f. A throe, ap:ing
in travail, v. % ^, ^T ; and
esp. in j)l- and then itfjjx or
"SlTTT. 2 .A. sudden and lancinat-
ing pain (as in discharging the
bowels). V. ^^, ^.
^'^Tr/. (s) A braid (as of the
hair of a woman's head) : any
braid of a few single threads, v.
^TSf. ^ofl'^wt /. Combing
and braiding the hair; tricking
one's self out. v. qr^.
^^ s A bamboo. 2 A bam-
boo flute.
^^ Katan. 2 A cane.
^^ v. Littering or biinsing
forth : a litter; a turn of littering.
^^•T n. (s) Wages or pay.
^^% a. Stipendary, mer-
cenary. 2 Assigned in lieu of
salary— a village, &c. 3 Relating
to ifI«T.
^cTr^ The king of the
Pishach. 2 A high order of
Pisiiach.
>^r5?r€" qr'^r /, The rounds
of i?TTo3.
>cT[S-r^r ^flfr/. a term for
a multitiule of Ignus fatui or
Wills-o'-the-wisp.
•\
^tIF n. s That knows,
knowing.
t^ 72. s A ratan, 2 The
wand, or mace of particular of-
ficers of a great household.
>^^4r -^rfr (s) a staff-beRrer,
usher.
^^Tll'T A mace-bearer.
%?TT/. See °T4r.
^^ (s) A Veda, the generic
term for the sacred writmgs of
the Hindus ; supposed to iiave
been revealed by Brahma and
grqrr
40()
g"^^
after being ])reserved by tradi-
tion for a considerable period, to
have been arran::(Ml, in their
])resent form, bv Vyasa.
»\
^^r f. (s) Acute pain in
<;ener;il.
^^^tT y. An honorable com-
pellation used in letters before
tlie name of a learned Brahman,
or of a Hraliinan diseiigapied from
secular eiiijairement and devoted
to nuNJitation or study,
^^■^[^^T^ An epithet of a
learned Brahman.
^^^r^ s Eiisence of the
Vedas, A title of the Hindu
deity.
^?r^ n. (s) A sacred science
considered as subordinate to,
and, in some sense, a part of,
the Vedas,
^rcT (s) The theological
part of the Vedas. 2 .\ theolocji-
cal system founded u()ou the
Vedas, teachine; that ]\Ialter is
nn illusion and that the sole exist-
ence is one all-pervading spi-
rit. 3 App. to any sage discourse
upon tlie illusoriness and unrea-
lity of the objects of sense,
^'Tffr a. That f.^llows the
])hilosoj)]iv or doctrine set forth
in the Vedant.
%f^, Vr^^r /. s A raised
ground on which sacrifices or
oblations are offered. "2 A defin-
ed s])ace (as in the yard of a
temple, &c.) on which a raised
mass is made, serving as an al-
tar.
^r^fT n. sTauglit by or de-
clared in the Vedas.
'^^^RinT'^ (s) An honorahle
a])pellation for a learned Brah-
man,
^^ a. s (Possible, necessary,
&c.) to be known: rf^^o
^''^ (s) Borino;, perforation.
2 A hole ])ierced. .'5 Piercedncss.
4 The ingress of a luminary at
an eclipse : the malign and un-
liallowod influence attril)utcd to
the approaching obscuration :
the affectedncss by it of the
sul)iect. Of this evil operation
and the inauspicious state pro-
duced by it, the duration is, in
a snlar ecliose, twelve hours be-
fore the commencement of the
obscuration, an<l, in a lunnr
eclipse, nine hours. Durinij;
this period dining, &c.,is forbid-
den. 5 The arriving u])on or the
remaining upon a day on which
is fallen or is to fall any particu-
lar tithi, nakshatra, &c. of a
])ortion of the following or pre-
ceding tithi, &c. and tlie action
of it (as benign or evil) upon
that day : 3TT5I ifJIof^T^I'
^•q- B^'T^. C The bearing in)on
and affecting generally of one
nakshatra, &c. upon another:
the point-blank opposition, and
thus the jiiercing or transfixing
(as fancied) of one ol)ject gene-
rally with respect to another.
Note. The falling of one object
directly in the line of another is
viewed as dire and fearful. Thus
the door of a house should not
exactly front the gate of the
yard; one window must not face
another. 7 Hence the word is
freely used in the sense of Oppo-
sition, obstacle, let, bar : also in
that of Encumbrance, clog, op-
pressive and worrying o]}eration
(as of worldly cares and troubles):
^nT^^T:T;'TTg ^T^TTiT'S ^>^
%TH-^ ^^rTt^ ; care, anxiety ;
or urgency, pressure: 'fjT
Lively and never-intermitted
remembrance ; a constant j)rick-
ing : ^^X]^! 4"^ «?TJT^Tr '^TK-
8 Depth or thickness, the third
of the geometrical dimensions. 9
Ingress: ^^^^I'St %1^ t^ll
TTf?: ^tPti r^TT ^^ tl^. HJ
(Piercing or piercedncss.) Deeply
entering into and affecting:
deeply affected state. Synony-
mously with ^^, ■siT^ &c. V.
^^?> a. s That pierces. 2
fig. Penetrating, sharp touching,
atfectin^.
^^^^ V. c. To perforate. 2
To fix closely and ])iercingly (the
mind). 3. To affect deejily,
fo pierce. ^^H^] See g"^"^!.
f^WTc^r f, s An observatory.
^^ m.f.A creeping or climii-
ing plant. 2 The -jfTll^M! or
Piper betel. 3 The litlie bark of
]dants when stripped off (as
binding material).
%c7€r See ^^^l'
^c^i^f y. Figures of vines,
vines and creepers, &c. (drawn on
cloth, &c.)
^^^-ff^cflT (s) The luxuriating
of a vine or other scandent shrul).
%?^rfr, >^==^tf Fj^c^ffr /. Tim
name of the marks f & 1 re-
presenting the vowels \ Sc x
when in conjunction with a con-
sonant.
»\
f^oT^ ?«. A term of endear-
ment for husband or other belov-
ed man./. A wife, mistress, or
other beloved woman. 'A In re-
proof. A gachibout, gossiping
female. «. Dear, darling ; — as a
person, feature, &c.
^^CP^ Poet. Poetical embel-
lishment : idle amplification. V.
^?^ro5" _a>"r ^. A term of en-
dearment for a wife, mistress, &c.
^^K Trade, dealing. 2 lie-
jdvingto and starting diifieiilties
and objeciions. v. '^fff, 'mx.
^°eKr a. That trades, deals.
2 That makes objections and
excuses. Sec. •
%^ SeeV-
^5^r /. (s) A dancing girl :
a harlot.
'^^ (s) Dress, garb. 2 A
costume. 3 A disguise.
^T^Trfr a. That assnmes the
garb of. 2 Hypocritical.
^^ a. s That environs,
wraps.
407
^^f^
^2"^^" V. c. To surround. 2 To
cover by winding around ; to
enwrap : to wind or wrap around.
^2"*? n. (s) Surrounding-. 2
Cnverinp; by wrapiug or wind-
ing; around : wraping around. 3 A
cover, envelope, sheath, a case. 4
An enclosing wall, hedge, a fence.
5 Turning and winding (as of
a road round a mountain).
^S"%^ a. s Proper to be
encompassed.
m'S^p. Encompassed. 2 En-
wrapped : wound. 3 Enveloped.
t^jf. A gate of a village. 2
Payment of the Government-re-
venue. 3 A gate of a yard.
^^^•T '^'Tf The person ap-
])omted to keep the gate of a
village.
%ProT -=[ f. The nose-bridle
of a bullock, &c.
f^H n. Inordinate liking or
taking to, addictedness ; a bad
habit ; a vitious ])ractice.
»\
^^^r f. An adulterous or
wanton woman ; a harlot.
^^ m.f. Time, space of time.
2 Time before us ; interval :
3 Leisure : i?I^ ^Tcrr^t ^T^T
4 A time: ?f if^C^'Bi^ ffl^ tssf
^^^T- 5 Time in excess : ir53
^ITi^I Much time has been
taken up 6 /. A season, time :
7. A half of the day. S A division
of the thirty ghatika whether
of the day or of the night.
^^/. The sea-shore. 2 An
ornament of females.
^cZ"3q"f3" y; Time as se^son-
ableness or nnseasonableness is
concerned; time good or bad:
sRt^l %o qi^fT ^T^t. ad. At a
time, time whether suitable or
unsuitable; at any time.
^^•T V, c. To sliake loosely.
^S'^'ETK ad. According to
tlie occasion ; at times ; upon a
time.
^^^^ll\ ad. At improper ^^''t,^^'^ r. c. To separate
times, at a time whether suitable j the finer from the coarser parts
or unsuitable, of meal (by agitating the ^i?
f^JR^oyiXf -mzm ^j_ p,.^^.,ptl in a particular manner).
and apt at meeting occasions; , n^^'^^ n. S Proficiency. 2
Depth of research : skilfulness
of investigation.
^t^'^ n. s Variegatedness,
diversifiedness as to color.
^^#^r/. s Black basil. 2 A
flower- tree.
^^h¥ n. s Difference of caste,
class, kind. 2 Strangeness of
caste.
^^r^^PcT^ s. One who,
under the appearance of piety
and virtue, is covetous, malicious,
and cruel.
^I^T n. (s) A lapis lazuli.
^^^^/. s. The river of the
inframundane regions. App,
to the cow which is presented
to the Brahman ])erforming the
obsequies of a defunct, that his
passage over the river may be
secured.
^^R Hasty conception of
anger and disgust at and
abandonment of (as at and of the
world). V. g, Q.
^cTTT'T V, i. To conceive an<:er
and disgust at ; to revile passion-
ately as vanity and trumpery,
and vow to renounce utterly.
tr?^ a. (s.) Relating to the
Vedas ; derived from or conform-
able with the Vedas ; well- versed
in the Vedas.
^r^# a. Relating to a ^f^.
f. The profession of a l^f^^,
^^^(Telingee) A sort of em-
piric, quacksalver.
M?^4 n. in. 8. A turkois or
lapis lazuli.
^^ (s) A physician, o.s Medi-
cal. 2 Relating to the Vedas.
^^°n n. s. The science of
medicine. 2 A treatise \ipon medi-
[physician.
ready-witted
^'^^K\ ad. Betimes.
W^r^oTirr, >"^^^T a. Skil-
ful at making or at improving
opportunities. 2 Punctual.
^^r f. 2)1. Large ciirdumoms.
^°^r ad. A time, or times:
f^rrCcf c. Poet. A timely de-
liverer; a friend in need.
^3rf^07 „_ ;_ To be affected
(detrimentally) by the time, i. e.
to lack the thing or the opera-
tion needful at a certain time ;
— used of crops, cattle, children,
..V ■ [large kind.
^^ A bamboo, esp. of the
V^^m^ See '^3'^f^R:.
^^^f^^r a. That is ill good
time. r i ^■
.V -x ,.,. L."o"'' time.
^STfrrr ad. Betimes ; in
•\ "^ ■^
^oST^ST ad. Repeatedly : ever
and anon.
t /. A hedge.
M^l?7^ a. s That on which
there is difference of opinion; —
as a doctrine, a point. 2 That
has the nature of an alternative ;
— as a precept, rite. 3 Dubious.
^^?^ w, s Impairedness or
imperfection ; i. e. liroken, dis-
torted, state (of a limb, &c.) 2
fig. Imperfection.
S5. •_
^MZ n. m. (s) The paradise
of Vishnu.
f^J^r^r a. Used esp. in
notes, of a deceased worshiper of
Vishnu.
H^t\ f. s Speech in the
fourtli of its four stages from
the first stirring of the air or i cme.
breath, — articulate utterance; the %-;rT:P
faculty of speech. 2 Language,
speech.
^fj"^^ ?/. s Difference of qua-
lities, heterogeneity.
'^^^\ f. The profession of a
^^r3i"^r f. The business of
a ]ihysician as prescribed by the
Shastra.
t^f^
408
^m
%?TfflCr/. Medical practice.
^?Trr=r A title of physicians.
%Jjf ;.. See%'^^.
^'■^^^ n. s. Widowhood.
^W^ 71. s. Contrariety,
reverse. 2 Hostility.
^^■^ 7t. (s) Grandeur,
glory, maguificeucc and splendor
of state.
^IH^^ n. s Sadness, sorrow-
fulness : distractedness. 2 Hos-
tility of feeling towards.
^^i?^^ a. s Grammatical.
tn. pop. t^JT^^t/Tl. A gram-
marian.
%r n. (s) Enmity, hatred.
^^^ f. Grass, &c. as food
for cattle ; fodder. 2 The place
in a cowpen to confine the
fodder, the cratch. 3 n.f. The
grist which is thrown in at one
time into a mill : the quantity of
grain which is, at once thrown
into a pan to be parched, fried,
&c., the/e«/.
^^ V. c. To pour gradually
from the hand or a vessel (rice,
&c. into boiling water to 'be
boiled, grist inio a mill to be
ground, grain into a ])an to be
parched), n. The quantity which
is taken to be boiled, &c. at one
time. 2 The vessel from which
the grist is poured gradually
into the mill, the hojjper.
^rr The portion (of rice, &c.)
allotted fur the day's consump-
tion, taken out from the store
and set apart to be dressed.
*4^r^r (s) Ascetic or a devo-
tee. Api)lied to a class of men-
dicants.
^f^PT //. s Absence of world-
ly desire. 2 Pop. U-nuncia-
tion of all sensuous delight.
%IT a. delating to Virat,
the great offsjjring of Urahnia
and mighty monarch. App. now
to tlie town and district of
%R -^ a. (p) Desolate,
wild.
^m\ -% /. Desertness.
%fr (s) An enemy, a. Hostile.
^55"$T'^q' n. s Strangeness,
oddness. 2 Ditference.
^^'^^ n. s. change of colour
for the worse. 2 Heterogeneity.
=(^rfC^ a. s Relating to mar-
riage ; nuptial.
|^5Tr^ (s) Thespcond month
I of the year ; April-^lay.
^f^2"^ n. s Endowedness
with some distinguishing and
particularizing property, or ad-
junct. 2 Tiie quality (peculiar
and essential to a subject) of
holding or having.
td^^ n.s Speciality. 2 Trans-
cendency.
t^q" (s) The agricultural
and mercantile tribe, the third
of the four grand divisions of the
Hindu people. 2 An individual
of it.
^^?^^ s A ceremony of the
daily course, viz. the casting,
before beginning the meal, of a
little food into the tire as an
offering to Agni.
^^R^ s Agni or fire.
°q^^ pop. ^^^r^r A iind
worshiped in the Carnatic. He
is an incarnation of Krishna.
°^^ a. s That has an abso-
lute and a distinct being; that
is manifest to or can be api)re-
heiided by the senses : 3^31^
■^3TT tiT^^ =^1 3j7?f ^T?^. 2
Clear, plain, evident. 'A Articu-
late— utterance, a sound. 4
Known, i. e. of known numbers
or quantities — arithmetic.
°^V^ f. (s) A real being,
an entity. 2 App. to a super-
eminent and transcendent per-
sonage, a Ph(enu; also to an
unrivaled scamp. 3 Clearness,
plainness. 4 Indication, develop-
ment, o The mark Rafter a letter,
indicating that 3T is involved
in it and is to be thrown out.
°^*\ a. s Deformed (in some
limb or organ). 2 tig. Deficient,
iinentire — an article, n. De-
formeduess : a defective particu-
lar ; a weak point. 2 A mole on
the skin.
sqx^Il^ /. s corrp. °^^\V^
A speech darkly and illusively
significant; an insinuation. 2
^q"*^ n. S Oddness. 2 In-
equality. 3 Adverseuess.
=1^R^ a. s Relating to an
ol)ject of sense; sensual.
^^f a. (s) Relatincr to
Vishnu. 2 A devotee of Vishnu.
%^"^Cr.'t.R('lating to a follower
of Vishnu.
^^^ f. Husband's sister.
^f iin/. A jrarticie or
respectful calling. IJolh to males
and females : ^'Ear ^f^^ ^\
trS"^^ r. l. To draw towards
or arise unto; to befal; — said
of some calamitv.
^m See ^m-
frFfJT See ^MH-
|'^lftloT,'-ir?TiS^i V. i. To over-
flow.
kftt^'^^ i\ i. To cry out or
I talk in sleep.
^^^ a. (s) Agitated, dis-
quieted by sorrow,alarm, anxiety.
°^^^ n. s a consonant. 2
The nasal dot over a letter. 3
A condiment, sauce. 4 Figura-
tive, allusive speech. 5 A mark,
sign.
s^rfcT^lT s Inverted order ;
emersion. 2 Reverse (or wrong)
conduct : licentiousness : con-
trariety (to rectitude).
°q"rc]TrTfi" a. s Separate,
apart. 2 AVanting, void of :
pi-cp. Without, except : ^T Hvlf
siffcT^^ s Unconnectedness,
absence from: {^ft ^^TTT^T
■^i?lT ^o ^T?. 2 The law ot
negation, tiie neecessary non-
beuig of one thing under the
non-being of some other thing .-
3^5) i^il ^% ^I^t -ii^ '^^^^^T
^tCT "SigT 3^0 ^t|. 3 Excep-
tion.
o^Tvfhrr
409
5TnT??r
s^^fTfcT (s) The seventeenth
of the astrologicnl ^irr. 2 A
])()rtent.fi prodigy indicating cula-
uiity. 3 App. fig. to a naughty,
mischievous child.
^^^^^ s Opposition. 2 In-
verted order. 3 Hiuderance.
°W^\ f. (s) Pain (bodily or
mental).
^^C^^^"^ a. s Lying', subsist-
ing, inherent in, relating to,
different receptacles, subjects,
seats, bases, lit. fig. ; discordant,
unfriendly. 2 P^quivocal, ambigu-
ous— an argument, n. A cavil, v.
^iTRT^rC (s) Irregularity :
anomalousness. 2 Deviousness
of course ; errancy. '6 Pop. Ad-
ultery.
5?TRT^ra a. That has ir-
regularities, exceptions, &c. —
a rule. 2 Adulterous : that has
committed adultery. 3 s That
walks deviously, dissolute.
°^^ (s) Expense, spending.
°^^51^rc=?" a. Prodigal, ex-
travagant.
°^^\ a. That spends liberal-
ly and munificently.
^^'4 a. (s) Fruitless, vain.
o?Tf^?H n. s Subtraction,
^^^r^J^ p. s Specified.
_ _»\
oJJ"^^^^ s Specification, ex-
ception,
sq-qfrjj^^ a. That specifies.
°'^f'-^R n. s Intervention :
2 Interval. 3 An intervening
object. 4 Obstruction: i. e. the
obstructing body or cause. 5
Ga|), break, temporary stop])age.
°<T^^r Trade, business.
s^rfFTPT (s) Trade, traffic. 2
s Conviction. 3 Diligence, as-
siduity.
oq-^m#r a. (s) pop. °q"^rf[-
^^ That trades, a merchant.
2 s Diligent.
S^^t^rr /: (s) Settlement, ar-
rangement. 2 Pop. End, issue,
fate. 3 A written declaration of
tlie law; or a written extract
52
from the codes of law, as given
as the opinion of the law-
officers, [adjusts.
s^T^^FT'lT a. s Thai settles,
s^^^^R^ ?i. s Settling, dis-
posing.
^f^E^fR^ p. 8 Arranged,
adjusted.
^^^r^^cT p, s Arranged,
adjusted; — used of things, affairs,
systems, schemes. 2 Orderly,
regular — a person.
^'^^^'R (s) 0|)eration; exer-
cise. 2 Procedure, practice. 3
Trade, business : a trade, an em-
ployment, vocation. 4 The prac-
tice of the courts of law. 5 A
law suit. gj^^T'Cfi^^T -■^'fj^
a. Skilful at business. 3J^t?T-
T^lX«r n. Regard to or study
of Law or Jurisprudence. 5i-
"^T^ii:!^ '*• s The science or
law of social intercourse ; the
law of demeanour, sj^^t^^^
a. Of correct conduct,
^^^ef^ s A person who
has passed his minority ; a
young man of age; or one who
has attained his sixteenth year,
at which period he can a«^~:ert
his rights in a court of law. 2
Conversant with business.
sq"^rrR^, szfsfCKr^ See °^-
°^??"ftr a. That is eno^rioed
ni secular occupations ; that is
following some vocation ; a
man of business; a merchant.
sg^^TTl ^T^tnt^ m. A vulgar
fraction.
_ c
«>^7^^r^ a. s (Possible, pur-
posed, necessary) to be employ-
ed, used, practised : apt or fit
for business — a person : proper
for any use — a thing : suitable
to be followed — a |)rofession. 2
Actionable, subject to legal
process.
°^rS" f. s Pervasion several-
ly or singly ; inherence distribu-
tively and constituently; the state
of an individual or a particular,
or a part of any compound or
collective mass — of any quanti-
ty or number — of any body or
whole.
^^r^ n. (s) Addictedness :
a bad habit. 2 s A sin, a vice. 3
s Intent application to. 4 s A
cahitnity.
°^tr% a. Addicted to evil
practices; of vitious habits.
SJR-T />. s Sspnrate. 2 Of
reversed order. 3 Bewildered.
4 Diffused throughout.
S^T^^rSTI^cr ft. Disordered, de-
ranged;— used of things, &c.
°J^^^ a. s Illiterate.
°^['TlfT n. (s) Grammar, sq-f-
"B^Tjft ni. A grammarian.
°m-^^ a. (s) pop. -55" or ^F-
^'53. Filled with and over-
come by (fear, grief, &c.); dis-
turbed, agitated by any great
agony. 2 Occupied and excited
by : '^^ -3fTSi:r --^T^ «JTo.
-^mW\\ f. (s) Explanation,
exposition ; gloss, comment. 2
Description, delineation ; defini-
tion. 3 Exp',sin-e (of faults. &c.)
4 Irrisive representation of.
^^r^sq'R V. s. Expounding;
making comment upon. 2 Un-
folding.
°^iSr (s) A tiger.
sqrg-g-?^ n. a term for a
science or an art of which the
rudiments are difiioult of mas-
tery.
^mm^T. n. s. Tiger's skin
worn as clothing.
°^r^ n. s. Disguise; cloak,
sham. 2 n. (h) Interest.
s^Tm^arr^rffr /. Drawing out
an account with interest cal-
culated upon broken periods.
s^rrsTiqir^T c. Usurious. 2
Bearing interest — a loan.
^m^Vi^l f. s. A figure of
rhetoric. False censure ; censure
in u])])earance conveying real
commendation ; in a})pearance
blaming one, in reality another :
disguised reproach.
S^rr^^ir a comprehensive
term for the various items of
the business of a shroff.
s^lWrcTf. s. A figure of
rhetoric. Disguised reproach. 2
Covert pl•.ai^5e. 3 Praising one
person whilst apparently blaming
another. 4 Censuring one person
o^T
410
?r^7
whilst apparently blainin°j an-
other. [Sirius.
^^F"^ 8. A hunter : the star
smf^ /. (s.) pop. ^^i*-T
Disease ; a disease, a sickness. 2
The black lei)rosy. 3 A trouble ;
a scrape; a pest. 4 Ap[). to
n miscliievous child ; answering
to pestilent brut, plague.
^mv-^'7 a. Afflicted with the
black leprosy or with consump-
tion.
°^fT (s) Frequenting or
being at continually ; constant
occupiedness, versedness in,
among, about : ?i^ 'J?»r f^r^-
^T'=^T II ■'J^ ^T ^r T^^JT^TII
^T'T^ITTIl - Worldly business
and fuss.
o^f'T?? a. That overspreads,
covers over, i,r takes in the whole
expansion : that penetrates and
pervades throughout.
o^fT^ V. c. To overspread,
lit. fig. V. i. To penetrate and
pervade: f^'T ^T ^It^ff 3jm#
°^rTiT (s) Work or action ;
any working or acting ; any work,
operation. 2 Trade, traffic.
o^rrtlKrA tradesman,a dealer^
merchant.
°m'^\ a. s That overspread;*,
pervades : 5IIT^5ITt1", 'g^^f^T.
°^fR" p. (s) Overspread,
covered over ; occupied ; saturat-
ed with, &c. : that overspreads.
°^f[fr/. (s) Pervasion, pre-
sence throughout the extension
of. 2 Universal permeation.
°^^^ a. s That is to be or
that is overspread, pervaded, oc-
cupied tliroughont: that is to be
coni)'''ehendcd.
s^f^f^ s Athletic exercise ;
exercise (of the body) in gen. 2
A fathom.
^^V^\ f. A female recently
delivered.
5^[??r[t^ a. s Re1atin«r to
business or to the generid course
of action; common, ordniary.
3?ir^?i[r^riT -nm v. The
common or familiar name ; as
3^TJiJTT, fflrqi, -^T^T, ■SfTSfT, ^T^.
s^l|^lTfy. s Separation ; re-
moval from: "^^^ f<^^T "i
^T<t1. K.\. ot compounds :
^T^-^TJT3JTo. 2 Separate state
orquality:gzif^^ ^T^l^ ^T^'^
5jlo. 3 Laxly. Perplexity; great
an.xiety, great distress. 4 (With
yet greater laxity.) A difficulty,
trouble,harass,bother:if\ ^T^T-
gjTo ?r tj^^T. Also difficulty,
demur as existing in the mind :
3JT9 ■slT'lt ^T ^T^T ■'ilT^T.
°m^ (s) The proper name
of a saint and author, the suppos-
ed compiler of the Vedas and
Purans, also the founder of the
Vedanta philosophy. Hence ap-
peilatively an expounder of the
Purans. 2 Diameter.
=^ran s Assiduous applica-
tion unto; diligent study of;
f^-^TSJTo.
^^r^^Tf a.s That studies or
applies himself to or pursues
closely and intently.
^r^qiJ 71. (s) The seat on
which sits the expounder of a
Puvan : the stool on which the
book is placed.
■^^r^lq n. s Semidiameter.
^mtl The father-in-law ol
one's son or daughter,
oqrs" s A serpent.
5^r^T s Obstruction.
s^rr^M s Excitation, agita-
tion of the mind.
^^^^ s Inverted order.
^^T^IFtT f. s Conversancy
with ; acquaintance with science
and literature. 2 Apprehension
of the significance (of any word):
such apprclicnded sense : ^-
WT^I f^^T q^T^" ?tfJIfI^# ai
3 Generation particular or spe-
cial. 4 Formation of words,
etymology : ^k:t^ 53* JZ'f.
oj^qq" ^j, g Learned (esp. in
the shastras). 2 Of which the
sense is seen to be resolvable
into (component parts or a root
or stock); derived — a word. 3
Generated, issued.
°^f s Military array. 2 fig.
A strategera ; a scheme to be-
guile, r
_^ |_vens.
°^m n. 8 The sky or hea-
^^ s A village or station of
cowherds. 2 A multitude.
^^ (s) An ulcerous sore or
hole, an ulcer. 2 A wound.
^^ n. (s) Any self-imposed
religious observance or obliga-
tion to hold it \ a vow made to do
or bear.
^cT^''^ s The rite of invest-
ing a Brahman with the sacri-
ficial thread.
^cf^ a. (s) That is under
the obligation of a religious vow.
^A\ ad. In vain.
^r^^ (s) An adult Brahman
of whom the investiture with the
sacred tlu-ead has never been
solemnized. 2 pop. A vile mis-
chievous child.
M^ (s) Rice.
°?^sf -^y; Husband's sis-
ter.
^ The thirtieth consonant,
^^ (p) Doubt : suspicion,
misgiving, (s) An era. 2 Aj))!.
es]). to an era which is de])end-
ent on the solar year, and dates
from the birth of Shalivalian.
It commences on the 1st of Vy-
shakh ','>\1\} of Kaliyug, or on
Mondav 14th March a. d. Ju-
lian style. .3 Reign : rule, sway.
4 Su])eriority over ; mastery, v.
'^^, "^^j ^I3T, g. of s. & of o.
ST^^tTF (s) One that esta-
blishes an era. 2 A})p. to the
founder of a religion, sect, &c.
^^^ (s) A cart. 2 fig. A
CIOL'.
5rs?Tor
411
5TT^
^^"T V. i. To be able.
51*^r (s) A name of Shiva.
2 The famous teaclierShankiira-
cliana. a. s Auspicious, propi-
tious.
^f.^f^r^ (s) The designa-
tion of tiie celebrated teacher of
the Vedant ))hilosophy. He is
stated to be an incarnation of
Shiva. 2 A])]), to the Sanyasi
))residing over the several
T?^ or colleges established
by him.
^^^ n. (s) A piece or bit,
es]). a slice.
20*^r /. (s) Fear ; doubt ; a
scruple, want of conviction, or
satisfaction. 2 An objection
started, v. g, ^i:.
^^f^r^ a. (s) Diffident,
dubious.
^f^^ p. That has fears,
scruples regarding. 2 That is
feared, doubted.
^J s The Style of a dial.
2 A spike, nail, peg, pale, &c.
3 Ten billions. 4 A cone.
5T5'T 7n. V. (s) An omen, a
]irodigy. 2 The point upon which
an astrologer, &c. is consulted.
'.i The oracle delivered.
ST^'T^cTr f. A book contain-
ing verses by which a fortune-
teller foreshows futurity.
^JR The name of the ma-
ternal luicle of the ^T'C^
princes. Hence ilfsfiT'TT'TT A
term for an old treacherous or
officious relative whose counsels
tend to ruin.
^^ (a) a word, speech.
^^ ad. In the era: ^"^ ^^
^tIT j), (s) Able, capable. 2
s Strong. /. Power, strength.
^TItF /. (s) Ability or capa-
bility : strength, might. 2 Power
(as of a word). 3 The energy of
a deity ])ersonified as his wife.
4 The female organ as the coun-
terpart of the phallic personi-
fication of Shiva, and worship-
ped by a sect of Hindus thence
termed Shakt. 5 An iron spear.
^rTF^T?" (s) Acceptation (of
a word'*; reception in any ])arti-
cular sense. 2 Laxly. Belief,
opinion : j^i^T ^^l^^^J ^T
'S'T^T '^TrlT. 3 Apprehension
of existencies as they actually are.
SJlTfT'l^lT ad. According to
the power of.
5Tr^J7r^ a. (s) pop. -^^ -J^cT
Able, competent : strong,
mighty.
^^jqr^^rr /. s Worship of
the Shakti.
^^^ a. (s) Pos«!ible, feasi-
ble. 2 That may be conveyed by
a particular word or phrase ; —
a sense.
^^^F^ s A possible import.
^^ s A name of India.
W (s) The conch-shell. 2
Conch-form lines at the extre-
mities of the fingers. 3 A term
of enhancement after an epithet
expressing the clearness, limpid-
ness of. 4 A hundred billions.
5 One of the nine nidlii or trea-
sures of Kuber. 6 A term for an
unlettered and rude fellow. 7
The cheek-bone.
3;r?3'^^('T m.f. The .sound of
the conch. 2 fig. See #t^.
^^r^, ^^^r See "^^ Sig. 6.
2 STtgji A luckless viirht.
's\zm\ ad. with ^^^r or cr,
o^T, ^. To divulge.
^5 a. (s) Roguish, knavish.
2 Vile, hateful, miserly, churl-
''^•_, [ness, &c.
^?rC f. Roguery. 2 Vile-
^^ (s) A neuter : a eunuch.
^^ a. (s) A hundred.
5Tcf?j n. (s) A century or
a cento.
5Tcr^5 (s) A name of Indra.
2 A hundred Ashwamedhs. The
performance of them entitles
the performer to the place and
title of Indra. Hence, (with
ironical implication) a mightv
feat.
'^^^^ a. Centuple.
^^Mf^ s A phrase of bene-
diction addressed to a person
sneezing. It signifies Live a
hundred years !
SI^fTfr/. A centiped. 2 Also
^rf^R^ Walk of a hundred
paces after a meal (to promote
digestion).
SJcTiTFiT A phrase used to
one vaunting of his might and
]irowess.
SJcTirr'T a. Of the measure or
amount of a hundred : "^o
^cHTKr a. (s That can cure
a hundred diseases.) App. jo-
cosely, as an epithet of a piiysi-
cian from the conceit that he
kills a hundred persons.
^^^f f. A manifesto.
sTcf^tsf A term for an ar-
rant fool.
5Tcr5T: ad. By hundreds.
5T^[^r?r A centurion. 2
Humorously. A possessor of
hundred rupees.
5T^i^ a. A centenarian.
^jeffS-^fTr -m a. Superlatively
lazy.
?Tfr/. s. A century: T\^%,
^-J (s) An enemy, foe; ex.
of comp. fT;iT} -^i?f -'^T«T s^o
^^mX Saturday.
SJ^Ifi'^qTcTc^r A designation
for a Jewish oil-man. From their
not selling or extracting oil ou
Saturdays.
^R (s) The planet Saturn
or the regent of it. 2. App. to
an adversary, cr to a dun.
3 App. to one of dull under-
standing and cold temj)erament.
A or Vlf^jf^?^ A sapphire.
^R:fIR See ^m\^.
m^^K Saturday.
3H:^%5^: ad. s Slowly,
slowly : tardily.
5R^^ See ^PT. Sig 1. 2.
2 fig. App. to any disturbing
person.
m^f. An oath, v %, m^,
^T, ^T, & ^. im"^ is used with
mx ; if, or without ^x. in a
5r?r
412
5nr5rr^r
construction implying condition,
and in solemn disallowal or
counter-asservation. St;e IMaik
viii. 12. Heb. iii. 11., jv. 5.
Greek : '^if^'^'^T ^'JIT^^
or ^l^^T tji^ cT?: 91 o ;
■S^o ; i. e. it positively shall
not fall or did not fall.
^TT 7n. n. (s) A hoof. 2 A
division of a cloven hoof.
^^ (s) Sound, any voice.
2 A word. 3 Ueproof, blame, v.
?iTTJI,ii,i:^,^TW,'3?nn".'3T5?:^T^'J2I
•n. Pisrsimony of words or speech :
Wq^UT. vr^^^TST A dictionary.
ST^?g-;s^ ?j. Verbal criticism.
Sl5^^Tg^4 n. Eloquence. '^^^-
'iir e. A plagiary. ^js^SiTS?
n. Net of \Yords. A term for
language considered as a multi-
tudinous assemblajje of words.
2 (Esp. in Poet.) Many and idle
■uords. ■jT^rfT^'T n. s Verbal
chastisement ; i. e. rebuke.
Stgr^jq- Verbal fault (in litera-
ry composition.) 2 Familiarly.
Elame, word. v. 3"^, ^T^,
??n^, ^jv], g, ^iTT. 3 The
slur of a word. ■sr^^qtrgFEI n.
Oratory. ?j;5^T?T^tq n. s Vio-
lence, harshness of words,
^s^tn^l^ Verbal exuberance,
verbiage, v. ^p,]-^, ^i^, ^^.
?T5^qT^ji;j- n. The evidence of
words ; viz. testimony (oral or
written.) ^5^^^^ Verbal dif-
ference. 2 Another word.
IR^^irCt -^^ a- 'A'liat has the
skill of sliootinjr (an arrow, &c.)
upon an unseen ohiect throu'^h
liearniir a voice ))r«cee'.iu)g from
it. 2 That can pierce into and
iliscover the design tln-ougli a
few words spoken. ?I5^(;'=^€TJ
/. Syntax. ?io^?!T'?fiTai\T /. s
Formation of words. 2 Parsin<'.
^5^5^ n. MelliHuencc.
^^Tf^^'^R In ihetoiic. A
trope or verbal figure.
^i;?[7T5^ lla.sh word. 2
Speech whether good or bad.
5THT a. A hundred.
5T*iJ (s) A name of Shiva. 2
A term for a simpleton, or a
person gniless and unsuspecting.
^W (s) StilHno-, subduino-
(of the passion and affections) :
stillness (of tlie mind); stoicism,
quictisin. 2 Stilling gen.: still-
ness. 3 Final happiness.
^^■^ V. i. To become calm,
lit. fig. ; to be ])acified.
^^'f n. s Quieting. 2 In
medicine. Allaying. 3 A com-
poser; an anodyne. 4 Becom-
ing; still.
5TiT^rr^r^r ^ffr hm^ To
use chicanery, intrigue.
mm^ a. Lighter or
heavier ; lessened or augmented ;
— used of a sickness, of the
market-rate, rain, &c. 2 n. A
slight difference less or great-
ter; fig. a slight discrepancy (in
accounts, statements, &e.) ; a
slight disagreement.
^^ /. s A thorny tree.
IMimosa suma.
^mi'^ n. s A name for
Legumes or pul^^e.
5T#RsH n. ^mj^\ f. (s)
Woiship of the Vt?i) during
the festival of ^^^T.
^^•T n. s Sleeping, reposing :
reclining. 2 A bedstead, couch,
mat, &c.
^^r/: s. A bed, sofa, Sec.
2 Sleei)ing,. lying.
^ (s) An arrow. 2 The
arrow of Shiva, i. e. the three
stars composing the belt of
Orion.
5I^5rr^ Ti. s Poet. A flight
or shower of arrows.
^^^ %i. (s) Protection, de-
fence. 2 A protector, preserver.
^"T'T n A pyre or funeral
pile.
WM^'^n. (s) corrp. ^^^t^T^
A refugee, an ap|)ellant.
^J^t^R^^^^^ a. Kind unto
refugees.
"^XmA (9, For (he sake of your
protection I am your refugee
or moxt humble servant). A form
of salutation used by the f^-
JlTl<T-pcop]c on meeting.
^^^r^«. That solicits refuge
or protection.
5T^cf , ^^5r,7T?:^^rc^-^^ m.f.{sr)
Autumn.
^^r^ s A quiver.
"^^ (s Cage of arrows)
A term for a person in whose
body many arrows have lodged.
^ITJT / (p) Shame. 5T^^ r\
i. To be ashamed or abashed.
^^fff^T-"^T a. Abashed, over-
awed by.
5T^^q"R n. s Setting of an
arrow (on the bowstring).
^n (a) Law. Used in courts
as signifiying Mobamniadan law.
^irr^cf a. Expert, adroit.
^r^ (a) Spirituous liquor.
^n»^f^ (s) Archery.
5lfR n. (s) The body. 2 A
covert term for pudendum virile
ve! muliebre.
^fR^^ Mortification of
the body by austerities. 2 Cor-
]K)ral piuiisiunent.
^HT 5Tf 1%/. Constitution of
the body ; bodily health. 119
^TJT. A term for disease and
suffering, gen. as appertaining
to the body. ^<» "^■qffi f.
Health. 2 Bodily vigor. ?F<»
^^'"£1 Affinity. ■J^o €^^ a.
That is related to by marriage.
^*^r /. (s) Sugar. 2 Graveh
the disease c\f this name.
^cT -xf y. (a) Superlative,
surpassing action : ?j^T 'm?-
^T^"»TT3llTo %«l1. 2 E.xuber-
ance; vast inealeulable quantity
or number : n^^rjf^^ -S^t'^T
Vjo. 3 Used for fs5:^^T.
^^1 ind. (s) An adjunct
ju'oper to the names of lirah-
mans : fsWiJ" ^T?iur.
^^^/. (.\) A wager or bet.
^^r?:r /. (s) a spike (as
of grass), a straw, a reed, a pin,
a piece of wire, a long, thin
])oiuted body, gen. — as a bar
of a cage.
^^"^f^r m'^\ f. Examina-
5T??t^
413
JTrq"
tion of the conversancy of !i
cnndidate with any paificular
work by placing that work I)c-
fore him, piercing the sheets
with a shalaka or pin, and re-
quiring him to explain the stanza
upon which the pin rests.
^^r^r^^ A mode, with a
straw, reed, pin, &c. of propos-
ing any inquiry. The sh;ilaka is
introduced into the book and
the direction sought is deduced
from tlie meaning of the stanza
u]iou which the shaUika falls.
^f n (s.) A corpse.
3^5Jtfr, ^^r s Poetical
names for the moon.
^I'^T n. s Young grass. 2 A
hair of the pubes.
^"^ n. (s) A weapon. 2 fiij.
That in which one's prevalence
or power consists — as learning,
beauty, the pen, &c.
5T^'^^K An armourer.
"SJimm a. s Armed.
'^m'i^ (s) A surgeon.
^^R3T[^ Military exercise.
?T?" (p) In chess-playing.
Check. 2 fig. The bearing or
set state against (as of an enemy
against a persoii or place) :
intent or vigilent state (as of
one watching an opportunity).
V. ^, ^^, ^. 3 fig. A notice,
warning, v. ■^.
5T§^^ n. (p) A city or large
town.
'5J^l^1\ A city-bred sharper.
2. A knowing one. 3. A clever
one.
^g:?:q^r The waiis of a
city. Ai)p. to the Guards, &c.
a])poiiited to protect a town.
5T?'^r A quake or tremor
witli horripilation.
^§"U a. Relating to a city,
urb.an. 2 Hence Scampish.
^UlT w. See ^?^rr.
^§:r (p) A king. ^rcR[^r a
prince.
5Tg"fRC V. (p) Arum ni-
grum. Bengal Pharm.
^cTirirJT a. (h) Creditable,
reputable. 2 An epithet of a huudi
which bears this word jipon it,
im[)orting that the jierson pre-
senting it is worthy and may be
trusted with the cash ; answering
to payable to hearer. 3 App. to
rujjees, &c. so manifestly good
that they may be received with-
out any examination.
^TTRqar n. Shrewdness,
sagacity, good sense.
^§^Rr a. (h) Sagacious,
knowing, clever. [cornel v.
^rrFrg^cTf a. Clever and
"^Kl^m n. Ninety-six.
^r^T'J^rrtn^r^^ /. a very
dullard.
^^^1^ /• (P) The mulberry
tree. n. A mulberry.
^TdrTr a. Seventy-six.
5ICW^ (p) A fabulous bird,
a gntfin.
^TI"f3T2frr a. Eighty- six.
^CK j)l. See ^Cn.
5TCr^/. A species of^f^^f^
^ri^r (a) a witness at law.
/. Testimony. V^TTsfl^K c.
A witness.
^rt f. (p) Ink. 2 A paste
made of iron rust ; to be applied
to the bass-eud of a tabor.
^r^ a. (p) Relating to the
rule of, bearing the virtue, na-
ture, or name of; belonging untO;
vui - M^\ ^To Belonging to
Poena, &c. ft[i< 5IT0 Proceed-
ing from, established hy, in same
or other way pertaining to Sin-
dia. Used of coins, fashions,
laws, usages: ^T?fur S):to Pe-
culifir or suitable to; usually ac-
companying or with Biiihmans;
il^^To, ^WT^VJT" Appropri-
ate, &c. to scamps, liars./. Sway,
rule: 50ST*T'<«' f"3T^5lT«> '^T^l. 2
A people,a community : ^jIo3[t
^rq:# a. Eighty-six.
^r^/. A pot-herb ; any leaf,
fruit, root, &c. used as a veget-
able. 2 A mango nearly ripened
on the tree, fit for t}i^ or
the gathering.
^[^lT[^r/. A general term
for esculent vegetables.
^rrns A worshiper of a divine
energy under its feminine person-
niticatiou. a Relating to the
Shakti.
^r^/. See 317^.
^m f. (s) A branch. 2 fig.
A section (of a subject, a book,
&c.), a branch. 3 A sect.
^r# a. (s) Branched, lit.
"^mt, "^im (P) A scholar,
a disciple. 2 A Brahman re-
tained as a servant, ■siifji'^/'.
The ofKce, duty of S^ifir^.
5T12rry. (s) A garment; pop.
the red-ochre-colored clothes
worn by Saynyasis.
^^ /'. A sort of pipeclay.
"SW^m a. Ninety-six.
^i^ p. (s) Quieted, calmed,
serene, quiet : milJ, gentle,
bland.
5TfcT?r^ a. Composed and
subdued ; mild, temperate.
2iI[cT^=T n. Appeasing, allay-
ing.
"^im^ V. c. To allay, pacify.
m^ f. (s) pop. ^[^ Com-
posing, quieting: ^TJT -%it-^t:
Vlt*- 2 Composed state:
composure, serenity ; mildness.
3 Stoicism, quietism. 4 Ceremo-
nies in conciliation of incensed
devils, &c. ; any expiatory rites.
5 Preliminary ceremonies to
avert inauspicious accidents dur-
ing any religious celebration. 6
fig. Death. / ^frr When
used with the neuter gender ac-
quires an implication to the
sense Compoyedness, answering
to Suppression or extinction,
cessation or end emphatically (of
some oppressor or troubler or
some oppression or trouble);
quietus, v. ^K,^^.
m^^^ n. -tV c. Terms for
a gentle, quiet person.
^ricrfriT s Bumt-ofterings
to avert evil.
^I'T /'. (a) Fineness, gaud! -
ness (of persons, appearances,
&c.) 2 Finery, trickery.
^nrnrr
414
ftf^
^RTf^ See tJR^R.
^\^^ -^f^r /. (A) 'J'rick
ing out, (iL'Coiatiug. - T'oppisb
iiess.
2TR5T5^, 2rri=Rfr^ c. A buck,
l)eau : a hellc.
5Tr7 (s) A curse, v. 'k, ^f-
SITXi^^ c. Bearing a curse.
TTjqin r. c. To curse, to ex-
ecrate. •Jjm^vv a. Blasted by
a curse, ^m^? n. Bound by
a curse. SIT^^^ «. lU'lcased
from a curse. Frfxi^-i^-if n.
Kck-asins from a curse.
^rqr?:mr^[?r^ a. s Abie
both to curse and to fight. Used
of any Priek-Warrior; also of
any one clever as well in secular
and common business (_in 3Z'?-
TSi^i as in f^^^.) ^I^T^^^
TiflEf a. Capable both to curse
and to exhibit clemency.
5TI^r n. s Maoic, sorcery.
?TTg^^ a. Kelating to magic.
5Tr^i^ int. (p) Bravo ! welt
done ! noble !/. Laudabloness (of
conduct). SIT^T^^I /. Ap-
plause, commendation, v. ^.
5Tf^^ -^ a. (a) Firm, sound.
'2 Proved, established.
2Trs?", ^[[^^^ o. s Verbal,
vocal. 2 Relating to sounds.
?TW^ n. That calms, allays :
fqTl ■^^'[V Vjo
2jrW See ^n^^i.
5IT7T^ -Tfr a. Eiohty-six.
Wfr, miT^ n. (s) Corpo-
real, bodily. 71. A division of me-
dicine comprehending anatomy
and pathology.
SrrSj^ s pop. ^ A tiger.
^r^/. (p) A shawl.
^\^k A wife's brother. 2
A])p. to the husband of one's
sister.
3Trr^^ftr/. A double shawl.
^\^l f. (s) A house, an apart-
ment. In comp. as 'IttSJ^T^T,
■qi^m^T. 2 A place of study-
ing science or tlie arts, or of
practising the gymnastic exer-
cises, &c., a school. 3 A system
of doctrine as delivered by a
partieular teacher, a school. 4
A body as united by one system
or form of doctrine or discipline :
a body banded or characterized
bv anything : HJT ^o31^ ^T-
^r^R5 A school fellow ; a
fellow student.
^l^l^^a. Of a good school;
of a school in which sound doc-
trine is delivered, or the arts and
accomplishments are skilfully
tnnglit.
5Tirc=??TR Ablack stone found
in the river jf^^ and wor-
shiped as sacred to Vishnu. 2
fig. A jocose name for the onion.
?TlTc=5-^rC^(s) The name of an
ancient sovereign of India, the
founder of an era still current
and bearing Ids name. lie arose
about 78 A. D.
^\^ a. (s) Shining, radiant
with ; conspicuous ; rich: ^^\^
'ST5T--Sj:T$fr.
n. A term for a child following
the evil ways of his father, a c////.»
of the block.
^r^cT a.(s) Perpetual : ever-
lasting : durable. /. Per])e-
tiiity: 'UT '^fT'^l ^\o -siITf
^TJTIoT.
^W"^ V. c. Poet. To punish,
chastise.
5TW^ V. (s) Punishincr. 2
G;)verning, ruling. 'A Ordering :
an order or a connnand ; edict,
decree. 4 A grant (of laud or
jirivilcge) ; a charter.
Sir^^lT^ w. s A plate (of
coiij)er, &c.) or a sheet of pa])er,
on which an edict or a grant is
inscribed. [Governable.
^r^^R a. s Punisliable. 2
STlfa'cT p. s Punished. 2
(ioverned, ordered.
^r^^f n. s That punishes :
that rules.
^TRf? n. (s) Institutes of re-
ligion, law or letters ; scripture;
in comp. ^t» ^T^ -ttrT -WfJ-
Used singly it implies works of
religion, literature, or science;
or treatises upon the arts; as
5?JT^ -"^^ -^^m ^To 2 A
treatise.
^R^cT: ad. s Agreeably
with the Shastras or a Shastra.
^R^^^qRT /. Conversancy
with the Shastras; versed in the
sacred writings. rci ' ^
^R^r^ A precept of the
srr^tr (s) One who has
studied the Shastras or a Shas-
tra : ^qrg S^T". 2 Affixed as
an honorable designation to the
names of Brabmans versed in
any Shastra.
^TR^rqff^r A common term
for six departments of sacred
science viewed as the Profession
or forte of.
"Simi^ a. Scriptural.
^rPcfr / (p) Witness, de-
jiosition. 2 c. A witness.
5Trr?Tr a. Relating to a poet.
^rf[^ (a) a poet. A pp. to-
one who gains a liveliliood by
reciting ballads and songs.
^\^\f. See ^r?5T.
^r^^r or ^r f. The stone
in the centre of which the
^TW or emblem of Shiva is
placed.
JTl^ A variety of ^rV^T. 2
Used to express fleeting, fugi-
tive : STjo f^^■g A swiftly
passing day ; TIlo ^T^ffl A
companion for an hour, .'i /.
The uttering at night, in some
lonely place, by an aggrieved
person, of a few words of ex-
ecration and menace ; in order
to intimidate the aggressor, and
force him to render justice, v.
5Tf5fr^r A horse-doctor; a
veterinary surgeon.
r^3r3-/. Whistling, v. ^f^,
^T5J^. 2 The yoke-pin.
f^T^ f. (11) A sneeze, v. ^\,
f%#, te*^ v. i. To sneeze.
F5T^
l%^°t V. c. &c i. To learn : to
stiulv^ ["nose.
\k^l^ V. i. To blow the
r^T^in (p) A hawk or falcon,
te55- y. (A) Polishing (of
weapons, &c.) ; fiubishing. 2 tij^.
Honor, splendor, v. '^'S, ^r\X.,
r^^lK^^r -III^ A polisher of
weapons, &c.
te^t^r, f^^f'^ /. Style of
teaching. 2 Suggesting and in-
structing (in an ill sense) ; in-
stigating. V. ^m, %
f^^fffsT^f /. Fomenting
of dissension by stirring and
urging both the parties.
teM V. c. To teach. 2 To
teach (in an ill sense) ; to in-
stigate ; to edge on.
i^^l^ f. (p) Defeat, bro-
ken u|) state (of a person or
thing). 2 High pitch (esp. of
action), a. Defeated, &c. 2
Wrecked — a ship. 3 Ruined —
a building, &c.
T^W,K f. (p) Hunting. 2
Game. 3 fig. Perquisites, v.
^jy^. fs^cSK^T-iiT A mena-
gerie, an aviary, &c. f?^^]^
a. Relating to hunting.
r^?:r^or v. c. To sling (a
pitcher, &c.) 2 fig. To suspend
(from one's office).
W^, r^* 71. A sling (for sus-
pending things) ; the loop of a
pole to receive the burden ; the
strings of a balance, &c.
f?I^r (a) a coining die. 2
The royal seal, 3 The stamp pro-
duced by the coining die or by
a seal or stamp. 4 App. to a
mark upon cloth, the l)ody, &c.;
to the mark of inoculation, &c.
F57%^2:rr/. (h) a compre-
hensive term for the insignia of
royalty, 2 A slang term for the
pan of fire placed upon the bier.
r^^^f^ The keeper of the
seal;the officer who impresses the
royal seal, fai^^'C'^T^ The
officer in charge of the regalia,
f^T^^f'ST (s) A proper name.
415
App, to an hermaphrodite, 2 A
peacock.
T^^X n (s) The peak of a
mountain ; the top of a tree,
pointed building, &c.; apex, ver-
tex. 2 A spire ; a minaret. 3 fig.
The pinnacle, acme (as of great-
ness, &c.) : the conclusion (of a
business).
r^T^r/. (s) The tuft left on
the crown of the head at tonsure.
2 The crest,comb(of acock, &c.):
crest. 3 A jdume. 4 A spire of
flame, f{R:^T^S A term of op-
probrium for a Musalman. fjj-
^I'SR'^ n. The lock of hair on
the crown and the sacred thread ;
the distinguishing marks of the
Brahman — caste.
Tcr^ s Poet. Fire. 2 A pea-
^^ock. [cornet.
WT n. A horn. 2 A horn or
tWlZ^ V. c. To gore, or
strike with the horns.
151^^ n. The foal of a mare
or an ass ; a colt, a young mule.
r^T^r A young horse, a horse-
foal.
l^T^r^r An aquatic plant or
the fruit of it, 2 A particular
fish, 3 A powder-horn,
rm\^ See Tmz^.
ftl^r^ a. Of sprouted horns
— a young ram, &c. 2 Given to
butting. 3 Having long horns.
ranr /. A mare-foal, a filly.
2 fig. A giddy girl.
Tmiii f. (H) A careless
term for a horn of a horned beast.
2 A general term for horned
beasts:3TT^ ^•^TfjJo'^^'^Tfl
^^. 3 The horn-rope of a
bullock. 4 Duty exacted from
the purchaser of a horned beast,
Pr. fsiJI ffl^i fitJTTSl.
r^ v..
r^'sT'T V. i. To be under
cooking by boiling ; to be
in seething, 2 fig. To be in
agitation-, to be in contemplation
and under consideration ; to be
cnncoci iiKj . 3 imp. To be sultry.
RTsfP^'i^ y. c. To seethe.
r5T7tT ?; i. To void e.xcre-
I ment ; — used of a bird.
r^m V. i. To become
prankish and knavish.
r^r /. Whistling, r. ^\^^,
^'^■^ ^ ^ [To sprinkle.
f2[r^?;rf -^r a sprinkling. V.
131^1^^ ad. Patteringly and
passingly ; — as rain falling. 2
Snappishly,
r5T^f%5ot V. i. To rain with
a brisk and brief pattering,
[^^i%^r /. A pattering,
scanty, and swiftly-passing
^shower^ [a stair-case.
r^T^r -ST/. (H) A ladder:
f5jaycj| J, j^ -"Pq liave languor;
to be very weary.
r^'^Rj'^^ V. i. To be set on
edge — the teeth.
r^cTS- a Cold. 2 fig. Gentle;
— as a slope. ^fro3'^^ A term
for a dull and heavy fellow,
sloiv coach.
r^cf3rr^%/. Allspice,
r^cr^rif /. Coldness or
coolness. 2 Cold in the animal
system,
r^^f^K^r/ The small-pox-
goddess,
r^crrq^sr/ See fecTrqr^.
r^Tcfl^ a, (p) Nimble, active.
2 fig. Ardent, eager.
ra^rrtr / Activity. 2 fig.
Ardency.
r#T^ a. (A) Sixty.
\m\^'^ V. i. To drizzle,
sprinkle, v. c. To besprinkle.
lllcTrir (n) A drop (of rain,
spray, foam) as dashed or spurt-
ed against, v. ^3^, ^;^^, ^j^.
2 A sprinkling,
M^^ a. (s) Loose, lax,
not close, or firm. 2 fig. Languid,
dull, fjlfsj^tl^T^i a. s Of
slac-k limbs,
fJT^/. (u) Wild date-tree.
r^J^S" a. (h) VVhorish, un-
chaste ; used of man or woman.
fsR^^^t/' Whoredom ; har-
Rrrr
416
Rm
'Whurish piiictices : wanton
ami lascivious arts and tricks
(of the female).
r^^r (n) A tribe or an
individual of it.
fer'T[»:^r a son of one's
slave-j^irl.
r^r m. f. Wild date-tree,
2 f. The sj)irituous exudation
of it, date-toddy.
{^f^lk a. An epithet of
fasliions, cloths, &c. 2 Relating
to Snulia's court or to the days
of Sindia's rule.
f^^rrr f, victuals or dressed
provisions (ns carried on a
journey, taken or sent to the
iields, &c.) 2 Victuals (given
bv women to Brahmans, esp.
given in the rainy season).
5 Victuals (given to a stranger-
child, in order to obtain ^thj).
r?lCr (A Lord) An Abyssi-
nian.
I^l'"ir Undressed rice or
corn and fuel to dress it ; as
taken on a journey, as sent
to another's house, as given to a
mendicant, guest, dunning peon,
&c.
r^^^fTl^r n. -^IW/. General
ttrms for undressed articles of
l)rovisions and for fuel and
culinary utensils, &c. as taken
or given to dress them.
r^T^rmf'^ V. c. Corr. from
l1r=T3", itr^oT See ft^^-
I^T'ir a. Poet. Separate,
distinct.
I%7 /". (ii) A half of an
oyster-shell, cockle, &c. 2 A
shelving or slanting cut gen.
r^FTTf / A twig. 2 A cluster
j.f l.mdnuts. [besi)rinkle.
r^7^^ r. c To sprinkle : to
\^m, m^\ f. Si)rinkling.
r^l^ n. The sprinkling of
colored powders or dust towards
the close of the festival of Iloli.
V. c. See f»iqf iJI.
r?rqc^r, r%7i^r a siieii of an
oyster : a larsre shell gen.
rm^\, I%T^r /. A small
shell.
f^PTF The fruit-receptacle or
fruit-stalk of the Cocoanut. 2
An oyster-shell. 3 .\ large shell.
r^M^ (p) A soldier. 2 A pp.
also to policemen and to
attendants of kings and grandees
who are belted and armed, to
peons, jasoods, &c. 2 Tlie stand
or horse of the native palanquin,
of the shafts of a cart at rest, of
a f^^zt, &c.
r^tl^r^rirfr /. The profession
of a soldier, a. Relating to a
soltlier.
i\rqrf^['^r The Military pro-
fession : military uniform.
IST'^I A caste. 'I hey are
tailors. 2 /". A half of an oyster-
shell. 3 fig. The lioliow ^f the
breast; shell-form depression
gen.
fsTfrr^ir n. Patronized.
ra'TTT^^ /. (p) Recommen-
dation. 2 Patronage. 3 Mighty
^exploits. [-,|ig,.y
T^t^T f. (p) Irregular sol-
r^rrr? ^r/. (s) A kind of palan-
quin.
\^m\ The I-Ioli-festival. 2
The month in which it is held,
the month Phalgun.
rairr/. A boundary.
r^ n. (s) The head. 2 The
top of a tree. 3 The van of an
army. 4 A head or an individual;
as iil^T vil^ '^i^- fw^ ^m l^^
goT. To take one's head in
one's hand : to be reckless of
life. See Judges xii. 3 ; 1 Sam.
xix. .5, xxviii. 21. f«[rt ^T^ui.
To be at or over (as a protector
of) the head of. See I Sam.
xxviii. 2.
fJJ^^'T" V. i. To penetrate, to
cuter.
f^Tr^JT'^ n. A poetical term
for tlic head.
r5I?'^^'nr,r3T^^fW'^r/. Thrust-
ing or jticrcing; forcing through
or ni.
[ST^^fl'^, rsjr^f^fJT V. c. To
cause to enter; to pierce ; to force
in ; to carry in or into with
jigor.
te^r (P) Vinegar.
ra?:fr See m^i
mm< f. The crest of a
cock.
1^?^^? Decapitation.
f5T^^f^ a. (p) Headstrontr :
refractory, turbulent.
r^lT^Rf/. Headiness: cou-
tuniaciousness.
rs V'
r^T^ V. i. To enter or go in.
r^r^f? (P) A turban, &c. be-
stowed by a Haja or grandee, as
a mark of favor.
ra"^"^^ (p) An aigrette of
jewels worn in the turban.
Wm'^ V. c. To insert or
put in.
f^Tl?!^^ V. i. R To quiver.
fiTTfsiTT./- Shivering.
r3Tr^?5" n. Oil exti acted from
Sinapis dichotoma.
V^T^ A kind of mustard,
Sinapis dichotoma. 2 A tree.
rar^^r ad. (s Wilh the head)
With profound reverence or
humble submission.
r5T?:^(2"m^H^R Obeisance
with all the members of the
body. Used in letters to an elder
or a superior.
r^^^clT (p) Practice or cus-
tom.
r?[?:^%TK (p) The head
native clerk in the office of a
Collector or in a coiut of justice.
Hn^'^^ft^ a. & ad. Cus-
tomary, usual; according to
custom.
ra^r^^R V. s Head-guard ;
a turhan, helmet, hat, &c.
[sjfr f. (s) Any vessel of the
body really, or supposed to be
tubular ; as an artery or a vein,
a nerve, a tendon, a muscle, a
gut. m.(i>) Syrup: a vegetable
extract. 2 A certain sweetmeat.
3 (ii) The border (of a field, &c.)
«. Excellent, capital, fine.
Rkm
417
Rt^
r^fSS" a. That has dilated
veins. 2 Streaky, n. Shadiness
from clouds, v. ^, ti^, aij.
T^r n. A broken off stick.
2 Water of boiled lack, or a
decoction of Badzri, &c. used in
making ink.
Tmmm (s) That division of
the body which includes the
head. 2 fig. The head of any
body.
RT^r^r^ A gem worn in a
crest. 2 fig. The head, most dis-
tinguished person.
r%n3" m. f. The stale or
cooling season.
TST^^ -^ /. (A) Balance in
hand (of money, nrticles, &c.) 2
A pin. 3 A shooting pain from
rheumatism, &c. v. m^i, f«rsf,
^, ^T.
Blc^^Tf^r Clearance, v. ?^!T,
r^c^^r a. That is left or re-
maining. 2 That has been lying
in store ; spare.
|3To5"iT'^ 11. The passing of
the borders in pomjious proces-
sion in the festival of Dasai a.
r^Tc^cTf^ ad. From side to
side;i. e. throughout, whclly,
altogether, -i^ fsio v^^s^
-fq^ij -51B^ -^^T^.
f^?5T f, (s) A stone, esp. a
large and hard stone ; a rock. 2
A slab on which condiments, &c.
are ground. 3 Threshhold.
I5To5f?:^ s Styrax or Ben-
J^';'"- [arsenal.
r?Ic?5'iir'Tf (p) An armory or
r^^JlT (a) Armour. 2
Tricking out finely (a child, &c.)
fTTw^rr (p) A horse-soldier
who provides his own horse.
ra'^^Kf/. The ])ractice of
shiledar. a. Relating to shiledar.
2 fig. Boastful : lavish, prodigal ;
riotous, dissolute, &c.; used with
53
\^^^ n. (s) A manual or
mechanical art. ftiw^^. «•
Artisanship. fsr^sSK An ar-
tisan, mechanic. flT^fg^T/-
Handicraft or art. fa^^SIl^T/.
A manufactory. f?r'?q?j;T^ n.
A treatise on mechanics. f^Wl
a. Relating to a mechanical
profession or art.
f'^^y. A boundary, border.
r?!^ (s) 'llie deity Shiva,
the third of the Hindu triad. 2
Shiva, as distinguished from
Jiva, and viewed as the pure
soul, the vivifying, actuating,
and sustaining principle in ani-
mated beings.
r^T^^ /. A seam. 2 Tliatch-
ing material to be laid and
fastened, &c.
f5T?'^^R 71. Sewing-work.
fa^^cTT^o? /. The price for
sewing, thatching, &c. R. Sewing.
r^T^^T V. i. To sew. 2 To
thatch. V. c. To touch.
r5T^''^[3' s. The milk-Stone,
opal.
r3T^R5f[?q- n^ „,. (g) The
flowers, &c. remaining of an
offering which has been made to
8hiva.
[?T^n a. Scuriilous or abu-
sive ; — speech or speaker.
f^T^U?" A copper coin.
RT^^ff^ /. m. (s) pop.-n^
A night on whicli fasting, vigil,
S:e. are held in honor of Shiva.
^?^-^^^^at .^,_ I 'I'o tinole,
thrill : to ache from cold. Used
of teeth, ears, &c.
[^m^ n. (s) Any thing that
has been ofi'ered to Shiva. As
no such thing can be taken by
any person without his contract-
ing exceeding sin, the word is
used of a deposit or an ai tide of
property of another in solemn
declarations that it shall not
be or has not been appropriated.
f^J^S" y. The yoke-pin. 2
Whistling, v. m^, ■^T5i^,^T'51-
Rri^f^ -^ prep, (h) Besides.
2 Except. 3 Extra.
r^^lfRS^^/. By-gains.
r^T^r^^r (s) The divine ema-
nation as the quickening and
actuating soul of an animate
being.
r?[^i3^^r a. (Allusively to
the stone-bull that is before the
idol in the temples of Shiva.)
Blockishly-duU or stupid.
ra^rq- See r^i^il-
VSjmT, llj^f^ n. m. Grounds
arouad and pertaining to a vil-
lage. 2 A woodland. 3 Timber
trees cut and deposited for
building. 4 A trip into the jun-
gle to cut wood.
l5T^K^f^cT A term answer-
ing to Hedge-priest or hedge-
schoolmaster ; village-wiseacre.
r^T^f^^ n. Any temple de-
dicated to Shiva. 2 x\. place
where the dead are buried.
i^J^r^IFTr f. A general con-
tact and commingling (of pure
with impure). 2 Pollution.
r^T^r/, An abusive word. v.
•^. flfTqrl3TTo3 -■^ /. A torrent
of abuse and execrations ; abuse
freelv.
RrfTJ[^Tr /. A term for a
viouian under menstruation.
WkX, Rjra^^^ s The cold
season.
r^J-^ /. (p) A phial.
I^U s A young one of man
or an animal in general; a child,
^a calf, a pup. \v\x\\q.
X^^ m. n. (.s) Membrum
rWf?"^qrR'^ a. Given to
wenching and gormandizing ;
sensual.
1^2" p. (s) Disciplined, train-
ed ; orderly, regular. 2 Excel-
lent, superior, p. s In comp.
That remains or is left: ij^fsii^.
■fsrg^ij'^T^ A custom of the
noble, respectable: a well-approv-
ed custom. fsi^giTT /• A
council or an assembly of gran-
dees, or of venerable persons.
f?ia "^^TT^^T /. Reverential
recejition; receiving or dismiss-
ing of a person with courtesies
and presents suitable to the
honorable. 2 The presents, &c.
made. i?lSTT^ /• Pre-emi- '
nence, greatness. 2 Orderliness
and correctness of deportment.
3 Mediation in order to bring
about a matrimoniiil match :
niediation gen. fsi^T^Tx; (s)
The manner and procedure, the
custom and course, of the ven-
erable and good.
131'^^ (s) A pupil, disciple.
2 An apprentice. fsi^iiT^T/-
A school, a sect, a persuasion-
fsj;^i35i^T^ A body of the
disciples of any teacher viewed
as forming a sect or school.
r^^^KF/. Quamibhness. 2
tig. Disgust.
[liT^^, fWf Blackwood-
tree. fxf^^l a. Relating to
l>lackwood-tree.
RT^r (p) A bottle, flagon.
r^^rfr/. Nausea, v. ^, ^^.
[^m?r, rtr^rrr, T^mz\ /.
Sudden chill and shuddering, as
arising upon the sight or smell
of an offensive object; an un-
pleasant thrill, t'. ^. 2 Nausea.
f. ^, '^^. 3 The shivering of
ague, &c. V. M^, ^^^^.
1%^ n. Lead.
f?!^ /. (p) Aim.r.^^, ^^T.
2 A roll of the householders (of
a village, &c.) from whom the
revenue is to be gathered in, or
upon whom an assessment is to
be laid. a. Suitable, proper,
correct. fsi^^I^ /. Balance
(of the revenue) due.fsi;^^!^
a. Suitable, agreeable.
l^TSZ f c Rawness and
coldness of weather, v. q^,
^T1- 2 Coolness and humidity
of soil from rain. v. ^.
[^^\ a. Stale. 2 fig. cold,
dull./. See fsT'^T.
rsTSTpcTf?: /. A stream of
stones ; — rain in torrents,
nOaST^l^ a. Stale and such-
like— used of victuals.
r5T55T^riTK A term for the
418
market of the day after a week-
ly market.
r?[Sr[W See f^^I^^-
r^TSfr /. A whistle, v. ^f^^,
^TST.
l%affqr The cool of the day.
2 Coolness of air or weather.
r^^^ (s) That instructs or
teaches : that corrects. fsprguT
n. Instructing: chastising, iw
S^ofl^ a. s (Proper) to be in-
structed. 2 (Proper) to he
punished, fir^^ v. c. To in-
struct. 2 To chastise or cor-
rect, fs^gi/. (s) Instruction,
teaching : learning. 2 Punish-
ment. f33:r^rT P' Instructed :
conversant. 2 Corrected : train-
ed. 3 Studied or learned — a book,
&c.
^i^ /. H Sneeze, v. ^, ^^
^R /. The head, crown of
a measure of corn.
5f[Sr a. (s) Quick, fleet ad.
Quickly. ifl^^f^ A ready poet;
an improvisatore. "sfl'Sf^iql a.
Irrascible, irritable.
?ff3'y; Excrement of birds.
^T^ 11. The mainsail : a sail.
2 fig. The arching of the neck
of a mettlesome horse.
^[^^rsr/. The saih mast.
^I'T Lassitude, languor, v.
^, ^T3, TT^. 2 Disgust :
3 m. /"^Agc: ^T ^TTfirT M\
Lassitude, languor, v. %T, ^.
?TffTw. A grain of boiled rice.
2 The string of a bow. 3 (s)
Cold, or coldness, a. Cold, lit.
iig. (a) Si.\.
511^^^ Ague : an ague-fit.
'"• r^
^TFcIcT a. Cold, frigid.
^r^T^ a.Cold,not hot. 2 Soft,
gentle — a slope.
^FT See ^T^.
^f^ f. A boundary, a limit,
^fr /. See rljn/. 2 n. The
head.
^[<C?^S" n. A multitude of
l)l()od vessels. App. to the head
and, gen. to a member wherein
blood vessels are supposed
to abound.
^\^ 71. (s) Nature, disposi-
tion. 2 A good disposition, a.
Possessed of naturally; propense,
prone. Incomp. ^T«T-f^'^T-f=f-
STf^, €i^ /. A boundary.
'sff^'^T^T Boundary-stone.
srTr^qTr^, "^IW^ V. A flower
(of any fruit-tree) of whicli the
fruit forms and follows l)eliind
it : that flower to which fruit
s\icceeds. 2 A head ornament
of females.
^[55-/. See l%^r.
5T^ s A parrot. 2T^^ri%^ a.
Having an aquiline nose.
?T?^^Rr A term for a lean
person, barebones.
^^ (s) The planet Venus,
or the regent of it, the preceptor
of the l)ytyas. 2 w. s Semen
virile.
^^WR (s) Friday.
5Tp|Tr'^I?lThe teacher Shukra.
2 .4pp. to a monoculous person,
Cijclops.
5T^ a. (s) White. 2 Bright ;
— used of the waxing half of the
month, or of any lunar day in
it. m. A Brahman who lives by
begging from Bruhnnuis only.
lie is viewed as unsullied, ii.
A disease of the cornea, albugo.
^T^^rS" n. A term for a
person considered as a pest ; for
a business considered as a diffi-
culty. V. ^Ti;^ ^. 2 A term
for stocks.
?T^q^ The light half of the
month. 2 fig. The innocent or
pure side of two sides or parties
contending. 3 fig. Advancement,
the briylit aide.
Sjr^ a. s Clean, pure, holy,
lit, fig, Ijf^wfi a. Become
^
clean or pure. Pop. Clean, pure,
lit. lig.
5T2: -E c. A blockhead, dolt.
5T^r/. s -?^ m. The trunk
of the elephant. ^j^T^J"^ n.
An alembic or retort.
^^ p. (s) Free from all
filth ; clean, lioly. 2 Purified,
sanctified. 3 Freed from fault ;
correct, right, good ; — used of
persons, writing, speecli, con-
duct, act. 4 Alone, simple. 5
Mere, pure : "^t ^li ^f^^ ^TW
?IT^T^ ?PT^ ^^? 6 Liaht,
l)iight ; — used of the waxing half
of the month or of any lunar day
in it. 7 Right, good, free from
any evil bodings ; pure, or fit for
holy rites. 8 Right or proper :
^T^T^ 33 » Of the proper
shape ; ^^I'^T^ ijjo Of correct
and becoming conduct. 9 Sound,
healthy : ^^T?'=g^ ^^^ ^iftff
TJlTwfi: \m^. /. See sjfi;.
SJ-I- m^l^ Vulgar fraction.
Sj^g"^ «. Clear and knowing;
^. e. clear from TT^T (Illusion)
and knowing according to trutli.
App. com. to a Pure ignoramus,
&c. 'Sm^Tlf^ a. s Guileless.
531[^Tif The right way, or-
thodoxy. 731[g^ a. Wanting
ai'^T upon his forehead, ^^^f^
fs A proper business, i. e. men-
dicancy. 2 Puremindedness :
nttrib. Purerainded. IJ^ ^-
^T"=WT^ Good tidings respect-
ing. 2 Consciousness. ^^
^f^^ (s Pure crystal). A
term applied to a penniless
wretch and to a thorough fool;
a blank sheet.
W"^ f- i^) Purity, holiness ;
freedom from filtli. lit. fig. 2
Cleaning, purifying : cleaned
state. 3 Correcting : corrected
state; accurateness, rectitude:
ex. of comp. 5i^ -^q -^^-
^•T -^T^ ^•. 4 Rightness
or goodness; freedom from un-
propitious influences, or suitable-
ness for holy works. Used of
planetary aspects, of lunar days,
&c. 5 Consciousness : as op]). to
swoon : remembrance, (j Search-
ing, exploring : searched state.
419
^fl'?'^ n. A sheet of errata. 2
A certificate furnished to a per-
son who, through the adminis-
tration of prayashchitt, has been
purified from his pollution, and
restored to fitness fen* the inter-
communication of the social re-
lation.
^^(s)Tlie name of a demon.
A]^\^. to a dull, sluggish, and
stupid fellow.
U^T n. (s) Good fortune,well-
being, weal. 2 Goodness, propi-
tiousness (as of conjunctions, &c.)
3 Favorablcuess of indication or
promise, a. Good, favorable,
happy ; used of acts, rites,
omens, aspects. 2 Happ}'; joyous,
as opp. to funeral, dolorous;
— used of ceremonies, rites. 3
Pop. Good: ^vi^*<t^ Do
good things pronnptly. 'SJW^T
a. s Auspicious, favorable. ^-
^P^rl^ a. That wishes the
weal of. I3«T^»T a. Good and
bad.
W a. (s) White.
3TITR -m^\^ See ^^TR, &c.
?T^Tr/. s Service, attend-
ance ; diligent and watchful wait-
ing upcui.
^■^^ a. (s) Dry ; not wef,
succulent, or sappy. 2 fig.
Dried and shrunken througli
sickness, &c. ^^^^ Ground-
less enmity. 2 Unprofitable en-
mity. 3 Assumed enmity.
^^T^t^ (i(^- Di'vly, empti-
ly— doing any labour.
5T^ m. n. s Beard (of grains
and grasses. )2A bristle.3 A cater-
pillar. ■ar<^'?^T^ n. A term for
the grains which have awn or
''^'"■'l- , [sow.
5T^^ s A hog. 5T^^[ f. A
^ (s) The Shudra or fourth
grand division of the Hindu
body: an individual of it.
vrf] f. A female of the Sliudra
tribes, a. Relating to the Shudra,
— language, a rite.
5T^^ n. (s) Voidne«s, inani-
ty: a vacuum. 2 A cipher: app.
to the dot of the 3t^^t^ &
fg^^ : a dot gen. 3 The
profuudum. a. Void, empty, des-
titute ; 3[5j^T^ -•n'^. 2 Bare,
naked : 3 Desolate : ■3T° T^-
4 Benumbed or of lost sensation,
^'^r^f?" s The doctrine of
nihility (non-existence of the
univer.se).
^'5Tr?r^ a. s Failed in
faculties. 2 Merciless. 3 Desti-
tute of mind, taste, interest.
^'^^K a. Dismally empty;
naked, desert. 2 A term for
Brahma or the universal ens, the
all-annihilating (by re-absorp-
tion) divine monad of pantheism.
^J a. (s) A hero. 2 Bold,
i)rave ; eminent for some one of
the nobler qualities or affections ;
as ^T^ --^DT -^J'^'^K.
^7 ». s A sifting fan.
5Tq>?^r /. A term for any
monstrous and hideous female ;
or for a Xantippe, vixen.
^^ (s) pop. -^ A sort of
pike. 2 An impaling stake. 3
Sharp pain in gen. (in the belly,
head, &c.)
^^^r /, s pop. -^r A chain.
^'^c^R*:!^ n. Confining by
letters.
^f^ 71. (s) A horn. 2 The
peak of a mountain : a crag. 3 A
cusp or horn of tiie moon. 4
fig. An irritating point (as insist-
ed on to provoke a quarrel, &c.)
^^f'T (s) Dress and decora-
tion. 2 Love, the amorous pas-
sion; as in comp. ^ JTt^;^!^-
^^ -f^^T"^. "«'iTTTOi. V. c.To
adorn, decorate.
^J\J^ s A male jackal.
^m a. Horned. 2 fig. Peak-
ed.
tf a. A hundred.
?r=f) (h) Warming one's self
before a fire ; or fomentation of
a limb with heated cloths,
leaves, &c. v. ^ ; and vs'ith ^,
Warming or fomenting another.
2 A little fire of sticks and
rubbish (for warming one's self)
ir^F^efr a madcap.
^^^r -^f ad. (H) Per lum-
fr^of^
420
^^
dred. ^^^ ?«. An aggregate
of one hundred. "S^^T, 'Ji^%T-
71:, "^L^^TiTT (t(l. By hundreds.
^^(ffr, ^W>'^\ f. Warming
one's self. v. ^^.
W^, ff^iot r. c. To warm
&c. See ^^. 2 fig. To affect
vith a loss (in some bargain) ;
to burn.
SJ^rJf /. A bamboo-crook ;
used to pull down pods and flow-
ers. 2 (^*) A little warm-
ing fire.
■*\
3T^K The covering: of a
house, viz. the thatch as distinir.
from the rafters and hith-work.
»^K^ ./• Covering in or
roofing, &c. ^^T^w V. c. To
thatch.
3J^r^'^ V. i. To be singed,
^^^K (p) The collector of
the revenue of a division of
villages or land.
5T^r/, (p) Boasting, vaunt
ing. V. ff^K^, ^i^qT, ^ig,^^
m f. A pod.
W\^ m. n. Horse-radish
tree.
^irfr/. A chafing-dish.
m'^\ See ^^.
^^s-, i^r^rsrr^ a.
Forty-
5T^ f. (h) a bed or bedding.
2 The spot formed on tlie fore-
liead (as of a child at its mar-
riage, &c.) with jf"«r, '^^ &c. ;
serving as a hed for ^^grfT to
he stuck. V. *T^, ^1^. '^f. n.
Scries, train.
^^IT Neighboiu"hood. 2
Neighhnurs.'K^T^tl'fTlicduty
of neighbours one to another.
■^5?T^x?T^K A general term
for neighbourhood. "i^JT^ A
neighbour. -wsTTTiJfl/. A fe-
niale neighbour.
^^ (n) A respectful title for
a banker, merchant, &c., and for
certam artisans (5?ouur, Kansar,
&c).
^73" n. A hair of the pubes.
^^\i f. Shet-ship.
^JpTr f. The wife of a shet.
5T^r The head, top (of a
tree, post, pen, &c).
^^rf^?3r A bit of the be-
ginning and a bit of the ending;
the head and the tail ; i. e. not
the unbroken thread. 2 Tlic
whole from head to tail (of a
story, &c).
^f r /. See ^l:
tffr/. The luft of hair left
on the top of the head at ton-
sure. One of the distinguishing
marks of the Hindu. 2 A crest,
comb. 3 The tail of a comet. 4
The forelock of a horse. ■^^-
■^XT The Hindu religion.
^"C /• -^ ^^^"^ ^^ pipeclay.
ST^^^T"^ n. A comet.
TT'^ n. Dung of a bull, cow,
or buffalo. 2 .4 pp. with reference
to the quality of softness and
squashiness, to rotting fruits,
flowers, &c. .3 /. A piece of cow-
dung, whether a cake formed by
mashing, kneading, and drying,
oralunii)aslvnig on the ground.
?t^^t/. The pit receiving
the daily WW. 2 A pile of -aaur-
^'T^r A mass of cowdung
voided at once. fdnn"-
^fW^r /. Pelting with co\v-
^'^Mf A division amongst
Brahmans.
d'^^r^r Sprinkling with di-
lute cowdung-wash (a floor, &c).
V. ■giwi, ^13F, "<• 2 Used of a
rotting mass of fruits. &c. 3 Lav-
ish scattering (of fruit, &c.
amongst a crowd). 4 Lively
slaughter (as under a hot battle-
fire.)
^t^r^fK^r Making a decla-
ration of bankruptcy, r. ^t'^,
rjqR^f^r a. Wenk, feeble,
easy, yea avil luty. A colloquial-
ism expressing 'contempt, and
used of buildings, business,
animals, men.
^cri[^aTr^f^:gT=qT a. That
seems at first soft and easy,
empty and unmeaning, and be-
comes grruhudly hard, weighty,
grievous, until at length it resem-
l)les iron ; — as a work, a speech,
a treatment. 2 Weak and strong;
of a mixed character.
^^ n. A field. 2 A stand-
ing crop. 3 Agriculture. 4 fig.
Any person, employment, or
thing from which one derives
his subsistence ; any field of
support. -SRri^Tl The owner
of a ficdd. 2 A farmer. 3 A
field-labourer, ■^rf^ /. Agri-
culture. 2 Growing corn. '^«T-
WS\'\ A clown, boor.
^^W\^x\ (p) A privy.
%^W^ / Arable land:
cultivated lands. ^?T*iT»T A
gen. term for fields and arable
grounds. •^?Ti7ST A gen. term
for fields, plantations, and gar-
dens. ■^fT^I'^^y. Fields, mea-
dows, &:c. gen. ■^rr^»f^~1That
have lands assigned tliem in
payment of service — troops, a
soldier, a public servant. '^-
atf5T«ft fk^T"! pl- Landed
mihtia.
mmil Land-tax.
m\^, frerr^r^ «. Forty-
.''^- [Crops,
^^r /. Field-business. 2
^^imt'r A husbandman. 2
f. Ficld-himncss.
^^ V. c. To draw up (water
from a well). 2 n, A bucket for
drawing \\atcr.
jf^n-=5Tr-?T a. Of the color
of red lead.
^^ Rock-salt. 2 Saltness.
3 Ooze, exudation.
?lVl^n5T7rf A term for an
em]>ty pretender to valor and
puissance, a gascon.
^^^f'T p. Drawn from a wcU
— water.
^^T JNIiniiim or red lead.
^'^cJ^oTj Tf^^R n. Rock-
salt.
^^
421
5Tr^
^T/. (n) Anise-seed.
m, m f. A tail.
%OT V. c. To switch. 2 To
follow hard at the tail of.
mflf. A switch. 2 A tail.
inr, ^TH: w. a tail. 2 fiii.
Extremity.
5J^, ^^r /". A cover or cap,
as on the head or at the bottom
of a \valkin<T stick, on the head
of an umbrella.
5I^^?r -3^r a. Snotty— the
nose : snotty-nosed.
?ffr See ^^.
^^3" Runnino; or a very
moist mucus of the nose. 2 fig.
Snuff of a lamp.
%^^r (a) The end of a tur-
ban, &c.
5ir The milk-bush. 2 (h) A
measure of weight or capacity.
3 Corn or flour given to a mes-
senger or laborer. 4 Daily food ;
a subsistence : ^'3, '^^, cfiTS,
^^^r/. A she-goat.
^^'^ n. A goat, without re-
ference to sex.
^^^r f. (p) Sweatmeats;
used esp. of the sweatmeats dis-
tributed in a temple, &c. by a
person of whom a desire ex-
pressed to an idol accompanied by
a vow has been fulfilled.
^^r (a) Rate, averag:e. 2
Law, rule : a law, precept, canon,
commission, warrant : establish-
ed practice; popular usage. 3
(In courts of law.) An order or
answer written below or endors-
ing a letter or a petition : ^^
STsTf -^T^ -S^H, &c. An
^sff &c. having its answer
and the vi'ord -^^t written
■upon it. 4 A note written across
a rough ])ai)er when a fair copy
has been taken. 5 A notice
by a crT:tT^''?t^ that the con-
tents of a paper are not to be
admitted. 6 A pajjerof instruc-
tions ; a directoi-y. 7 (h) End.
^^/. A narrow lane. 2 A
perquisite of about two sher per
mauud taken by the Kamavisdar
&c. from grain brought in pay-
ment of the revenue : the grain
which the officer, who supplies
the ^i^'RKl to the public
servants. 2 Or ii^l^iift-sr.
Garden-ground which has never
been included within the bounds
of any village, and which is held
bv the State : land which may
revert to the State, either by
becoming forfeited or because
originally ])urchased from the
State for the purpose of planting
trees.
•\
^^^r a. Best, chief, choice.
ad. Finely, grandly. 2 Exact-
ly, closely.
^^^^/. Medley.
^^r (h) a sort of scarf.
%^[fTfr[r? n. A term for a
slight honorary notice conferred,
or for a trifling bribe.
%^, ^^f f. A little roll of
flour of pulse.
^^ /. m. Making incisions
into the tip of the ^TWl of tlie
Falm tribe in order to induce
the exudation of the sap. v.
■EJTwI- 2 m. End, skirt (of a
village, cloth) : skirts. 3 fig. The
bordering particular, the link
(as of a crime, of proof).
^^1/ Vermicelli.
^^^r Horse-radish tree. 2
A vessel drilled with holes for
taking out vermicelli-like rolls
of boiled Hour,
^^2: End, close. 2 n. The
last part, end. 3 A gun-match.
^^S^ V. c. To beat into an
edge : to whet. 2 To dispatch
and bring to its end (a matter).
'5^^Z^\ a. Relating to the
v*""^! ^._r. [or its flower.
5T?frr, ^^frr/. a flower-tree
5T^?y, ^^fc^r m. n. s pop.-^.
The green filaments which grow
in or on water : moss gen. 2
App. to several aquatic plants.
^q-fSS-q- ^j i^ Xo contract
moss ; — used of trees, stones,
&c : to contract tartar ; used of
the teeth. 2 fig. To get plumj)
and sleek on good living.
^^ (s) The king of the ser-
pent-race, as a large, thousand-
headed snake, at once the couch
and canopy of Vishnu, and the
upholder of the world which rests
on one of its heads. 2 Remnant,
rest ; as '^TJT'^^.
W^^r A goatherd,
^^r/. A she-goat.
^1^^ n. s Coldness or cold.
2 Chilliness. 'Sirgfq'fl n. s Dis-
order of the bile from cold in
the system : prevalence of cold
and heat in the system. 2 The
phlegmatic-bilious constitution.
5Tf^?^ n. s Slackness, lit.
fl"" r
^ = |_tam.
^^ s Corrup. -^. A moun-
^^\ f. (s) A way, style, fa-
shion.
5T4 a. (s) That worships
Shiva as the Supreme deity.
5Tf<f) (s) Grief. 2 Lamenta-
tion, mourning.
5Tr^"^r V. c. To dry up : to be
l)arched with thirst, to be dry.
SJim n. s Blood, a. Blood-
colored.
5^r^T (s) Search, quest. 2
Inquiry, investigation. '6 Scru-
tiny, inspection. 4 The result of
search. 5 A correction (of an
inaccuracy or an omission in a
writing) written over or under
or on the margin of the line in
which it is to be read. 6 s
Cleansing, -^fef^ a. Fond of
research ; inquisitive. 2 That
inquires. 3 That cleanses. 4 la
ai'ith. The subtrahend.
^\m V. c. To search; i. e.
to explore : to seek after. 2 To
clarify. 3 To correct (a writing,
&c.)
*\ _
^['=T'T n. Cleaning, purifying ;
correcting. 2 In arith. Subtrac-
tion : reduction.
^\m\^ a. s Proper to be
cleansed, corrected, &c. ro
JTrf^cT p. Cleaned, corrected,
5TffT, m^ (h)/. Anise-seed.
%^Z n. Rather affected
with the smell of ^t^.
422
^
^W^ V. i. To have a Iiand-
soiue ai)|3earance. 2 To become;
to be graceful, fitting unto.
•\ ' .
^W^ w. (s) Adorning ;
causing to look graceful. 2 A
festal ceremony or occasion ; as a
marriage.
^[^\HH p. pr. s Shining;
looking bright, ^niwfgw v. c.
To adorn, decorate ; to make
histrous. •^T^T/. (s) Beauty,
grace, elegance. 2 Anything
which confers beauty. "^T«T^-
T}T?T See ■^THITT^. wfWrT V-
Adorned, decorated. -^Trw^'?!
a. That has beauty ; splendid.
^^ (s) Dryins: up ; absorb-
ing. 2 Absorbedness. 3 Absorbing
quality (as of ashes, &c.) 4
Drought (of wells, &c.) 5 Inordi-
nate and raging thirst. (J Pul-
monary consumption. "JIT^^ a.
sThat dries up by drawing forth
the moisture of : absorbent.
■^T^T^ 71. (s) Drying up; absorb-
ing, &c. ^T'srvit^ a. s Sorbile,
&c. Wi^ V. c. To dry up ;
to desiccate : to absorb. 2 To
gulp. -3 fig. To drain, empty.
V. i. To dry up ; to become
arid. •^iftTfTiJ. (s) Dried up,
nrefied. 2 fig. Drained. 3 Ab-
sorbed.
?n"Ri (a) Inclination towards.
2 Voluptousness.
^^ a. That has a fondness
for: that has a taste for. 2
Devoted to pleasure.
^f^ n (s) Purification. 2
Purified state. 3 Evacuation of
f(CCCS.
^{^^'^ A privy, necessary.
^RRR s A rule of purifica-
tion ; directions for the cleans-
ing of the person (by ablution
of the iiarts, &c.) after voiding
any of the excrements of the
system, or contracting impuri-
ty of any kind. 2 Pop. The
business of discharging the
bowels.
5IfSr a. s Kelatuig to the
Shildra. m. A son of a Shiidra
woman by a man of any of the
first three castes.
=5w r
^r^ n. s Valor, courage.
^^R V. -^J^f. A cemetery.
55To fffSfT /• Death. 5Ho »1^
The Brahman that conducts
funeral rites. 35^0 iTT5f»r n.
Eating in or near a cemetery in
the name of a defunct, ajjo
•BTT'^ 71. A term for the
momentary alienation of the
affections from the world and
impressedness of mind with the
importance of eternity joroduced
bv a sight of a cemetery.
^^\n. f. (s) Hair of the
chin, lips, and cheeks. 2/.
pop. Shaving.
W^ a. s Dark blue. V^UJ^^
(s) A white horse with black
ears and tail and other particu-
larities stated in the Shastras
as suitable for Ashwamedh.
attrib. having black ears, &c.
■ — a white horse.
^'S'rf.(s) Reverence. 2 Impli-
cit faith. 3 (Cant.) Ventris
crepitus, v. ^J^, tfX, & "^K,
^irrirT^ /. Faith and love
towards God: Faith and
Worship, I. e. inward trust and
confidence, and Outward ac-
knowledgement and adoration: v.
^K. ■3W, ^^•
^^r^ a. s. Confiding, be-
lieving.
^I"?T a. 8. Worthy of
reverence and veneration.
"^ (s) Labor, toil. v. ^,
^. 2 Fatigue : vexation, an-
noyance.
"^^^ V. i. To be tired, to be
harassed, vexed.
^JTr^ot V. i. To fatigue.
^^r a. Tired : annoyed. 2
Diligent, painstaking.
^■T 7/. Virtue or moral
merit : pop. ^m. 2 Prosperity,
weal .
^WJ n. (s) Hearing. 2 n. m.
The organ of hearing. ^^-
l7Ti'=g ^WTJT n. The hearing
facidty. '^^^J^^ a. s (Worthy)
to be heard.
^i^ ;^ (s) Wearied, !=ipent.
"^jfflf. Fatigue.
^f^S" 7/. (s) A funeral cere-
mony observed at various fixed
periods, consisting of oflPerings
with w.ater and fire to the gods
and manes, and of gifts and
food to relations present and
assisting Brahmans. It is esp.
performed for a parent recently
deceased, or for three paternal
ancestors, or for all ancestors
collectively ; and it is supposed
to be necessary to secure the
ascent and residence of the souls
of the deceased in the world
appropriated to the manes.
^nr See ^FT.
^r^^ a. s Diligent, sedu-
lous.
^r^ (s) Oozing, dripping.
^f^^ (s) A follower of a
Jina; one of a sect amongst the
Jyn-people.
^[^•^ (s) The fifth month
of the Hindu year, — July-
August.
^FfOT^r -e?r / A shower
in the month of iSliravan. It
answers to April-shower. 2 fig.
A quarrel continuing with short
intermissions.
^f^% /. (s) The day of full
moon of the month Shravan. 2
The ceremony of renewing the
sacred thread, performed in this
month.
♦v.
^f^'T" V. i. To ooze, drip.
^F^ a. s (Pioper, Sec.) to be
heard.
^r/l (s) The coddess Laksh-
mi, the wife of Vishnu, the
deity of plentv and prosperity. 2
Fortune, wealth, glory, &c. 3
The three ol)jects of life collec-
tively ; viz. love, duty, and
wealth. 4 Used as a ])refix of
reverence to the names of deities,
holy places, sacred books, spi-
ritual teachers, !k.c. It is also
written at the beginning of books,
letters and writings gen. Elipti-
cally of ^ JT^SIT &c. forming
an invocation to the god iTtnij,
It is affixed to numerous words
— to confer the sense of glory,
lustre,bcauty; as JnT'sil, ^T^'sPl.
9^^^
423
'^\'^^ n. (s) pop -^ n. A
fruit. 2 A cocoaimt.
^RcT a. Of fortune and il-
lustrious station; opulent, noble.
2 Rich — a merchant, '^\^r{^f.
Opulence, greatness.
^RI-T a. (s) Prosperous,
fortunate.
^15^ «. (s) Illustrious coun-
tenance.
^r^'^'^f (s) A sect amongst
the worshipers of Vishnu.
^^ p. (s) Heard. 2 That has
heard. '6 Learned in the Vedas
and Shastras. 4 Prescribeil by
the Vedas.
^f^y. s Hearing : the organ
of hearing. 2 The Vedas seve-
rally or collectively. 3 Riunor. 4
In music. A quarter-tone or an
interval. 5 Tlie iiypothenuse of
the right-angled triangle. 6
Pop. Authorit}', warrant, ^frl-
^3 a. Harsh to the ear ; grat-
^^r f. 8 A line, a row.
^^ n. s Good, weal : a good,
a blessing. ^??^T a. s That
confers a blessing; auspicious.
^S" a. (s) Best, excellent,
^hief. [to be heard.
^[cfsq- a. s (Possible, &c.)
^f^r a. That hears ; an au-
/I'tor. [i„g.
^r^ n. a The sense of hear-
se
^r^ a. s Relating to the
^e*^^^- [applaud.
■^R""'!' V. c. Poet. To praise,
^fq"^r^, ^^r-^ a. s Praise-
worthy, laudable.
^^ 8 A combination of
words so as to admit of a dou-
ble interpretation; a species of
double entendre, equivoque or
paronomasia. 2 Embracing ; an
embrace, v. ^.
%'^^J s The phlegmatic
humor. 2 Phlegm. 3 pop. A
cold.
^r^ (s) A verse, a stanza.
*^^r s A father-ia-law. ^=^
/. A mother-in-law.
^R m. 71. A dog.
^R^ n. m. (s) A beast of
prey gen. 2 Any beast of the
forest.
^f^ (s) Breath. 2 Thick
and hard respiration, panting ;
asthma.
^f^FiJ^r^ s Common. ^F"
'^T'^TW Respiration.
%^ a. (s) White. 2 (Corr.
from ^rf) A bridge.
^
^ The thirty-first conso-
nant.
^2" a. s Six ; as TJ^R.
^^^^ n. (s) T2;^^jo/. The
six duties appropritate to Brah-
mans ; viz. 3fvj^»r, ^l«T,
•T. 2 The six acts which may
be performed through the virtue
of magical texts ; viz. «it^W,
^^^. 3 The si.K acts allowa-
able to a Brahman for his sub-
sistence ; viz. eRW^fll, 'SffriTj'^,
^^^^r a. That practices
^^^r"^ a. Sexangular. ^ST^f-
V] m, A. sexatigle,
q-J^^^^-?- pL s The depart-
ments of the six mystical spheres
of the human body.
^^r^^r One versed in the
^^m n. The six Shdstras
as ascribed to the sages ^trri^
and iTT?I^.
^^ (s) An hermaphrodite.
2 An eunuch. 3 A bull set at
liberty.
^^^ n. s The six parts of
the body ; viz. the two arms, the
two legs, the head, the waist.
2 The si.\ supplemeatary parts
of the Vedas; viz. gjT^R^W, ^'^j
'^T-fcf^, f^^f^, ^^^3, f^^T.
^^■^ pL s The six attributes
(of God); viz. fifm ^^^ -y^^-
^Vi -^ -^T^ -WK:t75J. 2 The six
properties of TT3j^1f>r. 3 An
assemblage of any six qualities,
^^ui^^ n. Lordship or great-
ness consisting in the posses-
sion of the six properties or ex-
cellencies.
^^^51^ n. pL The six
schools of Hindu philosophy.
•^^^ (s) The six tastes ; viz.
sweet, sour, salt, pungent,
astringent, bitter.
^fW^=T 71. s Sumptuous
feasting.
^^Wi P^' (s) The six enemies
of the soul ; yiz. lust, anger, co-
vetousuess, love or affection,
pride, envy. [months.
^•^^IfT (s) A period of six
^fS" a. s Sixty.
^St/. (s)The sixth day of
either half-month.
^^^TrfT^ir (s) The perform-
ance of sixteen points in idol-
worshi]).
^ The Thirty-second conso-
nant.
^ A prefix, signifying With,
aloiig with ; as ^^TT{, ^ttttt.
r . ^
^I"/. (a) This word answers
to S'ujnature in writing ; and ae-
ceptance in oral communication.
Used in combiuation with qf-
^ui or ^p/Tui ; as ^TuiT \^ HT^
^t ^"^m To approve of and
agree to purchase (a com-
modity) : fqi^T ^i ^X^ To
agree to and accept ; i. e. to
overcome in battle,&c. and make
one's own (a fortress) ; Jij^
^K ^o To reach, safely arrive
at, make (a village, &c.) 2 Memo-
ry of. 3 The slight concussion
with its forehead against the fore-
head of the person caressing it,
which a child is, in fondling and
play, caused to make. v. ■^.
4 Poetry. A confidante.
^H (h) a particle oi empha-
tic indication or concession. It
may he rendered souietimes, by
the Eii;j;lish words Indeed, in
trutli, aye, of course; and some-
times by At least, well : ^T
^=1 rix ^1 ^w ^ix -friTf;
^T^'feT 'HI rf^ ^T, Tn ITW rl^
^t^r a. Of its own body;
i. e. unpieced.
'6 3^^ a. Uather brackish.
t^^ n. (s) A strait, diffi-
culty.
^^S" ad. In gross, in the
lump ; indiscriminately, prep.
Along with.
^^ (s) Confusedly mixing.
2 Tumultuous intermixture ; a
medley. 3 Also ■g'qixrsTTffr/
A mixed caste.
^W.Uk f. (h) The charge
of acceptiu.;^ and cashing a
luuuli.
^^K^ u.
[verl).
Transitive — a
5R^^'^ n. s Drawing, ])ulling.
^^^ a. (s) Whole, entire. 2
AH.
^^^ See ^^^.
?T^?5-f?r .^/. (t) Broadcloth.
^^R^cT p. (s) Added up. 2
Mixed, minjrled. '.i Heaped to-
tjether. 4 Condensed — a writ-
ini;, speech.
^^?7 (s) A desire. 2 A re-
solution, purpose. 3 Solemn and
formal eiumciation of purpose as
preparatory to entrance ii|)on
any imj)ortant religious rite or
work {e. (j. ablution at a ri1«,
^l^, ^T^, &c.)
^*^r?1°T r. i. To resolve, de-
sign. V. c. To commit unto,
charge with. ^'^f^fT^A Kt-
solved, purposed.
m'^ n. See ^*'^^-
^^S" See ^^'^.ad. n Early in
the morning. 2 In good time,
betimes.
424
^RiSbf^ See ^T^^.
^'^oS'fcT p. Compressed — a
book, speech, &e. ud. Comjieu-
diously.
^^l^ a (s) That has the
desires of the desh and the
mind ; that is not a subdued
sage. 2 Interested — an act per-
formed. 3 That has the sexual
passion, or that is under the
excitement of it.
^^R" Acceptance of a hiuidi.
2 Eiulorsemcnt of a hundi.
^^T^i?I r. c. To accept a hundi.
^^[rr=[?I!'r A covert name foi-
a %T^T Scamp.
"ET^Rfi"/. (h) The charge of
accepting and cashing of a hundi.
H^[a5"y; Early morning.
^^fST -S'f ad. To-morrow
mcrning. 2 Early in the morning :
in the morning.
vi^f^^;. s. Mixed; esp. in
a confused manner. 2 Crowded
— a room. 3 Compressed, nar-
rowed. 4 Dwindled — a Hume, the
soul. 5 Of mixed caste.
^CrTf-T n. (s) P raising, ex-
tolling. '^■^lf=^ff p. PraiseJ,
glorified.
vT^l^crcTp. (s) Narrowed.
^^^K a. Delicate, tender.
^JT^^llT a. s That appre-
hends and understands upon
once seeing or hearing ; apt :
(piick.
^|:s:^Tf ad. At the first
sight of. 2 At the very outset.
^^^ (s) Appointment, ordi-
nation. 2 Agreement, stii)ulation.
3 A provision. 4 A sign ; a nod,
beck, glance. 5 An assignation
(l)i>t\veen lovers). 6 A condition.
^^friWi-'- Appointed; ordain-
ed, &c. ^^«fl a. True to one's
agreement.
. v
'Ef^r'^ (s) Drawmg together,
in, or up : contractedness : scan-
tiness (of a room, vessel). 3
DdHeulty from continedness. 4
Reserve, closeness. 5 Abashed-
ness. V. ^^\Z, ^l-
^^[^"oT r. i. To draw to-
gether, in, to contract : to bc-
come strait. 2 To suffer the sense
of pressure. 3 fig. To draw in ; to
become reserved. 4 To suifer re-
])ression (from modesty). ^$T-
^^ n. s Drav\ing in or up. ^*-
^^f^r{p. (s) Drawn in or up ;
contracted. 2 Become narrow :
become lessened in cai)acity. 3
Become reserved. 4 Abashed :
overawed. 5 Doubtful, scrupul-
ous.
^WM a. (a) Hard, firm.
^^ p. s Attached; placed
in contact with. 2 fig. p. a. In-
tent upon.
H-WJTfU/. Hard-labor.
^^frry. (p) Hardness, soli-
dity. 2 fig. Austerity, severity ;
^ rigor.
^^^^ n. Poet. Slaughtering;
hacking, cutting iq). Fop. Hand-
ling roughly.
^^^ 771. s -'^ n. Passing or
going on, travelling.
^^[^ /?. s Passed on, pro-
ceeded : that has been i)assed
(over).
^^icf1i5r n. Astrological pre-
dictions for the half-year or the
season.
^^iRT/. (s) pop. ^^i^ Tran-
sit (of the sun or a ]danet from
one sign of the zodiac into an-
other). 2 Passage from one time
or condition in bfe to another :
also from one place to another ;
passing gen.
■^^'^ a. Low or short. 2
Deep; — as a well: hollow,
sunken, — ground, w. A depress-
ed place ; a dale ; a basin ov
h:'ll()v,-. [cloth.
^?^^[^-^ /. (t) Broad-
^^c^r^r -fr a. Relating to
broadcloth,
^^r (s) A friend, a com-
panion. 2 See ^JFT.
^#/. (s) A female friend.
^^^ 71. (s) Companionship,
friendship ; as "^T^ -TT5I^^.
2 Communion with the Deity.
^^^ir /. (s) Number. 2
A number.
^^ (s) Union, junction; is
wv^
425
^r%rr
^^iT. 2 Congress of the
sexes.
^q^r -^Kf a. (s) That
walks or goes together with,
concomitant. 2 Gregarions.
^^5" rtr/. In the gross, in-
discriminately, prep. With, along
with.
^n^ a. (s) pop. m^m^ Ap-
posite, consistent, congruous.
^llcm'Jr The influence of
companionship or companj'.
^m%/. (s) pop. ^^^ /.
Union, junction. 2 Congruity,
consistency. 3 Company, c. pop.
^■jTrTl or ^3I?I A compauiou ;
a fellow.
W\^\ -^ prep. With, along
with. ad. Together.
^^^^ a. (s) Odoriferous.
^^T'T^cT n. A confederacy,
alliance.
^•TRcfr A party in combi-
nation, league or concerted
scheme ; a confederate.
^^^ (s) Meeting, union,
junction.
^m^^^ (p) Marble. m^T-
^Kt, ^im^T^. a. Relating to
marble.
^TIT a. (s) Pregnant, m. A
brother by the same father and
mother.
^^o5T a. All or every one ;
the whole number. 2 Whole,
entire.
^^ a. (ii) Own, near, full,
closely related ; — used of re-
lations.
tm\ See ^mi mi^'i, -^
See ^'fl?ff.
^ir a. (s) That is the com-
panion of : ^T^ -irw-^JiT.
^^\^ n. (s) Singing accom-
panied with music, a concert. 2
The means of a concert. 3 The
science or the art of music and
dp-ncing.
^^R /'. (p) A bayonet, a.
Built or made of stone. 2 Hard,
firm, solid. 3 fig. Firm, decided ;
—as speech, a measure. 4 Com-
plete, iiert'eet.
54
^5"^ a. (s) That has attri-
butes and perfections — the Dei-
ty : that has qualities — a thing.
^riq^g „. The sensible
form and person of Deity ; the
Deity in his fullness of manifesta-
tion as embodying properties
and attributes.
^Fforer^I^^ir s External and
^^
sensible manifestation of him-
self afforded by the Deity, as by
his assumption of a body, by
working miracles, &c.
e'^rT[€^ a. That worships
God considered as possessing
and exercising the attributes
and excellencies appropriate to
Deity.
^rforrqm^r /. Worship of
God considered as ^itv\.
^^fcT p. (s) Collected,
heaped up.
^n" prep. With, together
with. 2 Of or at.
^^^■•T ad. In constant com-
panionship ; always together.
^^J^ (s) A kinsman of the
same family-name, or one sprung
from a common ancestor.
mm n. (s) Corrup. tfllTR
Careful preservation, '^jit-
f^rTl). Carefully kept.
H?T§r (s) Collecting, gather-
ing : a collection, heap. 2 A
compilation. [sembling.
^C^ n. s Collecting, as-
^^^^\ f. (s) Irregular state
of the bowels, — costiveness, al-
ternately with diarrh<x^a.
^^^^ a. That collects, a-
masses. 2 Pop. Covetous.
^?Tt^ s Conflict of armies,
battle.
^^rrST a. s(Pnssible,necessa-
ry,&c.)to be collected,assembled,
&c.
^^^RT s A descriptive term
for a beggar, a porter, a player,
a legend-expounder, and the
others of Adam Smith's unpro-
ductive labourers,
^q-^fff j^_ I Poet. To come
I into contact ; to cucountcr.
^^^ n. s Corrup. 4^^^
Close conection and intercourse,
2 Encountering. 3 Close contact.
4 Confrication.
^•T a. k, ad. Thick, close,
dense; — used of trees, cloth,
liquids, &c.
• r
^^^ s Rubbing against,
friction. 2 fig. Contending with
for superiority; coping, vicing.
^^ Apparatus, materials.
^"^^^I^ In law-matters. A
portion of the remuneration of
a vukeel advanced as earnest-
money, retaining fee. 2 Such ear-
nest-money in gen.
^^•T" V. c. To accumulate, a-
mass.
^"^^ (s) A collection, heap.
^"^^Fa. Disposed to amass;
avaricious.
^^T^ V. i. To enter. 2 To
penetrate and occupy. Used of
demons entering into possession;
of poisons or medicines absorb-
ed into the system ; of fire, air,
&c. enveloping or permeating
their respective subjects of ac-
tio"^^- [vaded, &c.
^"^itcf p. (s) Entered, per-
^^^r See ^^[^r.
^^«S" n. A factitious salt
prepared by fusing fossile salt
with emblic myrobalans.
H'^K Penetration into and
occupation of; pervasion : ^ff
-■cfTfT ■#» 2 Stirring about in.
3 Passage, progress, advance
made into.
^^1^^ V. c. To cause to
enter; to insert, v. i. See
^^rf^cT p. s Set in motion.
BV^^i V. c. Poet. To collect,
^f^rf p. Amassed, collected.
^f^cT n. (s) The stock, over
and above that portion of it
which is applied to furnish out the
allotment of physical good and
evil to be experienced in any
particular birth of merit and
demerit, wrought out and laid up
w^^
426
w^^
in preceding stages of existence ;
and will thus continue, until all
the demerit shall be expended,
to furnish occasion for future
birth, and to regulate the quan-
tum of happiness and misery to
be enjoyed and endured. 2 The
stock ac(iuired tlirough the good
and evil works of the present or
other particular birth.
^'^^-f a. (s) Animate, living.
^'^^ a (s) (Possible, pur-
posed) to be collected together.
^^^ ad. Wit!i one's clothes
on. a. That is dressed, ^'^vl-
«^T»f n. Ablution in one's
garments.
^% a. s See ^t^H.
^^ffr /. (ii) Honesty,
integrity. [sincere.
^^1 a. (h) Veracious, true,
^r%T3H a. s Full of real
being and intelligence ; epithet
of the Deity or of the spirit of
man.
^I%?5r s The intellectual
portion or principle (of a rational
being).
^r^^RT a. s A title of
J>ralnn. Rejoicing in essential
being and understanding.
H^ See ^f^.
^'^JKl A orain called ^FTO
W^'^ m. ^ni'nf/.See ^r^iq-^.
^W\\ f. Making ready;
dressing out.
^^'T V. i. To get or become
prepared; — to get equipped,
accoutred, armed, dressed out.
2 To get or become corrected,
adjusteil ; to l)ecumc tit, lit.
fig. ."i. fig. To fit, become, beseem.
4. Used trdnsitivehj in the above
souses: ^r?lTl^ ^'^T ^tJ?i
^sln'^ r, c. To. prepare or
make tit and ready ; to equip,
accoutre, arm, fit up, furnish,
dress out, Ike. 2 To correct or
adjust.
H^r/. (1-) Punishment v. ?'
^'slf^^r -?:cT a. That is taken
from n shop without settlement
of the price, and with liberty
to retain or return it — an article
of merchandise.
^5[[[% a. (s) Of the same
caste, family, tribe.
^^T^ a. (s) Animate, alive.
^^F^'T V. (s) Revival re-
animation. 2 Any thing by which
resuscitation is effected.
^^r^-rr f. The art or science
of restoring a dead bod}" to life.
2 A plant to which is ascribed
the power.
W^^ -JT?rr a. Orderly, well-
regulated; — as a state, a house-
hold, a business : compact, well-
cunfiued, that is within mode-
rate dimensions.
^^r^T Stock, store, fund ; the
materials and necessaries (for a
business or an occasion) as
present and conveniently appli-
cable : the ])resence of them in
the required quantity and suita-
ble disposition. 2 Economy.
^^TTofT /. Sufficiency, ade-
quacy. ^i^liTU) r. ^. To serve
or supjily well ; to be adequate
for, or unto.
^-sTF^ir An ascetic that does
not observe the rules of celibacy.
^^^, ??rr^sTc[ p, (s) corr.^B'^^r
a. Ready ; prepared, &c. See
^5JBT. 2 Heady-stretched— a
'"*^^'- [ous i)erson.
?T^5I^ (s) A good and virtu-
^^^r A room or an erection
of sligiit fraine-work on a liigh
terrace. 2 A h.uig range of cul-
tivated grounds, li In tlie cus-
toms. A range of country with
retVience to transit-duties : 3-
^^sf(J5[f^ Impure carbonate
of soda, country alkali, natron.
^Z^m^f. Starting ofTsud-
(Icnlv and bhar[)ly, holliny v.
^ZV^ZX n. See ^^^T^J^.
^Z^^ r. i. To die of, or be
affected with, a distemper oc-
curiug about the sixth day after
birth, and viL!V>ed as a visitation
i'loui Devi — an infant.
EZ^]t, ^fr /. A vulgar
name of the goddess Durga, and
hence of a distemper incidental
to infants considered as a visita-
tion from her. 2 A))p. as a term
of reviling to a woman.
^?r^ a. (s) That has a com-
mentary or an interpretation
attached to it.
^fi^Rr^rf ad. Occasionally.
^JT^T^ w. Rivalry of rival
wives.
^?r (h) Mercantile transac-
tion ; exchanging of monies, &c,
^fT^fT A lose term for
shroff-business.
^TT / See ^^r. 2 See ^f"
TO /. A form of Durga. 2
Worship performed by a woman,
on the sixth day from her deli-
very, to the goddess Sathi and to
other goddesses, o See'^^^T'?.
.^^ A stump (of a sugar-
cane, reed, stock of coin); a
piece of stubble. 2 fig. The mem-
brum genitale (of a bull or a Inif-
falo). 3 fig. A teat. 4 A bristle
(as of a hog) ; a stiff hair or
similar thing. 5/. A line of pro-'
cedure ; a course, v.^, ^T^fl^,
■^T^, ^^- fi 1" cases of dis-
pute. Any writing or oral state-
ment in attestation or evidence
of: any certificite, document. /.
Pounding (of rice, &c.) in order
to luisk.
rT^sT^ f. A rope ; esp. a cart-
rope. 2 A made road. v. ^fv.
3 Apj)- to a person of straight
and erect frame, a Straight ; —
as a road, a row ; straight and
erect ; as a jierson, tree, column.
2 Strai<!;htforward, plain, blunt;
— as a reply. a charge,alnise.&c.«.
& «f/.lIeadlong,onor in; straight-
ways and wilfully ; (with the
im])ort and empiiasis of such
words as) outriyht, cl('S/)cratc4i/,
utterhj, and with ap])lication
to spirit-drinking, drug-eating,
gambling, cKcc.
^^W\ V. c. To pelt, batter,
banir ; to strike smartly and
briskly, and with somethhig as
the means (as with hailstones,
heavy drops, pebl)les, a cane, kv)
I 2 To work or cut y\{^ roughly
^¥^
427
^TT^
and riulely; to chisel, chip coarse-
ly and cai-e.lessly : to strike vio-
lently against the stone (clothes
in washing them) : to heat
hard with the sledge-havnmer
t,metals on the anvil) ; to sliake
with heedless haste and violence
(meal, &c., in a s^'ij) : to cast at
lavishly and ])rofusely; to shower
vpoH (kicks, l)lows,curses,rni)ees,
&c.) V. i. To set oft' in a run ; to
set oft' sharp.
^^■^^rcrS" „. Thin and lean,
meagre ; slender.
^^^r a. llotten, putiified.
^^irT ad. See the verb ^^-
^ui'. V. c.
^3"0T n. Rice, &:c. taken to
be husked by pounding. 2 The
operation of pounding in order
to husk. -^^WT^H /• The
price of husking, '^^m) f.
Pounding (of rice, &c.) in order
to husk.
^^°T V. c. To pound (rice,
&c.) in order to husk. v. i. (h)
To rot, corrupt.
^l"q"r^S- See tT^^^rcTas-.
fT^^^ -^f ad. Imit. of the
sound of the pelting or pattering
of rain, &c.
^^JET^"^ V. z. To dash down;
to descend with rattle and clatter
— rain : to fall smartly andsound-
ingly — strokes of a cane, &c.
iET^g-ffcT a. Hard, dry and
gritty (as from bad boiling); —
rice, &c. 2 Tall and straight and
comely ; light and tight ; com-
pact and erect and dapper ; — as
a person or a tree.
fT^'Frr^r f. Evidence written
or oral; authoritative testimony
or account.
^^r a. Bare, void, detach-
ed, single ; — as a person un-
married, or unaccompanied by
wife and family, or having no
retinue or l)aggage on the road, or
having no secular embarrassments
or engagemoits : unemjjljyed,
unlured, or unloaded; — as a vehi-
cle, a beast, a man. m. Sprink-
ling (as upon a floor) of tliin
cowdung-wash, colored water,
&c. w. giwf, ei^, •^, fliq. 2
fig. Scattering profusely (as of
fruits or flowers, of rupees
amidst a crowd, &c.) v. ^T^,
^. 3 See ^^^T. 4 c Table-
land upon the summit or the
sides of a hill; an elevated rocky
])lateau.
^^r^r A soiniding- stroke;
the pelting (of a heavy shower) ;
the crack ! crack ! (of a sound
and hearty caning.)
^^r ^RiTK Free, bare, un-
varnished business ; plain dealing.
^^r ^^m A reviling term for
a fellow unencumbered with
wife, family, articles of
property, &c. ; a vagabond with-
out a penny or a clout, and
free to rove in the wide world
before him.
^^JfJ^'T^^r^a. (a) Single (i.e.
unmarried, &c.) and of the ])oor
and laboring class. Such liavc
half their house-tax remitted, and
are designated by this term in
revenue-accounts.
^^r^ (h) a privy.
^^WJTr^=T,^:3T^[r^'Jr «. The
operations collectively of sweep-
ing, smearing with cowdungwash
&c. (on the floor of a house)-
^^r^r^r a See ^^r.
^^"Wrr An irrisive or
scornful terra for a single man ;
a bare stalk, a naked trunk.
^^r /". A wasting disease —
a sort of rot. 2 The spawn or
feculence of flics settling upon a
sore, and producing maggots in
it, a fly-blow, .'j A si)lintof wood,
a piece of stubble, grass, &c. (as
running iuto the flesh).
^^r^ a. Husked througli
pounding — rice, &c. 2 See ^^-
^^. sig. 2.
^^ri^fSfy. A force unencum-
bered withsuttlers, followers, &c. ;
an equipment for active service ;
a light armament; an expedition.
^Ir^^rft/: a hght escort;
a small and unencumbered re-
tinue.
^^^ a. Rotten ; putrefied.
^imZ -5 See ^^r^fST.
^'^5^^ A monkey of a
troop which is composed whollv
of males— into which females and
young ones are never permitted
to enter. 2 Hence one of a
number of bachelors.
^^'^ a. Liberal, bountiful;
lavish, profuse.
^^ A holiday. 2 The feast-
ing and festivities observed on a
holiday. 3 Victuakor undressed
corn given on the festivals of
Dnsara, &c. to the family barber
&c. : presents (of cl ,>th, &c.)
made on such occasions to one's
relatives. 4 (T^nr s) Bengal
hemp.
^^^ See I%^r^.
^^T^'H" V. i. To whistle ; whiz,
&c.; to dart or shoot.
^■^^r A sudden, sharp, or
shooting pain (as from the bite
of an ant ; from a rheumatic af-
fection,&c.) V. fiig, ^S, ^T^.
'T'^^^ffl/. The Stem or bare
culm of Ilemp-plant after its
rind is stri|)ped from it. 2 App.
to the stem similarly bared of
Ambadi, &c. 3 A match.
^^^ n. A web of cloth, a
piece.
^"^^^a^/.Imit. of the whist-
ling, whizzing, singing, ringing
(of a cannon-ball, an arrow, &c.)
H'^^fr A holiday.
^^W^ f. Imit. of the singing
or hissing (of fermentation, ebul-
lition, &c.); any singing; ringing,
&c.
^oj^'^^ V. i. To emit the
sound ^ui ! ■^■DT !, to sing; — as a
thing boiling : to whistle ; — as a
thing in rapid flight. 2 To feel a
tingling sensation, to rinff or sing;
— as the hand, &c. on striking
with a weapon, a hard and reper-
cussive body. ^v\^Tn]'Z in. A.
loud whistling, singing (of bul-
lets, bows, stones, &c.)
ing from intense heat ; — as water
&c. 2 Hot, biting — a dish. 3
Tense;tight,firm; — used of thread,
cloth, man. 4 Blunt, flat; — as a
refusal, reply. 5 Stiflly dry ; —
as a washed cloth, (i Strong-
sounding, of a high and full ring
i. e. 9oot/;— used of coins, me-
tal, &c.
WWT
428
5[Tr^rr
^TOTR"^ V. i. See ^'^^°^'T^.
'3'cr/?.(s)Tlie tvy\e{i.e. real, self-
subsisting) bcinp; ; — a designa-
tion of I3i-ahm as the real and
sole substance of the (illusively)
material universe, m. A holy be-
inj;, a saint, a. True, real, actual.
2 Free, good. virtuous, j)roj)er,ex-
cellent : -^t^it, ^'^T^lT, ^l^".
^^ n. Cream, pith, marrow.
2 Virtue, vigor, ind. Tlie term
used in multiplying by 7 any of
the numbers above unity: c{\f{
9^(s) A holy man. 2 pop.
A religious mendicant who
professes great sanctity and piety.
^^ n. Gentle, calm, soft,
flowing ; — as a stream, a breeze,
the air, the water : gently burn-
ing ; — as a flame : mild, not
vehement ; — as a disorder : soft,
placid ; — as a disposition.
^^^, ^cTcf a. (s) Continual,
])erpctual. ad. Continually.
^cTcT^^ (s) Remitting fever :
a remittent.
^cfcT'^ f. A continous
stream (as of water let fall over
an idol, of rain descending, of a
river flowing, and fig. of a [)rac-
tice, fashion, &c.)
^^r^/. (s) Race, lineage,
ofspring.
5Ffcr^f^ a. Thirty-seven.
^cT H] TIcT A vulj^. phrasp. In-
despensableness, the must be, the
condition sine qua non. »f^^T-
^I^T^^Hl'^'T ^o No help —
no remedy — no getting on
■without.
^cTfT p, (s) Extremely heat-
ed, lit. fig.; scorched, parched,
inflamed. 2 Greatly troubled or
distressed; agitated by ])ain.
^clfTfTR 71. Burning s^old.
Efpiivalent to " Fine brass burn-
" ing in a furnace ". Rev. i. 15.
t1d*lf f. A manifesto, r
. -^ [carpet.
^"{T^t f. (A or p) A kind of
^n^r a. Seventeen.
^^'T'^ n. (s) Gratifyinsj,
satisfying the desires or wants
of. ^'n^in. f. c. To satisfy
the desires of. ri«Tfu?l.^j. Grati-
fied, well-supphed.
^^^ffc^ a. Veracious.
^cTtT-^'T pi. Saints and good
men comprehensively.
^cfF^ nd. c In a regular
and continuous row.
^cf^S" a. Sixty-seven.
^^f'T 71. (s) Race, progeny,
'^rTT'T^l'T Philoprogenitive-
ness. ■^'ffT^'^J*?' ?«. Wealth con-
sisting in offspring. '^'iTl«r^5T
n. The seed or first of a race.
2 The first of a family to come,
i. e.'d child after long barrenness.
^cTrTv«.^cT[qrt|Tr^r.. The
plant Rue.
B^\^ (s) Excessive heat, lit.
fig. ; burning or inflamed state
(by fire, fever, lust, anger, &c.)
2 Passion, rage. 3 Perturbation
or commotion of mind, alHic-
tion, anguish : the agony arisini:
from corporal suffering. ^"rfT-
xf^^x: Feverish excitement.
^cfPT^ y. i. To be under ve-
hement and burning lieat ; to be
scorched, parched, excited, in-
flamed. 2 To be disgusted or
wearied at or with ; to be vexed.
^^ftrrn V. c. To afflict,
grieve, torment greatly.
^cTli'^^p. (s) Affected by ve-
hement heat, lit. fig: — excited
by anger, lust, &c. ; incensed. 2
Perturbed, vexed ; afflicted ; agi-
tated under corporal pain. ^-
m^^ «. Passionate, irritable.
^cTIT /. (p) A guitar with
three strings.
^m^^ V. c. (n) To plague,
tease, annoy, vex.
^cflf , 'Ffcfraf/i. Santisi)!, rage
for following a ^?r, orforjjcr-
forming religious rites to the
neglect of worldly duties and
occu])ations. A word of oppro-
brious implication. 2 A com-
panv of holy men. ^ App. to
any grave lecture ujion tlie va-
nitv of mundane pursuits or of
earthly pleasures, &c.
^^WfTifr /. s The ablative
case; absolute.
^^r /. (s) A chaste woman,
App. esp. to the wife who, on
being widowed, burns herself
with the corpse of her deceased
husband. Pr. -fTrll^ ^l<t ^"fVt
B^i a. Relating to a ^^; —
as a practice, dress, &c,
^^rt^r^^ n. (The fruits,
rice, supari, &e. of a woman
about to immolate herself upon
the pyre of lier deceased hus-
band.) A term for a business or
an undertaking of which, after
])romi.se has been made to per-
form it, the relinquishment is
utterly inadmissilile.
^flfT^RF a. Having truth
and credit.
^^r^ s. A fellow-Student.
^^'^ a. s Having on its
husk — corn.
^^'^ P- i^) Delighted, pleas-
ed. ■^■■gUijf. V. c To delight,
please, ■^^fu/. s Delighted-
ness. ■^'sTi a. Fully satisfied.
■^"(SfT?/. Fidl satisfaction.
HcT^^^ o. s pop ^^^ Hav-
ing light, lustre, glow, lit. fig. 2
Having potency, vigor ; — as a
medicine, an article of food.
#^V (s) Delight, pleasure
satisfaction. 2 Contentment. 3
Placidity (of aspect or deport-
ment). Pr. ^TJI ^T^ ^TTqWT^
^m^ 71. s Pleasing, ^'clfq--
V] V. i- To be pleased, delight-
ed. '^^I'l^fk^ V. c. To gladden,
please. ■^'HifqrT 27, Pleased, re-
joiced. fi^TfV «. Of a cheerful,
hapjiy, contented disposition.
^^^ ?i. s A good deed ; a
virtuous action.
^^^^-T 71. (s) Sacred poetry.
■^r^sf^ A poet on divine sub-
jects.
^f^K (?) Paying respect. 2
Reverence, homage, honor as
])aid or rendered. '^f^Kin. v.
c. To honor, ^f^lf^rl p- Re-
spected.
^^tT
429
!ff?T
^HFTf^T 11. B Hecitinc: the
graces and excellencies of the
good.
^tT^T a. Best, excellent.
Wk\X a. Seventy.
^tTF f. (s) Being, existence.
-2. Authority, right over ; right
of rule, swa3% disposal, a]iplica-
tion or use. 3 Power, might :
\-^X. ^o, ^T'SJ'^o 4 Used
for Power, the domination
of might in contrad. from
lleasonable authority. ^^ 5^
Sj^iurtiur ■^T'tiff ■siT^t Capa-
city, sense, &c. prevail nothing
against the absoluteness of power.
^fiT^T^^, ^TlT^lfr c. One
that has dominion, lordshij),
proprietorship over. 2 That holds
fast one's right.
^Tr[^[3T (s) A kino-, ruler,
governor, lord ; one that holds
lawful sway over.
?jTTfR|TTr /. s Resignation
of right, abdication.
^ffF^^T a. Fifty-seven.
^T[[^fR^rt. (s)pop.-^^ Having
mastership or right over; holding
the right of rule or disposal of.
^xfrff^" a. Tvventy-^even.
^"fT (s) Bai ley. 2 Flour of
parched barley.
g'TfxffS'-ST^a. Forty-seven.
^nf ff ^ a. That has property
or right, in or over. 2 That is
under the mastership of: '^
•EjT ■?|^^^ ^o rs^-[^ ^ ^\'^x^1
W^\^ n. One worthy to re-
ceive presents or honors; a
proper object of gifts or charity.
^^J^ A dutiful and affec-
tionate son. 2 A son by a woman
of any of the three first classes,
in exclusion of a son by a
Shiidra female.
^^^ a. (s) True, real ; not
false, illusory ; having real exist-
ence. 2 Extant, living; an
epithet of the Deity. 3 Real,
genuine. 4 True, veracious, sin-
cere, that speaks the truth. 5
Honest, upright, pure from
guile, n. Probity, honesty ; in-
ward pureness. 2 Truth, reality.
3 Ordeal, oath. 4 The first
Yuga or age, the golden age. 5
ITsed as a particle of interro-
gation and asservation, — indeed,
really, yea.
^^•Tf^ pop. -^ Destruc-
tion, annihilation, extinction,
perdition, &c.
^"^^"JTf^ir a. Faithful to en-
gagement ; covenant-keeping.
^^5^ See ^^^. sig. 4.
€r^r^%,^^^[^^^^r «. s Of
whom the whole form of being
is Truth. An epithet of Deity.
^^q"«r^ The uppermost of
the seven lokas, — the heaven of
truth, of Brahma, and of the
^m^^\ -^rfr -^wr -w^ a.
Truth-speaking, veracious,
^^^^cf a. That practices or
adheres to the truth ; honest.
^^57fc7 n. Disposed to
speak the truth.
€^W^?7 a. Of whom the
determinations and purposes are
true and abiding; "all whose
counsels come to pass." An epi-
thet of the Deity, &c.
^^q-faqq- ^^_ Ninety-seven.
^^R^ n. s A term for com-
merce, fty-seven.
^^q"iq#, tf^5Tr4# a. Eigh-
^^2Tr?:^r, ^^^rrrm^ a. Se-
venty-seven.
a. Forty-seven.
*\
^^^fTfC n. Formal and
solemn asservation. ad. Formally
and solemnly. 'ETt^lTiT: flc/.With
many protestations and jirofes-
sions ; oaths and invocations.
^^ n. (s) Sacrificing or sa-
crifice. 2 Liberality. 3 Reciting
in public assemblj' the mar-
velous exploits of the gods. 4
The distribution of food to
Brahmans and mendicants : the
building erected or the spot
ai)])ointed for this distribution.
^^m -^ ad. Poet. With a
vehement effort, ^^itn" n.
See "^TW.
^^5 (s) The first of the
three t\v\ or properties of
created things, — the property of
goodness. 2 Being, existence,
entity. 3 A substance. 4 Cream,
]>iih, sap, the real and material
subject or basis of the virtues,
excellencies and influences of.
5 Vigor, virtue, spirit. 6 Nature,
natural |iropertv.
^^l^m See ^^^ sig. 1 ^^^
^imt a. In whom or which
the ^cjt^JTUT is predominant.
^^l^m a. Tliat steadily
and stanchly maintains his in-
tegrity,veracity,chastity,&c.; that
retains tenaciously its vigor, vir-
tue, spirit, or essential quality ;
firm, constant, abiding. '^f{'^
f»[-^. a. Upright, honest. ^'H-
■t^9?l^ a- Of a virtuous dis-
position. 2 That retains long
and euduringly its virtues — a
thing. ■'gH't^'Slfl/. s Depuration
Or refinement of a drug — the
act or the state effected ; rectifica-
tion. ■^ fT,w??J a. A'irtuous; good.
2 Wliolesome, salutary ; — an
article of food.
W^WX^ n. (s) Carrying off,
despoiling, or destroying the ex-
cellence of, lit. fig.; robbing the
repute of, &c. ^■cef'^lfiT/. Loss
of excellence, virtue, or good of,
lit. fig. -^c^lTfl 'gfiTDTT /. A
term for a true ami virtuous
woman.
W'^^X a. s Quick, swift, 2 pop.
ad also ^lef^^. Poet. Quickl}'.
^'^^^ s Good society, com-
pany or connection.
^^^S" a. I^ixty-seven.
^^^ H. Level oioiind, table-
land.
^^1" /. Reading and con-
ning, in order to commit to
memory. 2 The portion to be
read and conned, a lesson.
^^^^«, Thirty-seven.
^^■7 11. s A house.
^^rq- a. (s) Merciful.
^^^ f. (a Supreme.) Tlie
highest court of the law. 2 n.
In papers of accounts, &c. A
comprehensive heading : a head-
ing gen. 3 A class or department
in the sense of f^^j. \ The
^?r
430
^1-^
hall of auilience, a state-room :
a seat for the administration of
justice, or the direction of public
business, f) ad. In the gene-
ral : ^5^1 tirf?^ ^^t ^iW
%: ex. ofcomp. '^'^^ T^T-
^TT -M]-^. (J C'liief, princi-
pal, head : ^ »
^T^TST^Tr The second chiss
iu(l<;eovcr a Civil Conrt, snbor-
"(linlite to the Ziila-courts.
^^m'?^] f. The drawina- out
sejiaratclv and regularly of the
<>;eneral heads, and of the sums
Total disbursed or received under
them, in order to frame the ac-
count and determine the balance.
ij-^^siiT^T Tlie total of the
headings, grand total.
^R?:fR ad. By the headhigs
or beads severally : according to
the order of the headings.
^T^W^nd. Accordingly with
the lu-ading, text matter duly set
down, &c. : ^o fsrf^^l^flTDT'
observances of the Hindu castes,
as preserved in the land l)et\vixt
the rivers 'g^^fft & ^^^Tffl-
s pop. -■^a. That walks rii^htly:
of correct demeanour.
^r a. Ever-
3Ef2"^€r ^cJ5T/.An autecliam
her (to a hall of audience, &e.)
^^H s Connection, consist-
ence (as of the members of a
disco\n-se, narration, sentence). 2
The planning, or laying schemes
to bring about a matrimonial
match : connected state. ■^^-
»Tf^^? a. lucoheieut. ^X^-
^^ (t. Congruous.
^T^,R^^ f\ Interchanging
or changing about.
^^^ff a. (s) Trne or false.
2 Real or unreal ; existent or
non-existent, .\lsotrue owe/ false;
rc;il (111(1 unreal.
^^■^S" a. Sixty-seven.
^T^r nd. (8) pop
Always : ex. of coinp. '^^I^IT
Abvavs, ever and anon.
^?"r^^"^ n. (s) Correct and
proper deportment, (s) poj).-i7i^
(I. Of correct deportment.
^T^R (s) (Jood and right
conduct. 2 A good jir.actice*
usage, custom. 3 Tlie traditionary
pop
rejoicing or ever-happy. 2 App.
to an idiot.
^^T^T^iT -ig-^K o. Solvent. 0pp. to
I ^T^IT. ■^^T<t /. Solvency.
Opp-to -iTT^Tft.
^^f^^ a. Ever-sour and
sullen.
^^^"^ n. A reliiiioiis observ-
ance. The distribution daily
of food to mendicants or travellers.
^^T^Tlf «.Ilelating to ^^T^tJ-
H^rra"^ A name of Shiva.
^?"f^^^ ad. Always, con-
stantly.
PT^rra^ a. (s) Ever-existing,
eternal. An epithet of the Deity.
^Ki"tT a.(s) Doubted,suspect-
ed at; doubtful, ambiguous, of ob-
scure and uncertain im])ort, quali-
ty,kind. •^f^T^TRffTcV sceptic;
one who is doubtiul of religious
observances, &c. 2 One of a
doubtful mind. ■€fs['^^^ 71.
-^^ m. s In law. A docu-
mentary writing of doubtful
meaning or authority, '^ff^-
TVT^ A doubtful meaning.
2 A disputed dei)t.
Blt^l nd. At this very
instant; in this juncture.
^cTF (id. n Always.
chest. [solid.
HfTS" a. (s) Firm, haid,
ti i ^l a. (s) Like, similar :
^jr^ in comp. iJfr^T'T, f^S^ o •
^?5J (s~) Message ; charge
or mandate transmitted.
^^B\ Poet. A message, v.
^RT (s) Doubt; indcter-
inination of opinion or mind.
'^^'^ (I- Dubious, scrupulous ;
tliat iiululges suspicious and evil
surmises.
^^ «. (s) Fortunate, lucky.
(t(l. 8 Always.
^^IT a. Having blemish,
tlaw. 2 Criminal, faulty.
^STcT /. See ^m. 2 Re-
source, remedy, help. SPT^^-
HSTfT /. (s) TTappy state as
attained by a creature in the
birth succeeding to any parti-
cular other biitli ; i. e. ematu-i-
])ation or absorption ; a seat in
any of the heavens ; birth again
in a high caste.
^5"f^cr a. (s) pop. W^ Op-
pressed through vehement emo-
tion ; full and swelling and un-
able to articulate ; — as the
throat or a ]ierson ; as through
excessive and overpowering grief,
affection, &c.
^^^ (s) A good quality. ^-
?r^. A ood guru or spiritual
instructor and director. '^5"^^
A respectable householder ; a
mild and affable ])erson.
^ff /. (p) A century, (a)
Prosperousness, ha]>piness: pros-
perous or ffounshing season.
^^^ (s) A good property.
2 A good religion : a good
religious jiractice. 3 Laxly.
Good conduct. ^^^^f «.
Righteous, just. [now.
^^^r, ^^^r ad. Presently,
^i:rf (s) Goodness. 2 Pu-
rity of purpose or mind.
^^: ad. (s) Now, instantly.
^^.fT'^' The rule of doing
and despatching a matter at tlie
moment at which the occasion
arises ; the present time. 2 The
3Tq^^ or anticipated perform-
ance of a duty.
^^l^, B^l^\^ a. Relating to
the present time ; recent, mo-
dern. [\t the present, now.
^^r a. Present, now. rtc/.
^5;^ a. (s) That is suffering
or is suscejitible of exudation or
liquifaction ; or that has, inhe-
rently, juice, sap, or liquor.
Wl^ n. s A good thing, i. e.
God. w./. Any person or thing
trnc or good.
^r^^^ (s) Just discrimina-
tion. 2 Good discrimination,
^f^^^ a. Judicious, discreet,
^^5^^ s Wise, profitable, or
in-oper expenditure.
^^ f. Juncture, union. 2
Joint, seam. 3 A cleft; a gap.
4 An interval (of time). 5 A
joint, knot, articulation. G fig.
The exactly opportune period;
the critical time : the nick. J
lleconciliation, peace, a. a That
liolds or has inherently : efiq^-
^'"^ a. (s) Having wealth.
^"■^^r Fine lime well ground
and blended. 2 Laying or spread-
ing this lime : the overlay or coat-
ing.
^^^r /". s A woman whose
hnsband is alive.
'Ef'-TI'T //. (s Joining, uniting,
blending, &c.) The bringing of
measures or means to bear : the
harmonious application of expe-
dients, powers ; the concentra-
tion of efforts, energies, talents,
towards the performance of. 2
The |)roper way towards the ac-
complishment of; the process
to be observed. 3 Aim, leaning,
tendency ; direction, front, or
indicative as])ect assumed. Used
of the mind, the will, the eye, a
wea])on. 4 Aitentioii, heed.
^''^iJl'si'i, ^^'[Ti ^icQi a. Shrewd
and clever in fixing his aim, di-
recting his efforts, apjjlying his
resources, devising schemes,
means, and way of attaining.
^f*^ m, pop./, (s) Junction,
union. 2 Joint, juncture. 3 A
cleft, chink. 4 An interval, o A
joint, knuckle. <) Union of letters
at the end or beginning of words
entering into composition ; —
in obviation of dissonance or
hiatus. 7 Aim ; the miud direct-
ed or applied, v. ^^ : ftgi^
^T^^ ^T<:rjT. H. A hole made
in a wall, or underneath it, to
enter a building for hostile or
felonious purposes ; a breach, a
mine, &c. U iig. The exactly_op-
[jortuue period : the time and
431
tide ; the nick; conjuncture gen.
10 fig. Reunion, reconciliation.
BN^^ a. s Gone into the
ioiuts: ^*« ^T^ -^TJT.
^rtljnrqr/. Hheumatic pains
of the joints. 2 A boil at a joint.
^r^t'^^ n. A binding of the
joints, a tendon or sinew. ^^-
f^H^^\^. Rheumatism in the
joints.
^TC^qr Peace and war;
reconciliation and rupture,
^^^r ad. Now.
^Wr/. (s) The period of
evening twilight. 2 Religious
meditation, repetition of man-
tras, sipping of water, &c. to be
performed by the three first
classes of Hindus at particular
l)eriods in the day, esp. at
. sunrise, sunset, and noon. 3 Twi-
light. 4 An intervening period,
— the forenoon, the afternoon,
or midday. ^^t^T^ The
period of evening twilight.
^°T n. (a) An age or a
period : ^«r^ \^^^' I'^ ^^he
year 1863,
^•Tl" f. (p) A clarion or haut-
boy.
^'f^ 71. A cloth, a web, a
cotton stuff, considered as a piece
of merchandise.
^^ f. (a) a commission
or warrant. ^•I'?^ a. Relat-
ing to a sanud : e. g. held by
sanud ; — as land, a post, &c :
prosecuted l)y sanud — a busi-
ness : paid from the produce of
laiuls made over to him by
sanud ; — as an inamdar, a sol-
dier.
Arrears of revenue due through
a course of years. 'g'ST^Trf ^
^tff, "fr^^^q^lfT a. Lying-
fallow for years, n. Lands so
lying.
^•TIcf'T a. s Eternal, ever-
lasting.
^'W^ a. (s) Having sound ;
— as a nuisical cord, a metallic
body. 2 Giving forth sound;
sounding.
mm a. s Of which there
is a gloss on each margin — a
book.
^f^^ 8 pop. ^r^-T ad. &
prep. Near. '^f^'^T«r n. s
Nearness, proximity. 2 Appear-
ance ; becoming visible.
'ET'N^rcf s Mixture, i. e.
mixed state. 2 Coming together :
a g.Tthering, a collection. 3
Falling together, joining : con-
tact, union. 4 Alighting, com-
ing unto. 5 Violent fever with
delirium and syncope.
^^'^['FT (s) Abandonment of
all worldly possessions and
earthly affections. ■'^'TJgT^
One that has cast off all worldly
])ossessions and carnal affections,
an ascetic. 2 The Brahman of
the fourth order, the religious
imendicant.
W'^\^f. (s) Good or right
judgment or luind ; " a wise and
discerning heart" ; " a good un-
derstanding." 2 Attrib. Of a
good judgment,
W'^\^ Respect,honor.^=^R^
V. c. To treat with reverence,
to honor.'fI5jf|r»i?f «. Respected.
^^T^«fl?I a. s (Suitable)
to be respected ; worthy of
respect.
W-mA (s) The or a right
way ; the proper course.
E'5^ «• (s) Frontin<r,
opposite to. ■g^^^I^ Propi-
tious time.
e'^OT V. c. To abandon
the world and deny the flesh
and disallow nature.
^7 See ^^'^\.
^Tc Unanimity, confederacy:
^7^ a. Insipid, unsavory.
^^'T V. i. To be exhausted,
consiuned. 2 To be finished :
to be completed. 3 Cant. To die ;
to be done up.
m^^f. s M=Fr (s) Wealth,
riches, treasures. 2 Attain-
ment ; accomplishing, achieving :
^Mfrl ^a"!^. 3 Prosperity,
success. ^qfTHTT*r pop. -^1^ a.
Wealthy, rich.
^TTRT
432
^nr^
^^Hr/. A rival wife.
m^Jf. (s) Wealth. 2 Prospe-
rity.
^7*^ H. 7n. A dream.
^7^ p. (s) Possessed of,
eudowed with, csp. with implica-
tion of copiousness, richness,
fullness. In comp. ^tm ■#«
INIastcr of the Shastras, f^^T-
5f^ -TfV'J ^o 2 Prosperous,
oi)ulent. 3 Achieved ; obtained.
^T^f^^T^ fi. Being accompanied
by his cortege or train.
» r
tIM* (s) Contact, connection
l)y touching.
^^m V. c. To expend,
consume. 2 To end, finish : to
complete.
^T^ a. (s) Having wings;
winged. 2 Being of the same
side or party ; a partisan, an
adherent.
^m^ a. Flat, level, plain. '2
Smoothed ; made even with the
brim ; — as a measure filled with
grain, &c. ad. In the state of
demolition, ^a^
^^f^f a. Huge, monstrous,
^qT3^'. V. See ^tjjsnf.
^mi\ f. Levelness, equal-
ness. 2 Any level and smooth
expanse ; — the table-land of a
mountain, the landing-place of
a stair, a jjlain, &c.
^TK^ a. (s) Tiiat acquires,
attains, gets: that acconiplislics,
effects. 2 The acquirer or first
))Ossessor of a vatan, &c. o Tiie
manager, director, or master at
a wedding, &c.
^qK^f, ^*^l^^/. Acquir-
ing : effecting. 2 Supporting a
character or part assumed, an
luijust pretension, a false asser-
tion, &c. by artful coloring, Ike. ;
giving a si)ecious appearance to
a matter in general, li The dress-
ing up fas of a katha by a
hardiis) with rhetorical embel-
hslimeut. 4 Acting of a charac-
ter (in a dramatic i)erformance).
5 The managing througli, i. e.
the furnishing and the ])erform-
ing (of a wedding, Ike.) v. c. To
acquire, get. 2 To achieve, ))er-
form. ^qT^«f n Acquiring,
getting: effecting. ^qifs^rT^:*.
Acquired : efl^'ected.
^^mi -trf a<I. Iniit. of the
sound of a smart and vigorous
slashing, slicnig, chipping, v.
Vjr, m^, m^. ^qj^qt. /.
Slashing and slicing; chopping
and cutting.
^m\ / c See ^'frs".
^R^ One entitled fc> f^^,
i. e. any person of seven genera-
tions in direct line of ascent or
descent : one connected by the
oli'eriug of the funeral cake to
any one or all of the manes of
the father, grandfather, and
great-grandfather, and their
wives respectively, as sprung
from them in direct collateral
lines. The relationship stops with
every fourth person ; and the
fifth cannot perform the offer-
ing of a cake even to the father
of the deceased, ^fcf^/. The
ofiering of a ball of rice, &c.
to the manes of a deceased rela-
tive, commonly on the twelfth
day after his decease, v. ^^.
^^13" n. The finest wheaten
tlo;ir.
^J- ?j. s A casket, a cover-
ed basket, a basket or similar
thing formed of two hollow or
shelving l)odies joined moiuh to
mouth. 2 The cavity formetl by
the palms hollowed and placed
over each other.
%? See^fJ^sig. 1.
^l^ /7. (s) All, the whole.
2 Whole, entire, |)crfect. p. Com-
pleted, finished, ■^"qomj /.
Completion ; finished state.
^^f^ a. Of good texture-
cloth.
^R" a. (s) Seven. ^H^Tl j,l
In astronomy. The asterism of
Ursa .Major, [seven, a. Seventh-
^ff^ n. An aggregate of
^fT^f^ A septangular fiiiure,
heptagon : altrih. septangular.
^B"?^ a. s Seventeen : se-
venteenth.
HR"IT a. (s) Scventli. ?TH"4t /.
Till- seventh lunar day of either
half nu)ntli. 2 In gram. The
seventh case.
^^\^ (r) A peach.
'FlB'i^ n. See ^R"^!^.
^R^rC s A period of seven
days, a hebdomad or week. 2 or
^TIT"^ qi^Cl^W n. A perusal
through (of a Puran, &c.) in
seven days.
^"^^r, ^^^\ A slap. r. ^\r,\.
2 Utter destruction ; ruin in the
widest sense ; demolition, havoc,
exhaustion ; ravaged, razed state
(as of a country or town through
acts of tyranny, rapacity, or law-
less turbulence); annihilated state
(as of a population, a race, cat-
tle, &c., through an epidemic, a
murrain, &c.); devoured, consum-
ed state (as of articles of ])rovi-
sion,a fortune, an estate) through
voracity, prodigality.
^R^TR n. s In gram. The
power or sense of the dative
case — giving to, doing/or,making
over to, or laying at ivith, to
the account of : the dative case.
^^^\^ (s) Custom : a cus-
tom. 2 A phrase ; an idiom. 3
Traditional and authoritative
doctrine. 4 A system of religious
doctiines,a])ersuasiou. ^q^i^
o. Of the sect of. ■g'^^PTT*
a. Kelating to traditionary or
pojndar (U)etrine or practice.
^R^r,^*3Tf?: n. (s) Common-
ness or oneness of founder (of
two or more families), a. Having
one common founder — two or
more families.
W^^ a. (s) Mingled with,
accompanied by, or having love,
affection, or fond and im-
passioned devotion: ^o^Irjij-
«f3> -■?;t^ -^T'^W.
^I^r ??. (a) The name of the
second Mahomcdan niontli. ,/'.
A vovage or a journey. 2 Seafar-
ing occupation: making voyages.
3 The wages of a sador for a
trip.
^'^T^W/. Fierce battling,
'ET^tf (ii) A mariner, sailor.
^Ti'y^ a. (s) poj).-^ l^caring
fruit (not fructifVrous, but) noiv
bearing fruit—a tree. 2 fig. That
is now yielding profit — a trade
&c. : that is fruitful, i>rofitublc —
a business, &c.
433
^^Tfr
^^r?/. (n) Polish or gloss.
2 fiii'. Ck'iivness, neatness. c!e-
pmce (of speech, composition,
&c.) 3 Smfu-tness and skilfuhiess
of action gen. ad. Altop:etlier,
utterly, clean; outright, flat, dead:
-■^Tift /. Clearness, smooth-
ness, &c.
?f^^*]r/. Close and furious
battle. V. •^^, ^T. 2 Ravaged
and devastated state(as of a conn-
trv, the seat of vt'ar) : consumed
and cleared state (of the articles
and outlay of a shop, of the
provision of a feast, &c.)
W^^ a. (p) White, esp. of
a clear and bright vvbite. Usual-
ly conjoined with ^f^^T in
enhancement. qt^TT ^s^T^T'^-
^•^cTr (p) Ceruse or white
J^ [coat of vvhiteuash.
^^^ /. Whiteness. 2 A
^?^r f. (p) Greenness. 2
Verdiu-e. 3 An infusion of the
leaves, &c. of hemp with black
pei)per,&c. 4 Covertly. Dry leaves
of henip. [throu-hout-land.
^^4^^g:fcT a. Cultivated
^^«" /;. Bound and attach-
ed uuto or with ; connected with ;
endowed with.
'FTW^T (s) Connection. 2
The ghost of a deceased Brah-
man.
^^'^ a. Corrupt ^t^ That
is tied, bound, lit. fig. 2 Of mass
entire ; whole or undivided :
■S-^-ES ■^■SiT ^T^T Fm^S^T ^°
^t^F a. Connected with ;
belonging to : ijt*T -3Z^ -^^
^^*-4i^ a. Relating to. 2 01'
fi friend-like disposition. 3 E,e-
Li'iiiig to the fiend called ^'-
^SfR^r/. (p) The office of
^m^ The head-clerk at-
tached to cue cf the '^^^^T^.
55
Ilis business was to pay the Si-
biuulees and public servants of a
district.
■cT^ f. (a) Cause, reason,
motive, ad. Therefore.
"^■T a. Big with young ; —
used of the mare or she-ass.
^^^ a. pop. -^ Strong, vi-
gorous.
#^sr^ ^^S"/. m. A bickern
that is divided at one end into
two parts, a crowbar.
tT^oT m. A musical instru-
ment of the tabor kind,
^■^i a. (a) Seven.
e^i^PqcRad (s) Outward-
ly and inwardly. 2 Actually and
sincerely ; in external act and
with engagediicss of heart :
tiT?^. n. The exterior and the
interior ; the heart as well as
the profession.
^f?r, mili, ^|l/. (h) Pa-
tience, forbearance.
^f '¥f ad. With a holding in
and then an effort ; with gather-
ed force ; — used with "^"^^ or
"^m ^T^iJl and of the scorpion.
^^'l a. (a) Seventy. Used
of the Arabic year.
^tn^of V, L Poet. To call to.
^5ffv[0| y^ f. '^i^Q address or
accost ; to speak to or call to.
^^P^'fn. (s) Addressing, ac-
costing, calling to. 2 In gram.
The power or the sense of the
vocative case : the vocative case,
or the sign of it, %, 3^t, ^^T,
&c. Oh '.holla ! 3 An epithet :
■^r?t. ^'ilf^irl i'. Addresed,
spoken to.
^^^ a. (s) Having fear, ap-
prehensive. 2 Having ground to
warrant fear; i. e. perilous, dan-
gerous.
W^T: a. See ^^^. ad. With
all its weight, bodily, ponder-
ously. Used with verbs of fall-
ing and striking.
tr^aHTtffa. Crowdedly full.
^^-T^ (s) Suitableness or rea-
sonableness of being; possibili-
t}^ probability. 2 Connection
and cougruity as apprehended
or apparent ; view of as possi-
ble, probable, or real. 3
Consistency, conformity, corre-
spondence. 4 Birth, production.
^^^^ V. i. To be possible ;
to have capacity. 2 To consist
suitably, agreeably. 3 To rise,
originate : to subsist, exist, be.
m^^,l, ^IT^^rc^r ad. j^rcp.
All around, I'ound about.
^nrr f. (s) a place in which
uoble or learned ])ersons assem-
ble;— a hall of audience, a
council-chamber, an assembly-
room, a cabinet, a court. 2 An
assembly, a meeting. ''3^1^^
Trembling or timidity in com-
pany; abashednessiu the public
assembly ; bashfulness. c. %^,
^T, ^'^. 2 Trembling in
general before the public eye ;
the confusion and tremors of
exposed crime, &c.
^^Tf^C 7). An assembly-
house, a town -hall, Szc.
x^m^^ a. (s)Fortunate,lucky.
2 Auspicious — app. to persons.
^^r^ln# -ti^^q" n. (s)
-qiZ'^ n. s The ability of be-
having properly before com-
pany ; politeness, address, good
breeding.
e-ijr^W Master of an as-
sembly, president, chairman,
master of ceremonies.
^^-rifrn'^^q" n. Showy and
superficial ; erudition ; learning
sufficient to flash occasionally
at ])ul)lic meetings.
*\
^^Tf^^^T The opening of an
assembly. 2 The introduction
(of a member, &c.) into an.
assembly.
^i^[J{^cf A portico or an
erection in front of a temple
where pcojde assemble. 2 The
open space of a temple in front
of the 3IT^KT or apartment of
the idol. 3 An audience-hall; a
council-chamber, &c.
^^K s Materials and im-
plements (as of vvorshij), war.
^iTfT
434
^JT^TT
&c.) collectively ; the apparatus
ami necessaries (of a business
gen.) 2 Assemblage, mass, heap; j
a multitude : 5}T^^ ■^^rfl^
^*oy In comp. : 3i^ -X.^ -^*l]
^o 3 Maintaining, uphold-
ing.
^'iTI^^r /. (s) See ^V^ sig.
1, 2. 3 Conjecturing or estimat-
ing. 4 A supposition or hypo-
thesis. 5 Assuuiing the ap-
pearance of; making as if. 6
Kes])ectful reception or treatment
(as of a guest) : the honors
shown, the presents given, &c.
7 Consistency, conformity.
•^;T^-q^?j a. Capable of being
or likely to be. 2 "Worthy of
respectful treatment, ■^fwyf^fr
a. Possible, probable. 2 Connect-
ed, a(la])ted, congruous. 3 Re-
spectiible, rej)iitable.
^iTi5R a. Bold in the as-
f"'^'>'- [conference.
^m^^ n. (s) Conversation,
^iTW? An assessor (mem-
ber) of an assembly, council, or
court : a person seated in an
assemblv,
^iTf^^lT{ /. Presence of
mind and faculties, or self-pos-
session in public or in campany.
^t^r^ Supporting, cherish-
ing, lit. fig.
^m^^ V. c. To feed, foster,
support : to preserve, ])rotect,
take care of. 2 To uphold, bear
up, lit. fig. (a burden, business.)
V. i. To take care ; to beware ;
to be cautious : ^WIo3 ^T^^
^ii'? ffK "^i^^ ^T^^- 2 To
feel ; to have sensil>ility of ; — as
the body or the mind with re-
spect to their objects : 'RT'^T
^^^ a. s Consisfent, con-
gruous. 2 Born./. Also ^*Trr
•^T^T /■ Talk or accounts of,
as real, probiible, or ])o.ssible.
snake has never been heard of
in this village, &c. Hir't ^<t
HT^^ ^5f eft.
B'^m (s) Enjoyment or
fruition: pop. sesual enjoyment.
2 Use or employment.
m\m V. c. To enjoy ; to
have fruition of (esp. of a woman
carnally). '^'^t'I) ff.That enjoys
or uses ; that has the fruition of.
2 Devoted to the ph^asures of
Venus.
ad. & prep. All around, round-
about,
^^^ a. (s) Polite, Avell-bred,
fit for good company. 2 Kelating
to an assembly.
tl^JT (^) IJuiry, flurry, flut-
ter, confused and precipitate
st.ite of mind. 2 Eagerness, im-
petuous ardor : -Jf^jm^T^T^ ^'-
^TT"?. 3 s Reverencing, lionor-
ing : tt^T fsT^ ^Tim f??^T«T |1
•?IT^% ^if^^ ¥» 11 Hence
pop. An act in honoring, adorn-
uig, dressing up, deligiiting,
gratifying, &c. "^iSl^I^ "qitri^
3T^^T. 4 s Turning round,
whirling. 5 s Error, confusion,
bewilderment.
^^fcf p. s Confused, per-
plexed, being under darkness.
2 Disturbed, agitated, hurried.
^^ a. (s) Equal, like: ^^-
^TST-'^sr-JlT^. 2 Even, level :
straight: luiiform. 3 Even; —
as a number. 4 Alike, indifferent
to ; not having partiality. ^
Neutral; neither hostile nor
friendly, ii. .s A figure of
rhetoric, — identity of objects
compared. 2 A ])oint at which a
vertiele circle cuts the horizon.
3 In geom. A mean. ^»ia]tr-
ui]^ Proper fraction.
^^5"/. A metal and upright
lamp-stand and lamp.
^*TC^ a. Held under com-
})i\{'t: common to several owners ;
-as lauds or tenements : con-
ducted on by men in partner-
ship ; — as a business.
square. ■^iT^TnT^?T?2.An oblong
rectangle, '^^l^g a. Equal,
alike, par.
^JT^Fc^R a. sCorrup.^^^ir^^-
^ Contemporaneous or coeval.
^T^sf a. Of the same centre,
homocentric. ^ti^tW a.
(s) Rectangular, m. A right
angle. ^iI^T«T m. s A parallele-
piped. •^??Tn7|«r ". s Multi-
plication of a number by itself ;
raising a number to its square.
^^^ a. (s) All or every one.
2 "Whole, entire, all.
^IT^?:^ a. s pop. ^JT=^r^
Having four equal angles, n.
A figure of four equal angles.
^Ji'^cT a.(s) Even tempered,
or of equal disposition. 2 Of
equal mind, i. e. indifferent.
tT^T^tJ? 3 In arith. Common
denominator.
'B'^Sf y, ^ri. (h) Apprehension
of in the judgment ; understand-
ing. V. 'g, "q^. 2 Sense, power
of apprehending. 3 Right under-
standing of, with, or towards ;
convinced, persuaded, or pacified
state.
^HiT^ V. t. To apprehend,
understand. 2 in con. To be
known by ; to be apparent unto.
V. i. To come round ; to come
to a right understanding of or
w ith : to become pacified and
reconciled towards or with.
e3Tsr?R a. (II) \Vise,sensible.
2 Of a correct understanding.
^rr^TrfoT ,.. c. To exjdain, <&:c.
See ^JiSTlf^tit.
^JT^TtT (s) Wise, discreet. 2
Intelligent. 3 Virtuous, good. 4
Rational, right, fit.
^JT^R^.qr /: Explainlno-,
&c. : right understaudmg effect-
ed. V. s^K., ^\.
^m^nqoi ^,. c. (rO To make
(a person) to understand : to
explain (a subject). 2 To bring
round ; to persuade, convince,
satisfy. ^??5Tif^^?t, ^'T^ /.
^ir^flr
435
^TT^rT
Bringing to a right and just
understaniling : bringing round ;
porsuiuling, appeasing : right
understanding of, with, or to-
wards, as effected through speech
in conviction or persuasion.
V. ^X, ^T^, ^T^ S- of 0-
^FTtr^ See m'^Vi.
^^^/- Understandino- or
sense— the faculty of under-
standing. 2 Intelligent appre-
hension (of a matter). 3 See
^5T3TTf^?iT- "^^5Tffq^. H.A deed
of agreement, as furnished by
the parties in a suit.
^^^^ Z^^^ ad. Knowino-ly,
purposely.
^^^ See ^^^^.
^iTcTcT:, m^\\ ad. s All
around.
^^^^ a. Poet. Of equal
weight, equiponderant : equiva-
lent.
^fTcTr^ a. (s) Of equal
weight. 2 Equal, even, rivaling,
of the same grade of ability,
value. 3 Equable or duly balan-
ced ud. Equally on both sides
— as a weight pressing, &c :
^prt^rra^ m. n. s pop. ^^-
f=5X:Tf?t /• The rule of three
direct.
^K-^^ n. Level ground.
^^?# a. s Impartial.
^^?r a. Vulg. See ^^^
^flj:^ a. (s) pop. -?tr That
has the same pain, trouble,
affliction ; a fellow-sutferer.
^^fPs" a. Of equal, unbias-
ed view or regard. /. Impartial
and equal regard, impartiality.
^4'-T, ^IT^ See ^^'^■
^iT'-:rg a. pop. -cT Of equal
or equable temperature.
^^^ (s) A time, season, a
or the time : the season. 2 s
Agreement, compact. /. See
^iI^l-T[q"aT 7z. Timely, or ap-
propriate speech; "a word in
season." ^JT^^tJT a. Capable
of discerning and ciuderstatuling
times, ^^^"jfl^ acf. Upon oc-
casions. ■gfl?j^'^^ a. That
occurs to mind at the proper
season, ^^^^f^ /. The
ability of recollecting an
emergency ; readiness of me-
mory. ^5l-?Ji«ftfr «. That of
which the tit time is passed.
■'J??^!^^!^ ad. pop. ■^T?^l';r-
■^T'! Accordin;^ to the time,
season ; suitably with the exi-
gency. •g^^Tp^ff «. Seasona-
ble : opportune. "^MK s Bat-
tle, fight. ^^^flK a. Poet.
Bold in battle. ¥^^wf^/. A
field of battle.
^m^ a. (S) Of justly ba-
lanced passions and affections;
of equal temper ; mild, placid.
2 Of the same essence, nature.
jn. Identity of essence or spiri-
tual being; and, specifically,
co-essentiality or rfT^TcISI with
^ST- g^i;^^ V. i. To attain
to identity of essence ; spiritua-
lity, or vivid consciousness with.
2 To harmonize, blend, mingle
generally.
^m\W\ n. (s) Corrupt. ^^^-
JiUT. A field of battle. 2 Used
through ignorance in the sense
of War,fight. ■gS'^q. a. Of the
same form, ■g'^l^tzi n. Same-
ness of form.
^iT§f a. (s) Strong ; able. 2
s Coherent. ■^^^iT n. Main-
taining, supporting, establish-
ing (a position) by rebutting ob.
jections, advancing arguments,
&c. 'g^T^^Tr^ a. s (Proper,
&c.) to be maintained by ar-
gument. ^TT^^^l'^f/- (s) Hi-
A'alry with a powerful opponent.
^^q Thronging and press-
ing, treading and trampling, &c.
^^i^ a. (s) Fitting, suiting;
worthy of; agreeing with; con-
formable unto; — used with
^Ti^, Vf^qur, ^%, ^^■\^^, WT^.
^HqoT n. (s) Offering, pre-
senting, making over. ^Tlfi^BT
V. c. To present •, to devote :
^^^'" Sl'Tt^ ?f^^ II 2 Freely.
To give, to bestow or give ;
fqcT p. Offered, devoted.
^^^k a. (s) That has
limit ; definite, moderate,decent,
rejularlv. r -j
' . ■ r zoid.
m^^ "^m^ s A trape-
^^^r (A) The end of a
turban or a kamarband, some-
times tucked into the folds, but
by bucks and dandies allowed to
fly loose.
w^^^ -^^^ a. pop. ^^^^r
Of the same age, eoetaneous.
^H^R s Assemblage, mul-
titvule.
^fji^'q'q" ji^ Irrpgularity, im-
propriety, inaccuracy : m^T
^^fR a. Of moderate vir-
tues and properties, equable — as
a drug, &c. 2 Of equal heroism.
^^fTT n. s The prime, ver-
tical.
»\
^^^cT p. s Concomitant,
conjoined, related ;- — as subject
and quality, action and agent.
prep, (s) Together with, along
with.
^^%^ /. (p) A sword.
^fJ^X ^I^T^'C --^^ A mighty
man of the sword, a man signa-
lized by martial prowess ; but
esp. used of a hat-headed, cut-
throat fellow, or of an empty
swaggerer ; a Hotspur, a Hector.
^r^TlS" /. s Comprehended
or comprised state ; the state of
being gathered np into and of
consubsisting with.
^^^JTR a. Exactly alike ;
quite equal; just the same.
^^tR a. s Of the same
confines or border, contermiuous,
bordering.
^^^^ n. s A great circle
passing through the poles of the
l)iime vertical.
^fft^ a. (s) All ; the whole
number. 2 Compounded — a
word, &c, 3 Complete, entire. 4
Compounded or combined with.
^?J^\i^5lf31rT. n. Compound
proportion; Double rule of three.
frA4'<i:14l
436
^^
^li^^r f. The requiring (a-
iiior.g scholars as a trial of tlieir
skill) of a shlok to be completed
bv them on giving out to them
a part of it : the part so given
out. In the manner of Virgil's
Sic vos nou vobis. r.WT'5?, S^^
2 A l<notty question; a puzzle or
enigma proposed, i'. WI^, ^^qT.
■^^^T^^^. «• The comple-
tion of the shlok upon hearing a
part of it.
W\<^ prep, (s) Before ; in the
front of. ad. Face to face.
^JTqTcTr /. Fronting slate,
opposiieness.
^^^Tr/. See^5T^3Tr.2 Mani-
festation (of the Deity, &c,)
^T^^WiT5T prep. Before or
in the presence of. /. Presence :
reciprocal presence.
tT^rr^^ a. See ^^f ^•
^^\W,■S^, ^JT[^3r a. All, the
whole: ^o qf^^/. The whole
village: tfo ^t<T -^T5r -^*Tt
^^R^ (s) Company, society,
coming together generally;
combination, coalition : concert :
concomittauce.
^^r^IT See ^M Sig. 1.
2 News, accounts.
^^nr (s) An assembly or a
multitude.^^T"-^* a. Relating
to a multitude, held in common
1)V several ; common, joint.
^^rr^R n. (s) Contentment,
satisfaction. 2 Rest, relief, ease.
3 In logic. Removal of an objec-
tion. 4 In the Vedant. Restrain-
ing of the mind from extcinal
objects and fi.\ing it stedfasUy in
contemplation. vriTl"mift «. Of
a contented or easily satisfied
mind. 2 Contented, set at rest
respi'cting.
Vi^m f. m. Cs) pop. W^\^
Dcej) and ilevout meditation ;
restraining the senses and con-
fining the mind to contem])latiou
(on llio nature of s])irit. &c.) :
abstracted or aI)sorb{d state. 2
Sclf-immolatiou (of a Sanyasi)
by drowning or by l)urying
himself alive, ."3 The rite of
burying in water of a deceased
Sanyasi. 4 The little edifice to
contain the Tulsi i)Lint which is
erected over the burial place of
a Sanyr.si. ^♦TCp? ^^ n. The
pleasure of devout meditation
or of profound abstraction.
^Hlf^^ a.corrnp.-^ Tliat has
undergone saraadhi. 2 Absorbed
in devout meditation.
^FrirR a. (A) Eight. Used of
the Arabic year, (s) Equal,
sraootli. 2 Like, similar.
^m^i^l a. Parallel : of the
same distance from : of the same
degree of distance.
^^l^VA, ^^\^\^^ a. Sy nony-
mous.
^^\^ iu A deed of assent.
^^r^n.s Finishing. ^^PT^T,
^'^TfqffjJ. S Finished. ■?r??TH
p. {:^) Completed, done. 2 Ex-
hausted, spent, ^vrifk/. pop.
^i?TT? End. 2 Exhausted state.
'vl'^IT^ The laying out and
carrying on ; the arrangement,
disposition, and management (of
a festivity, public entertainment,
l)ompons procession cr ceremo-
ny) : the celebration or solem-
nization with full form and state
(of a religious observance or in-
stitution, &c.) : ^^T^^T -W<h-
^o f. etfsc. 2 The articles and
materials and items, collectively,
used on sncli occasions : btt-
ii^ W5ct STil ^Tf ^Tof ^f^wt
?) Respecting, v. S'W, hit^^-
^iTRiq^ ?i -m f. Entertain-
ment made to RrAJimans on
festive or religious occasions.
^JTR*^ V. L To enter and be
contained (as in a vessel or re-
ceptacle). 2 To enter in, into,
amidst, under, &c. congenially,
kiiully, suitably; to enter and
bhiui with ; to enter and lie
amongst without cnl.argcmcnt,
derangement, disturbance, alter-
ation of a])pearance : 'W^ •"5-
r-rrirr^S" p. That has entered
and is contained in : contained,
comprised, lit. fig. 2 That is en-
tered and occupied; — as a house,
&c. 3 fig. That is entered and
possessed by (as by a passion or
feeling).
^l-Hi^SJ (s) Entrance into and
containedness in ; inclussion in
or among ; contained, com])riscd
state, lit. fig. (of persons, things,
afraiis, matter.)
^^FtT (s) In gram. Compo-
sition of words ; formation of
compound terms. 2 Acomi)oand
word, o Margin (of a book, &c.)
4 s Abridgment.
?JJTr^rT s. Putting or bring-
ing together; combination, com-
position, an assemblage. 2 The
alphabet. 3 Abridgment : an epi-
tome, summary. 4 In gram. Com-
position of words. 5 Conjunc-
tion of words or sentences, the
power or sense of the copulative
and. 6 A form of verbal composi-
tion,— a subdivision of the class
^^. 7 (^^ & 'STT^T^) One
or the same quantity of food.
^r^T'ir (p) An awning.
^T^f^X^ 7?.. 9 Equalizing ;
making ecnial, even. 2 Sum-
ming up or adding together. 3
In algebra. Forming the cqua.
tion : ^«r^o .
^^\^ f. (s) A stick of a span
ill length, of t;Io5^ and other
pure trees (to be used in kindling
si'.ered fire).
•B^f^ a. (s) Near, proximate.
prep. & ad. Nigh, near at hand.
^%^r /. (s) Proximity. 2
One of the four beatitudes, or
states of the blessed in heaven, —
nearness to the Deity, the l)eing
" over in his presence round
nl)out his throne."
^*Trr s Air or wind.
^HliiTtT n. s Inquisitive or
close investigation, or search.
ffJ^iT (s) Assemblage, col-
lection ; a mass. 2 A decision of
JFTITc^
437
^n:
a matter by an assembly. 3 In
g-ram. Conjunction of words,
clauses or sentences; the power
of the particle and or also.
^ri^3"2r s Utter extermina-
tion. [A whole.
^ETJ^ra" (.s) A multitude. 2
^^f?cf p. Collective ; assem-
bled or gathered tosrether.
^5^ a. s Sealed.
^cT (i^) A sea or an ocean.
2 Used fig. of any thing illimi-
table, nnfathomaisle ; for any
vast collection (as of the Deity, of
human life, of language, powers,
virtues). ^^^% Cuttle-fish-
bone, -^^i? ^t^ -^^ Coast,
sea-side. ^srif^UT The dorsal
scale of the Cuttle-fish : the
fish. ^^?f^^^T /. (That has
the ocean surrounding it as a
sirdle.) The earth. ^iTS^^^t-
f^rf a. Encircled or marked
out by the ocean, sea-girt; —
used of the earth, the land-por-
tion of the globe ; also of an
island. ^^?fT^ ^t^ /• The
line of waves which bursts upon
a shore, ^frfij^j «. Marine,
oceanic.
^qr See ^wr.
^^ a. (s) Having a root ;
— as a plant. 2 fig. Having a
foundation, origin.
H^C s Assembly, collection;
a mass or heap.
"B^IT a. s Abundant, plen-
tilul. 2 Prosperous. 3 Augment-
ed. -^^T^ f. Profusion,
plenty. 2 Prosperity; thriving
state.
^*T3r (h) Drawing to a
close and terminating (of a
quarrel) ; reconciling : recon-
ciliation (of quarrels). ■^it^bI
i\ c. To bring to a close (a fight,
a discussion) : to bring to agree-
ment or terms (quarrelers,
rivals). 2 To gather together, v.
i. To end, stop. 2 To agree — as
op])osed parties. 3 To heap, or
gather closely.
^H^ a. (s) Conjoined (as
subject aud quality, action and
agent, &c, prep. Together with.
^^R ad. and pre/7. In front ;
in the forepart : in front of; in
the presence of. 2 Right in front.
straight before the beholder;
applied to rivers, roads, rows of
trees, &c. 'ft i^^ ^o ^if or
"=^7^^; ^T TITJI ^o ^T%or
^T3T^T; ffr "^g ^o 'STT't or
■^7(2^. 3 Straight up ; up-
right : '^T f^o3T ^o il^.
^f^^ -^r a. Relating to
the front or forepart. ■^^T'C^
■^v;-[K ad. Face to face, "^j^i-
^«r jjrep. From before ; from
the presence of.
W^^ f. Used as cRqr ; as
^T5TT ^Tff^^ ^» SOT. ct. (s)
Approved of; agreed to. n. also
^'SfrT /• Assent expressed ;
permission. 2 Agreement, ac-
cordance in opinion or sentiment.
^'TlffT'?'^ n. A writing testi-
fying the agreement, or consent
o"f.
^^R a. (A) Eight. Used of
the Arabic year. n. s Worship-
ing, paying respects : respect
rendered.
^^^5^ «• (s) Facing or front-
ing,
^m^ (s) A paramount so-
vereign,— one who rules over
other princes, and who has per-
formed the Rajasuya sacrifice.
^^ f. Recollection, memory
of. 2 Poet. A female friend, a
confidante.
"ET^cT a. s Bound, curbed,
confined. ■^gcTTfi^T. a. Self-sub-
dued; of well-regulated spirit.
^'^ m. ^^ n. 8 Bind-
ing, confining, 2 Self-denial ;
regulation (as of the passions and
affections). 3 A religious vow.
^^ffTffjJ. s Bound, control-
led, 'tf^fl^ One who controls
and regidates his passions.
^^tR" a. (s) United ; annex-
ed, attached. 2 Mingled, blend-
ed. 3 Endowed with.
mr^, ^^F^ a. s Rightly
connected ; coherent, consistent,
congruous : rightly contrived, or
i)Uuuied.
^^R (s) Union; conjunc-
tion; association; close connec-
tion, 2 Mingling, mixing. 3
Copulation, ^"^Tfjiffi?. Unit-
ed ; conjoined-
^^f^^ a. 8 That joms,
unites, &c. ; that concerts or
disposes harmoniously.^^iST«T
n. Uniting, joining : mixing. 2
Copulation. '^^Tf^fl /». (s)
Joined, united.
^^^^T (a) a descendant of
Husijn, who was the descendant,
in the fifth degree, of Mahomed.
^^ A string (as of gems,
beads.flowersj; a wreath, garland.
2 A long and squared piece of
timber. 3 The horn-rope of
bullocks, (p) Head fig. i. e.
the chief, principal, president,
superintendent, &c. '^T ^Vr^'r
"=^^T:rrr ^'C ^li. X'sed also
as a prefix to words designating
the public oiScers of a state ; as
¥^ t'S^iJJ'S-^Sltlt^T-'^ri^^ ; and
their offices ; as "^X "^Sig^
&c. 2 The chief, leading person
(of any corporation). 3 Following
the words iTT^, 1^, ^lUTJTT,
&c., it denotes unity, and
corresponds with Head; as
iTT?T ¥^ ^^, 5?^ ^^ "^Tfr One
head of cows, two head of
buffaloes.
^ /. Equaling, rivaling,
coming up with. v. ^: ^Tff^
^K fT ^i "^ti^m^l n 2 See
^ft sig. 4. 3 A sudden and
forceful gush, rush, or proceed-
ing : tiT^*3rqf ^o a shower
of rain; ^^031^ ^o a fit
of crying; <Tiqi^l ^° a pa-
roxysm of fever ; ^T^^^T'^
-■^^trjTT^ a rushing emotion
or a sally of joy or laughter ;
sTiT^"^ a gush of affection ;
qs^t-^T^^T^ &c. •^^. 2 m.
f. A fit of delirium.
./ vf
^ i7id. A particle from ^^^
(To run into, tend towards, &c.)
expressing slightness, feeble
existence or incipient state of any
quality. It agrees with the particle
^TT^
438
^^
Blackish, sweetish, &c. od. So
as to run or flow over in an over-
flowing manner ; as a river or
a vessel : "JT^^T'^r^ or ^T^¥T
4T^-iT ^T^^; *lti "^K^X. or
^T^^ V. i. (h) To slip or
slide. 2 To move on, aside, or
back ; to advance ; to give jjlace ;
to yield, recoil. Used of persons
and things.
^^cT /: (a) Partnership. 2
also ^x:9ifr "^t^Trn In arith.
Fellowship. ^^^fl'^K c. A
partner.
^?:^cr=fRr a deed of part-
nership. "^^^«ft -TqT a. A
partner. 'g'T^^ Held in com-
mon with others as shares, i. e.
Shared or parted ; — used with
Jlfg, ^T^iyT, T'TTT, &c.
^T?.=[-^^ &c. ad. I rait, of the
sound of sliding, ^^'^t^ A
loop with a running knot, a noose.
^T^l%^ V. c. To push or
move on, aside, away, or back.
^^^K n. f. (p) The govern-
ment of a state ; the supreme
power. 2 The administrator of a
government ; the supreme ma-
gistrate ; the king or governor.
3 It is a comprehensive term
applying alike to the judicial
court of the king or ruler ; to
the Collector's (Jutchcrry; to
the courts of the Miiiulatdar, &c
&c. 4 Ajjp. to one's master or
other superior person:^^^TT;'=i
^TT^rW^R a. That hes
fallow in the jiossession of the
State — land. "^^^tT tlT^T The
tax laid by the state upon bind
and tenements. ■g^^^TK; '1'^'JIX a.
Notorious, known alike to ])rince
and to pc()])le fcsp. for deeds of
evin. 2 l'u))lic, known toman and
l)oy tliroughoutthe state ; — as an
affair or event. ^^^K^T^T
A royal palace or court.
m^H{ ^\W^^ f. An accu-
sation by the state ; a public
charge ^T^r^ut v. i. (iij To
advance boldly, lit. fig.
^^Iff 'T" V. c. To move on or
aside ; to push a little from its
place.
^rrfr /. a seed of Cotton-
tree. 2 ^?:^T jjL is app. to
grain clotted and lumped (as
from dampness) like cotton-
seeds.
^T^^cT n. (p) A note of ac-
knowledgment from Govern-
ment bearing upon it severally, in
the order in which they were
made, notices of all the payments
made into the public treasury.
2 A bill of sale.
^r^IT^ a. Eather warm,
lukewarm. 2 fig. Indefinite,
vague — speech, conduct.
^^5^r -^r (p) A term for
the principal person (of any
assembly or establishment) ;
prime minister, president,
chairman, director.
^t^m (p) Materials, appa-
ratus, furniture. 2 Villages and
lands granted in inJlm to ])ersons
from whom the maintaining of
forts or troo])s for the public
service is I'equired, or upon
whom a horse, apalkhi, or other
honorable yet expense-involving
gift has been conferred, "^x-
ornifl «■ Given in inam for
one of the purposes .stated under
saraiijam, — used of land, dis-
tricts, villages. 2 That holds
villages, &c., as saranjam.
^^3" s pop. -^ -^r A cha-
melion. Q^jig
^"T n. A pyre or funeral
EW] -qr /. 8 A road. 2 A
straight line. 3 fig. Manner,
mode, way (as of speaking or
writing). 4 A disease of the
throat.
^^ V. i. See ^Tm sicr. 1,
2.2 To be consumed, exhausted,
finished. 3 To go on smoothly,
suitably, harmoniously : ^%T-
JIT ^tf^^ ^m ^^<T -^ift:
qgjJT ^t'^'^ '^TWT'^ ^^^' ? 4
To pass with or go alonr/ with
in a fitting, suiting manner ; to
become fit : '^T i^^fiT %' '^l-
^^^r />. a. Ending, conclud-
ing, tiie final one (of a scries).
^^fiim^^ The concluding
period or stage of a business :
n^ ^^t^ 'S^cElT m^qt
^ITrfT. Also the declining
stage: ^ -g;^ ^^cJJT V[]^^
^cTiT^^r p. a. Completely
executed; thoroughly and over;
full well — a work : complete; suf-
ficient and to spare : ^f^ vi]Tfj-
^I'=q[ a J. During the whole
night.
^drtrfH: -fr, ^^q-f^^r ad.
At last, at length. 2 At the end :
•^^^ f. (p) Properly, a fron-
tier, but, pop. a direction, region:
^T : the border (of a field, hill,
&c.) 2 A line or row (as of houses,
trees, &c.) a. Cold, chill, raw,
— as a climate, weather, air,
place. 2 Cooling, refrigerant ; — as
a medicine or an article of food.
m^^^\ f. Heat attempered
by cold ; moderate heat (of a
climate, air, water, &c.) 2 A dis-
ease— fluctuating temperature
of the system.
e^oj y, i^ To be affected
with chilly dampness.
^^^11 (p) A chieftain or
chief; a prince or a leader ; an
officer. •^^^Tfl, ^'lI^T^aRt/.
The office or duties of ^^^i^,
chiefship, rule, Sec. '^^'^T^l
a. Relating to a chief, &c.
gr^lfot See ^^^.
^rr^r^T^r /, (p) Average
or mean ])r()portion : general
(piality resulting from the mix-
ture of various ingredients, v.
2 See ^x:^T^^-<t.
^^^/. (p) Coldness, damp-
ness, rawness (as of climates,
nir, ground). 2 Coldness (as in
drugs, articles of food, &c.) The
imjdication in both the above
senses is of insaluhriousness or
injuriousness. 3 Cold in the
system, morbid cold.
^rr^
439
w^^
m'^m a.k ad. See ^FTJ.
BT'^Z f. The trail (of a ser-
pent, worm, or other creeper) :
the track of any thing dragged.
^'Ttf^of V. i. To crawl along
on the belly : to creep. 2 To
skim along the surface of : to slide
along. 2 To slip or slide. 3 To
move along upon the buttocks.
^xiq^jJT «'^- Crawlingly, creep-
ingly : smoothly over or along
upon the belly or the buttocks —
passing or moving.
^K^^ n. Wood, cowdung,
&c., for fuel.
^?^r^ (p) A cover or cover-
ing, a cloth spread over (a dish,
tray, &c.); a dish-cover, a lid.
^^^^^[^[/.(p) Advancement,
promotion, commendation and
exaltation for exploits or ser-
vices.
^rqrr (a) Profit, gain.
m'^t^ See ^r^TTf^. ^tive.
eT^frr a. Profitable, lucra-
^^3"'^ V. i. To skim along
the surface of.
^T^^ (a) An acidulated
drink, sherbet.
¥?r^Tfr /, A closely succes-
sive application of the '^ttT or
light (to cannon, matchlocks,
mines. Sic.) v. '^. 2 A. volley
or a rapidly consecutive dis-
charge or explosion, v. '^'^,
■^T, ^^, & mK, ■^T^, '3^^. 3
fig. The breaking out of a
quarrel, v. ig"^, ^^. 4 Hu-
morously. A rapid serving round
(as of pansupari, of ghee, &c.)
e?:^^ -n /. (p) Rivaling,
emulating or coping with.
^r^^r /. (p) Conducting,
carrying on (of a business).
m^m a. Thinish, dilute,
sloppy. Used of flour, mortar,
mud, &c., well watered; of boiled
rice, vegetables, &c,, well diluted
and blended with ghee, curds,
&c.
^^^m, m^\^ a. & ad.
(p) Of unequal size, weight,
goodness, &c. ; of differing ap-
pearance or quality: ^TTc3f
^j%fl. 2 Mixed, blended :
raixedly ; in the gross ; all toge-
ther : ^ ^t^^"^ '^T'ti^ ^im
f^^^T. V. ^?T, ^, ■q¥, f«Taf,
■^T^. 3 JNIiddlingly.
^^IT^ /. (p) Putting a per-
son or a business on his or its
way; equipping, &c., and setting
out ; promoting, forwarding,
helping : ^fl^fl ?i^T ^"U ^T-
^?:Re"S- /. Mingling: a
mixture, a. Of a mixed quality.
^^^r Ground of which the
crop has just been reaped ; still
having ears or heads littering
about: such residue(the matter for
the gleaners) of the crop.r.^^.
2 The gathering of such residue
upon the field or the tree. v.
^TS"^, ^^^, ^^^•
^^5Tr, ^^^l^r^/. Ascend-
ancy or advantage over ; the
upper hand. v. a, '^T, ^K- 2
Advancing or flourishing (of af-
fairs); prosperous condition, v.
^r^r prep. Along with.
51T5T^ The very conclu-
sion.
^?r^ (p) Glue. a. (h) Supe-
rior, finer, better. 2 Exceeding,
greater, more (in size, age, num-
ber, &c.) (s) Having juice ;
sappy, succulent. 2 fig. Sapid,
sjiirited, savory, piquant.
g"?:^^?: -^^ad. In the gross ;
in the lump ; indiscriminately.
mm\^ a. Very level and
even, all level and even. "^X.^-
•qrsi/. Uniform evenness, or
])lainness.
m^^ -ti ad. Imit. of the
rustling of a snake in motion ;
of the sound of slipping, glid-
ing. ^■^ff^oT V. i. To move
with a rustlmg sound ; — as a
snake, &c.
^^^f a. Similar, like: ^l^F-
^^^ ^Kvf\ ^^Tft. i3/-e/3. In
the neighbourhood of; close un-
to ; akin to, along with ; toge-
ther with : ^^T ^TSff q^' ^\'
■^^ff 3^ ; Also: — With the
sway, sweep, rush of: '^T^
^x:?i"t ^^"^ giif\ 11 ; ilToSiT ^^-
^ sg ^^1% ; ^TfTT ^o, -^qi-
Hjir ^a ad. Nigh, near. 2 To-
wards; out of the direct way.
Used with the verbs of action ;
as ^T^, ^T:, ^I^ & fsiW, -f T,
5TT.
^^^r a. Superior, ^mt f.
Superiority, excellence. 2 Ad-
vantage (as obtained over).
^?^^fc7 rt. (p) The whole year.
^^^R'T V. i. To slip or move
on or aside ; to yield and give
way. 2 To advance daringly : to
advance gen. 3 To spring up or
grow rapidly and vigorously.
^^^IF^'T' V. c. To move on ;
to push from its place ; to ad-
vance.
"^^^ prep. By, beside, a-
long, from the surface or vicini-
ty of. Noting passage. ?'. aJT,
^C^r^r a. Advanced out of
youth into maturity; adult.
^^^f^C^r ad. Advancingly,
aggressively, in assertion or ex-
hibition of one's superiority. Con-
structed with such phrases as
^^T ^^^', 5T^T^ ^^, fvj:3JI-
^^H^r/. (s) The wife of
Brahma, the goddess of speech
and eloquence, the patroness of
music and the arts, and the in-
ventress of the Sanskrit language
and Devanagari letters. 2 A
Veda, a Shastra, or other
divine writing in the Sanskrit
tongue. 3 Speech — the faculty,
or the exercise of it. 4 A figure
which children, learning to write,
draw u])on their boards, and
worship as representing the god-
dess Saraswati. 5 The river Sa-
raswati. 6 A terra for an elo-
quent, or an inventive, or an
excelhng woman. ¥'^S3<f^ ^T-
Tf^T^ A period during which
the Vedas are not read. ■^^-
'^'fl^l^ n- A covert term for
a receipt, or a bond or written
ent^agenient made over to a per-
son. V. ^, %^iT ^. 2 Ap-
plied to an oral promise, v.
^. '3'T^rf\ "iC^T-f n. The wor-
ship of Sarasuati in the month
of Ashwin.
*^<^^ f. (p) Frontier or con-
tiues : boundary.
^^^ a. See B^^.
^iaTo^Tsf ^^_ Simple interest:
the rule of simple interest.
^^•^r /. A term among
swimmers. The making of one
extended and vigorous sweep of
the water and then proceeding
smoothly and equably on with-
out moving arm or leg till the
ini])ctus thus acquired be ex-
pended.
^ T'^^ a. (s) That keeps care-
fully. ^\gur. n. Keeping, pre-
serving, taking care of. ^X.^-
TTflq a. (Proper or worthy)
to be preserved. ^\f%i7f v. c.
To take care of; to guard heed-
fully. -^Kf^rf p. Preserved,
kept, ^x^ a. s (Possible,
necessary. &c.) to be guarded.
^r c Spirituous liquor :
liquor distilled from tlie juice
of trees of the palm-tribe.
^rf f. The time of ripen-
ing (of fruit, corn, or other pro-
duct of the earth); harvest-
time, the season. 2 The season
of peculiar fitness or greatest
])revalcnce for or of certain
ceremonies, rites, or practices.
^^rf /. (p) A house for
travelers to alight and refresh
themselves ; a caravansary.
^^rt^ a. (ii) Skilled in;
adept, acconijjlished.
^T[Z[ A thorny shrub and
its fruit. 2 A splinter or splint.
3 The thrill or shake in sinfinc.
r. a, ■^^^■^, qj^r.
m\^^^[ Sec ^T\^i\.
^T\% (a) a money-changer.
2 fig. A term for a miserly fellow.
^^T"^! /. The business of a
sliroir.
^n^ Spiiituous liquor.
440
'Kr^ot See m^T^.
^r? Practice, use.
In a cursory manner ; any how.
2 Conjecturally ; upon a loose
estimate : ^i^^t ^KT^ ^o '^-
oTTT "^T^q ^TJIffl^. 3 In the
average : ^o sr^sjx ^cf^ qiuft
^T^. a. Common, middling:
mean, poor./. Averiige : general
quality or character resulting
from the mixture of various in-
gredients, V. ^ix, ^r=i", & ^^,
T'' ^^' ^^^' [See ^^T.^^.
^\<m a. Poet. Like, &c.
^[<^^ f. Chanting- the notes
of the gamut, and beating time
with hand, &c. ; sol-fa-ing.
^m -err /. (s) A river.
^\t^\ (A) Profit, gain, ^ft-
W^K a. Profitable.
^f^'^l^ /. The trigger (of a
firelock).
^^f/. A wire. 2 An orna-
ment for the neck of females. 3
A narrow shred or slip off from
a baml)oo, &c. 4 A water-clian-
nel (as in a garden-bed along a
row of plants) : the line occupied
by such a row, a row. 5 A
collar-bone. G Rivaling, v. ^
g. of s.
^•^ A cypress tree, ^^^f,
^'i^^r^T^ a. Tall, long, or
straight as the cypress tree.
^^T «. s Of the same ap-
pearance ; like, similar.
^^qcTf /. (s) Sameness of
apjiearancc ; likeness, resem-
blance. 2 One of tlie four states
into whicli nuikti is distinguish-
ed— assimilation, in nature or
general features, unto the
Deity; " the l)earing of the like-
ness of God." Note. Altliongh the
above meaning may be insisted
upon by those who desire to
correct the gross notions of the
Hindu asj)irant after heavenly
bliss, yet the p()i)ular ajjprehen-
sion of the word is more tndy
Conformity unto the deity in his
external figure ; resemblance of
him in the limbs and members
'B'^I'^T s Hindering, prevent-
ing.
^n^^r /. (P) Eqnaling, cop-
ing with. 2 Equality, ad. Equal-
ly: 7^f 5T^T^^ -go "^^Ht fff-
iH"m^ n. (s) A lake.
^n s Creation. 2 A book,
a canto.
^iim^4^ Creation, subsist-
ence, and termination, ■^o
?RT^ur Epithet of God.
^^r f. 8 pop. ^fir^^TT m.
Natron, alkali or the im])ure
carbonate of soda commonly
called sujjee mittee.
^ See m^.
^^ (s) A serpent, ^m f.
A female serpent.
^^i^ See m^Z^.
r
^^ a. (s) All, every part :
all, every one : all, the whole
duration or extent. 2 Complete,
entire, perfect.
r
^^^Fc^ -S" ad. Throughout
any time. 2 Constantly, ever.
^■^^I^^fT ct. s Eternal, per-
petual. ^^JTfT ff. Pervading all
things. ^^JTHfl a. That goes
every where, omnivagous.
r
^^^' ad. s Every way;
everywhere. 2 Wholly, entirely.
^^^IW a. (That faces
every side.) An epithet of the
Deitv, of spirit, water, air, the
sky,"&c.
'ET^^ ad. (s) Every where.
2 (Misused for ^1) All, &c.
^t^rr ad. (s) ^#t? s In all
ways; by all means ; altogether;
utterly.
^#^^r, ^%ST a. All-seeing.
^fcTf ad. Always, m. A term
for the fortiuie-tellers, almanac-
makers, &c.
^^'^^ 7/. s (In arith.) Sum
of the scries.
^^^R n. (s) In gram. A
pronoun.
and organs of his material body. I ^^H^^^frt. s All-controlling.
^jqr
441
^'^r^ s Utter renuncia-
tion and aliandoument ; relin-
quishment of the world.
^4q"Rm"cf n. s. Expiation
of sin in the gross ; expiation at
once of all offences, errors, and
omissions.
^^'^TcTiJcTr^^ a. s That per-
vades all things ; — as the Ilidii
Deity.
»■
^^'^^ a. s Universal.
^Tf^TTr a. Omniscient. ^^-
^^^%, ^"Isjiqt a. All-pervad-
ing.
^^^r*. See ^#^r.
^^^JFTK^q-fJI See ^^^Tf^.
^%JT2T a. Omnipotent.
^^^i^Tcf a. Approved by
or agreeable to all. ^"ggT^T-
Tur n. Common to all.
^^^f5fr a. That witnesses
all. A title of the Deity. It is
app. to wind, fire, akash, &c.
^^IWS' a. Existing in the
enjoyment or possession of all
(excellencies or attributes) ; full,
])erfect ; — Used of the Deity.
B^W^f. Obtainmentofall
one's objects.
^%^?R^ a. s Possessino-
all joy in himself. An epithet of
the Deity.
^##ter a. Ever pure, holy,
and fit for the highest and most
sacred ceremonies. Used ironical-
ly of a filthy fellow that clothes
himself in silk that he may be
spared the trouble of washing.
2 Ever pure and clean. Used
jocosely of silken articles of ap-
parel; as snch are always pure
however long worn without
vrashing.
c
^^f w. (s) One's whole pro-
perty. The whole essence of any
thing, ■^■g^^*^. Confiscation
of the whole projierty of.
r
^^5r a. (s) Knowing all
things, omniscient.
^€t w. The whole body. 2
The Vedas and all Aiigas or por-
tions; the whole body of sacred
literature.
56
^fr^r V^^f f. A term for a
^?:o3t. 2 App. to a silly, half-
crazy woman exposed to every
body's jests and freedoms.
^fcTr^r ad. In every body s
month.
^^V^^^\ ad. with the whole
soul or self of; with one's whole
spirit, mind, and heart. Alto-
gether : "^T ^o ^^ -^T^T- 3
Never ; by no means ; on no ac-
count: «T5TqT^^ ^ JIT? ^o
^^m\ (s) The sprit, soul o'"
life of all. A title of the Deity-
^^f^^ a. That is altogether
loose, licentious, devious ; or in-
coherent, rigmarole ; — used of
persons, proceedings, composi-
tion, discourse.
^^r^r a. That desires all
things; craving, ambitious.
^fp-Tf ad. In every means
or sense ; in every respect.
g"#5T^, Wim a. Relating to
all the parts of.
^^f^r ad. In all respects.
^%, ^f^?: s A title of
Shiva or the Deity. 2 A lord
paramount.
^^F?5" a. Supremely good,
best of all. A title of the Deity.
2 Supremely good : very right.
mm\ ad. In all methods,
manners : by all means. 2 Over
all ; uppermost : chiefly, su-
])erlatively,
^^ m. n. A dead foetus
remaining in the womb. 2 A
splint remaining in the flesh.
3 fig. An injury or insult
remaining rankling and festering
in the niiiul ; an occurrence or
an act of painful remembrance :
a pla?:ue. a pest; a thorn. 4
A dried tree. 5 m. The cord by
which the scabl)ard of a sword
is connected with the hilt and
secured. 6 A disease of
cattle, ^g^ /• or ^^* /. c
A sharp, shooting pain (as in
rheumatism).
^^T or ?T?5"% y. Intimacy,
familiarity. 2 csp. ^^JT
Continuousness or a continued
row: qx:t^ ^ft ^TJia if^.
^^H" a. Of one continuous
piece ; wanting juncture.
'B'^^^a. (s) That has a sense
of shame ; modest, decent,
decorous.
v«
"^^ a. i. To prick ; to feel
(be felt) as sharply painful, — as
a thorn or a splint lodged in
the flesh. 2 fig. To be offensive
in the sight of; to be an eye-sore
unto : to rankle : — as an injury
received : to be biting luito ; —
as the remembrance of crimes
committed.
^^^^ or -^R/. An arma-
ment, an equipment, a field-
force. 2 Sovereignty.
^^ See ^§5"r.
E^\^^f.(A) Majesty, awful-
ness, imperativeness. 2 Power-
fulness : high prosperousncss.
^^W (a Safety or peace.)
The wood used in salutation by
and to Mahomedans and other
people not Hindu, v. cjr^. It
well answers also to Comple-
ments, respects (in messages
and notes), v. ^jv, i^l^, f%^.
E^[H^ ad.{A) Safely, secure-
ly. Pr. fgj;^ -^^TTrfT ^X ^ir^T
i^^ft^. See Mat. vi. 2,"). Pr.
^1^ ^rT ^T^ 'JT^ ^° ^T^
If we are bountiful or charitable
to the meanest and the most
disconnected from us — then our
affairs prosper.
^c^fJTr^^r /. Acquaintance
sufficient to warrant the inter-
change of compliments and civil-
ities a (jreeting or houiiiff
acquaintance. 2 See ^^ttI.
sig 1.
^^\^t f. (ii) See nRTrqr. 2
Sec ^^T«1T^^ sig. 1 . 3 Low-
rent just to command homage.
nominal rent, a App. to a cannon
of depressed muzzle; to abowing
wall, ])ost, &c.
^^r^ a. s Playful, sportive,
(a) Facile, easy.
m^^ ^cT^r -^r Good terms
with or together ; amicable fool-
ing. 2 Peace : friendly relation
with a foreign power.
^55 r^
442
^r^g
^c^7^cTr /: (s) One of the
four state into which mukti is
iUstin<^uishe(l, — residence in the
heiiveu of the particular deity
(ludra, Shiva, &c.) worshiped as
the Supreme.
tTe^^ /;. s United unto.
B^\ m.f. (a) Peace ; truce-
2 Counsel. v.^\ti, % W^^-
^^k^ ^^t /. Custom, use ;
habit, wont : readiness, ability,
skill acquired throuj^h constant
performance, v- ^^, ^TJI,
^^m See ^^'
^^^ a. Cheap.
^^ir A playmate, a crony.
^f^iq I,, i. To become cheap.
^^IT^, ^^'T^ V. c. To gather
a crop by reaping.
^^'^li f. Cheapness.
^^^^ a. Easy (of perform-
ance, occurrence, &c.) ; practic-
able, feasible.
^^^, ^^^ f. An mterval of
leisure or convenieace. 2 Sparc
room : ^iT^ ^TTTT ^X.€i ^^
.5 Room, a hole (as left, kept, in
a promise, speech) : rfT '^o %-
f^ ^T^^T. 4 The place, re-
gion (of the influence) of.
^=rcT (s) A year ; esp. a year
of f^^WTf^?^-
fl^cT /■. A rival wife.
^^^JT^^^ The mutual jea-
lousy of the wives of one com-
mon husband. 2 Rivalry.
B^r{7Z^ A rival gallant,
^^cffH".^ Sec ^^ciq^^?:.
^W'^^ (s) A common term
for the sixty years composiu'i-
the Indian cycle, each bearint;-
a peculiar name. 2 A year
in £^en.
^^?r (p) Traffic, trade. 2
Goods, wares: a commodity.
^^^Tl'; A merchant. fi'^^\-
VX\/- Trade, traffic, a. Relat-
ing to a merchant, commercial.
m^^, ^^T^ (H To adorn,
befit, agree with. Or from
^t^<:PI To gather up, recover.)
A verb of which the only power
or use is that of intending the
signification of the verb with
whicii it is conjoined, or of
noting the completeness and
l)erfection of the action express-
ed by it ; or of filling up the
vacuities in, and eking out and
rounding olf the yawning, hang-
ing, hesitating utterance of a
spt'aker whose wits are a wool-
gathering, or whose materials
are scanty. It is used accordingly
with every verb in the language,
and in every voice, mood, and
tense. Its place is after the verb ;
its form the form of the verb ;
its sense nothing : if| ■^^«r
^T^ vf'^T^ ^Tftt rH]^ JITS
^^^"^ a. s That increases ;
that prospers, advances. ^^"^iT
«. Increasing ; thriving. ^^^^-
flwi^- Grown, thriven.
^ff a. Having a fourth
more ; more by a fourth :
^mW f. Excess by a fourth.
a. Having the excess of a fourth.
r-T^lNirr /. Extra-collec-
ti'^'\*' _ ^ [fifth,
^^fl'^ y. Remission of one
^^\^{ n. pi. A table of the
successive multiples of l.l.
^^\^l f. m. (h) Borax.
'^^Rf A kind of nippers or
^ffcT (s) Conference, con-
?T^r^ a. (p) Mounted upon
or seated in (a horse, a coach,
&c.)
^^K\ f. See l^-
^^\^ (a) a question, in-
fjuiry. 2 The tenth month of the
MMliomedan year.
H^rar A tribe of Brahmans.
^^f^l-JT, ^-^^mf. A woman
whose husband is living.
^fr?"'l n. (s) Rubbing (as
of the body) : kneading (of the
limbs), shampooing : 3fJi -^\^
^^m% f. . The butcher's
name for the rectum or lowest
bowel of a sheep, &c.
^(^^r s The sun.
^r^*^ a. s Homogeneous.
^r^^cR „, (s) Detailed, cir-
cumstantial, ad. Circumstantial-
ly. minutely. [amazed.
^(^^IT^ a. (s) Astonished,
^frC /. s Increase, 2
Abundance. 3 Prosperity : pros-
perousness.
^f inep. Pop. Along with.
2 or ^i'g or ^%f^ ad. Imme-
diatel)', promi)tly.
^^-4 a. (s) Left, not right.
2 Reverse, contrary. 3 Southern.
^sqrq^Bq- a. Left and riglit ;
reverse and direct ; foul and fair
n. The shifting from side to side
of the ^T^l^ at ^Tl &c. Hence
Fuss gen;
^°?f^ rt. Twenty-six.
^5T^ a. Fearful, timorous :
afraid. 2 Doubtful.
^5IW a. (s) Powerful,
strong, able.
^^^ (s) Doubt. 2 Surmise.
^'5\^Wl c. (Vulg.) One
ever doubting ; one distrusting.
^^2fq^ a. (s) Doubtful,
dubious.^ [doubts.
^2rriTR||ff /. Solution of
^^q"R^a. Doubtful, ob-
scure. ■^»i;^T^ a. s Disposed to
doubting.
^5r#lf/. Doubtful; deniur-
ing; that indulges evil surmises.
^Wtf. Purified state.
^^^, m'^^ p. s Supported.
^^rj't /. ^*'!}?? 7)1. S. Support,
shelter.
^^TI'-T'l n. s. Purifying.
^foT^' 71. s Joined in em-
brace, closely united.
J^^^r
443
^r^
^^^r^ See ^^^f^.
^^fTfT /. s Connection. 2
Intentness of application. 3 In-
timacy.
^^tR^ a. (s) Relative ; that
subsists not absolutely, but with
relation.
^^?:°T n. s Going. 2 Birth,
life, and death. 3 The constant
niio;ration of soul.
^€JT s Contact, junction.
2 Intercourse. fence.
Hq"JliTr^s Inlogic.Non-exist-
^^^r a. (s) That hes in
contact or near connection with.
2 That keeps the acquaintance
of; concommitant.
^"m A hare. 2 also ^^r^^r
falcon.
tmK (s) The world ; human
life. 2 The affairs of life.
Ex. of comp.^"^T^g^TTrK:-?Ti?JT-
^^Kr a. That has the cares
of a family ; worldly, secular.
^'^T'C^^ «. That is wise and
])nident in worldly matters. 2
Relating to wordly affairs, o
En<jai?ed in public life.
^lljrC^/. s Nature, disposi-
tion. 2 Perfection.
^^FcT /. s The world ; the
life of mortals. 2 Flow, stream.
^^TcTT'^r Poet. The path of
living (and dying).
^^2" p. s United, joined.
•
^■^S"^^ w. s In law.Voluntary
co-residence (of father and son,
or of brothers with one another)
after partition of property. 2
Union.
H^rS" y. s Uniting, joining.
^^E^xfr a. s That performs
a Sanskar, that operates upon.
^^rr (s) A common term
for the essential and purificatory
rites amongst the llinelus. 2
Purifying, sanctifying. 3 Pre-
paring (a dish or an article of
food, a medicine) 4 Embellishing,
polishing, finishing. 5 Any action
U|)on : any change or abiding
effect accomplished upon.
H^^l^t^ V. c. To make a
person the subject of any of tlu
Sanskars.
^^^ff^cf p.That has been the
subject of a Sanskar or of an
operation gen. ^^T^ «•
(Possible, purposed, &c.) to be
the subject of a Sanskar.
Wf^^ p. (s) That has been
the subject of a Sanskcir or of an
operation of a work; wrought,
elaborated. 2 Hence n. & a.
Langauge formed by perfect
grammatical rules ; the classical
and sacrtd language of the
Hindus, — the Sanskrit : relating
to Sanskrit. 3 p. Decorated ;
cooked ; purified ; made.
^^r a. Cheap, ^^^ll /.
Cheapness, ^^t^uf v. i. To be-
come cheap, ^^if^uf V. c. To
make cheap.
^^'4 a. s That stays, in-
heres, in, at, with ; as 5^^-
^jg. 2 That stops, ends ; as
?iT4r f. s Happy or easy
state of life. 2 Stop, end. 3
Stopping. 4 Continuance in the
right way.
^^^R n. (r) a royal city.
2 A place favored by the occa-
sional manifestations of any
god, by the residence there of
saints, of learned doctors, &c. :
a town appointed for the resi-
dence and made over for the
maintenance of a god, saint, &c.
3 Reveiuie applied to the sup-
port of such places.
B^^Nm a. (s) That sets up,
establishes (a religion, &c.)
^^m^ V. c. To appoint, set
up (a king, a religion, idol,
&c.) ^""^Tti^ n. The setting
up, appointing (of a king, a
religion, &c.) ^iSTTftfTi?. Set
up, established.
^r^2^"cr p. s Stopped, ended :
(with implication of complcted-
ness or rightness. 2 Standing or
staving with, together, at, or in.
^f^^fcTy. Termination, con-
clusion. 2 Abiding.
tTC a. s That suffers, en-
dures ; as '^Tjj-^.
^^^R Assisting,aiding. ^K-
^T^ An assistant.
^CTT'? n. The accompany-
ing of her deceased husband by a
widow. 2 The burning of herself
by a widow together with a figure
of pa'.ash leaves, &c., assumed
to represent her husband, he
having died at a distant place.
3 Going with.
^^"^ (s) That goes willi ;
a companion.
^C-sf rt. s Born of the same
mother, uterine. 2 Born with,
cognate. 3 Innate, native. Also
^^sjJfrTfl'^ ad. Without any
particular object, purpose ; idly,
simply. 2 Without effort; easily,
as a matter of course. §131^7-
Used as a. <§ ^TH T^'fT ^^^\
^?:5frFri" a. That is easily
produced, effected. 2 s Conna-
tural.
cd. Easily, simply. [tience.
^l^'l 71. (s) Suffering ; pa-
^§:^W a. (s) Of a bear-
ing disposition ; patient.
^C'fR a. s Bearable, toler-
able.
^?"^i'T n. (s) Compotation,
drinking together. ■^^^irT^JT
n. Commensality. ^"^ii^in"
n. Concremation.
^^^ /". (a) Exercise abroad,
taking a walk. v. ^K.
^^^tT^IR prep. Along with,
together with.
^^^W (s) Dwelling with. 2
Companionship.
^C^r^^T V. c. To ascertain
or become acquainted with the
qualities, nature, or use of.
^?"^r^r a. (s) That abides
with : that keeps the company of.
^?:^r ad. (s) Hastily, pre-
cipitately. Pop. Never, by no
means.
^K^ n. (s) A thousand. ^-
^^Si:: ■^'^^T^f^ (td. By
thousajjds.
^T^
444
OT?3^
^Tff a. Six.
^TCTOT /. A grindstone. 2 A
leviiratin^-slab,
^r^"^rq[ a. (s) A condis-
ci|)lc.
^crq- c. (s) pop. ^crfr a
companion, adhereut. 2 An
assistant.
^§^r^ n. Compnnionship.
2 Fellowship in working, i. e.
aiding or aid.
frC'K (s) Destroying or de-
struction of the universe. 2
Extinction, demolition of form ;
exterminating slaughter. .'^ s Col-
lecting, a. Collection. 4 Abridg-
ing : an abridgment. 5 Contract-
ing : contracted state.
^CR^ a. That destroys, (See.
^qT^*^ v. c. To slaughter.
^Km'S: a. Sixty-six.
BlW^ p. (s) Accompanied
by; being in company with. 2
Tiornc, endured, piep. Along
with, with.
^r^^ p. s United. 2 Col-
lected. 3 Abridged.
^fC^r f. s Proximity or ad-
junction. 2 An arrangement of
the text of the Vedas into short
sentences ; denominated after
the person by whom made :
T^cfTfo 3 A school ot'tlie Yedas.
4 A code, digest.
^k"^^ a. (s) Patient, endur-
ing, forbearing, meek.
^J/. (.•v)Scc^f Sig. 1.
^^TS" s The son of a woman
])regnant at the time of her mar-
ria<re.
»\'
'ET?^!^ s Born of the same
mother, co-uterine.
^^ a. s (Possible, nece.<^sary,
&c.) to be borne, tolerated.
^<* The cord of the scab-
bard of a sword with the hilt. 2
The crease or line of duplicature
of a fold. 3 Toot. See Wof.
"B"^* f. A needle for ting-
ing the eyelids witli a collyrium :
a pin, spike (of bamboo or me-
tal.) 2 The staff of a ])estle,—
the beam without its iron ring.
^^^'i i\ i, To glide alonjr
rustlingly or liissingly — a ser-
pent: to slip out: fig. to slip
oif.
^^^r Morbid itching and
longing (of the teeth to cat or
bite), r. ^"Z, ^, ^T?I, aiT.f^'C.
^S'^SOT V. i. To bubble up
briskly and noisily ; to wallo]) ;
— a liquid under ebullition, ike.
2 To tlirob, thrill ; — as a boil. H
To be affected with its ])eculiar
itching and longing to 1)0 drawn ;
— used of teats. 1 To itch, thrill,
vibrate tremulously ; — teeth,
hands, feet, tongue, &c. in order
to eat, beat, write, kick, &c. 5
To tingle — as the teeth from
cold air, acids, &c.
^T^H" p. (s)^ Abridged, epi-
tomized. ^^^ (s) Abridging :
abridged state. 2 An abridge-
ment, summary. ■^^^?ff: od.
s By abridgment, &e.; briefly,
^'^fq^. (f. Relating to abridg-
ment ; abridged, shortened,
^^■qffi V. c. To draw together,
in, or up, to contract.
^5fry. (s) Name, denomina-
tion. 2 A sign, a nod, beck. 'A
The sacred verse or gayatri of
the Vedas. 4 s Return of con-
sciousness after a swoon : con-
sciousness gen.
^?r^ a. That consists of
signs and appointed marks ;
that is expressed by gesture,
bv emblems, allusions, &c.
^r«. Six.
^r Abridged from ^^\ ; as
mk f. Cream. 2 fig. Any
creandike layer.
^ftT/. Atrain(ofants,&c.);
a bevy (of birds) ; a swarm
(of flies) ; a herd (of wild hogs) ;
a troop, baud (of monkeys, &c.)
^^ f. The palm of the hand
as drawn up and hollowed (to
hold water, Ike.) 2 A person or
line of persons set to watch or
look out for (travellers, &c.
expected). V. ^^^^■^, B^, ^T'lr.
.) Mercantile credit : character
gen.
?ri^^ -^r a. Narrow, strait ;
— a ])laee, a vessel, 2 Tight : i
short. I
^r^^ -t n. (Poet.) A diffi-
cultv-
^r^tr The box of a nr^F or
load-cart.
^l^^f. Sugar.
^r^f?^ a. s Resolved, pur-
posed ; relating to ■9*^^.
^r^?^ n. s The whole, all
entireness.
^r^S-, m^d^f. A chain.
^^^^ V. c. To chain. 2
fig. To confine, curb. c. i. To
congeal, clot. 2 To become cos-
tive— the bowels or the person.
^t^cS"^:?" A large and thick
^^^^^"•^^ [rule of three.
^ra^rrm/.In arith. Chain
^f^ST, ^f^^f Clotted state.
V- "^X.. 2 tig. Constipation, v.
m^ST /. A chain.
^i^s'r^lTW A bit with
links, a chain-bit.
^r^rr a. (s) That has a
form : figurate.
v.
^r^R'T" V. i. To assume a
form. [desire or wish for.
m^\^ a. (s) That has
^r^r /. See ^r^. 2 a par-
ticular measure of poetical com-
jiosition.
^F*Rr^r /. Balance, &c.
^t^frl^ a. (s) Ptelating to
^^ff. 2 See ^'sflBR.
B]^ f. Mercantile credit.
^l^t f. Sugar,
^r^^^i^ The rose-apple.
^r^^l^T /. A morning-
snooze.
mw:^\ m^ ^rs^rn a. a
term for a person su])erflu-
ouslv strict, minute, &c. ; for one
disposed to find fault with the
very best tiling,
^r^i:^r 3"?r /. a term for a
covertly cutting speech ; also for
a soft and gentle but deep and
merciless |)erson.
^m^, B\m^ f. A chain. 2
or ^frlt'^^ ^t'f^oS A row of
teeth.
m^s^
445
m^
m^^^ V. i. To congeal. 2
To become costive.
m^^ 71. m. (s) One of the
six Shastras. m. One that follows,
or that is studying this Shastra.
^R (h) The teak tree or
wood.
^i^/. (h) a spear or a jave-
lin altogether of iron. a. (s) That
is with all its members, parts ;
complete, m. (Vulg.) Telling,
order, v. '^t'T.
^iiT^I^r -^\ a. That can
fulfil only the letter of the
orders he reeeives : that is to
act as bidden.
^'m^ m. f. A float composed
of two boats bound together :
a link of two ponipions, &c. to
swim or tloat by. /. A body
formed of two or more (fruits,
men, &c.) linked together.
^fiT^^rf J^r /. A puppet.
^tn^l f. Direction, man-
date. 2 Mode of teaching or
lecturing. .3 Telling, v, ^t^T-
^\m V. i. To tell ; to de-
clare. 2 To tell to do; to bid
to do; to enter upon (a work,
office) : to bid (to an entertain-
tnent, &c.) 3 To teach ; to de-
liver orally to a learner (a lesson,
doctrine, &c.) 4 To repeat (his
lesson to his master) ; — as a
scholar.
^RcTF/. Completeness, full-
ness (of a rite, business, &c.)
consisting in the presence of
every article and item, and in
the due performance of every
point, part and particular, ap-
jjertaining.
^r^^ (s) A sea or the ocean.
^f^^r a. Consisting of Teak-
wood.
^fJT^R (ii) The teak tree or
wood. 2 w. A forest of Teak-
trees. 3 A quantity of teak-timber
(as gathered for building).
mm\^ a. Made of, belong-
ing to ^TIT^T^.
^m^^iT^r/. Servincr or as-
sisting (a person) through speak-
ing (to another in his favor) ;
helping through intercession :
r^l^ ^m ^Nt f^^ ^T^t ^vl
^TT ^T^- 2 The assistance of
fair promises, tongue-help :
«TT^ ^t» ^^. 3 (^tT s &
^o) Complete aid. v. ^^
g. of o.
mm^\ The skeleton, box,
or frame (of a building, boat, the
body, &e.),the hull, shell, corn-
pages. 2 App. as Hulk is to any
animal or thing huge and un-
wieldy.
mJIf^int/. Talk, report,/<ea/--
say. 2 Tattling. 3 Telling a mat-
ter to numerous persons.
^ITT /". Direction, injunction,
warning, v. ^t'T. 1
^m^r /. (II) Meat, flesh-
meat.
^r^T (ii) A tree from which
sago is prepared. 2 Sago, ^i-
ir^ tTT'^53 2>l- Sago.
^mrfr See ^\m\.
mm\^ a. (s) Being with
all its members, items, parts and
appendages ; — used of a mar-
riage sacrifice, &c.
mk^[^ n. Careful keeping ;
preserving.
^F^r a. An accomplice. ^F-
3?JT^17gT a. Clever in schem-
ing, &c. 2 Sharp at schemes and
plans of knavery or violence.
^t^riH^ a. s Military, mar-
tial,
^r^ (I. (n) True, real, just.
^[^•T V. i. To accumulate,
collect ; to form in mass.
■g't'a^i'ft n. Water collected
(in a tank, &c) ; any accumula-
tion of water.
g'i^l^of y^^-;f Q collect, gather
together.
^V^\ n. True, real. m. A
mould. 2 A quantity cast in one
mould or formed after one fa-
shion. 3 A model, an exemplar.
^1^[T a. Poet. True, just.
^f^r^p. Collected, a. Pre-
served in a tank, &c. —water.
^1^ (r) Apparatus, mate-
rials. 2 Equipings, dressing
up. 3 Habiliments. 4 The
instruments and apparatus of a
band of dancing-girls, of musi-
cians, jugglers, &c. 5 The tabor
called ^^T\ or ■q^^TW.
^f-^/. (h) The evening.
^R^ Poet. A lover, gallant.
^TSfufl/. A mistress, a belov-
ed woman. 2 A woman's confi-
dante or female companion.
^f^^ V. c. To befit, suit.
^f^^r a. Decorated, embel-
lished. 2 Graceful, neat.
^T^f'T" V. i. To become
evening, to advesperate.
m^^^f. Eventide.
^r5ig-^5[Fr (p) A general
term for the apjiaratus, furni-
ture, &c. belonging to or required
for any work.
m^^^, m^m See ^m^^-
^f'^r Particles in wheaten
meal, grit : the coarse part of
such meal (grit and flour
mingled), gnrgions. 2 Such grit
boiled in milk or water with
sugar and spices.
m^mK Country alkali.
^f^^* ^'■' F'esh, new.
^1'^ A frame composed of
slit bamboos, &c.; forming the
deck of boats, &c. : the lathing
over the rafters of a roof: the
floor of a loft.
^i^ V. c. To buy up a
whole investment or the total
quantity of goods brought by
a merchant to market.
^13"7r A hoard or stock : a
reservoir, the capacity of any
receptacle. 2 Goods gen.
^FcTiTK The sport of beating
about, from one tormentor to
another, in a ^i]vi or arena,
of elephats with sticks.
^r?r A drop cast in sprink-
ling.
^13" n. A whole investment;
the total quantity of merchandise
(brought to market by one mer-
chant) : buying up the whole of a
investment, &c. v. g, S^, ^'^K-
^f^
446
m^
mr^cf n. The deed whicli
is executed upon the purchase
of a -^1^' .
^r^^r^ n. Barter, truck.
2 An intermarrying of two
families.
^r? a. Sixty.
^\E^ V. z.To collect ; to get
to<!;ether in mass. 2 To be cou-
tainctl.
^fJ^'T n. f. Any receptacle
in which to store up ; a garner,
bin, jar. 2 Hoarding.
mE^^\ n. Water collected
(in a tank, &c.)
^fef^T V. c. To lay up, heap
Ti]i. 2 To amass together.
^12^^ V. i. To be in one's
d(it:ipc.
^rjr'-25Tr a frame (as of a
])icturc, &c) : the frame of a
^i^r A collection, a heap.
^IZ\ f. An acjgiegate of
sixty. 2 The age of sixty, o
Dotage. 4 See ^t^.
^rjf prcj). For the sake of,
for.
^fJIffl: /. The driveling of
superannuation,
^i^ /. A female camel.
^f^"/. An outlet for super-
fluous water (as through a dam);
u ilood-vent. 2 Suffering to slip
out of memory, v. ^X g. of
o : forbearing ; passing by- v.
^^ witli fqf^^t of o : g^T-
fg^^t -^"^TTT f^■^■^ ¥!■¥
#»^. 3 A habit, propensity of
dropping and losing, v. ^13T :
^R^T ^TJ^T VlT^r^T ^T^m-
^^t ^t^ ^TJTr?1. 4 Letting
alone. 5 A forsaken wife, fi n. A
thing dropped and lost. n. Drop-
ped on the road ; fallen and
Iving (unowned).
^fT^SrcT n. A bill of divorce
(to a wife), of manumission (to
a slave), of resignation (with
rcs])rct to property).
^t^'nr / Dropping, <S:c. ^t-
^vff/. (u) A fcuialc camel.
^t^iffl^T^ A rider upon a
fern.'xle camel employed as a
jiostuian.
^\^^ V. c. To spill, shed ;
to cause : to overturn or agitate
unto s])iUing (the vessel). 2 To
lose by dropping. 3 To cast away;
to drop.
m^m^ The husband of
one's wife's sister,
^f^^ A kind of pincers,
^f^r^f^ J, General and
great and confused spilling,
shedding, &e.
^f^f /. (ii) A garment worn
round the body (esp. by young
women). [wife's sister.
^r? The husband of one's
^r^ pL Half; as ^F^^R.
^ri"iTr^f^ A saint-looking
knave,
mi^ffr^r^n a term for a
grievous distress, v. ^, Also
B\^m\^ ad. Brimful.
^1*^/. A grindstone or whet-
stone. 2 A levigating slab.
^M\ A person set, on the
part of one of the sharers, to
watch over a iield of corn, sugar
works, &c., the joint projjerty,
to prevent fraudulent appropria-
tion by anv of the other sharers.
m^ a. Seven. /. See ^\^.
2 A course or run (esp. of
epidemic disease) ; and, freely,
of any matter of one kind; as
WT^'-I'^ ^TfT (HTaf^T^).
^i'cfgf^^?:^* To tell a story
or make a statement with
contradictions.
.» »,«
^^X n. A fall of rain, &:c.
continuing seven days. 2 Cold
falling on the seventh day after
an interval of six day.s' mild
weather. 3 fig. A turn-np, for a
season, of something extra and
fine ; a run : Tif-q^T fk^'J sff^
»TI^^T%' ^To ^Tfl^ ■^Trr.
4 A period of seven days.
^frT^^ri" a. A terrible liar.
^("T^^r A ])priod of seven
days, a hebdomad : the total of
seven days' account.
^rcT^^lT ad. By excess of -
seven ; by seven-fold : <^1^85t .
^^mm^pl. Many and great
efforts ; exceeding exertion and .
labor.
^f^rr n. A child born in the
seventh month of gestation.
^r^r A companion, fellow.
ind. The terra used in multijdy-
ing unity by seven : ^^ ^i?r1
^r^T Barley. 2 Flour of parch-
ed barlej', wheat, and gram
(as eaten for ^^153, &c.)
^fcTlST a. Born after seven
months' gestation.
^h^^ n. (s) Appeasing ;
composing : comforting ; abating
the excitement of anger, grief,
fear.
^rr^^^ a. (s) Relating to
■^■f^JTTrT — Pure, honest, true,
gentle, &c. : nnld, sanative. 2
That has cream, pith ; that has
vigor, virtue. 3 Real, existent.
^r^T f. Company, society :
ji.artuer.
^f^r m. (n) m^KK c. A
companion, a fellow : an assist-
ant; a second in singing, &c.
^r? m. f. A calling to : the
call returned, v. gj^, ■^, "^T^.
2 Sound : ^'I"^ ^^"^^T-tlvrr^T.
H'f?ra.(s) Ready or prepared.
2 ad. Respectfully, reverently. 3
Respectful, p. (a) Arrived, come :
])rodneed, issued, edited.
^IK^^K -n /. (a) Any
contingent charge (as for certain
entertainments, for the subsist-
ence of a troop of mendicants,
&c.) paid l)y an extra-assess-
ment : such cxtra-assissment.
Used as an adj : ^^o x§^ -^flT,
&c. ^
^ff^Kf Sec ^i'-^r, &c.
^r?"5'^ n. s Resemblance,
likeness.
m^r^i^r ad. In nooks and
corners.
W^^ a. (s) That has the
beginning and the end ; whole.
m^
447
^Tf^
entire ; — as a book, a relation.
ad. From beginning to end,
throughout.
^r«^/. Joint, juncture. 2 A
cleft, chink. 3 A joint, knuckle.
^n^ a. That accomplishes,
effects ; that is instrumental,
conducive. 2 That is engaged
in a course of rites and observ-
ances in order to obtain Moksh.
^['^^^['=1^ a. Helpful and
hurtful; helpful or hurtful.
^N^W n. Joinery.
m^m^ f. Cranny and
crevice.
Hr*^'^5' /• Accomplishing,
effecting. 2 The proper way of
procedure towards the ac-
complishment of: the means,
materials by which the ac-
complishment is sought.
mm V. c. To effect: to
make. 2 To observe (a festival,
a right) ; to make (holiday)- 3
To parse. 4 To form (words) by
composition, with grammatical
adjuncts, &c.
^f'^'T^ V. i. To succeed, avail ;
to issue successfully ; to proceed
smoothly, flovvingly.
"GTi^^ V. c. To join; to unite
(by sewing, pasting, Sec.) v. i. To
join, to come together.
^F^'T 71. (s) Accomplishing :
executing. 2 Materials; an in-
strument, organ ; an agent, a
factor. 3 Good works, as second-
ary means of obtaining purity
and emancipation. 4 In logic.
Premises. 5 In law. Proving.
G Preparation (of metals) by
oxydation, &c., for medicinal or
alchemical purposes.
^['-:[R^r /. s The science,
art, act of composing, preparing,
or making. 2 Parsing.
mm\ a. That effects ; that
is clever and skilful, in devising
and a]iplying means towards
the attainment of. 2 That is
adapted or calculated, &c.
towards the acquisition of ; — as a
means. .3 That tends to prove; —
as a writing.
^(^??K-^'/Luckor fortune;
chance viewed as the orgiua-
ting source oi tlic profit or loss.
^Rr a. (p) Plain, simple,
lit. fig. 2 Artless, guiless. 3
Plain, mere, pure, &c.
mm A joint, knot. 2 Junc-
ture, seam. 3 A piece joined.
4 A cleft.
mw:^ a. (s) Common,
general. 2 Middling, ordinary, n.
A common rule applicable to
many persons or matters. 2
Specific character. ^l"?^!^^
tig (s) The common order,
or part.
^f^Wf'^y. Joining of many
things by many persons. 2 fig.
Making up of matters; repair-
ing.
^[te J), (s) Achieved ;
made, done. 2 In gram. Ab-
stract; derivative. fchink
^f'^r /. Jomt, juncture :
mq^r^Kf /. pZ. A term for
joints and seams.
^i^f^i^r^r a. That keeps
himself in the recesses and
privities of the house; a house-
idler. 2 App. in the sense of
Obscure, ignoble ; " unknown to
fame."
^f'^r? p. Joined or united ;
— as parts or pieces; jointed,
pieced.
m^ A holy man ; a saint, a.
Eight, proper, good. '^T^sfl^
a. Ilolily, piously disposed.
■^I^^rT pi- Saints and sages
coliectively. '^T'^'^iTTJi'T The
society of saints and sages ;
good company. [Au alley.
m^\f\ f. A large joint. 2
^i^r^ffr See ^t^[€ifr.
^r*^^ a. (s) That can be per-
formed, practicable ; attainable ;
that is within one's power (to
get, subdue). 2 In logic. That
is to be inferred. 3 In law, &c.
That is to be proved. 4 Pop. At-
tained.
mm\ f. (s) The wife of a
Sadhu : a saintly woman.
^R a. Poet. Little, tiny :
^'"^^ ^^"- [letter,
g-mrrer^ «. s Nasal— a
^R^^R a. Having the dot
over it — a letter,
^ri^'^ n. 8 Proximity, near-
ness.
m^ A serpent or a snake.
^rq^^ V. i. To fall (into the
hands of a person, a trouble,
snare, &c.) ; to be found, got
hold of, lit. fig. 2 To be found
by ; — as an opportunity, leisure,
&c.
^1^^ See ^T^^.
^f^^WR The feeling towards
one another of rival wives, half
brothers, &c.
^R^'ir^ a. s Having a wife.
m^^\ A trap (for rats, &c.)
2 fig. A skeleton : a lean person.
^TRl^fr^riT/. A term for a
weapon, &c. remarkably short.
m^^ a. That has desire,
want, or need of. 2 Compara-
tive or relative : referential ;
as ^i^^To, "^S^^T*
^[^^r/. Want, need.
m^^ ad. (s) At present, now.
^f^T^R Custom, practice :
a custom. 2 A phrase.
^JWTFi'q"^ a. (s) Relating to
traditionary or popular doctrine
or practice.
^FF a. (a) Clean. 2 Free from
moral impurity; pure. 3 Free
from disease, clear of blemish,
flaw. 4 ISmooth, even. 5 Plain,
clear, simple ; — a piece of
coiny)osition, speech, &c. ad.
Plainly, flat, s/fl/}— telling. 2
Fully, utterly, clean — doing
or being : ^] t^T^^T^ ^T"5 f»T-
5i^T- 3 Clearly, distinctly.
^f^?^ n. (s) Fruitfulness,
lit. fig.; profitableness.
^rqr^'Tir «. clean and clear ;
glossy and even.
^f^^'T^R /. Gloss, polish,
shine and finish.
m'il f. Cleanness, pureness.
m^ (s) A name of Shiva. 2
fig. A term for a soft, simple
]>erson.
^R^r a. Plain, quiet, artless.
m^^ (a) Soap.
m^T m. V. A sort of elk.
^fl^^' n. Magic, sorcery.
^w
448
^liiu
^^JTT5 71. Salt extracted
from saline earth, &c. : such
saline earth.
^t^r a. Relating to the
animal samber — leather, &e : of
the leather of a sauiber — shoes,
&c./. The hide of a siimber. 2
A kind of ba^.
^[^55T See ^1^^. . • k.
XI n 1 kjv-t •[previously.
^rft^ a. ^ ad. (a) Former ;
^rfrcT a. (a) Sound, firm. 2
Proved, established.
^ff^ (a) Soap.
^firr^ Prepared seasoning.
^iTK w. A dilute dish of
curds, &c.
^f^r^ fl. s Having appear-
ance ; invested with form and
properties and ajiparent sub-
stantiality but illusory and un-
rfal ; — an epithet of the objective
universe. 0pp. to fw^^ilHTg'.
m^v^ See ^^r^-
^MITR a. (s) Proud, lofty.
^R n. (s) The Sama Veda.
2 A verse of this Veda. 3 Con-
ciliatinjr, soothing. 4 One of the
four niodes of overcoming an
enemy ; — adulatory speech and
deiiortmeiit.
TR^r (id. & prep. R In
front ; before, opposite.
m^'^l f. (s) Materials, fur-
niture, gear.
^H'iTr A sort of auger.
?rR^^^, ?TrJT^a[^^ n. The
.sigjiature or the lines of ac-
knowledgment of his debt written
by the debtor on the books of
the banker or tradesman, a. Also
TiT^^ci^. Used with ^^^,
'jirr, v\;c.
^\^^^ v. A term for the soft
and pacific modes of prevailing
witli an opponent or of accom-
plisliiiig a matter : as o\)\i. to
violence and coercion.
CTFRte a. (s) llolating to
time or season ; seasonable ; ininc-
tual. 2 Stipulated, conveutional.
^WA n. (s) Power, might.
2 Capability, ability. (-;„„ p„,,^.,._
fTR^q-^R pop. -^cf a. llav-
^\^^\^ f. (a) Partnership
or share in. '^T'T^Tfft «• Re-
lating to partnership ; associate,
confederate : ^T" 'S'KT -^*^-
^^^^ -^T<I -"tlT^.
m^^^ See m^m.
m^^ {?) The third of the
four Yedas. ^TT^^ An ob-
server of the rites, &c. prescribed
in the Samaveda. 2 A Urahmau
versed in this Veda.
m^^^ n. f. (h) Stillness,
silenee, quiet, ad. Silently : hT
^Wr^^ a. Common, joint.
?TfiTrr5[^ n. (s) Relating to a
number or to an assembly or a
meeting. 2 Conventioual. 3 An
assessor in an assembly.
HFTFf 11. (p) Instruments ;
a])paratus, furniture. 2 Goods,
chattels, 1raj)S, kit.
^RR^-ITR 71. See ^RR.
^^I'^r 71. (.s) Generalness,
generic quality ; the projierty of
kind or sort. a. Common, general.
2 Middling. ■^I'TT'qfr: ad.
Moderately, ordinarily. 2 S])eci-
iically. 3 In general. 4 Exten-
sively, mostly. 5 Commonly,
usually. C) In the main. ^T*iT^
♦fT*T"-A common nanie.^lTn^q
■qg The middle or common
order, class, or part, ^ittt^-
^q 77. s In gram. The ordinary
form ( of a noun) in declension,
as eft'ected by the TjFq^ or
j^article noting the case : as
^HT, ^T^^T, inllcctions of
^T^T, ^1^^. effected by
Indefinite pronoun.
mmm See ^{^m.
^RrW o. Half-yearly. 2
Of the weight of six mashas,
f. A cow tliat Iiriiigs forth every
year ; thus giving milk during six
months.
^TIR^J^ See HR^^'lcT,
^\^M n. (s) Proximity,
contiguity. The beatitude de-
seriiied under ^iflqflT.
'FTRl^^- a.(A)Confederafed or
associated with ; accessary unto.
2 In accounts, &c. Added
^Rqr, ^[^fifr See ^R?Tr.
?TR?rRT^ a. (s) Relating to
an assembly, multitudejto a mass.
^RS" a. (s) Marine, oceanic.
^R^ 71. s A spot on the
body. [time.
^R^^ n. Sea-faring : mari-
^155^^%/. A device of tr.ms-
lators to render (geographical)
strait.
^RIS^^ n. Interpretation of
tile spots, lines, &c. upon the
body. 2 A treatise upon the
subject, m. An interpreter of
these spots and marks, a
chiromancer.
miirqt/. See ^R5r7.
?TR[q^r^ (s) A mild and
moderate application, operation,
or curative. 2 Auy milil, conci-
liating measure.
^mKlad. In the front or fore
part: cgT^T FT" 5IT -^ -%I
Go, come, be in the way before
him.
m^qr n. (s) oorrup. ^\^'^^
f. & ^T3?I(^ n. Efpiality, parity.
2 Levelness. 3 Evenness, o])p.
to oddness (of numbers). 1 Im-
partiality, neutrality. 5 Compa-
risfin.
^fCTRq" n. (s) Imperial rule.
2 A government of a firm, just,
and paternal character, [wood.
?TR The teak-tree. 2 Teak-
^f^/. Cream.
^4'^r?5' (s) pop. -^ Even-
ing. 2 The fifth and last division
of the day.
^r^3"f f. -Z 71, Thin creamy
surface (as on ^Tf, &c.)
^R^ f. A train or line. n.
{.\) Excise : excise-booth.
^R^l See ^nr 7/1.
m^, ^f^T^Rl a. Made of,
consisting of, belonging to the
teak-tree or wood. ■^T^m'Sf
Tiie teak-tree or wood. n. A
forest of teak-trees.
(TI^-l^'ifR a. Exactly, accord-
^m^
449
^TR"^
ant with ; having harmony
with. j-jjj, stored ; entire, full.
^m^riR o. Well-furnished
^RF The teak-tree or wood.
^r^^ Great labor ; exer-
tion, ado.
^r^r^ s Evening.
JETf^r^ f. A porcupine. 2 n.
A porcupine's quill.
€I^^?T n. s Corrup. ^R^JT^F.
/. The fourth of the four states
into which niukti is distin-
guished, viz. absorption into
the essence of Brahma. 2 Union.
^r^Wa. (s) Armed.
^K m. n. (s) Essence, sub-
stance ; sap, pith, spirit, lit. fig.
^K n. A dilute mixture of
tamarinds, &c.
^IT?3^r a. (h) Like, similar.
2 Equal, one. 3 Even, level. 4
Uniform, equable. 5 Alike, in :
ditferent. 6 Suitable, fitting :
3TT%. ad. In one continued
^V^ V. c. To move on,
aside or back; to remove by
pushing. 2 To consume, ex-
l»end. 3 To despatch, finish;
to drive aloncj.
mm s pop. -^r The driver
of a car, a charioteer. 2 fig. A
conductor, a leader, pilot :
Pr. Wt^T'STT^T ^T» oJ-ETSa 3T-
^^I^ ^T^ ^*Tt. 3 fig. A pa-
tron, helper. Pr. 3?^5?JT^t
^KSj)vi^T^T'iT. See Ps.xlvi.&c.
^r^^ n. s Charioteering.
^r^r A collection of chips.
^Rf'T a. Smearing (of the
ground, &c.) with cow dung-
wash. V. ^Ti*if. 2 The cowdung-
wash prepared for the purpose.
3 Smearedness (of the ground,
&c.) with the dung-wash : the
conting applied.
^R^R (p) A camel-driver.
^Rl^"^ V. c. To smear (the
ground, &c.) with a wash of cow-
dung.
manner: ^ trK '^K ^«^T^Rff (s) Indian crane.
s Relating to all.
^T^^ T^rf ^TTf
eR^ff^"^ V. c. To make
equal, even : to equalize.
^it^T f. A mango-nettinii,
&c.m.(.s) A Rag or mode of music.
2 In Sanskrit this word signifies
numerous animals and things,
viz. A deer, a peacock, a lion,
an elephant, a tree, a garment,
&c.
^[^W? A play played up-
on a cloth or board with songtya
and dice. 2 The doth or board
and songtya together.
^it^rr a. Dark-bay.
^rt% /.(.<) A kindoffid-
'^'f • [the ^T<nl.
^ft^'^r A performer upon
^R^rr/ Corrup. from 2TK?T.
A name of Saraswati.
mim^ (,s)A tribe of Brah-
mans.
^Kf a. All or the whole, w.
A white film over the eyes. 2
Tax.
mT\^ (.s) Essence, sub-
stance-; siij), ])ith, lit. lig. 2 An
abstract, epitome. [ui&'
^RWrr/ Pu.-hingand shov-
mi\mi The fat and the lean ;
the good and the bad, lit. fig.
^in?T^r^ ad. c Throu«b_ the
whole day, the livelong da}'.
mu:m See m^^i
g'f^cq- ^2_ g^ Likeness, re-
semblauce. 2 See '^^qfiT.
^R^^f A person paying tax.
HF^ a. (s) Having meaning.
j 2 Having ])ropevty, opulent, o
I Of tlie same meanina;.
m^'JTr /. (s) A table o ,
numbers ; an arrangement of ^F^'F^^ n. S pop. ^F^^ Com-
figtires to facilitate the calcula-
tions (of the Panchang, &c) :
H^^To ^e^^^To. 2 A
canal or a small river : a drain,
channel. 3 The large netting
which receives gathered man-
goes, &c.
57
pletion, fulfilment; the attained-
ness (l)y an action or a thing)
unto the ])roduct, ]iurpose, use
or end projjer to it : the crowned-
ness (of an agent or a person)
with the object sought by or the
excelleucy suitable to him.
^F5" a. s Wet, moist.
r
^f^ a. s Serpentine.
mf a.
^R^T^ Always, ever. •^T'^^r-
f^^ a. Of all times. ^l^^sjfsf^
a. Relating to all men; universal,
general, public. ■^Rf=?^ a. s
That belongs to all places;
universal, juiblic ■^l'5*TTf?T^ «•
s Relating to all beings: relating
to all the elements. ^l^iTTfl s
An universal emperor, a. Relat-
ing to the whole earth.
^F^ /.' (h) Bark, rind. n.
Husk. 2 The skin (of man or
beast) as rubbed off.
m^ n. (p) A year. 2 Annual
pay, salary. (-y^^^.
^rc=?^F^?"F (p) The coming
^F^^Tf A designation for
the individual of a body of
joint inheritors or in-oprietors •
that is holding, for that certain
year under view, the enjoyment
of the common inheritance or
propert}' ; this year'' s incumbent.
2 A person entertained for
one year.
^Fc^^^^F?"f^ n. The giving
away in marriage of the female
adorned with jewels and trinkets.
tTFc^J^^cT n. (p) The past
year. ad. or -^t During the
])ast year.
m^Z\ -fr/ The whole skin
(of man or beast). 2 A peeling;
of skin : a person's skin conterap-
tuouslj'.
V,, vj . •
^\^i -^ n. Skin, bark, rmd
(of a person, animal, plant) as
rublicd off: also a (lerson's skin
coiiteniptuonsly, as when liruised,
or iiurt, or a flaying, lashing, &c.
^F^^^^F^ ad. (p) Yearly.
tfFc^^T It. Bark, rind, husk,
skin.
^Fc^^F A quantity of chips.
^fcT^^^F f. (h) A revenue
term. The settlement for years
successively, or the jiajier detail-
ing and exhibiting it, of certain
recurring matters such as con-
tracts, leases, &c. 2 The arrange-
ment made by joint inheritors or
proprietors for the successive
^^^
450
5RT^^r=r
occupation and fruition of their
iiilii'ntance or property.
^r?^*?n^r -IW/. A store
sufficient for the jcar or a jear.
^rc=^JTsI^ n^ The present
year.
?T[?^riT#, ^rc^R==^r /. Salep.
^r^^ (1. (a) PTonest, sin'i|)le,
quiet ; free from vice ; — used of
man or beast. ¥T*«i¥T^, '^T-
vT'il/ Honesty, &'c.
^r?^r (h) a wife's brother.
1' App. to a sister's husband.
tTfc^r^f^ a. <f (p & a) An-
nual. Used with ^^, ^BffT, &c.
^rf^^TT ad. Annually.
^F'^ry. A wife's sister.
m=i^r^[^ ad. Yearly. 2 For
years. [honest man.
^f^ (h) a banker. 2 An
^T^^fT (h) a banker. 2 App.
to a person the crecUtor of. ^t-
■g^T^^/- The business of a
term for one who, with little or
no property, holds the airs and
the style suitable to opulence.
^I^^lCty. Dealing in money ;
the business of a ^I'^^T^.
^^^RT a. Mercantile; re-
lating to a banker.
^l^^l^ ad. Slowly, softly,
easily : -^jo '^T^T -"^TSIT-
^ETl^^r^ /. Slowness, easi-
ness : ])op. to bustle.
^Rf^cT a. Aware, attent.
-BT^^T n^ A wild animal.
^^^ a. Used only in comp.
as ^To 3Tlt A half mother.
^T^=5HTW The rivalry of rival
wives.
^l^^l a. Conscious, sensible.
2 Advertent, vip^ilant. 3 App.
fig. to one recoverin<^from sick-
nesss, emerging from poverty,
ignorance, &c.
^f^'-Tf^7/. Consciousness. 2
Attciitiveness, vigilance.
^^'^R a. (s) Attentive,
wakeful, n. At marriages and
munj. The uttering with grave
and solemn intonation of the
words ^g^=fl ^T^^T^ at the
moment of the completion of the
'^'^% and tlie removing, upon
the utterance, of the ^ffJ:M3
lietween the bride and bride-
groom ; or the fixing, upon the
subject of the thread-investi-
ture of the ^oT. The import
of the word is Mind ! take heed !
the hour is come! 3 Hence the
word is used for Marriage-
ceremony.
mm, m^to a. (s) That
has bound, definite, temperate :
That has yet time before it :
Also of which the term is yet
unexpired. 3 That has space
yet remaining to be crossed.
'Eff^^^ a. (s) Having- limbs
and numbers ; having parts.
mW^: f. Silk-cotton-tree.
m^T f. n. A mu.«cle or a
sinew. Used jj/. 'gi^^ "q^flTfl-
iETNr, m^X Recovery of
strength ; recruit of spirits ; re-
gathering of pristine vigor,
power, dignity, &c. v. %
mm^, mm^ V. c. To gather
up or together closely, compactly,
into narrow compass, or the suit-
able order. 2 To catch up and
rccover(a person or thing falling ) ;
■tjr^. 3 fig. To recover, re-
cruit. 4 To recover (a false stej)
or actj. 5 To uphold, sustain. (!
To keep regardfully ; to treat
with care : ^frT^T g^^t ^T-
Bm\ See 'ETf^^.
^[^"^4 n. s Sameness of color,
sameness of caste or tribe.
m^^\ f. (h) Shadow.
^[^fTR^Rf Bankers and
banking ; merchants aud mer-
cantile business.
^r^55T, ?TR3rr a. Of light
conii)lexion, fair. 2 Pur[)le.
mm\f. (s) The holy verse
of the Vedas, the repetition of
which forms an essential part
of the daily observances enjoined
to the Brahman. The prayer
is personified as the wife of
Brahma and the mystical
mother of the three Hindu
classes which are regenerated by
investiture with the sacred string.
^r^^ a. s Timid, fearful,
scrn|iulous, dubious.
^Wt^ a. s Doubtful. 2
Doubting.
m^\^ a. (s) With the eight
members ; consisting in the action
of the whole body. The word is
usually the epithet of ^^T'jfiT^,
■sjtTTT^ &c. ; and in this con-
junction it expresses Complete,
perfect, profound (iirostration,
obeisance, &c.) It is sometimes
used asn. without «Tfl^T^ or
m^m, m^m v. c To feel
with the band ; to ])ress and
squeeze, in order to discover. 2
To pass the band over (as ui)oa
a child, &c.) in a fondling manner.
V. i. To grope (as in the dark).
mm -mm n. The house of
one's husband's father.
mm\ A father-in-law. 2
When a term of kindred is
prefixed, e. g. B^T^^T^TT, tlie
meaning is the ^I«IT of one's
husband or wife.
?Tr^8r a. Sixty-six.
^f^lf^^ a.s Secular, worldly.
^iwr^^ a. s. Natural, in-
nate,
^r^^^ffr /. The house of
one's wife's father.
a. A girl dwelling in the bouse
of her husband's father. 2 fig.
A person absolutely at the beck
or luuler the thumb of.
^[§?:^W The residence of
a married girl in the house of
her busl)and's father. 2 The an-
noyance she sufters there :
Hence vexatious restraint.
^r^ f. A mother-in-law.
^R^-TIR^ a. (s) Relating to
■'J^I'*!;— «S ft business, ser-
m^^r
451
flr^rT
vice, &c. 2 That enjoys a ^-
^TT. [ed.
^r?'^K a. s Proud, conceit-
^rc^rr See ^?^k.
^rr^jf w. (s) Going with,
accompanying ; company, fellow-
ship.
^rg'rsr^ a. (s) Easy, simple.
2 That may or that does occur,
simply, spontaneously ; adven-
titious, incidental. ',1 See ^^51
ad.
B\^^ V. c. To suffer, bear.
^r?=T a. Poet. Small, little.
^IT^ n. (s) Violence, reck-
lessness. 2 Any desperate, daring
act.
mwm^ a. (s) pop. ^TT?"^r
Violent, furious, hot-brained.
^r?"r a. Six.
term for a long-pending litiga-
gation or other business ; a suit
in Chancery.
^r^P^ 71. (s) Assistance. 2
Fellowship.
^rfr^'T V. (s) See mW-
2 Companionship ; connection.
^rfl"^^^^ n. A letter be-
speaking aid or kind offices for.
^ril'^^R^ 71. A treatise
exhibiting and applying the
figures of rhetoric.
^r?T in.fl. The term used in
multiplying unity by six : ^^
■^I" ^1^1. 2 Poet. Six.
^rC^ (a) a lord or master.
2 A gentleman, esp. understood
of an English or a European
gentleman. 3 A term corre-
sponding with Sir, Mistress,
Madam, &c. 4 Used in comp. as
^[T^^tt^. 5 As affixed to a
respectful /(»>rtaZe; zfl^^To.
m'k^ ^r^ pi. The gentle-
men-peo]de. App. to the Brit-
ish gentlemen.
€[lfr /. (p) Mastership,
rule, sway. a. Belonging to the
British in India — manners, laws,
rule.
•\
^fCf^r Interest at rate of
six per cent. 2 A perquisite,
right, or share of six in the
hundred ; as appertaining to any
proprietor, &c. 3 The dues of
TTfl^f'^^ out of the 'aT^.
^m n. (s) Aid, help.
^r?TiTcf a. (s) Being auxiliary
unto, aiding.
^^f. A school. 2 A work-
shop. 3 In comp. Place; as
^FoS" f, Uncleaned rice. 2
also ^f'Est A porcupine.
^rS'ST^ a. Plain, simple :
fair, frank, sober; one that is
himself free from tortuous
policies and tricks and that
can make ready allowance for
the faults of others. 2 App. to
the business, acts of such
person.
^r^'TT f. Paring, shaving of.
Hfo5"'Jr V. c. To pare, shave. 2
To clear of dints. 3 To prune
(trees). 4 To peel, skin.
^ro^JTfoS" a. Extravagantly
long — a house, road.
^rso^^r /. Honesty, sim-
plicity, -gi'sj^^ -v( a. Honest,
simjde, orderly.
^1^1 See ^f^r.
^r^rwr a. Plain, simple,
honest.
^l^r f. Uncleaned rice.
^f^r A class of weavers. 2 f.
A wife's sister. 3 A porcupine.
^foSTJTfcST pi A general term
for the lower classes ; the vulgar,
^r^/. A porcupine.
^F^ItTT, ^r^r^ n. a trea-
tise upon the excellencies, blem-
ishes, &c. of the horse.
^raiTifl (h) a horse-doctor.
^r^ s An eye-witness. 2 /.
Evidence. 3 See ^T^T-
m^^ a. (s) That has some
conversancy with literature. 2
A])p. in the sense of An ab-
solute ignoramus.
^r^rr /■. Accordance with ex-
perience or observation ; esta-
blishment through actual mani-
festation (of the divinity of an
idol, the virtue of a charm, or
drug, the truth of an oracle, &c.)
2 A point in proof of indication;
any evidence, sign or mark.
^r^r^r prqy. (s) Before, in
the presence of. ad. Manifestly,
evidently. 3 In, by, or through
one's own self.
^r^r^R Proving, verifying ;
establishing (as true) in one's
own person, v. ^^, ^^'^ v(j-
■^T, 5- 2 Perception of a god
in a vision, v. ^\, ^l^^.
^r^TR^f^r a. That enjoys or
has enjoyed a vision of a god.
'dl^^^cT a. Perceived or ex-
perienced. 2 Done by self:
■^T ^ cqi^' (or <<J1^t) ^T»
^F^f^B^^ Personal connec-
tion with or relation unto ; af-
finity. 2 Personal encounter;
contact with.
^f^fT^ST a. s That is an
eye-witness of.
'^r^r An eye-witness : a wit-
ness. 2/. Evidence, testimony
(of deponents, facts, circumstan-
ces, &c.) ^T^^I^ c. A person
bearing- witness ; also "^TJ^t-
flT^T A witness.
^f'tf^ (s) Intent and perse-
vering pursuit of; ardent appli-
cation (of the mind) unto. v.
f^^'^FT ^T" ^1%. 2 Strong
bent ; setness towards of
heart and soul with full srvivg:
^f^lTr n. Close and constant
in the study, pursuit of.
■^\^'^ n. s Evidence, witness.
2 The business of an evidence.
r^ij /. A sneeze, v* ^, ^1.
r^^^r /. s Sand.
\^^^ f. (A) Polishing (of
rusty weapons) ; burnishing.
fpi^^^T -T\X. -JIT^. (p) A
polislier of tools, &c.
fiET^f^ &c. See under r^a".
ffr^^
452
fT^'^
F^^f^oT See \^mT^'
m^^ V. c. To sprinkle, to
scatter in small drops : to be-
sprinkle.
fe^R n. (s) Sprinkling. \k-
f^r{ p. Sprinkled.
nj^fTot See V^'m.
ra^lt /. (h) a ladder: a
staircase.
\^^ a. s White.
KTcT^"^ m, n, A grain of boil-
ed rire.
\mi^ See ftr^^^T.
r^^r^sTr, r%^n^3- f. The
custard apple. fgfiT^oS n. Its
^fnut. j-^jjg Araljian year.
r^cH a. (a) Sixty. Used of
rlr^f^^ y. c. To drizzle,
niisle — rain.
f%^f^r (h) a drop (of rain,
foam, &c.) as dashed against, v.
^■^. 2 A sprinkliii!^.
r^^5^ m. n. Read lead.
ftr^ p. (s) Accomplished,
made. 2 Established, proved. .S
Judged, decided ; — a cause, suit.
4 Framed, made ; — a rule, law.
6 Cooked ; ])re])ared. G Heady
— as a ])erson to act, an anininl
to be employed. / Adept (in
alchemy, &c.) 8 In gram. Con-
crete : Primitive. 9 ni. Au in-
spired writer, as A'^yas, &c'.; a
seer. 10 An adept, or magician.
1 1 An ascetic who has etFected
one or all of five jjurposcs ; viz.
the wealth of the gods, the form
of the gods, the society of the
gods, residence in any of the di-
vine lokas, identihcation with a
deity. E.\. of com|)ounds as p.
T%?'J^q" See r^"^, sig. 9,
l(», 11.
r^C^f^ A common term
for the individuals of a band
united in secret and fraudulent
concert.
(*T^f^ (s) Demonstrated
conclusion ; established truth.
2 A common name of eighteen
treatises upon a>tronomy, al-
gebra, &c. '6 Theorem.
r^l"r[cT^ a. Demonstrated.
m^m a. That is learned
in any Sindhaiit or scientitic
treatise. 2 An experimentalist.
r^^f^ n. Dressed food, vic-
tuals.
[^\^ f. s A supernatural
]iower sup]iosed to be acquirable
through the performance of
certain magical, mystical, or
alchymical rites or jirocesses.
2 Any marvelous skill. 3 The
fruit of a course of asccstie
severites, or of adoration of any
particular divinity. 4 Completion;
finished state (of a work, desire.)
5 Demonstration, proved state
(of an argument, plea, &c.)
() Adjudgment (of a dispute, &c.)
7 Enactment, formation ; framed
state (of rules, laws, &c).
8 Readiness through culinary
o])eration (of articles of food,
&c.) 9 Readiness (of a person
to act, a thing to be used).
10 Adeptness (in magical rite,
&e.) 11 The perfection of
mortal existence, viz. emancipa-
tion from transmigration, and
beatiiieation by absorption into
the essence of the Supreme
Si)irit. 12 Prosperity.
f^ {^) The ocean or a
sea. 2 The river Indus. '6 The
country Sindh. 4 The juice that
exudes from an elephant's tem-
l)les. 5/. A river.
[%^?r^'T n. (s) Rock-salt.
r^l" (s) A lion. 2 A sign of
the zodiac, Leo. 3 In comp.
The chief : TT^^ -v![^t\ fgo
Wg^^^jr s. A lion's mane.
fm'^K The roar of the lion.
2 The war-cry : any loud and
terrific cry : a deep, iiollow, and
solemn sound ;,as in caverns or
temples).
l^^'A (s) The position of
the i)hinet .Jupiter in the sign
Leo. 2 lig. The i)eriod of time
marked by this position.
fiRTRcTr?;^ n. (s) Pausing
and reviewing from time to time
(tlu' portion written or read).
\mm^ n. A throne.
raCRj: A lioness.
^fcir/. The wife of Rama-
chandra.
€rcTr\?r /. The portion of
a crop left (at reaping-time) ia
a corner for the Mahar.
^m%^ f. The custard-
apple, n. The fruit.
^f^r/.(s) A boundary, border
(of time, space, action). 2 Excess,
cxtravatiance.
^[^fePT'T n. The passage of
the borders ; es]). that celebrated
ujjon the festival of Dasra.
^f^ /. A boundary.
##sT[fr A border-neigh-
bor.
^ ind. (s) Good ; well, as
5"^ /. A needle.
^t^ f. A mid -wife.
^^'^ a. Dried up. 2 Slightly
dried. /. The fish called ^T^-
^ dried and preserved.
^^Z^ V. i. To dry up ; to
lose moisture.
g^HTr -Zm a. Desiccated ;—
as the body.
5^'^ V. i. To dry. 2 To
ebb awa}^ and leave the channel
dry ; — as the tide : to become
dry ; — as beds of rivers. 3 To
shrink and emaciate; — as the
body.
H'^cfoT 7,. The loose slip of
leather in a shoe to absorb the
l)erspirntion of the feet ; a cloth
(as under a saddle) to absorb the
perspiration.
H'^cTF f. The ebb or reflux
of the tide : low water.
^^^ a. (s) Easy to be done ;
facile.
5^?H 71. A virtuous action.
g^^ SceS'^r^.
^^r a. Dry, not wet. 2 fig.
Unproductive : heartless, insin-
cere : empty : void of meaning.
3"^!'^ -"J 71. (a) a rudder.
H^R^fT,TO'^^r A helms-
man. 2 fig. A leader, conductor
(of a body).
g^Ml^ ^iff/. A tiller.
?T^rrrr
453
?nr^
§"^rcrrf a pp. fia. to the burn-
ing of a himgry stomach ; to a dry
treatment or reception ; a dry
fare : a flat refusal ; a down right
scolding, v. ^ & ^¥.
^?^f ^^r^ A time of scarcity
occasioned by drought.
§'^ro5' A time of plenty.
^^r^^f^r Overcbeap mer-
chandise (with implication that
thev are not good).
S^ir^"^ n. A ripe plantain
peeled and dried.
S'S^f^ a. (s) Tender, soft.
§"1^^ n. (s) A virtuous or
meritorious action. 2 Virtue,
moral merit.
5^^^ a. k n. (s) Well-spo-
ken or ill-spoken: iTSjxii^cr Wif-
■rlf '5» ^^# rTK 85TI 31^n1 If
I have said any thing without
due consideration of its quality as
good or bad, pardon it ; ^raf-
oTT'^ Speak not unadvisedbj
in public.
3"^ n. (s) Ease, comfort ;
enjoyment ; satisfaction of the
body or spirit, happiness. Ex.
ofcomp. f^^^i;^, 3iT^l^;
§"^5"fS" A mild and gentle
purgative : a gentle and easy
purge or motion.
TOJ:^iT(^^^ n. s Experi-
ence of pleasure and pain. A term
of the Vedantists for Personal
existence.
^^3q"^f Easy delivery,
^I^TR An easy portion ;
'• lines fallen in pleasant places."
W^^\^ n. Debt wantonly
contracted. 2 An easy debt, a
debt payable at one's conveni-
ence.
^^^q a. Well, happy, ad.
Freely, readily, pleasantly.
^^m^ f. Residence at
any place during pleasure or
convenience ; residence without
any landed property, &c., to
operate as a tie or restraint.
^r^^^r, 5"^^^^ c. A person
sojourning at a place without
the connection of an estate, &c.,
but simply for his pleasure or
convenience.
^?I^q=l 71. (s) A festal
couch. 2 A word used in polite
inquiry after one's rest, health.
g?^^25Tr f, A coucb, bed,
given to a Brahman in order to
the obtainnient of happiness in
the next l)irth.
e"??g'i7r':TR n. Ease and
])eace ; rest and contentment.
^^m V. i. To revel one's
self in. 2 To become easy and
comfortable (as after sufferings).
g'^r^f^tJr A comfortable
allotment, v. ^"^^f, i, *TTJT.
^i^Rf^lt/. A happy hour.
5"^[^r ^\^Tf. A term for
an easy situation, a sinecure ; a
subsistence obtained easily,
^m^ ^FCr n. The maternal
mansion or very home of hajipi-
ncss.
TOr^*^ V. i. To be lost in
joy ; to be transported.
^m^'^ V. i. To be highly
pleased.
g-^^rj-^r^l m^^\ a term
for a husband and (changing
^T f^mrfl into ^ ^I'^fHuT)
wife reciprocally ; also for a
closely-attached friend.
g<I[^^ V. i. To become
easy and comfortable. 2 To be
gladdened.
g^Iffr Comfort, ease.
§"^r^rir^I=fR ad. With one's
own free consent ; of one's own
accord and jdeasure.
^?^re-€r-# ad. Voluntarily,
freely. 2 Easily, simply.
5'^l«-(s)Easy,enjoying com-
fort, ha]jpincss. 2 That is in good
circuuistuuces.
^^•f i ad. Freely, readily ;
without any obstruction ; with
perfect liberty : ?i" ^n*}"^ ^'Cf
P^ V. c. (h) To smell : to
suitf.
^^r^f. (s) Happy state.
3^^'^ (s) Fragrance, perfume.
m^^ a. Corrup. ^nm Of
pleasant odor, fragrant.
§^^r^ (s) A fragrance, a.
Fragrant.
§*Tm a, (s) Sweet-scented.
g^^*n^^5:52T ;i. A sweet-smell-
ing drug.
^^^r A perfumer.
^^^ a. Easy of access, of
acquisition. 2 Of kindly opera-
tion and easy passage. 3 Of easy
interpretation ; — as a book, sub-
ject.
^^ a. Skilful, clever.
^^'^ f. A species of the
Tailor-bird. a. Skilful, expert.
^'Rff y. Expertness.
pff"^/. A woman skilful
in domestic accomplishments
(cooking, &c.)
^mm Search, quest : finding;;.
?'• ^I=r, ^T^, ^TJI, f^^ g. of o.
^ s.
g"jTr /. The period of the
coming to maturity, or of the
abounding (of the products of
the earth, &c.), season, v.
5^f^ (s) A bonne bouche, a
dainty morsel.
^'TlfT a. s Of easy appre-
hension, se'zabie.
^^\t^ a. Well-made. 2 Easy
of performance. 3 Well-joined.
4 Well-contrived.
^^'^ V. i. To come into the
mind; to occur unto.
^'^'Try. Suggesting; a sug-
gestion, hint.
^^I^°T V. c. To inform, ap-
prize : to suggest.
^f^'f n. (s) A good omen ; a
good sign, mark.
^^^ V. i. To swell. 2 To
be intensively eager after.
5^*^ (s) A good man ; a
l^erson of mild, quiet, correct de-
portment, '^m^rijf. ^^^c^
n. Gentlemanliuess, afiability,
urbanity.
^sm
454
wm:
^'^T{ a. Swollen. 2 That
swells and heaves after : i. e.
that eagerly craves for.
5^FT a. Knowin":, intelli-
gent : well-informed : sharp,
readv.
^Z^ -W^T &c. ad. Imit. of
the sound Sut ! as fancied on
sudden slipping, sliding, &c. 2
Smartly, promptly. [shake.
^Z^m V. i. To be oft" in a
3^^r/. Release, deliverance
(from trouble, restraint, &c.)
Hd'-'Ni f. Release.
^^ V. i. (n) To become
loose ; to get loose from bonds;
to be extricated from trouble,
evil, of any kind. 2 To part ; to
be untied ; — as a knot, bandage-
3 To break out ; to come : to
arise into being ; — as perspira-
tion, tremors, an itching ; a
smell, discoloration : to spring
up (in the mind) powerfully ; —
as terror, anger, lust : to break
out and spread generally and
vehemently ;— as a plague, a
calamity : to break forth and
blow ; — wind: to set in furiously;
to descend in torrents ; — raiu :
to blaze and spread wildly
and irrestrainably ; — a fire : to
run off wildly and madly ;— a
frightened horse, bullock, &c.: to
burst all bounds and checks ;
to become dissolute. 4 To break
from (whatever may be suppos-
ed to restrain, embarrass, &c.)
and rush headlong upon, on, at
(a work, act, or course of action)
to set with full swiiifj; to engage
in ardently and with energetic
deteririiuation: ^T 'ilOfT -il-
■^f{ -JITfT ^2^T. -T To go off ;
to exjdode; — ii gun, &c. 6 To
burst its due limit ; i. e. to be-
come loose, flabby ;— used of the
belly.
g?H^r^ a. Compact; short
and* well-set : knit for activity
and briskness : little and neat ;
snug, trim ; — as a house : small,
contined.
g^r (I. Disengaged, detach-
ed. 2 Unbound, .'i Not fixed or
made fast. 1 Loose, bagging. 5
Not crowded or close. () Single,
separate : 2r"<;i^q<<I i, ^^ ^-
'N'^^'iTT^t. 7 Free, unengag-
ed. 8 Exempt, free.
^37/, (h) Remission (from
study, labor, service) ; leave or
liberty granted.
5^3" y. Ginger.
^^?r Ginger-candle. ^^-
^vfl n. Ginger-water.
^■^^r m. -^ n. A tatter
or an old rag. 2 Used abusively
to a person as a strip (of some
rotten old creature by way of
father, or mother).
§"'^r y. A stack of unthra sh-
ed corn ; a stack of sheaves.
5^5"T3" a Of good form, fa-
shion. 2 Lustrous, clear ; — a
gem, a color.
3^^ s A son. 2 A prince.
H"cRi n. Impurity arising
through a death, v. tj^.
^'^M a. Impure through
^ff*. /. Au instrument of
stone-splitters.
^cHPT ad. (s) Beyond, fur-
ther. 2 Altogether, utterly ; in
all ways and respects : '^T ^»
^'1 3TT%. 3 Never, by no
means ; not or none. «5iqT-
FTcfarry. Twine, string.
?ra[55if[^JTfiT A kind of snaf-
fie.
§■^1/. s A daughter.
§"crT f. (a) Circumcision.
3'^r^l A thick and strong
stuff of cotton. Used as carpet-
ing, sacking, &c. 2 A feMuale
garment of Ntigpur manufacture.
mK A carpenter. ^^\l'^ f.
Carpentry.
§^^r a. Made of cotton ; be-
longing t;) cotton. 2 Straight,
direct, level : regular, right. .'5
Correct, skilful ; that works by
line and Tide; — as an artist. 1
Tractable. .*> Threaded. In
^f^^r A spider. 2 The thread
wliii'h it spins.
^^\^\'^ f. n. Beginning to
sav. V. qs'^.
^^-C a (s) Handsome. 2
Capital, superb, fine, &c. %'^K\
f. A beautiful woman. ^^^
/. A beauty.
5^^H n. m. (s) The discus
of Vishnu. 2 fig. n. A clog,
an encumbrance, ad. Good-look-
ing.
5^r a. Pure, mere, simple.
^?^W ^\^^ n. The poverty
of the Brahman Sudama, i. e.
extreme poverty. ^'^Tfl ^f'CSfl
rt. Extremely poor. ^^TT
■^gj^ ^^ V. A term for a
cloth or clothes all in holes and
tatters. ^^THg^ /. (^^T^T
The name of a very poor
Brahman that was raised to
wealth and honors by Krishna.)
A term for a wretched town or vil-
lage where nothing can be procur-
ed. ^%^^^^ ^T% pL (A few
grains of })arched rice as given
by the poverty-stricken Sudama.)
A term used, humbly, by a
donor of his gift ; expressive of
his opinion of its worthlcssness,
and of his own insignificant
condition ; — a widow's mite.
'%^J^ pL A covert term for
])arched rice.
3^^[^r Search, inquiry, v.
^TJr,f*fg and ^TW,^T^ g. of s.
& o.
e-p^^T n. m. (s) Corrup. 5?f^
m. An auspicious day ; a day
free from evil omens, unlucky
aspects, &c., a day favoral)le for
any undertaking. 2 A ha])py day ;
a day of hearing glad tidings,
meeting with a friend, e.\|)cricnc-
ing s'lme good luck, &c. — a
faitstus dies.
5'^S' a. s Exceedingly firm,
fast, well-fixed : hard, compact,
strong.
5^Cf^^ /. Consciouness and
right undeistiiiuling ; sanity and
self-possession.
^^\ pre/). Together with,
along with. 2 Even.
W^l'f. (s) Nectar. 2 The
nectar of flowers. 3 Mortar,
plaster. 4 s Juice ; water ;
iightning. a. Right, projjcr :
^I ^I^T. [ing, comi)osing.
^fcjf^qf -OT^ -oir y; Adjust-
^W°t V. c. To adjust, com-
pose ; to make straight : to finish,
polish. V. i. To get straight; to
become conformable ; civilized ;
enlightened.
^^\^^ (s) Nectar. ' .^^
•^^R a. (s) Firm, undaunt-
^"•T^r a. Naked, bare, dreary.
^^•Tcf -cfry*. (a) Circumcision.
jB^frcfr /. (h) Insensibility
of the skin, Tactus imminutus.
2 Black leprosy, a. Empty, void.
§[=f[^^ f. (h) Explaining ;
the reading and explaining, in a
court, of a petition, &c. '?T^Tf^-
v\, V. c. To explain or tell.
5^'ir (a) a Mahomedan who
acknowledges the four successors
of Mahomed.
WJ^], Eq^\ f. A small
sifting fan or basket.
5^1^ n. A person worthy of
gifts and honors. ^qT"^^T«f
n. Giving to a person worthy of
a gift : a gift to such recipient-
^■fTlfr/. Betelnut.
§"f^^ a. Stout, sturdy ; a
good fat lump.
^^f^ n. A good crop.
3""^% /. A bedding.
g^irr^ ■«. (s) The break of
day. ad. also ^^HI^ At the
break of day.
5^!T^tF«, Closely connected,
composed. 2 Well ap[)lied, set,
laid. ad. Well, rightly, regularly ;
— used of acting, speaking.
3^^f^ Close and just con-
junction, connection. 2 Proper
application, direction.
giT^^a. Well-pleased, fa-
vorable. 2 Glad.
^%^Z^ V. c. To set in the
right direction or on the right
side (a thing upside-down, in-
side-out, &c.) V. i. To get into
the right direction.
2"^rJT a. Direct, risht ;
opp. to reverse or inverse.
W^^ a. (s) pop -55- That
bears good fruit — a tree : that has
proved productive— a busiaess. 3
Efficacious,
455
9^^ n. m. The fibrous inte-
guments of the cocoanut,
*TTir, ^Tt^T#t, &c. twisted
into threads or strings, m. A
hoof, esp. of the horse or ass.
9^^^ a. (p) Liwht and tight;
compact and firm ; small and of
just proportions; — as a person
as to his frame. 2 Pretty, neat.
» v»
^^'^ V. c. To cord (a bed-
stead, &c.) with sumb.
^^cTH^ -^ (h) a hoof-
parer, a butteris. '^^ff^TV^-^
/. Paring of the hoofs (of a
horse, &c.)
5^^TTf f, (h) State of peace
and plenty ; quiet and happy
state (of a town, &c.) fwise
51^^ -f^ a. (s) Intelligent,
9^^r^ a. Easy to be under-
stood; plain, clear. 2 Docile,
teachable, m. Good counsel,
advice.
5^^"W a. (s) Of a worshiping
spirit, devout, '^vifsi /. De-
voutness, piety : devout attach-
ment.
5^M"2r a. Symmetrical.
9^^r (a) a province, a subha.
2 The governor of a subha.
^^^ ad. In, upon, to or under
the head of the subhii ; — used
of registering, crediting, &c. mo-
nies.
^iTfl^cf rt. s Elegant or ac-
curate speech or composition;
fine discourse, a. Well-spoken,
possessing of elocution. 2 Spoken
eloquently.
^\^^ n. (s) Plentifulness
and cheapness of the necessaries
of life. 2 attrib. Abounding
and cheap; — used of a country,
a season.
»\
9^iT?"R (p) The governor of
a subha. 2 A native officer in
the army, a Subedar. ^^-
^ifr/. The office of Subedar.
5^H n. s. A flower.
5^^!^^ a. s. Of a right and
sound mind, not sad. 2 Of a
favorable mind towards.
g'^^fR' n.f. StillnesS; silence.
ad. Silently.
5*TR: m. n. (p) Number;
numerical amount : btI^ ^<>
ijw^ : excessiveness, immode-
rateness : 7?}t^ ^^ m^iJi ftf-
ft ; f%P?^^T moJIT^T ^o
^ «fTTf- 2 A conjectural es-
timate : conjecture or guess.
^T. 3 Moderatenes. "fi '^IT-
^T^' iMWT -^mi -fq^T ; -^T
4 Nearness, aboutness .- — with
application to time, space, ob-
jects or forms, and proper-
ties. ^T^ ^'ll^^ ^»^ ^T^-
^ q^*sJT; jqT "S'l^r^ ^»^
TT^ ^^ 3TTt ; '%\ ^^^\ ^\^
^^TlJT^ ^o^ 3TT^; "^Tfocf-
^'i ^o^ ^T^ ^^-if Tfi:
*f^ '^TfTl. Further, the word
is extensively applied in the
sense of Boundedness, compass,
&c., and thence, of Reasonable-
ness : connectedness, adapted-
ness: '^ ^\^ ^TSl 1x^^t?r
fSTT^T'^ ^o ^rpt^. {Range
or sphere of the action or state
Rotting) ; ^\ trr^T ^^^ffi't
^o^ ^TSfT {Ranye) ; '^T
^r{J (Dejiniteness. There's no
end to his stories, &c) ; ^l^
^ ( Compass ; range of powers,
resources) ; ^l 'fi^ ^^ ^TJT^T
?T^^ ^TSJT 'go XTT^rl ^T^t
{('ongruoits7iess; the correlation
of matters, and their require-
ments in consequence,as discern-
ed or as inhering in them) :
{Coherency ; consistency) ; '^T
'^T'^T ^o •IT^ {Advertence ;
aiming mind.) ^flKT^T Mo-
derate, middling : ^ ^l^^TT^
fTurri"
456
?rgT
^T^Tf^f a. Numeral; numer-
able. 2 Nmnherino:, registering;
as i^T^^'ItO', JTf^^o [Mem,
5PT^(s) The sacred mountain
^ijTti a. (s)Well-joined,com-
buied ; consistent.
5^ See ^^^.
5^ (s) A god.
5"^^^r-^f^|/.Asudden plunge
into Avater and dive. v. M'XK, \-
2 A rush (as through a erowd,
as of a fish through the water.)
V. 'fT^, %.• 3 k stream (of
any hquor) spurting out foreihly.
^^f^^T VI. To wrinkle : to
rutHe, jmeker.
^rjcTf y; A puckering,wrinkle
(ui):)n the body, cloth, &c.):
a told of loose skin.
3^^ A mine. v. ^r^. Also a
cavernous excavation as a passage.
^^3f\/. A mining q^TT;. a. Fit
for mining-work.
5"t7, ^Z m. n. A liairy
kind of caterpillar.
5^^ f. (a) Tiie countenance,
i'^^"^- [city Sural.
3[^^r a. Relating to the
m^\ f. (s) Tiie Ganges of
heaven, the galaxy.
9^ri?f /". s A fabulous covv,
the cow of plenty granting every
wish. (t. Sueet-smelliiig.
^nrr (p) Sulphuret of anti-
mony. 2 A mild form of leprosy.
V. ^Z, ^^K- 3 The name of
a 11 ^h.
^TRFT A species of the palm.
^4t See ^^^.
5T^f^ f. (a) The beginning;
tlic first steps. [locms.
9^^f^ f. (p) Trousers, panta-
3^^^ a. (;<) Tasty, savory,
lit. fig.
gre"^ m. n. (a) a INIalio-
incdan era, commencing with
.'iO'.) ,v. D.
mm .l\ ad. Imit. of the
liissing of gunpowder under ex-
plosion.
m'^\^ a. Straight and
smooth ; fair and flowing ; ])lain,
regular. Used lit. fig. of roads,
poems, act.s, sjjcech ; also of
persons, ad. Regularly, frcelj' —
continuing, acting.
^r^"^ 71. Pre-^erving or
keeping in good condition.
mmr{ p. Well kept; safe
and sound,
^n (h) a large knife, a
chop)ier. 2 A sort of dagger. 3/.
(s) Spirituous or vinous liquor.
2 X drinking vessel. [uitre.
mmR (h) Saltpetre or
m'm\ f. (s) A woman of
the gods, a courtesan of Swarg.
T-r-i- ' '^
§Tr^f^ The ])reeeptor of the
gods.
mn\^ n. The drinking of
s]Mrituous liquor.
^Ti^T^" s The froth of a vinous
liquor during fermentation, yeast.
err/, (ii) A knife.
fV^ See mn.
§'^^rcfy. (a) Beginning.
3^ (p) The cypress tree. p.
(.\) Begun. 2 Proceeding, con-
tinuing— a work. .'J Kept for
breeding; as^^ il'^T Stallion,
g-^^^ a. (p) Shameless,
blushing. [.some.
3^7 a (s) Beautiful, liand-
?T^^ a. Neat, pretty, liand-
some. ^^ITV f. Neatness ;
beauty.
3^^r^^rr Salti^etre.
g-S^^oTr/. Testing (of gold).
^^"301 V. c. To test (gold).
^c^^sf a. Decent, decorous.
^'^'Z^ V. c. To turn up or
set right again. 2 also v i. To
get right again (in the right
direction or on the right face).
H"c^2T a. Right, regular : oj))).
to reverse or inverse.
^'^cTf^r f. (p) A species of
grape. 2 Evil proceeding from
kings or governments.
g'^^r^ ^Iq" A kos establish-
ed by Tip|)oo Sultan, equivalent
to live English miles. |
5^^ a. (s) Easy of attain-
ment. 2 Easy of performance,
practicable.
g^^'T n. (s) An auspicious
mark, sign. 2 A virtue, grace; a re- .
commending feature. 3 atirib. Of
inispicious marks and signs : of
virtues, graces, and excellencies.
^^m (p) A hole bored in
gold and silver coins, &c., to as-
certain the purity of the metal.
V. ■ETT^, T?T^, ^T^. ■^^T^Wl/.
Boring gold or silver coins, &c.
^^TWi V. e. To bore gold or
silver coins or ornaments (in
])roving them), v. i. To show its
lac-stntHng — a worn gold trinket.
^^T^ a. That lias a siiUlkh
or hole bored in it ; — as a coin,
a trinket, &c.
5"^ -m (a) Good terms
witli ; amicable intercourse. 2
Cessation of hostilities.
^"^"^ 71. (s) Gold. a. Of a
good color : of a good family,
caste.
g'^of^*^^ 72. Steahngof gokl.
It is accounted amongst the
live grent crimes.
^^uflfiTq-^ A ceremony at
marriages. The sprinkling of the
l)ride and liridegroom with water
into which a piece of gold has
been dropped, the gold is after-
wards giveii to Brahmans.
3^ a. (s) That carries
well. 2 Tiiat endures well ; pa-
tient. 'A That is pleasant to lie
boriu', lit. fig. [i)lain, legii)le.
5"^F-^ a. Easy to be read ;
^^fn Agreeable tidings :
intelligence.
5"^Tff f. Good news,
mm'n See ^fri%%
3^W (s) A friigrance. ^^l-
fpf^ (I. Odoriferous, ■^^ifqrf
n. I'erfuiUv^d.
3?riMr /. A term of
courtsey for a woman whose
husl)and is alive.
<TfR /: A midwife.
?T^7 u. Timely and easy
|):irturition.
W^^i^ Sc'k^ for%3- Time.
As the time of the birth of a
jfTftr^r
child is a happy time. (Impurity
aiisiii;^ to a household through
tlie birth of a child in it.
g'fsi^Tr /. Good instruction,
traning. ''Sfsif^JT «• Well-in-
structed.
^■^r /. (h) a certain alTec-
tion of the bowels incidental to
children. 2 A cotton and striped
stuff.
^^\^ a. Of a good temper.
^Trrr^cT a. Very handsome ;
eles:a)itly embellished.
^^fcT"^ V. i. To become ex-
ceedinu;ly fatigued.
^"^F^ a. s Pleasant to be
heard ; — as music, pious speech,
&c.
g-JH" a. Fast asleep. ^^1^ /.
(s) Profound sleep,
^^'^r f. s The name of a
•sTf^ or tubular vessel in the
body.
5"^^fr -T\ A deep-drawn,
and full expiration, v. ^T^.
g"^?i[^^ V. i. To expire
deeply and forcibly.
^B^ m. ^B^^\f. (s) Good
company.
^■^r /. An alligator.
§"^^ -^ a. (s) Easy to be
suffered.
^¥13" Impetuous and loud-
sounding motion ; or the roar-
ing, singing, &c. accompany-
ing an impetuously moving body ;
— as the rushing and tearing
along (of a torrent) ; the roar-
ing sweep (of a squall or high
wind) ; the singing, whistling (of
arrows, bullets, Inrds in rapid
flight) ; a dash, rush, &c. 2 Vio-
lent ))ulsation. ad. Imit. of the
sound proceeding from certain
bodies in rapid and impetuous
motion ; as of rushing, roaring,
singing, &c. (of wind, a torrent,
a ship, arrow, &c).
g'^lHTof y_ i^ To rush, roar,
whiz, &c. rapidly.
^W-^ a. (s) Readily per-
formable, practicable.
^mm See 5"^^!^.
3"^^ a. (p) Lazy, indolent. 2
5S
457
Heavy, dull (as upon repletion,
as from cold, &c.) 3 Slow, dila-
tory— a person, ad. Without
care. v. ^^, -alsT, ^fj- '^^J
a. Slow, sluggish ; that acts
tardily. '^WT"<; /. Slowness,
dilatoriness, ^'gj^^ v. i- To
become lazy, languid. ^^
/. Laziness. 2 Heaviness, torpor.
.S Slowness.
TOfrT a. s Well-bathed.
^^^r/. An allig-ator. w. (s)
A pleasant note, sound, or tone.
a. Of a good musical sound.
e"rRr /. (H) Borax.
^§:[^^^^=T a. s Of smiling
or pleasant countenance.
§^^., ^^^ (s) A friend, a
person well hearted or well dis-
])osed. 2 An ally.
^I"^^'t*--ir pi. Friends and
relations.
^^S'^r A peak of a hill, any
peak, pinnacle, spire or cone ;
a canine tooth ; a fang ; a stub ;
a small stake ; any pointed body.
2 App. to a tall and tapering
tree. i3 A jamb or post of a door.
^o5"^^'T i\ I, To be affected
with a tingling sensation. 2 To
swarm ; to stir about busily.
^^i;an^ Exceeding fidget-
ing, or lively, brisk, and bustling
motion (as of children, of rats,
pigs, pups, &c) : busy swarm-
ing (as of worms, ants, &c.)
V. wfT^, «T^, ^K.
^S'^affcT a. Slippery : highly
polished. 2 Slack from much
wear. 3 Sleek.
5[^r The tusk of the elephant,
boar, &c. See ^^oRT sig. 1. 2
A roasting spit.
^3^RC€r (TIST/. A term for
any extremely perilous situation,
or for the person or thing so si-
tuated ; a jeopardy : ^JT'ST^
^5f a. (s) Learned, sensible,
intelligent.
^ f . A needle.
fT, ^ ad. Imit. of the hiss,
whiz (of a snake, bull, &c ; of
the whistling of the wind). /.
The hiss (of a snake, &c.) ; the
twang (of an arrow, bullet, stone,
&c.) 2 fig. A sudden running
oflp. V. ^^^, ^X-
^?;^ S A hog. 2 The hog-
deer.,
^^ a (s) Well-spoken or
said : well, good ; — used of a
matter in general whether spoken
or done.
^T^^ a. (s) That intimates,
informs. 2 That pierces, n. A
svmptom, sign.
^^^ n. 8 ^^=rr /. (s) Inti-
mating, hinting. 2 Notice, in-
telligence : intimation, hint.
^R-^r, ^S^f- s A needle. 2
An index : a list. 3 Any pream-
ble or preface.
^r^cT p. Communicated,
made known : hinted. 2 Inform-
ed, apprized of.
■^^[ a. s. In comp. That in-
dicates : '?^^'^.
^^^ a. 8 Conical, pyra-
midal.
^^/. Swelling : tumidness.
^Z f. Remission (of a debt
&c) : the sum remitted, abate-
ment. 2 Release from bondage.
3 Interval : T^l^l ^^^ S^
^T^ n. A bill of divorce,
manumission, &c. See '^\^^-
^^ Vest, inquiry ; search-
ing after, into, v. §, ^i^,
^T^, '^T'T. 2 Strict reckoning
with. V. ^T^, vfT^. 3 Abstract-
ing clearly out (of an account).
4 An account abstracted from
the village ^riT^w~\. 5 An
unbroken effort. ^^ yof g.
of o. (To look into) i. e. to take
revenge or satisfaction for.
^^ 11. A thread ; any string,
wire, line, fibre, but a cotton
thread or cotton threads parti-
cularly and eminently. 2 fig. A
line (of patronage) ; a resource
(of access, obtainment) ; a line
of connection with. 3 An ani-
malcule (as appearing in rotten
fruits or sores). 4 Texture. 6 fig.
Holding amicably together;
good terms with.
^TcT^ n. (s) Impurity (aris-
ing to the members of a family)
^^
458
from the birth of a chikl iu it ;
also from a death.
^^^ 'I. ]Iaving the inij)uritY
^\r{^\ /• s A woman recently
delivered.
^ n. (s) A thread, string,
line, fibre. 2 The striiii>; of :i
puppet, &c.; and hence, the art,
trick, mystery, key, spring (of
an ingenious piece of mechan-
ism, or a complicate business :
for T^^^, the incliuiiig of
the mind ; the will. 3 The
rule, law, cannon. 4 A rule
(in morals or science); a short,
obscure and technical sentence,
enjoniing some observance in
law or religion, or expressing
some rule in grammar, logic, &c.
S An ojjiniou or a decree in law.
() A string; a collection of
threads (as that worn over the
shoulder by the three first
classes).
^5'"-^rr The principal actor
of a company of players, and chief
interlocutor in the jirologue to
a drama. Tiie hohler and manager
of the strings (of puppets.) '6
The leading man (of a company).
^^ V. c. (Poet.) To kilh
^^r ti. s KiUiug, sU\ughter-
ing.
^ /". A daughter in law.
^ ». A scuttle-furm basket
for sifting corn.
^^f^^ 71. s The science of
cookery.
^^ f. A needle. The spike
involving the fruit-stalk of the
Plantain, &c.
^ A note in music. 2 A
tune; air l)reallied through the
nostril, r. qri^, '^TSf, o^T,
5^^T- -i A uioulli-instruinent
of music. 2 /. c. Spirituous
liquor.
^5 (s) The sun. 2 The sun
personified as a god. ^^cRtrSf
?i. Sunflower. ^■q^fff A
stone of fal)uions existence. It
is represented as bright and
glittering, and as sending forth
flame when the sunl)eams strike
upon it. It is worshiped as the
sua himself. 2 n, A sunllower.
^^^rr Saltpetre.
^^^TCTT )}. Solar eclipse.
^Wrr^tJT A name for the
sun as a god.
?T^J?r -En. An application
of the sunbeams; a heating or
drying (as of a chemical or
medical preparation) by expo-
sure to the sun.
^%?r-Jr«. Baked or dried
by the sunbeams.
m^lt\ #[^r A term for a
dull or bad son of a clever or
good father.
^Jf^^ n. The disk of the
sun. ^^if^^ 71. The region
of the sun.
^^m^l /. The solar system.
^^^^ A race of kings de-
scended from the sun.
^^(^7 771. n. Sunset.
^^r^q" Sunrise, ^^ffqi^^
That worships the sun.
^^qW^r/. Worship of the
sun.
^^ A stake on which cri-
minals are impaled. 2 App. to
an exceedingly steep and straight
hill, tree, &c., ditlicult to climb. '6
Sharp ])ain (in the belly, &e.,
head, &c.) : the disorder from
which it ])roceeds, as colic,
gout. &c. 4 A weapon, — a sort
of spike : an iron s])it.
^^■^ rt. (s) Little, atomic.
2 Tiiin, slender. 3 Fine, rare, sub-
tile. 4 fig. Sharp, nice, refined.
^J<^ n. s The divine monud
IJrahma. r , • w ,
r^ LS"''"'P-s'?:bted.
^^^^^\ a. Eagle-eyed,
m^^K See \mtW.
Wf{^K s The doctrine that
the soul cuii.sists of one ^Xi-
»TnJT or absolute atom.
^^■^ r. c. To create.
^^ p, s Created; joined.
'J''^ ./• (s) Creating; joiniu'j:.
2 The expansion of" Brahma
constituting tlie universal sys-
tem. ^fa^iT The course of
nature ; ^o^ ^i\ %jufj ^;j.
^T ^Tofl ^^^T- 2 Secular
life: ^(. %T^^ ^^1^ ^^m
•\
^^ (s) A bridge.
•\ .
^^^^ Adam's bridge.
•\
^'^ I- (s) ^n army, a force.
^•ITqfiT The connuaiider of
an army. •%»ri»Tl'(: Troops,
forces.
•\
?r^^ m. (s) A servant, a.
That serves, menial, servile. 3
That uses, employs, &c.
^^^ V. c. To use, adopt. 2
To serve, obev, worship.
•\ _^ "
^^ n. (s) Serving or
service. 2 Using, adopting, try-
^^^r a. s (Worthy or suit-
able) to be served. 2 (Proper)
to be used, employed.
^^r /' (s) Service, servitude.
2 Worshi]). 3 Religious service.
N.B. The word answers well
to Divine service.
^^f^^if The duties and obli-
gations, the peculiar offices,
virtues of service.
^f^^r A servant, esp. one
who has devoted himself to the
service of an idol, or one engaged
in Divine service.
#=^ a s ( Possible, &c.) to be
served or olieyed; to be honored.
%"^^ (A) Satan, devil. 2 //?. n.
A])p. to any ])crson or tiung
horril)le, iigly, furious, hateful,
harmful, &c.
^'4^ 11. m. (s) Rock-salt.
a. s Relating to the sea, marine.
%^[r^qicr s a general.
^r^ a s Military. 2 A milita-
ry man.
=>> "_
^'^ n. (s) An army.
%7r?i,%qr^ Dressing of food.
2 The food drcs'^ed. ^'qT^^?:
71. The kitchen, ^'cfl^ A cook.
_ %"qT^lDT/. A female cook.
'^^^ (A) A descendant of
Ilusyn, who was the descendant
iu the fifth degree of Mahomed.
&r?
459
^rrq"
<5^2:,gTfrr/.Self-vvilIerl,wiIful,
lieady. 2 Rude ;— as a language.
3 Barbarous ;— a person or prac-
tice.
^r"Ti^r^c7 n, A heading in
revenue-books. To it are refer-
red all classes of produce of tbe
field, the plantation and the
garden.
"H^f^^r ad. In numberless
directions and with wild ]>re-
cipitancy; — as an array fleeing ;
helterskelter : loosely, at random,
with wild liberty 5 — as beasts
foaming. ^^^^
^^ a. Slack, loose ; not
Ir^^Tfi" /. A slack rein,
loosness of restraint, lit. fig. v.
^^\m V. c. To slacken.
^^^ n. Poet. The choosing
of a spouse by a female.
vTlC /. Opportuneness of
circumstances ; harmonious and
fav^)rable ct)njuncti()n, connec-
tion, position (of affairs, articles,
items, &c.), in which consists the
commodiousness, comfortable-
ness, or convenience souicht
«r subsisting for any ))articular
work or act : ^T"Krf ^i^"^ %\\
tlT^T ^IT f^HlT^T^T -^rT ^^;
^, igr^T^t tT», &c. 2 Order-
ly and regular disposition :
^l-sjJT %To^ <sllf5 ^^f. 3
Any thing viewed as the sub-
ject, source, or seat of one's
comfort or happiness of condi-
tion ; one's means of sul)sistence,
an estate, office, profession, &c.
^IT^R a. Convenient, com-
modious, suitable; — as a place,
thing, &c.
^rfgJTR The fitness of
things; the appropriateness a-
daptedness, justness,consistency,
as inhering in actions, occurren-
ces, arrangements of measures
or schemes, &c. viewed in tiieir
prominent relations and respects:
^ft^ft% ad. Gradually and
gently, conveniently ; — paying a
debt, performing a work.
?fr^r, ^ra^r /. a piece of
ivory, wood, &c., used at cer-
tain plays,- — a piece.
m^^, mm V. i. To contract
a fondness or liking through
tasting the sweets of; to take to,
m^\^, m^\^ p. Addicted
or habituated.
^fT n. A part in a dramatic
representation ; an assumed
character and guise, v. ^TTiH",
g, ^x, & ^- 2 Sham, feint :
■^T^^T ^ifl^. 3. The empty
show of a thing : ^^'VTT^.^TT-
'^■^ §7%^ ^IIT ^91T^T 1 4 Used
of a man, animal, or thing view-
ed as queer, odd, comical, &c. ;
a grotesque object.
^R?r See ^RJt.
^r^STT 7?.Sham,ienit; a trick,
'^im / (p) An oath. v. ^^,
^, ■57^.
^rwqf^ofr -% /. Tlie main-
taining of a cluiracter assumed
(in a play, &c).
^[^r The skirt of a garment
(as trailing along or as hanging
loosely).
i\mf\ -^^r a. One who as-
sumes various disguises ; as in
dramatic representation. 2 A
shammer, inqiostor.
e^rfr /. c (^'^s Pure,(kc. As
this dish is jjiire enough to be
eaten when plain rice is for-
bidden.) Rice boiled after being
parclied. 2 In the Desh. Fine
wlieaten fioiu' : wheateu liom- in
line granules. 3 Wheat roughly
ground and boiled.
^[^^c7 .3" a. Shining bright :
sparkling : glossy.
^rnr a lone, straight, and
thick piece of wood; as for a beam,
pole, post : a lofty tree growing
straight up ; an extraordinary
long and thick style (as of the
Aloe). 2 App. to a tall monu-
ment. 3 fig. A lubberly dolt;
I a sturdy boor : a man or woman
I altogether single and sole. 4 fig.
1 A tall and upright man.
HTTirr A cudgel, club.
im, m^J (H) A club : a
mace. 2 fig. The sack hanging
out (as from the womb of cows
&c.) after the bursting of the
jvaters. v. JFJ^J, 31^. 3 See
%^3: sig. 1. [bearer.
^r2:^?:crrr (n) a mace-
^r^ /. Letting go freely;
setting at large. See ^^.
g'g- ^- [phant.
^r^/. The trunk of an ele-
#r^j]cr See ^r^Mr.
^r^^r See mzm,
m^X^zi -z\ -fr /. A bill of
release ; a deed of acquittance :
— as a bill of divorce.
^f^T^./"- Setting loose. 2
Partmg, severing. '6 Letting go.
^r^^y. c. (h) To let loose;
to extricate from restraint, trou-
ble. 2 To part, solve, sever; to
untie, undo. 3 To let go : to
remit, forego (a debt, right) : to
forgive, aljsolve : to leave, quit,
abandon, to let off (a gun, an
arrow): to let flow or run: to
emit, send forth (a smell, &c) :
to omit, pass by : to let loose
upon. 4 To gallop or ride (a
horse) so as to work him well.
m-^^f. (Port.) A sort of
lotterv.
•\
^r^^IHT / Reiterated and
idle untying and tying. 2 Fre-
quent loosening and fastening.
3 The office, business, or pro-
vince of loosening and fasten-
ing : W m^I-^1 ijo -JT^^t
^7«ff.
^\^^^ /. The ceremony
of loosening the munj from the
loins of a IJrahuian about sixteen
years after binding it.
^\^^^f. Liberation, deliver-
ance, ht fig. : ^T^^T 'sil'^'^r
^n"^=<}7^ ^ur i^^^j ^H-JT
^1° ^TTf. 2 Any means °of
deliverance ; _ any loop-hole,
salvo, specious pretext : jqr
^T7TTrT3qt?r ^T9 ^Tflt ?iTn^
^7 ^3^1.
mrgr
460
m^
mT^^\, ^l^'W^/. Causing
to let t^o. 2 Deliverance ; re-
lease, o Any means of releiise ;
any thing which liberates :
'TT^I «T^^ T^T ^To 3n^
^f?r^^ r. c. To cause to let
go. 2 To deliver, release ; to
extricate, sever : 3TT^ ^T^TtjT-
tf^TT ■tl^f^^T- 3 To draw
(ti:;ures of flowers, &c., npon the
ground). 4 (To loosen from the
owner.) To appropriate.
?ri3irr a. That has a trunk
or snout.
^K^ a. (s) Co-uterine,
'B'Kr (h) a gay, di?sohite,
pleasure-loving fellow ; a de-
bauchee : a sharper, a knave.
'QT^i^i^ /"■ Libertinism, ra-
kishness ; the practices or prin-
ciples of a ^T^T. ^T^Sirl a.
Kakish, knavish.
HR":^n2r^ /. Slight ac-
quauitance.
^R^ff^^r Crovv-phea.cant.
2 Apj). about Rcitnagiri, to *"Eor
SST^^T. 3 Synonymovis with
vt^^i =fiT^o3T A crow for the
credulous.
^'ff^^r A glow worm. App.
to the Firefly.
^HHJ'^I' n.{Littlfi (/(>}(/fJir/.)j\n
cpitliet uf endearment foraciiiM.
^H?TR A sort of actual
cautery applied csp. to the hoofs
of horses. 2 Heating gold and
suffering it to cool without
plunging it into water, r.
•^. 3 Abusing vehemently and
coarsly. r. "^ &; ^^'^.
mm^ /. n. A bright kind
of lirass.
^\^^oS\ r/. Having stripes of
a gulden color ; — as a cloth (for
a v-M^, S.C.) 2 Auburn;—
as hair : of a yellow color ;;-ns
a kind of wheat, &c. Also ^T'^-
^3BqT ^1^ Of a reddish and
bright yellow ; — as a horse or
color of the horse.
^>r5?ft /. (h) Senna.
m^Vf: A Goldsmith. 2 App.
to a churlish and niggardly
fellow. j-^j^g goldsmith.
m^K^l f. The business of
tn n. Gold. 2 App. to the
leaves of the A'pta, Shami, &c.
which are brought home as
booty by the people per-
forming ■^tfl'lPWI on the
festival of Dasra. 3 Worth,
value, excellence :^T^T ^t^^T
%l^'«r[ffl V. Gold and other
specie; cash or money. 2 Gold
and monies ; i. e. gold trinkets
and t;old, &c. coins.
^R^r (h) a. Golden.
^p^\ See ^Rf ^r.
^(T ri. m. c A sheath ot the
stock of the Plantain. ]
mi'h, ^m v. c. (h) To
conniiit to the charge, care of,
to deliver over to. v. i. Vulg.
for ^qvi.
Hl^ra.Fa('ilc\pasy of pet Torm-
ance. m. A long building, such
as a stable, barn : an arm or wing
of a house after this form ; a
branch of a veranda.
m^m^ a. s Having ^qi^T;
having cover, guise, some color-
ing, coating. 0|»p. to f^i^-qy-
f^ (Open, bare, pure) and
[ used with -^Tf -^^^ -'^'^.
mqf=T n. (s) A flight of
steps, a staircase ; a ladder.
JTRRF a. Easy, facile.
^*R^^t V. c. To strike
(clothes in washing them) against
a stone ; to strike violently (a
tiling in gen.) agaiiist the ground.
'J tig. To bang, beat (a person).
^R'Ty. (a) Company, so-
cietv : a companion.
^r^cir A companion, fellow.
2 Match, the man or fellotv for.
^T=irTlnT /. A feuutle coni-
nauiou.
^r^cTl^g-f^ a. Sociable,
^nr (s) The moon. 2 The
moon-plant : the juice of it. 3
See Somyag. 4 A name of
Shiva.
m^^i^ See =^*?^t^.
m^Z a. Warmish, slightly
warm.
mm\^ (s) A sacrifice at
which the juice of Soma is
drunk.
^\^^ (a) White arsenic.
^R^eir /. s The moon-
plant. %I*T^ a. Consisting
of arsenic, or that has arsenic
in it as a main ingredient — a
medicament.
HR^% /. A Monday in
which occurs the conjunction of
sun and moon.
^W^^ (s) The lunar dynas-
ty of princes supposed to de-
scend through liudha from the
™"o:'- [lunar dynasty.
^R^^OT a. Belonging to the
^^mT (s) Monday.
W\'^o^ a. Warmish, tepid.
^m. tw^r See ^rt", &c.
^Rrilcf /; Relation by mar-
riage, afHnitv.
^r*^^r A connection, one re-
lated by marriage. 2 \ term for
the gallant ke])t by the dancing
girl, slave-girl, &c.
el^T['-:[rq'^r A general term
f<n- a relation, friend, &c.
■FTf^^ry. A term for a mis-
. '^•'*^' [riage, affinity.
Hl^TU^/. Relation by mar-
il^m n. mTl m. Nitre. 2
A|)p. to a factitious snlt pre|)ar-
ed from saline ground.
^\^ n. Dried rind of the
Kokanib-fruit ormangostecn. m.
A stout rope.
^\^^ V. c. To divest of the
outer intcgninent; to skin, flay,
2 To shell •, to turn out of tiie
pod (seeds of leguminous i)lants).
^■•at^ P- Skinned, peeled,
barked. 2 lig. Peeled ; J. p. purr,
clean ; — used of rogues, knaves ;
^tToTT
4G1
_g^^
a pickled rogue, ft double-distilled
rascal. Also ?T#^ '^^^^ A
very pauper. ^\o -^fj^j; Pure
or absolute poverty.
^K^r, ^(fsrr a. Among
lirahruans. Pure, holy, clean,
that is m the state contradistin-
guished from BfT^oST or com-
mon; that has, by ablution or
other purificatory ceremony, at-
tained qualitication for the
highest and most sacred rites of
rehgion, and whom the touch of
persons or things in the ^T^-
531 or common state would
disqualify. The word is used
also of clothes, culinary vessels,
food and things in general, which,
by washing or other act of puri-
fication, are rendered fit, and of
certain things (such as silken and
woolen cloths) which are in-
herently and unvaryingly fit, for
the touch or use of the Sowala
person. 2 (Among some sub-
ordinate classes who, although
unauthorizeti by the Shastra,
make distinction and fuss.) He
who by bathing, &c., is pure and
fit for every thing. 3 fig. Uncon-
taminated or undefilcd (as by
any crime or bad action) : '^-
*TT^ ^T» ^T^. 4 fig. Pure,
free, &c. ; i. e. unfrequented, un-
defiled by the tread of man ; &c.
— as a road, a village ; exempt
from worldly business, &c.; free
from whatever is viewed as a
source of j)ollution ; — a person.
5 At weddings. Of ditferent
heads of trilje, not '^^i^^; —
used of the two families.
^I^^, ^[foS" n. A particular
silk cloth fit for the wear of a
person in the state described
under ifTWo3T-
HRnTr /. Borax.
€m a. Greedy.
HF^rr^ a. Patient, enduring:
forbearing.
^r^ Holding in; endurins:
forbearing, v, ^^.
^W Strong desirct v. ^' 2
See ^^^.
^Jr^"^ /. Endurance, bear-
^f^'T" V. c. To endure, bear.
i\ i. To agree with ; to be light,
salutary, &c. unto ; — as an article
of food.
^Wr^a. Patient, long suf-
fering. ^i„„
^r^^ a. Patient : forbear-
^f^T nd. Imit. of the sound
of sudden jintfs and blasts.
HFC^l? The conception or
realization of He (the Hindu
deity) being I and of I being
He ; the personal verification of
pantheism : '^\ %To f^'^T^T-
2 pop. The animal conscious-
ness, or instinctive notion of the
fcrtus in utero whilst uttering
^m IT ind. (s ^: He, ^T?"
I ; I am He, the Deity and I are
one.) An exclamation held by
the Hindus to be made, ever
and anon, by a child in the
womb ; exchanged, on his en-
tering this dark world for ^t-
'^iT Tf7?o am I ?
mg"iTJTf% f. erg"lTJTf%
Jlf^ n. s (I-and-he-person ;
I- and- he- person constituting
Brahm). A term for the human
being whilst enjoying the pure
and absolute light of the womb ;
he acquiring the dark, dark
notion of personality onlv
through the consciousness, the
intuition, the sensible percep-
tion, and the intellectual con-
viction and rational persuasion
characterizing the 3Tf%^T or
3T^T^ misnamed Life — all
sjjiritual science and truth being
inherent in the foetus-state ;
absolute nescience and ])ure
illusion pertaining to birth and
concious being.
^r§"3'r A festive ceremonv ;
a festivity. 2 Observing a fes-
tivity ; merry-making : rejoic-
ings. 3 Pop. An accident of
human life.
B\^\a. Sixteen. m^^R;?/.
Superlatively fine; — used of the
doing of an action or of the be-
ing of any person or thing.
^loSl nin't'^T ''iil^T A term
for a person or an animal over-
stocked with vices, tricks, blem-
ishes. ■tTo3T#^T'^ pi- See ^"-
^I^. 2 fig. Undergoing or
becoming the subject of all the
occurrences and accidents, all
the changes and chances, inci-
dent to humanity. r. ^T g. of s.
3 fig. Treating with the whole
code or body of courtsey and
polite etiquette ; or, ironi-
cally, treating with ridicule and
rudeness, with all contempt and
indignity, v- mxi g. of. o.
B\^^\ -^^r, ^r^Vr «.con-
taiuing or consisting of sixteen
pjlyli — a *{TTr.
'ETr^iTf^ A settlement of some
kind or other, good or bad.
%^[^' 71. s See ^5^R.
^f^^ n. s See g"^.
^f^'^ n. (s) Gentlemanli-
ness ; aflFability, urbanity.
E{^^^ -55" a. Brilliant, bright.
^l^M n. Beauty, loveliness.
HKr (p) Traffic, trade. 2
Goodsj wares : a conmiodity,
^T'^TJIT A Merchant. ^T^jiT^t
/. Commerce, trade, a. Mer-
cantile.
tr^rR%/. (s) Lightning.
t\l^\^^ n. (s) Good fortune.
2 App. to anything considered
as the cause, ground, seat of
good fortune, ])rosperty ; — as
learning, wisdom, rank, &c. 3
The happy and joyous state of
unfehood, as op|>. to widowhood;
consisting in the privileges of
using pigments, wearing orna-
ments, &c. : the ausi)iciousness
supjiosed to inhere in the hus-
band having dame.
r5» 4
'B"fiTF?Icrj The marriage-
string, — a string with a bit of
gold strung on it. The bride-
groom casts it, at the wedding,
around the neck of his bride, and
she wears it till widowed. Hence,
a husband.
^WrrjrST^q- n. Matter and
substances in general suitable
to the use of husband-having
women ; as ^^, &c.
^iJP^Tf fr /. A woman pos-
sessing a ^THTRJ; ft married
and uuwidovved woman.
^fhnf
^fiT^t^ H. 8 Riuhtnc?s and
soundness of mind. 2 Friendli-
ness or fiivorableness of mind.
m^^ a. (s) Mild, gentle;— a
person or a disposition : not
acrid, harsh;— as a medicine,
an o])er;ition, an act. 2 Quiet,
still. :i Lnuar. m. s The planet
Mcrcnry.
^Ifq-^fr-^r^?: s Wednesday.
#*^:^ffT^f^ A mild remedy
or measure.
h\X a. s. Belongiiiir to the
sun; — as worship, fast, &c. 2
iSohir ; — a day, &c. m. A solar
mouth. The i)lanet Saturn.
^Rr4 Corrui). of. ^^1^'.
^l^ f. (s) A neuter who
adopts the female garb. 2 Ajip.
to a forward unblushing female.
^r^^ «. s Easiness of ac-
(piisition. 2 Easiness of per-
tormauce; facility.
#1^^^ 71. 6 Sochal salt. 2
Natron.
#^'^V/. s Golden.
462
urine, &e): stupifaction from fear'
&c. : paralysis. 4 llinderance.
^cTiT^/2.(s)Sto])pini:: obstruct-
ing:. 2 Suppressing (as of any
of the functions or faculties of
an animal by magical incanta-
tions, or by medicincs,&c. 3 Any-
thing (a charm, &c.) by which
suppression (of a function, &c.ns
accomplished. 4 Restraining
the semen (through medicine or
mantra) : the medicine, &c.
ettecting this restraint.
^^^ n.(s) Praising ; praise.
^^^ prep. On account of;
for. '^^v\ Vs c. To praise, glori-
fy.^^"ST K.(s)Praising,Iauding.
^g«f1^ a. s (Worthy) to be
]iraised; laudable.
l^\^^ a s That praises. ^^^
p. s. Praised, ^frf/. (s) Praise,
applause. ^f?I'?l3^ s A bard,
an encomiast.
^r^^[^ (s) Panegyric.
^^^ a See ^cffHiq".
^^■^ n. s Stealing.
^1?^, ^fS"^ n. s Goodness. ! ^cTI^ n. (s) Praise. 2 A book
in celebration of the praises of :
a hvnin.
*\ "
^^R (s) A heap, mass,
multitude. 2 n. A body, band.
2 Excess.
^fcS" a. R. Rather brackish.
^RiT^ n. H See ^^^.
^^'-T (s) The shoulder. 2 An
urm of a tree ; a large l)ranch. '3
A section of a book, a book, a | i^\ ^ ^^^^ ^ woman : a
<'1''M'^*''"- female animal. 2 One's wife-
m'^^ 71. (s) SUiuibling. 21 :3 The female of trees and plants.
l)rj])i)ing. '.-i tig. Tripping
KDcccli. 4 Falling; sinnuig.
^^ a. (s) That stands, stays ;
as v^^, T?f^;gr.
^■^]^^ n. s An altar.
l^^ n. (s) A place, a spot. 2
Stead, room, place. 3 A station,
])ost. 4 s Dry and firm ground ;
terra firma, as opp. to sea.
^■q^^T a. (s) Terrestrial.
P-Tc^>f cTr/. (s) A local deity.
^^c^icTr 71. Another place.
^^'TR 71. (s) A place, a spot.
2 Situation. 3 Place, fig. ; season,
juncture. 4 Stead, lieu, place.
l^\^^^ .^^ a. (s) Fallen
from its place, lit. fig.
"E^FR^ a. s Local, topical ;
relating to any particular post,
condition, relation.
^'4R^ a. (s) That places, sets.
2 That establishes, erects, sets
up. 3 That settles, orders. 4
'I'hat proves, verifies.
^'4[7^ V. c. To place, set. 2
To establish.
^'m^ /i.^^m^J f. (s) Placing-,
setting. 2 Erecting, setting uj).
.3 Settling, ordaining. 4 Proving.
P-rrq^^T «. (Proper) to be
placed, laid, fixed. ^Tf^<T p-
Placed, set, established.
^TTZj. rt. To be set, fixed, &c.
crew, pack. 3 m. «. Emiitv vaunt- i-.^.r^.^ .
ing; haughtiness or pride. ^"^'f^* « » ^^^at resides;
^?3f^^/;. (s)That hasstnni-
l)]cd. 2 Drojipcd. .". Erred (in
speech, in moral action, ike.)
^^^ /; (s) A teat, pap, dug.
^^tjT^ n. Sucking of the
lircast.
^'^ n. s (Diawn from the
l)rcast or dugs.) Milk.
^^^'•-T p. (s) Stopped, arrested
in progress, lit fig. : obstructed.
2 Stunlv of mind : pop. fi.sed in
thought. ."3 Stilfcued. 4 Paralysed.
l^^^ V. i. To stop, stand
still.
^n (s) A post, pillar. 2
Stoppage. 3 Stoppage (as of
4 A word of tlie feminine gender:
^'^f^T'T 71. Property altogether
at the disi)osal of the wife.
^'^fO'^'T 71. A married couple,
^f^RlS" n. That is governed
by his wife or by women ; hen-
pecked, ike. : crtcminate.
^^|^q?r a. Devotedly at-
tiiehed to woman.
mi^n ,, The feminine ip^^^^ Standing, stay
gender. 2 allnb. Ut the teminme J ^ ^ o? ./
gender.
m'^ 71. s Womanhood, a.
Relating to a woman ; feminine.
2 Addicted to women; u.xorious,
&c.
tliat lives at, in, on, &c. perma-
nently : that inheres naturally.
^^P4r a. s That resides,
dwells. 2 Steady, stable.
^<!Tr^^ n. (s) Immovable pro-
perty : property which ought not
to be alienated, a. Fixed, not
moveable. 2 Immoveable, that
canwot be removed ; — as a field,
a house.
!^2Tr^5tiTrT a. Fixed and mov-
ing. 2 Immovable and movable;
— as an article of property.
F^r^r^T 71. A term for mi-
neral and vegetable poisons.
[^^-TR/. (s) Stay, rest; con-
tinuance ; residence ; state ;
situation, position ; stationed-
ncss (of any thing in any place).
F^5»ir^
463
^iT^r<T
'J One of the three states through j
which the universe passes, viz.
continuance or being. 3 lig.
Steadiness ; perseverance.
r^^TRT^ir^ /. Conduct, car-
riage (of a person) ; one's man-
ners and morals.
rP-Tr%^^nT^ a. 8 Elastic,
f^gjffl^'sil'ci^t? n. Elasticity.
Vk^'^ a. (s) Steady, firm,
fixed. 2 Permanent, abiding. 3
Constant, faithful. 4 Cahn, cool.
f^'^rjf^ ./"• Sedateness,
staidness : attrib. Sedate, sober.
2 Heaviness of understanding ;
attrib. dull or heavy.
R<iT^rfT V. i. To become
still or quiet. 2 To cease. 3 To
stop, stay; to rest, settle (at, in,
on).
r^^^FR^ V. c. To steady,
settle. 2 To stop. 3 To stay ; to
make to stop.
^^^ a. (s) Great, big. 2
Gross, bulky, corpulent. 3
Dense. 4 fig. Dull, stupid.
^^rA < C s The gross and
material body ; opp. to f^JI-
•^^. 2 A bulky body :
attrib. large-bodied.
<E^^^I5" a. Heavy-witted
■^2T^rfI«r n. A gross and rougb
measurement or measure. 2 A
rough conjecture, estimate. 3
Reckoning bv large periods, viz.
by years. 4 Used in translations.
Bulk or magnitude.
^■^H n. s Steadiness, fastness.
2 Staijility, endurance. 3 Con-
stancy, firmness. 4 Calmness (of
temper, &c.)
l^\^ p.sBalhed. HfcfF a. That
bathes.
^^H n. (s) Ablution.
HR^t^r /. A term for the
various acts and ceremonies
of the stated worship. 2 A covert
term for Bribery.
^'irj n. m. s A tendon or
sinews : — a muscle. ^T^Trf a.
Seated in the sinews — a disease,
I^''^ a. (s) Oily, greasy.
2 Cohesive. 3 Emolient.
♦\
^'IC (s) Any unctuous sub-
stance ; oil, &c. 2 Cohesivenses
3 fig. Affection, love, friendship,
%^^T^ /. Acquisition of
friendship.
Hc^rC/. A tenacious me-
mory ; attrib. of a retentive
memory.
^'llTiTr^ Friendly feeling.
^'T^'ir^cT a. A term used in
e])istles before the writer's own
name ; answering to Most
aft'ectionate.
♦\
H^r^ a. Containing oil or
the unctuous quality in an e.\-
ceeding degree. 2 or ^'^ToJ
Fond, loving.
^^fr a. Friendly. 2 Oily.
m. A friend.
^qv[(j[ y_ I 'Y^ contend with
in rivalry. ^•q'T/. (s) Emula-
tion or envy ; rivalry, ^"^r^
a. s Emulous, '^'^ff a. (s)
That copes with emulously or
enviously.
^^ (s) Touch, contact. 2
The sense of touch. 3 Tangi-
bility. 4 The philosopher's stone.
5 fig. A whit, jot, bit : "f ^-
^T^ot V. c. To touch. ^q#l
n. s Touching, ^"^ipt^, ^^
a. .s ( Proper) to be touched.
I'lmm /. s A tangent.
^T2"« (s) Clear, plain, open. 2
rigidly and closely accurate ; —
as a calculation. ^gWriiT u.
(s) That speaks clearly, distinct-
ly. 2 Plain-spoken, ^at^^-
v\. n. s .Mfdviug cL-ar, ]>hiin ;
explaining, illustrating, elucidat-
ing.
^^rr/. s A desire,
^"^r^:^ (s) Crystal.
m\Hj\ (s) pop. m^. Ap-
plause, honor : honoredness. 2
Greatness, grandeur, ceiel)ritv. v.
^^ p. (sj Blown, opened. 2
Burst, rent. 3 Exi)lained, de-
clared, revealed : open, plain, a.
Loose, detache(l ; that stands
alone, or forms no part of a col-
lection, or book; — as a stanza,
verse, tale. 2 In astron. Appa-
rent; as ^Z ^^JlOf:.
W^ w. (s) Blowing (of a
bud, &c.) 2 Bursting, splitting.
3 fig. Becoming public.
^Tl<:^r^ (s) Crackling, pop-
ing.
^^^^ V. i. To sob. ^5^=r n.
s Sobbing.
^J^'^ /*. (s) Quivering, thrill-
ing, vibrating motion (as of the
lips, &c.) : rapid coruscations or
gleaming (as of fire, swords) :
scintillation, sparkling (as of the
stars, of jewels, beams of the snu
upon water, &c.) : the quick
agitation of order or excited pas-
sion (as in fight, &c) : the trem-
bling (of rage, &c.) 2 fig. Rush-
ing into remembrance, 3 Palpi-
tation gen.
^^^^ V. i. To quiver, vibrate.
2 To rise to mind : to suKsest it-
self.
K'^lm (s) A spark.
^^^ P- (s) That has risen into
remembrance. 2 That is quiver-
ing.
^Jf^/.. (s) pop. ^^ The
awakening of a matter repositetl
in the mind; the cominij to mind.
2 See ^k:ut.
^^FT (s)"a boil, blister. 2
Bursting, rending, broken state.
3 Opening (of a fiower, &c.)
•s
^'^\Z^ n. s Breaking, burst-
ing by violence.
mi^ n. (s) Recollection, 7'e-
caUiiKj to mind. 2 Remembrance,
retention in mind. 3 Revival of
an idea ; return into the memorv.
4 Memory. 5 Mental recitation of
the names of a deity : calling
upon him in supplication or
adoration. 6 Any act or thing to
preserve the remembrance of, — a
monument, memento.
^rrrf^rjqfJT ,1. A memoran-
dum.
l^T^U f. A sort of rosary.
m^'m^ a. s Memorable.
^^^°t V. c. To recollect,
recall to mind ; to remember,
bear in mind. 2 To recite ment-
tally the names of a deity ; to
think upon him in supplication
or adoration.
^q^F^ See ^^m^.
^qrr^
464
^r^
^[^^ a. s That reminds.
^fcf a. (s) That follows the
doctrine of the Sniriti or inspired
codes of law. 2 Tliiit is prescrib-
ed by the Smriti. 3 lUdatinj; to
memory.
fl^^ n. s A smile, p. Smiling.
■2 Blown ; — as a bud.
^?^ V' (**) HecoUected.
^^ /. (s) Recollection :
memorv. 2 Law,— the body of law-
ns delivered originally by Manu
and other lei;islators to their
respective ])npils, and coinniit-
ted by tlieni from recollection
to writing : any book, canon of
tltis code.
^^frfTTR^ 11. s A treatise on
law.
^^?'T w. s A war-chariot.
^W\ V. c. To create.
^^ (s) Dripping, oozing ;
the falling, flowing (of any
li(piid body) in a gradual man-
ner. 2 Ooze, exudation.
^^^ n. s Dripping. 2 Urine;
sweat ; flowing ])us.
^^ V. I To drip, trickle ;
to fall — any liquid substance :
to emit, let fall,
'^^r a. s Tliat creates.
W^ (s) Dropping, oozing.
2 .Matter droi)ped. .'< Fall (of the
fd'tiis), miscarriage.
^f^^ a. s That causes to
ooze. 2 also ^t^ That emits :
^^ 'j)ron. (s) Own, proper.
n. m. Self. 2 n Property, wealth,
one's orrn,
^?^qr^^r?Trf Excogitated
l)y (me's own (crude and silly.
or devious and wicked) head.
f^^^ V. (s) One's own busi-
iicNS, office, duty.
mwm\X^^ Acquired by
oiu's's own toil.
^^=f)R o.Own, proper to self:
of one's own (family).
"^^f^r a. A kinsman or kins-
woman. 2 Of the same family.
^^^ r/.(s)Exceedingly pure;
free from filth, stain.
^^^-S"^ (s) One's own will
(wayward or devious), a. Wilful,
heaily. ad. Wilfully.
l^^^\ a. Self-willed, wilf.d.
^^sT a. s Self-born. m. One's
own son.
^^SfficT f. One's own caste.
^^cT: ad. (s) Of, from, by
or in one's self or itself; of
one's own or its own accord ;
in one's own or its own nature.
^^ a. (s) Independent,
free, absolute. By implication,
Of age. 2 Self-willed, unruly,
libertine. 3 That is separate,
apart.
^?cf:3TiTraT a. Self-proved,self-
evident.
'E^cT.r^^ a Self-accomplish-
ed, self-made: self-existent.
l^^\ See ^^cT:,
^^^^ n. (s) Ownness, pro-
priety, ownership. 2 Selt-exist-
ence. 'A Self-ness, individuality.
^^?^T n. Signature (of a
letter). 2 (Used with ^T3T«^,
T?'^^, &c.) Written with one's
own band.
^^?5T Native country.
^^'^ Own, proper, or pecu-
liar duty, ofKce ; as giving alms
is the ^o of a householder;
administering justice, the ^o
of a king. 2 The proper, native
or inherent cpiality.
^^-ir^ 71. One's own name.
^?TTflt a. A name's sake.
^^T-riTf^ ItCiiard to meum
et tuum ; distinguishing between
one's own things ami the things
of others: respect of persons; dis-
tinguishing between one's own
(relation, family, &c.) and the
multitude.
^W n. m. (s) Dreaming or
a dream ; the state of dreaming
or the visions appearing. ^"^
■^T^ s Pollutio nocturna. ^^-
^?T a. (s) Like a dream, il-
lusory. ^^f^^TT. s Interpre-
tation of dreams.^irf^'^T^ An
interpreter of dreams. ^^^f%
/. (s) The creation of dreams.
^W(f (s) Own or native
state ; the nature or the natural
temper : any natural property.
^T*Tm^r -JT'^^r (i<l in or with
natural course, passage, or move-
ment ; naturally, easily.
^^RfT: acf. Naturally.
^friTrf%^ -Cr^ a. Natnral,
native, ad. Simply, merely : of
itself.
^4 ad. Spontaneously.
^f^^%fcT a. s That shines by
his or its own native light, lit.
fig. An epithet of God. John
i. 5.
^f^^Ri Cooking one's food
with one's own hands. 2 Pop.
Cooking. .'^ The food dressed.
53?}qi3R^'C n. A kitchen. ^-
?Jtjj^ a cook. ^^Jqi^^nr/.
A female cook.
^^qr-^rST See ^^^^^tffcT. 2 fig.
Self-enlightened.
^f J^^fq" s Knowledge of self,
i. e. of self, spirit, or the universe
-deity-cause — these three being
one.
^?^^^ A name of H rah ma ;
also of Vishnu, Shiva, time, love,
a mountain, &e. a. Self-exis-
tent.
5f ^IT, ^f^THf ad. s Of one's
own self or accord.
??4^T m. n. (s) The choosing,
by a female of a man to be her
husband. ^*iq^T/. A female
that chooses her own husband.
^W ad. Of one's own self or
accord ; spontaneously.
IV: 11. s Sky. 2 See 1"^^. (s)
A note in music. 2 An accent.
3 A vowel. 4 Air breathed
through the nostril. 5 Sound.
^^r^^ fi. (Composed accord-
ing to the laws of music — a
song. ^TH*3T s Fluttering of
the voice, as indicative of agita-
tion.
^^^ Own or native juice;
the pure juice (as expressed
&c.) of fruits, &c. 2 fig. The
native sweetness, pathos, beauty
(of speech, a i)oem, ike.)
^?sr^
465
^ift
^f^T n. (s) One's own form.
2 One's visage, features. 3
Nature, one's natural constitu-
tion. 4 The native form, mode of
beino;. ^^q^ifs/- s Obtain-
ment of absorption into and
identification with Brahm.
^fT^fT^R a. masc. Of hand-
some form,/, ^^q^'ffl Beau-
tiful— a female.
^f^7[^rr a. s Having the
form and image of Brahm.
^^^% //. (s) That bears the
natural form or qualities of;
tliat is in the form ut'. In comp.
^^^(s) The heaven of Indra.
As Swarg is the main resiion in
which mortals receive the reward
of their virtuous actions, this
word, although faulty, is better
suited than any of the other
existing words to render the
Christian terra Heaven. Indra
will pass away, and Swarg will
be purified from its sensnousness.
2 Used in the sense of Sky or
heavens.
l^^m f. s The galaxy.
^^^flkif'^ n. Ascending to
heaven. Said of persons who
endeavor to pass to the north of
Badrika in the Hiuialaya, it be-
ing believed of such that they
will be swallowed up in the snow.
^^^ See ^^'^.
l^^\ f. s The galaxy.
^?c^r?r (s) Swarg or the pa-
radise of Indra, the residence of
the gods and of beatified mor-
tals.
l^^ a.(s) Very little. ^^^TT-
"^Tt Eating little: a slight
re[)ast: attrib. also ^<?cit'^T-
X] Moderate in eating, tem-
perate, abstemious.
^^^^ a. (s) Free, indepen-
dent, subject to himself.
^^I^ItT /. Own or proper
dutv. 2 Pop. One's own estate.
^fe^fTr^R ad. With one's free
will and consent.
^^^FTTfry, One's own right.
^^^ a. Corrup. from l^m. 2
Cheap, ^^i a. Cheap, ^^t-
59
\f. Cheapness. ^^T^of i'. i-
To cheapen.
^^i^^ ind. s A particle of
benediction. Ex. KlaiT "^^T
^f'51 ^^r 0 king ! may it be
well with thee! 2 An auspicious
particle. 3 A term of sanction
(so be it, amen, &c.) n. Welfare,
happiness.
mi^m ad. (s) Well and
happily; safely and soundly.
^f^^ a. (s) Easy, happy,
comfortable, I)eing in calm enjoy-
ment (whether of bodily health
and ease, of mental quiet and
peace, or of outward prosperity
or competence). 2 Cheap.
^fWr a. Cheap, l^imt f.
Cheapness.
^^Wf'T n- The territory of any
independent Raja or chieftain.
^^^^R'^ V. I. To become
composed, tranquil.
^^^-^tP^^ V. c. To cheapen.
2 (i^^q) To calm ; to make
settled and quiet.
^fr^fT n. One's own profit.
^^T^^ 71. (s) Welcoming;
welcome.
l^m f.7n. (n) Borax,
^ff-fj^ n. s Wilfulness,
waywardness,
^"^r? ft. Good, auspicious:
dutiful, docile. Used only with
the word ^T"^. It agrees with
^^fcf^^T n. s Independence,
freeness. 2 Wilfulnesss, unruli-
ness.
l^l^\ f. pL The fifteenth
lunar asterisra or the star
Arcturus. ^to^^T ^J^Sif3 The
rain which falls under this as-
terism. Said to produce pearls.
^^r^iTTJ^-f £ Personal con-
sciousness.
^^K (s) Taste, flavor, always
understood of pleasant taste. 2
Tasting. 3 Fragrance, scent.
^flrS" a. s pop. -S" also
^T«fl«l» Tasty, savory.
^RR a. (s) Subject to
himself; free. prp/). Under ; at
the control of: ^ 3T>ti^
^mi'a ^i» ^if. 3 In the
custody of.
^?R^ a. s Poet. Joying in
one's own joy; rejoicing iu self.
A title of Brahm.
^^RlTf/; s One's own or
personal experience or observa-
tion.
^fRiT^f^ %fr /. Poet.
One's own consciousness or inti-
mate realization ; i. e. one's ex-
perience of one's self, the uni-
verse-substance and subjective
cause (viz.) Brahm, and the uni-
verse as one.
^fWrP^?: a. (s) Natural, na-
tive ; pertaining uaturall)'. ad.
Simply, spontaneously: idly,
merely.
^?fTiT^R Self-conceit, attrib.
pop. ^TTHi^TifT Self-conceited.
mm'^^ n. (s) Mastership,
lordship. 2 The share out of the
products of a contract or farm
duo to him who holds it directly
from the State, &c.
^^ff^ry. A mistress, gover-
ness, &c.
^^f^r A master or lord : the
owner of. App. to the Deity,
a god, a king, a guru, a husband,
a learned Brahman, a gosawi,
san\asi,&c.
^^RlfrC Hatred indulged
against one's master.
^^rnr^ifr a. Having ^^itr-
^^IT (a) A man on horse-
back, a horseman, a. Mounted
tipon (horse-back, &c.)
HR^^" n. s Possession of,
inherently, sweetness, pathos,
fire, nerve, &c. 2 Goodness,
excellence : ^^*ir ^T^s(ri<1-
^r^r/. (p & A) Mounted state
upon horseback. 2 The equipage,
retinue, or train of a great
personage : Tjm\ gT^K! f*I^-
WT^ ^W^ 3T^^ ^T^ ?r-?ipc
^T»b\. 3 App. to the great
personage singly; or to any person
in the customary adulatory or
complimentary gtyle : ^
^^4
466
w^
f5I5T# %T^ ; and, more esp,
to a person contemplated as
in rnovemeut, and of whom
it is assumed that liis equii)a<;e
is correspondent with his worthi-
ness : ^TT^^1 ^I^ 1^ 3TT^1
4. A bady of troops as despatch-
ed, upon any service, from the
presence. 5 A rider : "^T ^i?
^?r5T (s) One's own profit :
one's own aim ; self-interest.
2 Inherent meaniuo; (of a
word, &c.) 3 Same uieanint;, a
pleonasm. 4 One's own projterty.
^T^^T:, ^t^'^TI^tJT «. That
is set upon his own pain or
his own ends ; self-interested
^T'^^'fl/. Selfishness : attrib.
selfish.
^^r=fr n. Selfish ; that pur-
sues only his own purposes.
l^M^"^ n. s corrup. im^.
Easiness, happiness. See the
adj. ^Sl. 2 App. to any
snug competence (as a pension,
&c.)
^frcr^?^^ V, c. To swallow or
devour greedily : to embezzle or
f/iilp.
l^l^roj ,,, s ^fl^r^ 171. (s)
Claiming, acknowledging; admit-
ting to be one's own j an admis-
sion, a confession. 2 Granting
(of a position, an argument, &c.)
.'i Undertaking:, assumiui'.
^?r?ir^'^ y. c. To claim, es-
pouse, grant : to undertake.
^^r^ a. (s) Own, belonging-
to self.
m'^fJ a. (s) Self-willed, wil-
ful. 2 Wanton, wayward ; — con-
duct. 3 Free, absolute, ^^i
/. One's own will. 2 Wilfulness.
^^T'^IT;. Wilfulness, wanton-
ness. ^'^T^ttI a. That acts
according to the dictates of his
own will, wUful.
^^? (s) l^erspiration. 2
Vapor. %^5i a. Engendered
by sweat, steam or warm vapor ;
— as iu ects, worms.
^^T a. s That goes whither-
soever he will; self-willed. ^K-
Jlff? / (s) "Walk according; to
the devices and desires of otie"s
own heart ; wantonness, attrib.
Wilful, wanton.
^fRff^lcr a. 8 Acquired by
one's self.
?" The thirty-third con-
sonant.
^ An interjection indicat-
ing attention, assent, &e. See
W^K^\ f. Puttins: off (of a
ship) : setting (of the sail in
order to put otF).
K^m V. 6'.(h) To put off; to
put out to sea (a ship.) 2 To hoist
(the snil, in order to i)ut off). 3
To start or set oif (a train or a
number of bullocks, carts, &c.)
4 To work along, impel (a boat
Vjy pulling the oars).
^■^r^'^ ??. c. To drive on or
awav (l)easts, &c.)
C+iFoT^ /'. General or vehe-
ment and confused calling (by
or to many).
Cr^^ /. (a) Account, stvite-
inent : affairs, events, facts.
"^f^^rr^TffT (i') A. written
account of occurrences.
?"^W (a) a physician.
?:^ 71. m. (a) Jliuht, title.
2 The share due (of the revenue
or of the crops) of the hereditary
district or village otfieers. o
fig. Province, peculiar business :
^^^i3<ft /. llight and cus-
tom ; right and due. "^^^T^
c. A holder of a share (of the
revenue or of the annual crops);
one to whom a portion is ai)point-
cd to he yiel'led. '^^^CI^ /.
Tlie holding of a share, &c ; the
quality or condition of '^^-
•^l^ : the share of the ^^^T^.
^"^=[1"^, ^^r?"^ arl. (P)
Riijhtly or wronglv ; justly or
unjustlv; — i. e. rashly, reckless-
ly-
?;^iTr^(H^ A rightful posses-
sion : '^1 ti^iB ^]^i "^o 3TT%
TTUT ^^\ ^I'STT.
?"^?:^r3T, i:^c^m[=^r «. (a)
Right and just ; truly and law-
fully pertaining to or due to.
?^C55^r?y a. Rightly and
truly due ; that lawfully belongs
to or is claimed by.
^f;r?"^Rr=^r «. Honest or
dishonest, fair or foul ; — used of
earnings.
^^ Ordure (of man and
beasts.) '^TT3iT^ /. Violent
])urging and vomitting.
^u^ V. c. To void (excre-
ment). 2 To cast forth (its
mucus) — the eye : to throw up
(dirt and tilth) — the sea: to
eject through the slackness of
the pin ^Hoiir at the pin-hole)
— a grinding mill, ^if^^
■^JI^T^^/. A place of general
resort for the disburdening of
nature.
rqj^r or ^^1^/. E vacua-
tion or urgent inclination to
evacuate through both of the
customary passages (from fright,
&c.) V. ^^, ^rar.
§7K"r a. That is ever and
anon voiding excrement. 2 fig.
Timid ; a funker. 3 Used freely
(of persons, things) in the sense
of Bad, vile, nasty; also in the
sense Poor, sorry, wretched.
^^f\ f. A stool, or raised
seat, &c. for the convenient dis-
burdening of nature : the little
frame for this purj)ose, suspend-
ed from the side of a ship, &c.
?"3T^W^i^r /. ?IT%^^ n.
Failures and misdoings of the
merest insignificancy ; petty mis-
demeanours. V. ^^\^, ^T*»TW^
^t^. ^T^, &c. E.K. ^r 3IVI^
Z'^^^ f. Loosennes of bow-
els.
^^1*1^ V. c. To confound,
^THT
467
kftm
disconcert : to nonplus : to baf-
fle : to mar, ruin (a scheme, &c.)
K^\^ (p) The season (as of
the products of the earth) ; the
time at which any thing or bu-
siness is most abundant.
^'irmr (p) Uproar, tumult,
riot : an assault, a setting; upon
with clamor and vociferation
and furious manifestation :
C'TRf a. Entertained for the
season or occasion ; — as a pubUc
servant. 2 Relating to the sea-
son.
Cl'n^^r a. That is yet un-
cleansed after discharging the
bowels. 2 tig. Unfinished — a
work. 3 Vile, loathsome : poor,
mean, puny.
w^T, Km^m^^ See i"T^rr,
&c.
?"^riT (a) A barber. ^^Wff
/. Shaving. 2 fig. Abusing
coarsely and foully, wii/giny,
rowing. 3 Fleecing, pilling, v.
"^X g. of o.
^^TIT a. (p) Thousand, a
thousand. '^SJT^I'TT^ A
cocoannt-tree which bears an-
nually about a thousand cocoa-
nuts. ^«II^r, '^MT^T '^STT^
a. Thousands, hosts, great
numbers.
5"^ Ob-itinacy ; obstinate
insisting upon. 2 A grudge, a
spite against.
?'3 A market, a bazar.
^^ /. CalliniZ. Hence
(quasi calling to one on his way)
sto[)ping. I', ♦ill^, ^liT.
WZ^'^, WZ^m f, CaUing to :
challenging, v. ^^, ^T?.
WZm V. c. (h) To bawl to
or call : to challenge. 2 To sisk
or inquire of. 3 To defy. 4. To
accost : to invite : to call. '^
^1^^ ad. Determinedly and
in defiance of; wilfully and in
sP't^ °f- [stubborn.
KZmK a. Sf c. Obstinate,
^cTS" Obstinate insisting
upon and contending for. 2 Im-
portunity.
WZ^ V. i. To recede, retire,
step back. v. c. To bruise (as
with the back of a spoon, &c.)
^fR?T?" Obstinate stickHng
for.
CJ^K Extreme obstinacy.
V. ^X, i, T?^. "^^^T<l c. Ex-
tremely stubborn.
^Z[^^ V, c. To push back ;
to cause to retire.
?'3"[3r a. Relating to the
bazar, ^. e. low, base. Pr. '■$-
Z(^ JI^ 3^TfoT H3T^ "i^I.
^Z^l a. Obstinate.
^ (s) A market, esp. a
movable market. 2 Obstinacy.
?"?ft^rMr /. A harlot.
^i^ /• R A petty market, or
fair. 2 A knot of houses or
people of one calling or caste ; as
«RTc3'^1^1 Gardners' row. Also
a cluster of huts (of shepherds,
&c.) at a little distance from the
village to which they belong. 3
An cncninpment of Bhils or
otlier lianditi : a rendezvous of
such people : a stronghold of
such : a crew of such.
^|r a. Kim^ c. Obsti-
nate, stubborn.
5"^ inil. A sound uttered in
driving off a dog, or in urging
on a bullock, &c.
?"^^r /. A little bone. 2
Ground allotted to the Mahars
for the reception of dead beasts.
^^^f ir^r A term for the
Maliar's Inam.
?"^^^r a. Bony, gaunt. 2
fig. Not pulpous — a fruit.
C^qoT V. c. To fan, flap,
winnow (fire, graifl, &c.)
§:^Tr A large coffer. 2 A
shutter over the mouth of a stair-
case. 3 A sort of cup-board.
^^^^■^(h Poet. )Tumult and
confusion ; hurry and hubbub.
=^^^^w[ V. i. To be hurried
and confused (as through a
tunmlt. 2 To be fidgety and
restless. "^'S^'^TSr Exceeding
tumult and confusion.
?^^^ a. Of strong bone or
frame, strong-knit. 2 Healthy
and hardy; hale and hearty. 3
Obstinate.
^^m v.c. To pull suddenly
and smartly. 2 To draw smartly
and forcibly in order to tighten
(a bundle, &c.) v. "^j^ : '^^^•T
2rt'^. 3 To jerk on the loom.
4 To strike smartly down
(upon the counter) a piece of
cloth in delivering it over to the
purchaser; uttering a few words
expressive of desire that the
article may be blessed to him.
5 To enjoin or charge strictly and
peremptorily. 6 To winnow
(grain in a sup).
ITS^^, Jsi^^^ ad. With sud-
den pulling and plucking. 2 With
smart striking down, &c. See
"^^^of. Hence Forcibly, vigor-
ously— accusing. 3 Peremptorily
— enjoining. 4. Decisively:
■^o '^T ^T^T f^^cT ^fir;
openly: '^» ^^T'^T ^T?T^T ;
broadly, bluntly : 'f <> «i^T^
^^C^T f. The scoffings,
reliutfs and contumelies (of the
wodd, &c.) : f*T^tfl ^^^T
Hence The wearisome wandering
(of a beggar, &c.) : ^l^i^T«ft
*TrfT "^o ^KT^ ^TJIfTi. 3
Painful inquietude, v. i. To dry
stiiily— a wet cloth, &c. 2 To
waste, emaciate, ^^^^[f^w
V. c. To hoot off: to scout, reject.
W^\ A cooking pot, or an
open-mouthed metal-vessel gen.
t"STT5rr/; A term for a wed-
ded jiair of which the bride is
bigger than the bridegroom.
?^f /. (h) a small cooking
pot. 2 A hanging (English) lamp.
C^Rm (h) The boy be-
longing to a party of conjurers.
2 App. to a pert and saucy or to
a prompt and ])recocious hoy. 3
A significant term for a child that
is ever in the kitchen and
amongst the pots anticij)ating
his dinner ; also for a sponger
or shabby fellow sharp at
smelling out a dinner but
slack at earning it.
kft^
468
^r
€";?fir¥^r /. a term for a
cooking pot or other vessel.
^-^ n. A small bone : a bone
contem]3tuously.
?"'^nRr A familiar name
of the monkey-god llanumi'in.
A]))i. to any obtrusive pretender.
^^^ V. c. To strike, beat. 2
To cut up. 3 To kill.
?"'JTif?r, ?-^if^ The monkey-
god Ilanuiuan.
g'tJTitcTit ^^ n. A term for
a longwinded story or a lengthy
and wearisome business — a lon<j
yarn; a case in Chancery.
CcT p. (s) Struck, hit. 2 Kill-
ed. 3 fig. Struck, blasted :
a. (s) Ill-fated, luckless,
?^^ 71. (h) An instrument,
veapon. '?«l^«i^ ^- Armed.
C^r^r (h) a large hammer.
€"fTr1rry. a small hammer.
^^ ind. An interjection
uttered in pushing aside or
«lrivingofFa beast, &c. Hence an
interj. of contemptuous or angry
reproof.
cWr An elephant. 2 The thir-
teenth nakshatra or lunar man-
eion. '^Tl't^T^fi^ A term for
a rigorous taskmaster. '^tiI^t-
'^^'^ A term for any person,
country, office, &c. tlirougli tlie
munificence of whom, or the
richness of which jjcople arc
maintained in comfort. ^=fJT-
'^^^ n. A term for an ex-
tensive, unwieldy, and unmanage-
able concern; fur a tedious job.
g^xir'n'/. A female elephant.
^^K\^ Ivory. ^^I^icff a.
Relating to ivory.
€^^r f. (s) Murder; killinu
(whether of man or aiiimalj
wliich is viewed as criminal.
?^^r^ 71. Desire of the male
(in mares or she-asscsl, heat.
€^^T „. (H) See C^^.
K'^^U:\ a. (s) That murders
or kills i as'^Tod ^•.
^■^^"t V. i. To tremble, vi-
brate : to be agitated as from a
shock; to be jolted, v. c. To
shake : to jolt.
K^f. (a) a limit, border. 2
The end or extremity of ; i.e.
excess.
C'T'f n. (si Stiikin'jf, hitting.
2 Cutting, chopping. 3 Killing
^•q»rt^ a. s To be killed.
^=r^?r, e^f ?r /. ?5 s The
chin. 2 The lower jaw.
rjflR (s) pop. W^^^. See
^7^r (a) An Abyssinian.
C'^nr An execration wrung
from or vented by an oppressed
person, v. §, '^. 2 Oppressing.
^■^rqT /. Fright or sudden
fear; alarm or apprehension.
V. g and, in con. '^^i «?!?!.
^^HT (p) A stated period at
which a portion of a sum due is
to be paid : the portion so paid,
an instalment.
^■frtfr/. Settlement for the
j)ayment of a sum by instal-
ments. 2 Payment by instal-
ments.
C^^ f. A place of sustaining
a shock, i. e. a losing trade ; a
loss sustained («. ^, 4^, <}v: ^):
a trouble, scrape, v. ^. 2 A
shock. 3 The word ejaculat-
ed by the ^TWT when he
invites the mK-
^^^^ V c. To shock, jolt. 2
lig. To plunder ; to pluck. 3 To
dash. V. i. To roar ; — as a tiger
in springing upon his prey. 2
To utter his cry,-^^l ! ^^T !
— a Waghya. "^cf^T A shock,
jolt. V. ^fj, ■^, «T^ : nT"^!^^
^* ^^<1TW- 2 A loss in trade.
V. ^^. 3 A smart dash oi
water, &c. with the hand (as
over a culinary preparation on
the fire), r. ^T^, "^, ^T^-
^-^^I^r The lowin";of a bull,
&c. 2 fig. Outcry, v. nj^.
K^l'^, tm^ V. i. To low ;
— as a cow, &c.
r^nj^n/. €^^^n. f. Thou-
ing and thee-ing ; angry speech.
w^^i See cq?fr.
^fc^?r/. (h) a distressful
condition.
W^^m, ^^^\l^ ad. (a) Pub-
licly and privately ; before, for,
or with all persons high and
low : 3?JT "^o T?^T f^^I ^ifoT
^T ^TTt ?T5^^T. - Positively.
^iT^R^a Altogether square.
?"^^fcr y, A piomiscuous
multitude, v. ^*T, ftTo?.
C^TTJEcTr The i)ublic road.
^H^\, r^TSTl^JT^r Wild gam-
boling. '^?i»nf/'.(p) Neighbor-
state or neighbor-relation, v.
^T3I, 3T¥. '^^illt^K c. A
neighbor.
^^r^ (\>) A mortar.
rfrf5T(?[^r (a & r) a bathing
house, a bath.
g'^TR^^clT A pestle and mor-
tar.
K^^^ (a) a bearer (of a
j)alanquin, Sec.) 2 A porter.
"^*TT^^./". The business of a
hamal. 2 The hire of a hamal.
riWr -% /. A lonor and
narrow m )ney-bag or purse.
C^r/. Assurance, v. t, ^^,^,
q^. "^Mt^I^ c. An assurance.
■^ffl^T^ /• The office of ^-
KH\^, t[^^ -^r ad. (i>) Al-
ways, ever.
^^ s A horse. ^^^ Sacri-
tice of a horse.
^^^t -^ f. Negligence,
carelessness ; inditierence, dila-
toriiiess, delaying.
C^r^Srq" (s) Selling of a
liorse. This is prohibited by the
Hindu law.
W^J f. (a) Shame, modesty.
r^rrcT/. (a) Life. Used in
notes.
5^ (s) A" name of Shiva.
^
469
wfh
C^ a. s That seizes, takes
avvav. In comp. as tj«T'^K:,
?"r a. (p) Every; as ^^^-sT.
?'fT^ pron. Every one.
?T^cr f, (a) Opposition ;
any measure or act in preven-
tion. V. mx:. "^^^nl. a. -w>^
c. One that opposes, hinders.
E'^^^tr c. (h) a person of
many crafts, a Jack of all trades.
K^^IT] (p) A courier.
^^^f^Cr Pron. Every one or
any one.
^^^'^ Joy or delight.
C^fTR -^ ad. (p) Always,
ever.
C^^^ ad. Continually.
r^'mvT^ Goods of all sorts.
^^^ n. fs) Seizins;, ravish-
ing. 2 Removing (as of pain,
sin) ; as t:|TR^o.
^^^ m n. An antelope, a
deer. 2 also "^fKJJf)/. A doe.
^^^ V c. To take away. 2
To carry off or away (pain, sin,
trouble). '6 To win, i. e. to bear
off (as a prize), v. i. To lose;
to fail, miss ; — as wisdom,
ability.
CTcT^r/". (p) Everyway and
manner.
W^^lo^f.m. Yellow orpirnent.
€"f^ ad. (p) Every moment.
^'I'^iT'^r^ Schemes, expe-
dients,devices. VsedpL: ^T^T-
^I3lf ^o ^^it ^TITflTrT.
2 Ingeniousness, inventiveness :
^1^1 a. (h) Wildly specula-
tive and enterprising ; full of
schemes and shifts. '^^'^T'O'-
^1 a. Relating to a Ilardas
— as dress, intonation, &c.
■^^^I^ A celebrator of the
Hindu deity in his incarnations.
He performs kathas, &c.,
relating the marvelous exploits
of gods and heroes with music
and chanting.
i:f?ltR[^r A term for a
wretched hack.
^^^a. (p) The two, both:
eacli of two. f ?:^q^«T^ The
two sides of a case brought into
court, the parties.
C^jT n. Meaning, intent.
?"^'1'T" V. c. To lose. V. i. To
1)0 lost.
CT^^^ Every effort and
exertion : all efforts and endea-
vors, &c. Used pi.
?T^ (a) a letter of the
alphabet. 2 fig. Blame, impeach-
ment, loord. V. tflTW, i:w, ^^^,
^TT, ^.
corn -^n A vetch, Gram :
a grain of gram.
^^3^1"^ f- Every device and
invention (as resorted to for the
accomplishment of an object).
pi. All devices and inventions, &c.
Cr^qR pron. Every one.
fTf^^cf ad. Every time,
continually.
f'TR'^ V. c. To lose, to cast
away or deprive one's self of
(property, reputation, health, &c.)
2 To cause to lose ; to deprive
of: to defeat (an opponent in
fight, play, &c.)
K^W^^ -5Tr ad. (p) Always.
?"^§^^ '^Cr?^ An invocation
or ejaculation indicative of ardor,
and uttered by troops on making
the onset, by a company on
attacking a feast, &c. m. Sudden
and complete destruction (as
occurring to any person or
thing).
?'^*T^ '^^ n. (p) Every art
and shrewd contrivance ; every
power of skill or cunning (as
adopted by or as existing in) :
pi. All arts and ingenuities, &c.
?T?=I?r a. (h) That is ac-
coraplished in all arts and cun-
ning contrivances: expert in many
crafts ; clever.
^^^ f. (h) a kind of grass.
■^^TSSl^ 553^/. A term for a
hardy and enduring race, tribe,
order, &c. that surviving all
persecutions, has ever some
standing and thriving representa-
tive ; also for an individual of
whom, with whatever arts and
efforts, the ejecting from his'
estate, office, &c. cannot be
effected ; also for a deeply seated
disease that, however repressed,
is again and again showing itself
under some or other form.
?^^r A large basket of a
particular form.
^^fT a. (a) Unlawful, wick-
ed, wrong. 2 Forbidden ; — as
an article of food. ^<:i«T^T^
c. A wicked doer. 2 One that
eats forbidden articles of food.
■^^Tfl^i^ /. (i') The doing
of unlawful actions. 2 The eat-
ing of forbidden articles of food.
3 The making of illicit gains.
^TRsfr^r a. Uougish, knav-
ish. '^^Tfl) «• Vile, base.
grrq'^lS", ^rW^rsr Adverse
time ; dechning day.
H^rr (s) A name of Vishnu
or of Krishna. 2 In S and in
old Prakrit books, it signifies A
horse ; a lion ; a monkeys a frog ;
the sun; the god Indra; the
god Yaina ; wind ; the moon ;
a ray of light; a parrot; a snake.
Cltq (s) eee ^^^.
5'ftcr a. s Green.
rftfST^ /. A term for the
Ekadashi.
CRST n. See €^^.
?IT5^r f. (s) Turmeric.
?"H:^r or -# /. Uivalry,
antagonism. 2 Boldness, daring :
bold doing.
^K^TTfT c. (s) A worshiper
of Vishnu. App. to a wanderer-
devotee who, renouncing all
secular sources, supports himself
by the name of Hari. 2 fig. A
hypocrite. 3 Used in the sense
of Simpleton, Johnny Raw, &c.
CrU^f^ n. An expressive
term for absolute and utter
devastation. [-^^^^^^ ^^y
^^i f. A line or row (as of
Ctr jvf'p. In the line or
direction of.
W<\^ 'W Joy, delight.
rffcftr /. s pop. Krf^l
Yellow myrobalara.
^t(7 or -^ (a) A rival or an
^^rigr
470
^■^nT
enemy. 2 Used in the sense of
Matcli, man for.
W^^ -^ Joy, gladness.
?'Tfr a. (s) That seizes, car-
ries off forcibly.
^qrS" 7n.f. (n) A snake of
a small green kind.
?^ (s) Joy, gladness. ^#^
». i. To rejoice, to be glad.
■^^^I?! s Madness arising from
excessive joy. ^ [lighted.
d^^ p. (s) Rejoiced, de-
?"^(s The mark (^) at the
root of a letter, denoting that it
has not the inherent short voh el
ssf, — that it is but a half letter.
V. "^j ^K. '2 A letter hearing
this mark.
g"^^ «. Lightish.
^r^prrS" Outcry and hub-
bub ; loud and confused clang-
Hig lof musical instruments).
rc^?il a. (II) Ljoht. 2 Small
or light; — a weight, length. 3
Weak, not ardent: ^*r^I f?-
^ ■^^ ^^t Vfrt f *?I^. 4
Light, mild, gentle; — as wind,
heat, &c. 5 Light ; — as an ar-
ticle of food, ti Light or soft ; —
used of water. 7 Trifling, slight;
• — a disease, a work. 8 Unim-
portant, insignificant. 9 Of lit-
tle or lo\v estimation, influence; —
a })erson. 10 Of low price : low,
moderate; — jjrice. 11 Frivolous,
puerile ; —a sii])ject. "^^c^T-
T^yi a. Exceedingly light. '%-
^^T^ul v.i. To become lighter,
feebler ; to diniiiiisli, abate, v. c.
To make lighter. 2 To humble,
lower (Of one's f)ride).
?^*r/. A kind of tabor.
^^^"^^ 7J, A term for a
very simple business.
W^^^\^(ul. Slowly, softly—
sp..aking. movmg. [i.or^^y
W^H.mX („) A confec-
^^^r (a) a svveatmeat. 2 A
fish — tlic black pomfret.
K^% -^ a. (a) Oppressed,
overcome, spent through sick-
ness, labor, &c. 2 Necessitous
«nd wretched. "^^igRt-Tal/'. Ex-
haustion, fatigue. 2 Distress
from penury.
?^r^ a. (a) Lawful, pure,
good. Used esp. of articles of
food ; and of certain articles.
2 Hence Projier, honest —
earnings, occupations.
r?^r^<^K (p A lawful eater)
A sweeper. '^^T'fl'^T^I /. The
condition, work, &c. of '?^[^-
^"•^1^^ w. (s) Poison pro-
duced from the ocean upon
churning of it by the gods and
titans. 2 The venom of serpents,
prison in gen.
^^R^r^fpZ. (A) The great
and small, noble and plebeian,
toute le moiide.
^P5"f (a) An attack, onset.
2 fig. A vigorous and determined
setting to (upon any work).
Ce5"r?"?:^cr/ A term for violent,
injurious, or vexatious intermed-
ling with one person by another
(as for assaults, arrests, ni;)les-
tations of whatever kind) ; also for
measures, acts in whatsoever
way obstructive, impeding :
ret r See citfr.
^^f'T n. (s) Oblation by fire
to a deity.
^"^1 /. (a) Air or wind. 2
AVeather. 3 The legion of the air,
the sky : tj^ -^^rf ^^rTTrf.
4 I'o}). Climate.
^=ric^ /: in.(A) Present state,
or the ])resent affairs (of a coun-
try, person).
?"^rc^QT V. c. To make over
to ; to commit into the care and
responsibility of (a debt to be
piiid).
€"^l^^r (p) An ofhcer of a
district under a Siibedar. 2 An
otlicer attached to forts. 3 The
cliief of a company of armed men,
l)eons, &c. 4 A non-commision-
ed officer in the Native army eor-
res|)oudiiig with Serjeant.
Wm^\ (a) Charge, trust,
care : responsil)Ic custody :
charge (to i)ay on account of)
as committed, i'. ^, ^.
S"srr?^T -^1 ad. In charge of,
&c.
C^5Trr a. Airy, breezy.
^n'^^ 71. (s) An article in
general fit. to be offered by
fire. 2 An article (as wheat,
cow's milk, &c.) particularly
pure, and suitable to be eaten
upon holy days. 3 Restriction
of one's self, by vow or rule, to
pure and holy articles of food.
4 A])p. freely to any observance,
practice, custom or course, whe-
ther religious, or licentious and
wicked or iiulifferent : ■^T
^^^r/. (a) a large house;
a palace, mansion, a seat, a villa,
a ffentleniau's residence. 2 Used
(wlietlier j)refixed or affixeil)
with the name of the chief town,
of a ])roviiice, or collectorate ;
denoting the Head quarters.
C^ n. (s) Clarified butter,
rice, &c. taken, or viewed as
fit, to be used as burnt-offering.
K°^\^ (A) Desire, lust ; any
longing or ilchinc/. v. g.
^^rr^ See Km^.
C^ (s) A swan or goose : a
duck. 2 A gander. '6 One of the
vital airs: the Jiwi'itma or ani-
mal soul (from the conceit of
the body being a ri^l^KT). 4
An ascetic of a certain order. 5
A natne of pantheism for Brahm
as tlie spiritual siil)stance consti-
tuting the visil)le universe. 6 A
name of N'isluui, of the sun, &e.
C^JTl'^ a. That stalks like a
swan ; — a female.
r^ET^^ t^^^i V. c. To jerk.
2 fig. or cant. To bob (money
&c.) out of. .'1 To fling or ciist
(terms of nl)use, &e) : to scold.
^^^r,r^?[ A jerk. 2 fig.
Hating coarsely, scolding, v. ^.
C^wf, kw^ V. c. To ridicule,
deride, v. i. To laugh. 2 fig. To
gape, yawn.
^^rrFp. a. Lau;j,hing. Hence
CJavsome, merry.
t^^K (s) The cry of the
goose, cackling.
^^, t^^n. Laughter, v. ^'
2'^DevM state. 3 A laughing-
stock.
€"^cr (s) A hand. 2 A cubit
measured bv the hand and arm.
3 An elephant's trunk. 4 The
thirteenth lunar as-terism.
^garf The hand, a hand. 2
fio-. A mate, the hand of. ^^-
^m^ -^ »• Dexterity, ex-
pertness. '^^^T n. An assist-
ant, a mate. '^^f^??T/. Any
manual performance. "^^iTfT
a. Gone into the hands of;
fallen into the power, charge, or
care of.
^lr{m Lnck, quality of
affecting, in a good or evil
manner^ the things touched, the
works done, or the i)ersons,
business, &c. with whom or
which connection is held; as
supposed to inhere in every
human agent :— the power or
principle 'to which is referred,
as the source and spring, the
piosperousness or wretchedness,
the successfulness or unsuccess-
fulness, which attends and cha-
racterizes him through his
coiu-se of life.
?^cT^nT?^" 11. Manual quick-
ness and skilfulness.
g'^cTc^^f^'f n. Dexterity. 2
Slight of hand or leger de main.
^cfd^r^ Contraction of
the hand, i. e. parsimony.
?^crf«^^ n. A writing of
one's hand ; a signature, a i)arti-
cular handwriting.
I'R^^cr m. n. Ivory. ^'f^cRcTr
fl. Relating to ivory.
?"f^^^r /. A female ele-
phant. 2 An individual of one of
the four classes into which
woman-kind is distinguished.
e^^r An elephant. 2 See
"^^ Sig. 4.
€^cT ad. By, from, into, &c.
the hand of— receiving or paying
monies, &c ; by the hand of.
"Used in accounts and writings.
C^"^^^^ ad. Whetlier with
one's own hand or through the
hand of another— giving, doing,
&c.
471
tt^ inter j. Hem ! eh ! lia ! v.
WWK interj. Ha, Iia, ha.
^oS'J^ -5^3" n. A clove of the
root of turmeric. [or the root.
^25"^/'. Turmeric — the plant
^aS'Z^^ n. T!ie ceremony of
presenting to husband-havuig
ladies, in the month of '^^
&c. turmeric-powder and ^^.
cs-f?:^r, K^^m a. of the
color of turu;eric.
?"^^r (h) a sort of Jaundice.
2 A kind of poison. Bees' bread.
WoS^^l a. or easy, open, so-
cial disposition.
?"«r^ (I, Rather rapid in
ripening ; — as kinds of grain. 2
Soft, gentle — a disposition. 3
Tender, dehcate : tender — a
structure. 4 Poor, lean. 6 esp.
with ail"^! Shallovv-witted. 6
*T^^T "f • Incapable of endur-
ing hunger.
^06?" 3" -CfSry, Inquietude ;
painful restlessness; great per-
turbation (of body or of mind.)
V. ^T3T, ^12^, *^- 2 Painful
res-ret. v. ^TT, ^^.
^oS'g^^'T y. i. To be unquiet
and anxious, &c. '?S3'?31<T a.
Unquiet and anxious.
g"^^?: a. (Poet.) Rather
light, soft. 2 Light, low.
?"3;^afZ. (h) Ligiitly, sofily ;
—used of speaking, walking.
K\ prmi. He ; or this (person
or thing expressed by a word of
the masculine gender). 2 There
is a striking use of this pronoun
in order to convey the impres-
siou of instantaneity, or sujjerla-
tive briefness of tiuie, or
extreme celerity of action;
i. e. This very I (unaffected by
the lapse even of a moment)
will rejoin you : *f^ '^l'^ ^T^T
I am returned the very person
that left you ; i. e. I am back
in a trice. 3 An interj. of hasty
prohibition or menacing repres-
sion. 4 interj. (s) Alas ! ha ! ah !
^\ ad. (h) a particle express-
ing consent, admission, &c., yes.
2 An interjection indicative of
sudden pleasure or of slight and
agreeable surprise. Ah ! yes !
3 An interj. of pain. v. ?fT7I 4.
An interj. to arouse, excite, and
make attentive (to something
that is particularly inculcated) :
W\^, ri^ /. (h) a call or
loud cry after or to, v. fllT. 2
A general and loud calling to. 3
Notoriety, public talk about. 4
The distance or reach of a call :
^T ^T?^T. 5 The call or cry
out, by a vender of the price of
his goods ; t. e. (by implication)
his exorbitant demand : faj'^-
Cr^^^r V. c. (h) To drive ; to
urge (beasts, &c.) by voice and
stick : to drive off. 2 To carry
on; to drive (worldly business,
&c.) 3 To drive (a bargain) ; to
set or state or strive to effect
(high terms) ; to give forth care-
lesslv (reports, &c.)
Wmi^ f. Calling and hal-
looing.
Cr^r^T m. "^ryi a general
calling unto. 2 An outcry
against; a combined or a vehe-
ment decrying, &c. : a general
outcry for (as for a thing want-
ed) : uproar, riot. 3 Notoriety.
C[^[CT^ -^r f. General and
vehement or confused calling
or bawling {by or to many). 2
General outcry after : ■qi^^T-
'^ ^T» ; general outcry
against (as for evil deeds ) :
^Trl^T^T"^^ '^T". General cry-
ing up or raising (of prices, &c.)
^\%H (a) a ruler or head
man (over a town, &c.)
?"lR^r /. (p) Presence (as
opp. to absence). 2 Mustering or
muster, v. g g. of 0. ''^tPsj^
^31:^1 -tlZ m -^T^ /. A mus-
ter-roll.
W\^ interj. (h) Yes sir, yes,
please your Worship.
?Tsfh:
472
5TT33*
rRK a. (a) Present.
^T^TI^^r^ A ready answer;
a repartee, a. That answers
readly.^Tsfl^IaT^Tsrf a. Ready-
witted.
rri^KsTI^R A security for
tlie appearance of, bail.
?TJ A market, a bazar.
^rr n. A bone. 2 fig. Stock,
root : m\ ^'T^T'il ^l^ ^r. 3
Frame, make (of a man or beast.)
^T^^msajT (I. lll-t'ated. 2 also
■^TS'^'TToaT Ileadstrong.heady.
?ri^r See ^^^.
^r^^TS" a. Lean, meagre.
^^^^ w. The frame of the
l)()(ly.
?T^^^t, f F^P?r Fever seat-
ed in the bones.
?r^r n. Deadly hatred.
Ci'i"^, ?"r^^f f. A female
?"1^1'"- [ton.
rrTi^^rq^-^iqsrr A skeie-
?rT^ n. A little bene.
?"f?|cZT Service land or
Iiuun bestowed on Mahars. 2
Revenue derived from sucli
lands.
?T^ f. See ^f^.
g'R^ V. r. To strike, beat.
2 To cut up or slash thronj^li ;
to chop. 3 To kill. "^HTflT p.
pr. That is striking, cutting up.
?r^ A hand : an arm, the
whole arm : the forearm. 2 A
cubit measured by the lianil and
forearm. .'5 Side, rifrbt or left :
?TIW 3TI%. 4l*rovince, sphere,
ranfj;e of power or right : g^
?|fT5 ^Xm ^ *TT??IT ^Trrtf*
•11^. 5 Person or self: '^"1
irm wr^T ^F?fT^ ^^wtt
'Sf\'^. 6 Possession : ^t^?f
^I|?IT '^Trff ^'IT ^T^"^. 7 A
beat (upon a drum, Ike): any
particular play or diversity of
nianceuvring (at fencing, &c). 8
Skill of ]ierf()rmauce (with
respect to works or actions be-
longing to the hand) : 7?JI^T
3TT^. 9 The key of, a key
considered as the hand of a lock.
10 A hand at the games with
sonktya, &c. 1 1 A helpmate,
assistant. 12 An application of
the hand , a passing over of the
hands (as in giving a coating of
paint, a wash of whitewash,
&c}. l.'i A stroke of the hand in
many variations of the sense.
^fcTTiirfr Disenoaijement of
one's hand (or self) from any
difficulty or work. 2 Taking
one's revenge, v. ^K- 3 Rea-
lizing of one's original stock
adventured or lent.
^[cTT^^T f. Monies taken
up at different times (as from
one's banker) out of one's own
funds. 2 One's original stock (as
inve.-ited, embarked, &c.)
g"rcT3"^c^^T a. Lifted up by
the hand ; i. e. voluntarily
given. 2 Undertaken, takenin
hand;— a. business.
gTcTS^oT n. A loan void of
any voucher, made for an occa-
sion and of brief terms.
^TlcTJOT See ^l^^"^.
rm?rf /. Sudden hurried-
ness or rapidity of movement of
the hand (in beating a tahor,
&c.) : suddenly accelerated mo-
tion (of any performer, doer).
^fcf^^r^r -m /. Smartness
and quickness of hand. The
implication is ever of fraudulent
or elusive smartness ; — of the
sleiglit of conjurers, &c.
Cf^^r a. Uclatino; to the
hand of, lit. fig.; that is off, from,
by tlie hand of; that i)roceeds
from or pertains agenl'uiUy to
(as a gift, a product, a work) :
■^"^ ^^•^'\ ^^•^\ ■^^^■^\ ^iii; f I
2 In aritli. Tiiat comes to the
hand to be carried — a number.
V. V, \J-^, €^. .t HwwirJy
feasible. 4 That is in one's
hand or ])ossession.
^■fcf^fqfrJ See cT5r?TcI^[^J.
^[rT^rg'?:r a. Liberal.
fl'T^rST Fidgetiness of the
hand. v. ^TJI- 2 Active and
constant employment of the
hand (as in paying out and ia
receiving in of monies, &c. under
a briskly flourishing trade).
l"[cTr%fr-Jr f. a letter or
note writtten or avouched by the
hand of; a letter (as from an
official or a great personage) of
which the authenticating tokens
are, not seals and stamps, &c.,
but simply the hand writing
of that personage ; whetlier
throughout or at the close of it.
See 2 Thes. iii. 17.
rrcT^cifr, ricF^r^i^r ad.
Instantly, smartly, in a trice —
any doing or happening : "^T
Tfl1; '^riT^l^io «TT^^ ^?,-
Cmirlt /. • Interlocking of
arms, and striving ; wrestling.
^FcTJofr/. An inam granted
in remuneration of the service
of washing the hands (of the
Raja, &c.) See 2 Kings iii.
11. '^Tfimf^'fi^'l/. Striking,
pushing, or similar use of the
hand disallowed as arro'.;ant
or obtrusive. 2 Practice or doing
as opp. to talking: ^t^ qT-
i^^afil ¥JT55Tt^ ^•ft'^T* ^-
bIt^. 3 Cleverness at striking ;
also at picking and stealing, nim-
hle-fingere(hie.<s. '^T«TRT''fT «•
Pouring water into the hand of
the bride during ^T'Jrr'^TUr.
I', gi'?. This rite is performed
by the bride's motncr-in-la\v
with the object of comuninicat-
ing her own matronly tact and
skill and domestic accomplish-
ments. ^l?Ti^/. Ahand-cuft',
a manacle.
§Tcr^^c7 A pocket-handker-
chief. A small bag of papers
of accounts : the little bundle of
business-papers which is daily
taken in hand to he attended
to. "^iff^m wi Reach of hand.
rfcl?fr / Skill of hand ;
dexterity. 2 Skill : m-^DjJT^
-5jiqT^T^t "^I* 3 Style,
pecidiar manner.
K^^^^\ Skill of hand ; ex-
pertness.
?fcf5J^ V. c. To handle
rT?rrTa[T
473
Wl^
roughly and disorderingly ; to
press and squeeze so as to crush,
ruffle.
ITcfr^l^^r a. Subject to the
hand (command or direction) of;
an assistant, a mate. 2 That is
well known unto (to be done) ;
familiar and facile unto. 3 Pre-
sent in the possession of and
freely under the control or at the
disposal of. Seel ISamuel xxi.o.
rrciRr^r^rr -^rs"55- o. Gene-
rous, munificent.
efcTr^fj^^^ a. Expert, dex-
terous.
g"[cfi^rsr^« OF heavy hand;
miserly. 2 Heavy of hand ; — as
a writer, &c. '^TcTT'^T^T^^ u.
Quick of hand; expert at
manual works. '^T<TT'^t^3^B3
a. Free of the fist ; given to
strikmg.
^f^RRS- Facilily (of any
work) — facility like that of wash-
ing one's hands. 2 also ^TK-
•^ sffl^tiT. 71. Terms used as
standards of illustration far a
manifest truth or an evident
matter ; agreeing with Sun at
noonday.
CrcfTSIFf^r a. Suitable to
one's hand — to one's manna!
skill. 2 Capable of being reached,
lit. fig.
?"rcT[RTr3rr a. That is become
separate from tlie lunul ; that is
laid down as fiuisiied : ^T ^-
^ui^ -^^^ gRTf? ^i-^. 2 That
is aside or apart : ^tHI
Crcrr=fr^Rf^r?: Maintaining
one's self by labor of one's
hands; carrying on of the world
by work. 2 Having one's
world dependent upon one's
hand ; i. e. living from hand tj
mouth. V. mx, "^1^^.
gTcTf^rgr «ri. Together wiih
(the present impetus of) the
hand ; whilst the hand is in
it; — doing some new work
proposed : ^^i ^T^^T B^i^rf
60
?r^'T n. Desire of the male
(in marcs or she-asses), heat.
V. ^X, or ^T^T^rg ^131.
?"rln: n. c See ?"^^.
^l^\t\ See ^^^.
m^r See g'^r^r.
i:firrTR, gr^r^rff ad. From
hand to hand. — as tossing bricks;
or delivering packages, &c. to be
conveyed to a distance. 2
also '?mi'WT?ff Smartly, brisk-
ly, hand over hand : '^'^'^
Crj^^ V. c. To shake o>
agitate (a tree, &c.) : to jolt. 2
To swing. V. i. To swing, rock.
Violent shaking, jolting, swing-
ing : shaking, &c. b}'^ many.
riFT /. (s) pop. KH -"^.
Loss. 2 Detriment, harm ; de-
struction, extinction, damage,
hurt.
?:iTr (ii) Panting.?;.^, Jf^,
g"f^^!77 y. c. To shock, jolt.
CR^r A sliock, jog. V. =Ttf.
^m^l See km^l.
W\^f. (A) Life.
Wl^, ^\ (p) An affix at-
tached to territorial designations;
as f^^ ^T^ Zillas.
^r^ An interj. upon the
sudden apprehension of sonio
exquisite (esp. corporal) plea-
sure. 2 An interj. upon a pang
or some sudden emotion or
sensation of pain.
?^r^^r^ An interj. of sorrow,
despair, &c.
^r^^ An inteij. as
uttered from time to time by a
person tinder great and continu-
ing bodih' pain. f. Lotul ex-
pression of corporal suffering.
r^r intrrj. See §"R.
j ^f^f^5^ inUrj. The utter-
! anee of a person under acute
1 bodily agony.
^\T (s) A necklace; a gar-
land; a string (of gems, beads,
flowers, &c.) 2/. A row.
^f^ /. Loss. V. ^, ^^. 2
Defeat (in battle, &c.) v. ^.
'i m. Taking from, raj)e.
^K^ a. (s) Tliat takes away;
that seizes,robs: f^Tj -s^^ -%j^
^R^Fcf f. Loosing and
winning; defeat and victory.
^\l^ V. c. To win. 2 See
v [be lost.
g'K^'^ V. c. To lose. V. i. To
^\^m V. c. To lose, &c.
See '^^fcfTi.
[meric.
^\\^^. a. s Relating to tur-
^K[ -prep. (Vulg.) In the
line of, towards, to, in the direc-
tion of: i{\ -^JIT^Tff il^^T. 2
"V^'ith, in the hands of: T^\
^T<Y ITTW ^I^T ^q^ 3^Ttfr.
;3 See ^#. 4 Near : JTJ^TtlTCf.
^TCE^fl. (s) That takes away
or from ; that robs : ■^:^^T€r-
2 That carries away (the mind) ;
deli^litful, charming.
^[^f'^f , CRlfffr^ jirej). In
the line or path of; in the pre-
sence of: 3?JT \^ 4^5? m\ ^T^T-
TIT^ =?To ^ITT ^T^TfT -fTT-ft-
»\ _
S'l^foK nd. In one conti-
nuous line. 2 In uninterrupt-
ed consecution ; — as events or
actions reiterated.
^f^ ??. (s) conn p. ^15".
Meaning, mind, intent : scope
purport (of a speech, an action,
he.)
^1^ a. s (Possible, purpos-
ed) to be taken away or from, to
be seized.
§^f^ (a) Distressful condi-
tion; the woefnlness (of disgrace,
fatigue, hunger, &c.) The "word
corresponds with Pickle, plight,
mess, &c., and pZ. with Straits,
extremities, &c. v. «f,Tg, irTJT,
?r^ ad. (A) Now. 2 Conti-
nually.
rr^r^
474
^fW
tressfiil and pitiable condition ;
pickle, plight.
gTc^^cffc^y /, (h) Moving, stir-
ring, acting ; the performing of
functions or the living of an an-
irante being.
ST^T y. i. (ii) To move or
stir ; to be agitated. 2 To be in
great confusion and commotion
— a country.
?-rc=^fq^^[^ aJ. (a) At this
instant ["stij..
I"[c^rf^ V. c. To move or
?Tc^g:^r?? (a) See ^\^ .
Cfc^?'^ f. Confusion and
comuiotlou; upioar aud hub-
bub.
gr^r ad. (A) Now.
?Tc^[iT^r?n-5^r^r/vZ. (a) The
great and small, rich and poor.
?Tc^?tJTr^r /. (a) Change of
adminstration ; the removal of
the present public officers of a
state and the succession of
others: TT'sqi^ "^To ^T<fl ^^t
succession and How gen.
Cf^n^Fc^ ad. (n) At the in-
stant.
W\^m A male buffaloe.
Wm (s) Any feminine act
of amorous pastime. 2 pi
Blandishinents, coquetry. 3 See
fT-7 or ^l^f. (a) Earnest
desire : earnest hope. v. ^x,
r^TJT, & ^^. 2 Spirit, ardor,
pluck, mettle.
^mm^ pi. Actions and pos-
tures expressive of sentiments ;
gestures and movement exhibit-
in (:; the passions : gesticulation.
^I^^r a. Greedy, covetous,
in-iati.iblc. '.! Impatient.
Cr^ir?^ n.(x) Revenue. Hence
Postage. 2 Purport.drift. 3 Profit,
gain.
?"R^/j. (s) Laughter: delight.
■J I<aughiug at. 3 Mirth.
?r^,^5^'''-^^'^ sniiHng coun-
tenance ; cheerful : that is wear-
ing (at the particular time in
view) a pleasant aspect.
^^^r^? n. (s) A butt for
derision, n laugiiing-stock.
Cr^T An ititerj. of grief, sor-
row, or pain.
K\^ interj. Hold ! stop ! ali, !
there ! v. Wf^, ^X-
?rrr^r (s) pop. ^Tf r^R a
general lamentation.
ff SR^^r See ?:^^=^[.
flr^^cf f (A) Skill, cunning :
art, trick, the secret and clever
disposition by which an effect is
accomplished.
r^^iT^r -^qr a. Skilful, in-
ventive : clever in devising or
abounding in devices towards
the bringing about of a matter.
rcn Assafoetida. \kn^\ An
inferior sort of f^JI.
fCll^^IT^^ V. c. A populnr
phrase implying To be greatly
behind band in a matter to be
done; to be as yet witliout
having made even a beginning:
^1T^ ilff f?JI^' ^T^t ^TW^
\^n^^, IfJR^n. A bump
arising upon a wound or sore
through the eating of f^'jT. f^-
JI^Tjff n. Water sohition ol f^'iT.
rcnr^f?=r^r a term for any
offensive or disturbing jjcrson
or thing in the midst of.
rt^r^r m^ a term for the
repute (of wealth, authority, &c.)
when the wealth, &c. being
departed, the repute is all that
remains.
f^JTI^ ^M n. A term for n
person of whom there remains
onlv the repute of riches, digni-
ty, i*^c. formerly possessed.
\k^li n. See fC^^^.
\^T\rS Vermilion.
\Wi\Skn ad. (Vidg.) Hither:
here. 2 Now.
r?"JTrrTfF V. Irrelevant and
evasive speech, putfiug off. v.
ad. Irrelevantly, &c., in an
erpiivocnting uianntT, v, ^T^,
rfSf^ST (h) a male herma-
phrodite. 2 App. to an obscene
or indecent fellow. 3 App. to an
emasculated man. f%m^f-
f%5T^ n.
n. (a) The Mahomedan
era, commencing with the day
after the flight of Mahomed,
viz. on the 16th of July,6G2 a.d.
r?"^^r a. Relating to the
^Hijra.
r^^Tr (A proper name.) App.
to a Hobby-rider or man of
crotchets and whimsies. App.
also to a wild, flighty, roving
person ; or to a truant child ; or,
freely, in the sense of loose, li-
centious; or idle, low.
fC^of V. i.To wander, roam.
iC^l^^r a. Given to wan-
dering; a rover.
r?^^r-^r -mn. Filthy, foui,
stinking; — used of persons,
speech, thing.
^^W\ V. c. To flout, scout.
fc^mffof V. c.To drive ofFor
repel with scornful hootings, to
flout.
Pcf f^ -^ 71. Rubbish and
filth as heaped or lying any
where. Dirty, vile.
f€m% or ll:'^rfOTt/. Low-
ering, &c. f%Tnf^Bi or ff^I-
f^W V. c. To lower in estima-
tion by exposing the defects, and
faults of. 2 To lower or lessen.
\^^ V. (s) Advantage, pro-
fit, a. Profitable, good, f^ff-
TToT n. Matter of one's owu
interest ; one's private business.
s That directs or advises what is
advantageous. f^«!»l^ a. (»)
Hostile to the weal of.
fC^rqt"^ (s) Good counsel.
fC?^f%, fC^fr a. (II) Re-
lating to the Hindus.
fC^f V. c. To jog: to
jolt.
fk^l^l^ n. India, flj^^f^
a. Relating to ff^^TT.
\k^aS\ A pensile or swing-
ing cradle, bed or seat.
fl"?" (p Black. A pp. by the
Persians to the Etliiopiuns, black
Arabians, Indians, &c.) A Hindu.
ikiJ^l (h) See Vw^^l. 2
Poet. An oscillation.
fl"J?r a. Of contracted
mouth ; of fallen countenance.
2 Gloomy-looking.
r?*? 71. (s) Hoar-frost. 2 Cold
or coldness (in the air or in
bodies.) '.i Coldness of sensation.
a. s Cold, ff «3q^ Fever with
Tk^Z, PCRJrTRqr a. Gloomy,
JT^cT, r§:fi7cT/. (A) Boldness,
coura^'e, spirit. [brave.
fr^JTcTSTlT, r^TTfr a. Bold,
TK^m\ a. (s) Cold, frigid,
frosty.
That enjoys the jmtronage of.
App. also in opprobrium to a
favorite. [patronage.
f^ri"cT/. (a) Protection or
fkm^^ The Himklaya
range of mountains.
fk^m (h) Spirit, soul, heart;
ardor in daring or stability
in suffering.
rC^^^TTa. Spirited, intrepid ;
bold to encounter, or firm to
endure.
r?-^^r f. A small diamond-
bit.
FCT3T Yellow or chebulic
myrobalam, Country galls. 2
App. to the bowl of a ladle, to
the tuft at the end of a fiag-staff.
2 Adam's apple.
r§T^r /. A term for the two
fleshy beds of the teeth, a gum :
the bed or socket of a tootli. 2
Chebulic tnyrobalam gathered
and dried when young and
tender.
rCC^ V, c. To seize and take
from ; to take and bear off for-
cibly.
T^VJ^ n. s Gold.
r^T^^r a. Damped, dis-
pirited. f^?:g^wi V. t. To be
475
damped, disheartened, f'^^^^
a. Disheartened, dispirited.
r?T^ a. Greenish. 2 Un-
dresssed. 3 fig. Unpolished,
untutored.
^€J:^Zm /. The smell of
green and sappy wood, grass, &c.
r?T^^ a. Rather raw :
emitting a raw smell ; — as
fruits, &c. [-tioQ
\WT^^ f. Herbage, vegeta-
f^'^^r a. Green. 2 fig. Raw,
unripe, imperfectly cooked, or
prepared ; — as fruits, bricks,
pitchers, &c. ; tender, unmatur-
ed ; — as strength, understand-
ing, &c. 3 That emits a raw
smell or raw flavor. 4 App.
cantly to bhang or ganja, 5
Unsocial, quarrelsome.
flT^r^^r a. Greenish and
rawish, half-ripe ; — as a fruit :
half-dressed; — as an article of
food : half-done; — as a business.
r?TfrR5rr a. Livid, black
and blue.
r?"^^ n. Green herbage ;
green and tender grass.
rC^^r a. Addicted to neigh-
ing— a horse.
Peirfr See r?"Hf F.
T?^r A diamond,
rrn^sfr /. («) Green
vitriol, sulphate of iron.
TWT\\^m A term for a fool ;
an absolute ignoramus.
r? nf^ot V. c. See \W^^'
IKIU^J f. A rush or run or
setting to with concentrated force
and ardor ; vehement assailing
or falling upon : XfT!^^ ^f^-
rC^^ffT/. A diamond-mine.
1^^^^ /'. Un explicated and
unadjusted state (of an account
subsisting with, of a suit at law,
&c.) V. ^\^, Hg, ^^, '^T. 2
Obstructed Btate : an obstruc-
tion.
ICc'yJI3"'T V. c. To keep dang-
ling or hanging; to hinder
from being explicated and set-
tied. V. i. To hang in suspense ;
to lie over; — as a case or an
affair.
fCc^5Tc7 (^ New moon.) An
iron bowl grated or opened-
mouthed, containing oil and
rolls of cloth, &c. It is attached
to the end of a stick, and kin-
dled upon holidays, &c. f%^T-
^T a. That bears the f'^^T^.
f^E^r (a) a pretence, sham.
2 A means (of obtaining sub-
sisteneej as consisting in a power-
ful friend, an office, &c.
rg'pTr?:^cr /; a term for
evasive tricks and acts ; — for
all obstacles feigned and difficul-
ties made with the ])urpose
of evading the ])ayment of a
debt urged, or the performance
of a service rightfully imposed.
rC^ n. Cold or coldness (in
the air or in bodies gen.) 2
Coldness of sensation, chilly
feeling. 3 Ague, f^^^qx:
Fever with ague.
rlf^ m, rr^cTSflfR/. Re-
claimed wilderness-land ploughed
up in cold season and left
unsown until the rains.
rCffST The cold season.
IC^T^ (a) Numbers, practical
arithmetic. 2 Computation,
calculation. 3 Amount deter-
mined through arithmetical
operations; sum worked out.
4 An account with ; an account ;
a register of debts, costs, &c.
o An item of account, v. mx:.
6 fig. Rectitude, equity. 7 fig.
Regard, account ; worth in men's
opinion.
fC^^f^^^ A term for Arith-
metic or Accounts.
\K^\ a. Relating to arith-
metic or accounts. 2 Skilful in
accounts. 3 Right, regular,
according to Cocker.
rg-^r^ See rc5i^.
[K^^ a, (s) That murders
or kills ; that destrovs life
(wrongly). Hence Murderous,
cruel.
rc^i'^r/ Jerking, &c.
rC^^otv. c. Tojerk, catch,
n^^
476
Hiul twitch. 2 fipj. or cant. To
cliouse (money, &c.)outof.
fC^^r (h) a jerk. v. ^,
■q^. 2 A shock, jog, concus-
sion. V. -^i ^^W. 3 fig. A
sudden stoppage (of a proceeding,
business). 4 fig. A journey or trip
viewed as toilsome and tVuitless ;
a push to and a shock from .
r?:^^r^^r /. Selzlno- from
violently. f^^^TRiJl v- c. To
seize and take from violently ;
to pluck.
Pulling and shaking.
1?"^^ V. c. Poet. To murder,
to slay or kill. v. i. To neigh.
\k^m, rk^ss^ V. i. To
splash up; to rise and fly out; —
as liquor in a vessel. 2 fig. To fly
otf wildly ; — as a horse, &c.
\k^\ f. (s) Slaying, killing.
2 Injuring.
tw^l^ See rc%f.
ik^ a. (s) Murderous,
bloody. 2 Ferocious, cruel.
l€"Wr (a) a share, part.
Tf^^f^ c. A siiare-hokler.
fl'ml" nd. Imit. of the
sound of giggling. 2 Giggling.
ET ad. Also, likewise. 2
Even.
t\'^ 7). Alloy. 2 fig. Mean-
ness : a nu'iui trait ; a failing.
€\^^i -^ff a. Alloyed or
debased : reduced in value
through alloy.
€"R a. (s) Deficient; that
wants or is without (in a
measure or utterly). lucomp.
■jf^j -g-ff ^l«r, 2 Base, vile ;
fK A rib of the leaf (of
trees of the Palm-tribe.) 2 A
fibre of kinds of wood ; a lihe
running along wood gen. .S fig.
Hardness remaining in badly
boiled rice, &c. 4 A fine splint
(of fibre, reed, &c.) v. »T^,
fair, "Qv^, ^qB^.
^l< /. Emulation.
fRjrr^- /. m. Breaking of
courage; disheartening, damp-
ing; dispiritedness.
frf V. See il:^-
fffr See r?:il"r^.
C» ^S ^"^ Interjections or
gruiifs indicating consent.
^f.^cT f. (a) Sovereignty,
rule. s^Tftt a. That is under
the rule of.
^^^r«(i. Asif by order; i. e.
most certainly and surely :
f^^r a. (h) Subject to the
command of". 2 Subject ; as
So ^TToJr A ball acknowledg-
ing the order of tlie shooter, t. e.
a snre-liitting ball ; ^o f^sji-
*r Unerring aim ; v. ^T^,
^IK, q7¥. 3 Ordered : autho-
rized. 4 Dependent upon or
sul)ject to the regulation or
direction of the order; as
^o ^kjik: Business that
must be conducted as ordered.
"So XT^ Government adniis-
tercd upon laws prescribed:
^o "^l^K A servant that
fiiltils or carries out the order.
5 Relating to command ; as
S° ^"^fT^ Register of orders ;
an order-book.
W^H (id. By order.
?"^K Ti)e uttering of %^ in
reply to a questioner, or in ac-
knowledgment of approbation
or attention to a person relating
a storv : also the "4 so utter-
ed.
kWtl^f The uttering of the
sound "^ in intimidation or
angry repression of. r, ^.
^*r f. Theory of the jackal.
2 A l)last of wind. 3 A purpose
or desire suddenly fornuHl ; a
fancv starting into and kindling
the mind. v. V.
^^ (a) a command or an
order. -^^iTiTl^^Ti /■ Mili-
tary mutiny. '^^^^•iTJn A
written award upon a siiit set-
tled; a decree. 2 A written order.
^|5^crr (Slave ready at
command) A ])erson subject or
subordinate to ; one's humble
servant.
^^r (a) a smoking ap-
paratus.
^^r See |Cr.
^E^5[^?"R (p) The servant
who prepares and attends upon
the hukka.
^^ /.Smell or scent- v. ^IT,
^ g. of 0.
p°t V. c. To smell. 2 fig.
To apprehend, discern, smell (a
secret rflutter). 3 To draw up
(odor or effluvia) through the
nose, to sniff.
^■^^ f. (a) Perverse wrang-
ling, objecting : any such objec-
tion or difficulty made : any
mean, unfounded, tmreasonable
pretence in endeavoring to shuf-
fle oif or decline. 2 A govern-
ment receipt (upon a deliverj').
I^'si'^^ir c. One that makes
difliculties or objections perverse-
ly : one that makes mean ex-
cuses.
?"^fTF f. (a) Troops under
the direct command of tlie Stnte :
troo])s about the royal person,
bodv-!jii:ird.
rsRI^^^, ?"^^rf i?: ad. In
the i)resence of. 2 In the com-
mon presence cf {i. e. in the
presence of the parties iu the
presence of each other)./. Con-
iVontedness. v. '^T, ^^.
?"5f-Jir a. That awaits in the
presence of; a page, a valet.
?"^ (a) The royal court or
presence ; the hall of audience .•
the roval person ; His AJajesfy,
The Government, Sf-e. In comp.
50 ?sj^ The royal expendi-
ture; So ^sftiTT The public
treasurv. 2 'fo as opp. to
-J ' '
T^T^ is app. to the Sadar
station or Head quarters of a
Collectorate. ad. In, at, to, or
before the presence or royal
court ; il^r^t ^JK "^^^ ^^-
fll^ ^ S» ^\^^^^ ^Tf. prep^
In the presence of gen. ?rT^
477
r55T
^1^^^^/- 'riie allowance
to the loViil household. 2 A si-
tuation about the ])erson of the
ruler : an office uuJer the go-
vprnment.
r^rgRf/. The body of Horse
under the immediate keeiiinicaud
command of the State. 2 The
personal stud of the ruler of the
state : the stables of tlieui.
S3l?:q"I^'^5TT A matter under
or suitable for adjudication by
the royal court.
ri^qr^ /. Searching, kc.
S'^^ui V. c. To search.
^^^r The rising and swelling
(of grief, vexation, &c.) which
precedes the bursting into tears :
sobbing or a sob. v. ^. 2 The
bumping with its head against
the mother's udder (of u calf,
&c., while sucking). 3 A blow
or push with the head or with
the side of the shoulder.
f ^^[f^^ V. C. To hoot off.
^?^r f. The bumping with
its head against the mother's
udder (of a calf, &c.), whilst
sucking.
^^qR^iy /. (h) Price paid
ui)on a bill of exchange.
^^^r A monopoly ; an ex-
clusive privilege of selling : a
contract. 2 An engagement with
a 9553 or peasant binding him
to furnish a certain quantity of
corn or fruit.
?"3^?^¥ -^r f. Shivering
(through cold, &c.) v. ^X,
v{%-9{^, ii. 2 fig. Quivering
eagerness, v. ^K, ^, &c.
r^f ^"cfr y.j. To shiver. 2 To
be impatient.
^3T Money given at marri-
ages by the father of the bride to
the bridegroom and his party. 2
An ear of the grain €iT^o3T,&c.
plucked befjre fully ripe, to be
parched and eaten. 3 A monopo-
ly, a contract. 4 A solid kind of
bamboo.
f ^RTOT v.c. (h) To push with
the head and toss up ; — used of
cattle, horses, &c.
f^r^'^Seef^rf5r.
^^f /". A bill of exchange.
^^cT hid. An interjection
uttered on pushing aside or driv-
ing off a i)east, &c. 2 An inter-
jection of contemptuous or angry
reproof.
?"^^, ?"^^r The risino- and
swelling of a strong emotion (of
grief, affection, &,c). v. "^W^
^ or ¥1^, ^.
rcTf^^T n. s Fire. ^^r^% /.
The pile arranged to be kindled
at the festival oflloli.
f3^, f.^3^^f^^ A play
amongst boys. 2 fig. Romps,
horse-play.
f^^ r. c. To shake or
agitate (a child, a sup, a cloth, a
tree). 2 To drive away rudely.
^?^^ V. c. To push with
the horns or head, to butt. 2 fig.
To drive off or away gen. 3 fig
To cast off from ; to turn aside.
V .i. To kick and caper about.
^^■^r The bumping with its
head against the mother's udder
(of a calf, &c whilst sucking). 2
A bljw or push with the iiead
or side of the shoulder. 3 A
particular disorder which rages
amongst man or beast : the
demon to whose influence it is
ascribed. 4 A terra for an im-
])etuous, headlong fellow ; one
that tears along stopping at
nothing. ^'^'€\ f. See ^^^T
sig 1.
^^.^ (a) An office or a post.
S^^^r^ c. One holding a
])ul)Uc charge; an officer.
I^^^^r^y. A rough manner
of going (as of a horse not
knowing his paces).
^•T?^ ni.f. An art ; a resource
or power of skill ; any ability
(as sulisisting in) for contriving,
devising.
f =ra a. Artful, skilful.
J^ -n /. A play, esp.
among cowherd-children, v.
J^r^r m. t^'^^l f. Poet.
The lowing of a cow, &c.
g"^^(Tf y_ I To low, — a bull,
&c. 2 fig. To bellow proudly.
^^u^Kf/ See 5^^ ^irrr.
PC' ^'^1 ''^^' (-^^ Under
exact and close, resemblance ;
with perfect imitation.
I^R^r, f^Rot See f ^^^F
&c.
f iTfqr See 3-j^[^r.
s''^^ K^^ «• Om" from whom
the utmost compliance that can
be obtained, howsoever he be
urged and pressed, is the utter-
ance of the particle "^ ; a
numskull, coldpate.
?'^S'^ V. r. To singe, scorch.
^^^r Corn or grains, or peas,
&c. of tender and immature
ears or pods (of tt^t, ^f^53T,
cfT^J'Cl', &c.) which have been
])arched. 2 Ears airived at that
degree of maturity suitable for
plucking and parching.
^^T^^ff/". Singeing, searing.
^^T^'T V. c. To singe, sear,
parch. V. i. To sustain loss (in
trade), to burn. 3 To burn or
glow ; — as the body, a limb.
^^^T a. Forward and head-
long, rash.
^^^^/'.( a) Character, credit.
l'<:iTcr'^r3r v, see i:^^^^r3r.
^^^f=^[, ^rqcT^rr «. Re-
spectable, reputable.
f^f ^ ad. with ^m To feel
lonely : to feel dreariness and
dismalncss round about. ,/.
Grieving, regretting : grief, re-
gret. 2 Uneasy hankering.
C^^^^ u. i. To grieve, la-
ment : to long for uneasily.
f^r Milk-bush.
|"%fr ^X^ To hoot, shout ;
to scout, flout. 2 To set on (a
work or an act).
^^ An interjection used in
driving ofl' with hissing or hoot-
ing. /'. Hissing, hooting, v.
^X, rlT^. [florus.
f ^^r A vetch, Dohchos h\-
1^5-, ?;^3- /. (h) An up-
roar, tumult. 2 A general attack
or set upon : a vehement attack
by an individual.
f^
478
^TH
^'^1^/- Hiinying or urging
wiih clamor and rude bustle.
». ^I^, 'TT^, ^TJT.
^i?nT a. (p) Smart, sharp :
attentive, alert.watchfnl. 2 Fresli,
brisk (as through good feeding
for a time): fresh- feeling (as
after recovery or during conva-
lescence).
^^ftf y. Smartrifss, intelli-
gence : wariness. 2 See the adj.
^^^•T V. c. To hiss or hoot
oft'; to flout. 2 To catch uj) and
throw about in a loose and
disorderly manner. 3 To mar,
blast (a counsel, &c.)
r^f^n: -n Hard and forcible
expulsion of breath ; blowing,
putting (as of a bullock, man,
serpent); a blast, pufF, or hiss.
^^m V. i. To blow, puff,
hiss; to breathe out forcibly.
• *
^?^ Interjection of pain or
grief.
fsfs-/. jsTarrr m. Ex-
quisite titillation ; the thrilling
(of a limb, &c.) upon the rajjid
passage over it of certain light
and scarcely sensible bodies; (as
of a hair, &c.) ; also (as of a
sore and temler limb) upon
the near approach and near
apprehended contact of a foreign
body.
^ ind. An interjection of
inciting, urging ; at it ! to it !
ad. A particle expressing con-
sent, assent, &c., yes, ah, well.
^^ f. (h) a sharp tearing
or shooting pain (in the loins,
back, belly, &c.) v. ^k, f^9. 2
The cry of the jackal, .'i tig. A
flying report, v. ^^, q:^, fif^,
^^Xi. 4 The zodiacal ray of
the morning, v. '%'Z.
^3 ind. From. 2 Than. 3
Used to e.Kpress the sense of lo-
cation ; as ^l^^'T, fff^^iT,
meaning simply Here, there, on
all sides.
^^/. Speech or action de-
signed to indicate intention (esp.
to indicate falsely, and to mis-
lead); making deceitful show. V.
^I^^. 2 General disturbance ;
n popular commotion, s*;!-
'^Tii/". A general uproar.
^^/. An alarm : a clamorous
stir, a roio, stonn. v. ^K, 'f{\^,
fcT^^^ 7j. s The heart or the
mind.
^^ a. s That bears oft or
takes away. lu comp. "^i^-
i"^H?5" a. s The heart.
i'^'Fl^ sThe pericardium.
W\k^ s The heart.
f 5"^ n. (s) The heart or the
mind. 2 The bosom or the breast,
lit. fig. 3 fig. Mind, intent : the
sco])e (of a speech, an action, &c. )
r^Jlfl^riT Rest of the heart
or spirit. A title of God.
5-^J^=q-«,s Merciless,//m/Y-
lesi. 2 Of failed understanding
and faculties. 3 Devoid of inter-
est.
i?^^^ a. Situate or abiding
in the breast, lit. fig.
^^RR a. That constitutes
the repose of the heart ; — used
of God or other objects of wor-
sliip- [hearted.
C^^r^ a. Merciful •* kind-
C^'Hcf n. (s) Meaning, mind,
intent, a. That is seated in the
hejirt; believed, cherished, dee|)ly
engraven, im|)rintedor impress-
ed, feelingly remembered.
W^\^ Disease of the heart,
lit. fig. ; heartburn ; anxiety,
regret, sorrow, &c.
5" ind. (s) A particle of re-
spectful calling:^ ^T«TT g-
C^H:, k^Z, t^J a. Self-will,
stiff-necked, dogged.
f^r, K^\ Determined bear-
ing or l)ent; insisting upon of
the mind or will. v. g, '^^.
Always in an ill sense ;
3fT'»^T'?^T Q-aiST Wi^?r ^%^.
r^^R, ^^mK See ^^'^.
k^i^^^,'i^l\^^■?\ a. Poor,
])altry, mean; — as a trinket or an
annual. 2 Nonsensical — speech.
ad. Irrelevantly /. ".Trumpery :
non-descript sundries : rattle,
gabble.
?n^flf^ V. c. To stigmatize
and revile as barbarous (the
speech, an action, a practice or
a fashion of).
m^, ti]I5T, W^^\ a. Rude,
clumsv, fumbling, — used of
speech, or any work : dull,
heavy : stubborn, perverse. App.
freel}' as Savage and Barbarous
to foreign persons, languages,
manners, &c.
§^3" ad. (h) Down, below :
down (the coast), towards the
south, ^^^rl An inhabitant
of the district called ^^. But
the general understanding is of a
■^t:^^T5I Tn^li of the "^3
country.
?"2:^fi:?:^r ^f^r a south-
westerly wind, J. e. a wind from
down the coast (south), and
from out to sea (west).)
Kfmti f. Slighting, treating
lightly : carelessness. 2 ud.
Slightly.
Kt^ f. (ATf^T^r) App. to
a huge and hideous woman ; to
a filthy and disgusting woman.
t"^ /. A kind of Pisfich.
1"3r^, r¥^%J^ a. Nasty,
disgusting ; offensive, vile.
r^-g-fW, ^^iTn^ V. c. To
flout, scout.
•s
W^ Desire : purpose, design.
%*T^?I /. Desire of heart
intention and inclination towards;
regard and affection ; friendship
and favor.
•\
^^ (s) Cause: — i.e. ground
or reason ; motive. 2 Desire.
?5W a. That has involved
within itself its reason, meaning,
&c : that has some involved
sense ; — as an act, &c.
^^^ /• '"■ Filth, dung (as
heaped or lying about).
?^r a. Dirty, filthy.
rir
479
rr^r
^q n. s Gold,
r^cf m. n. (s) Tho period
consisting of the two months
^rn^-^ & ^T^, the cold
season.
It (h) a spy. 2/. Spying
out, exploring, a. R Of little es-
timation or use, light, worthless.
i'^'Tf f. Spying. i^^^T ". c.
& t'. "To spy out ; to survey
narrowly and curiously ; to peep
around closely.
ir^T m.f. Slight difference
(of one thing with another as
respects size, weight, color, price,
&c.)2 Discrepancy (instatenfients,
accounts, &c.) %^^r, ^^iTiCt
/. Looking about and walking
about; surveying as one goes
along : KT^t^'I^' ^^- "- ^sp.
^^1^<t Patrolling about :
journeying about. j
?c7 w. f. Porterage, v. ^\^ •
the burden carried : the cost of
carriage — tlie fare. 2 The sui)ply-
ing for a few days (with water,
milk, &c.) of a family in which
a child is born: the water, &c.
so supplied. 3 A loud and pro-
longed utterance (in singing,
calling, &c.) v. orj^, fiTg.
'^'S^^ A porter. 2 One that
t'urnislies ^^. sig. 2.
Cc^^r^oj t\ ?:. To undulate ;
— as waves or water, &c.: to toss
and roll tlirough the imi)ulse of
waves or water ; — as a ship : to
oscilate; — as a branch, swing, &c :
to sway about from siile to side ;
— as a cam el- rider, &c.
^"T^q^tT V. c. To cause (to a
person) an unproductive and
toilsome journey or walk ; to
send upon a fruitless and
wearisome errand. 2 lig. To ren-
der abortive, v. i. c To undergo
destruction by the wind;— as
a tree or a building.
?;^T2rr An empty journey,
&c. r. ^q^, ^^ & ^, ^^. 2
App. to a circuitous portion
of a road ; or to a circuit taken
through ignorance ; and to
the additional toil of travel
undergone in consequence, v.
^¥, ^T, ^I.
?:?5'qfJ[ f. The employment
of a porter or coolie.
l:?yHt^,*k"c?r^r^%/. siight-
ing,disregarding.^Sl^t'^^l v.c.
To slight or disregard.
|C^f A male buffalo.
'kT^ s The sun.
^^r Emulation or envy ;
rivalry. 2 (a) Cupidity : earnest
desire. ^^T^iT, ^^^T^ c. or
a. An emulous or envious
person ; that competes with.
I'S'tTF See C<^r.
1^^/. (a) Dread, awp. v.
Terrorstruck.^^fH «• Fearful,
timid.
1"^ n. s Belonging to gold.
2 Belonging to frost, cold, or
winter.
tn*^ a. (a) Perturbed, dis-
tressed ; disordered through
tion, a direction or a calling the
attention of: ^fT ^t1^?I^
3TT% ^ ^^ ^T ; ^m H^T
HT^ n. A future or fixed
event. Hence Destiny.
CfSi'T ad. Beino^, becoming:,
coming forward; ». e. standing
forth (to act) uncoust rained,
unprompted : WT ^T» ^K ^'
Cl^r The mariner's compass.
fl^IT Consent, assent.
OTFPlt/. Calling by bawl-
ing unto.
i\^R^ V. c. To call by
crying aloud to.
f [7, i\z A lip. il^Zm a.
Hare-lipped. ^TZTSJ, ^T^ToJ
a. Blobberlipped. ^T^ToJt,
%T2To3l/. A rope tied round
the underlip of a horse (as dur-
ing grooming or watering).
i\T^\ f. il^^ n. A small
boat of the kind called '^T^T.
^1^/. A sort of canoe.
CRit -€/. Husband's sis-
ter.
i^ V. i. (h) To be ; to hold
or to derive some certain state,
or quality. 2 To become. 3 To
come to pass. 4 To be finished ;
to be consumed ; to be done ; to
be ({one for ; to be knocked up.
i\W->^ n. See i'lC^.
tuin
?"c^^I^r An undulation ; an
undulatory motion (of the water „
of the sea, &c., of a tree, of a 1 C^l'^TcT f. n. Distressful con-
swing, &c. ; of the vessel, person, I dition : bewilderment.
sickness, pam or mental affl.c- ^-^^f r^^ officiating
Brahman at a sacrifice ; the
or thuig exposed to it), a. Jolt,
shock, as received by the ship,
person, or thing exposed to the
fluctuation, v. «}^,^T. 2 A pull,
a push (of or to a swing, &c).
?^c^=Rf[f 'T r. c. To toss about ;
— as waves toss a vessel: to
m.ike to sway about ; — as a
swing, &c. 2 To pull to and fro.
H^^'ir f. Treating with dis-
regard, slighting : disrespect.
t^H m. f. n. (a) a beast or
other trrfl/to7(o7 animal; an in-
firm human being.
?T ind. (s) A particle of re-
spectful calling to man or woman
2 A particle used in calling to
and directing to stop, — ho !
^Til 31*T55 ^T. 3 Yes. 4 A
particle added, emphatically and
nnpressively, or in endearment
and tenderness after an injunc-
priest who recites the prayers of
the Rig Veda. ^Tff\*o3T/.
Advancing lustre. ^TfTl^^,/*.
An advancing thing ; any article
of which the goodness and worth
are under increase. ^irrt^T^y.
Opened or arisen way. Said
upon the occasion of the opening
of the womb of a married
female. ^T?ff%o5 /. The pro-
per time for.
^\^ n. (s) An article intend-
^r^TrlT
480
^mr^
ed or fit for offering with fire.
'2 Burnt-otFerinij.
*\ , *"
f n^rr^f ^j.pr. Being; standing
under some certain state, or
lioliling some certain qnality.
*\
?H A ""old coin.
-,, * _
€ f*Tr /". & ad. Yes — no; hesita-
tingly. ( V. mx) ■ Yes or no
uffirnnitively or denyinsly ; yes
or no; speaking decisively.
^R"f^r Confidence or as-
surance given ; promise of com-
pliance. I'. ■^.
?"f^ (s) Burnt-ofTering- v. ^.
■STfler ^ 71. s The hole for
the sacred fire of an oblation.
'^T'^Jt^ «• A term for the
articles used in a burnt-offering.
^T«13IT^T /• I'lie [)lace for the
sacred fire maintained by an
^rfU'lT'^. — *^Ti^^^ n. A
formation cxpressing,collectively,
the several acts and points
appertaining to oblation by fire.
"^TRTflT Fii"6 prepared for or
consecrated unto bnriit-oiFering.
?"R ad. Yes. tr^^rr Con-
sent, assent. ^]^m A constant
Yesser. ^\^^^^ f. Speaking
decisively, definitely, v. ^^,
STUT, 'siJl- Also yes — no, is — is
not; uith hesitation, r. ^^.
irr /. rdUiui .';fujj\—ihe
rni)bish and earth Ijrought by
scouring rains and deposited
over fields, &:c. so as to Jill up
all holes and depressions ; allu-
vion. ^TTxn^/. The filling up
of holes and depressions (as in a
field or on a road). ^T'C'n v. c
& i. To fill up and cover over
(pits, &c.) by introducing some
material. 2 To overspread (the
l)()(lv with trinkets, |iigments,&:c).
i\X^o!:^ See ^^7^^.
^In/. (s) Part of the dura-
tion of a sign, — an hora or hour.
2 m. rrediclion : H^iaiiisjr S"^
^T#^T ^T^ 3?"^T 751^1 ^ITT
31T%. •> (iwess, anticipation.
fT^r A bird, Ringed turtle.
i\X^^[ f. s See ^1^7.
^Rr Wedded pair returning
or just returned from the
wedding.
^r^ (p) Ardor, eagerness. 2
Consciousness, as opj). to in-
sensibility : Jlf'^TR^ "UST^
ir^T.
§"r^^r A term for the spor-
ters during the festival of the
Holi.
i\^^\ /. A disease,- a
constant running; flour alljus,
meiiorrhairia, &c.
CrS'tTf ^ I 'Yq ooze or
exude ; to stream or trickle
from gently, v. c. To wash. n.
An article to be washed.
^\'^{ f. The name of a Ra-
kashasi to whom this fe>.tival is
addressed. 2 The pile (of wood,
grass, &c.) arranged to be kin-
dled at the close of the festival of
the Holi. 3 The festival of the
rioli or the season of it. 4 A pp.
to the tree which is ])lanted in
the centre of the pile.
ling(n- light rain wliieli falls aljont
the season of the Holi.
^K (a) a basin made for the
water of a jet d'can : an
uncovered rcce|)tacle of masom-y
for water ; a iusin or tank.
?r?^r (a) An uncovered box
or chair n])on an elephant, for
the convenience of the riders.
?r^r Seed of white sesamum.
?T^r, ^f^r a. A vohiptuary,
a jileasurist.
^\^ f. (a) Inordinate de-
sire; ambition, eagerness, lust,
fire. The sense is rather good
than ill.
In _
err^cTfr a. Frcakful, gay.
v()lnj)t\ioa>.. 2 Aniljitions, ardent,
"c?" s A deep |)lace in
M.'itcr.
"?^^ a. (s) Short ;— as a
vowel. 2 Short, low in stature.
m. A dwarf. ?^J^iR"f^. a. Of
a short stature. /. A dwarf.
'CW (s) Decrease, decay,
decline. 2 Loss, damage.
■^W\^\ There should be, let
there be ; it is necessary, desir-
able, &c.
^Tiie thirty- fifth consonant.
'^^ (s) A measure of time
equal to four minutes. 2 A
moment, an instant.
'^'^3'fC a. Fickle, capricious.
i^^^-^J?^ a. That breaks in an
instant; iVai!, fleeting.
^'^^V< -l\ ad. Poet. A mo-
ment-fuU; for the space of one
moment.
^•^^f^r, 'Q^m^l ad. Every
instant.
^^[#J The term of a mi-
nute ; a very short time. ad. Just
for a moment.
'iTl'^^c/. Momentary, passing.
^^ n. (s) A Wound or a sore.
2 p. s Wounded.
'VT^ s A man of the second
or regal class : n. that class.
^l^^T (s) pop. ^tCf The se-
cond of the four great classes of
the Hindu, or an individual of it.
^H a. (s) Patient ; forbear-
ing, lit. fig. I" com}). f%'=^T^-
5jq-^l^ ^?r. 2 ("apable; com-
petent unto, o Possible unto.
i^^r /. (s) Bearing with ;
pardon, r. ^K- 2 Patience.
^TiT^T^ pf'P- -■^<T a. Patient
or enilnring ; forgiving.
5T^7 (s) Waste, decay. 2 De-
struction, loss. Inconip. ^m-
fiivf -TT'^-SR^. 3 CA)nsnmp-
tion. Phthisis ])nlmonalis. -1 De-
crease of the digits of the sun
or moon. 5 A destruction of the
universe.
^T^TclRT/. A lunar day be-
ginning after the sun-rising of
^«Tcr
481
?rR
one day and ending before that
of the next. 2 That lunar day,
or the anniversary of it, or the
monthly recurrence of it, which
was the day of the decease of.
^^TT^ s The fortnight of
the waning moon.
^^3Tr^ (s) That month in
Avhicli occur two ^BfitHT.
^nm Consumption. ^^^fffr
a. Consumptive.
5T^ a. s That drops., oozes,
or wastes away.
^fcf p. Pardoned, a. Pa-
tient.
^ffcf f, s Forbearing-, for-
bearance. 2 Patience.
^r^ a. s Relating to the
Kshatriya order.
fi' ^K (s) Salt ; any of the
natural salts. 2 Saltness. 3
Ashes. 4 Alkali. 5 Caustic
alkali. 6 Used for qT^#TlT.
a. Saline, salt.
^rc=5-q, ^[^ V. c. To wash.
^r^=T n. s pop. -^^ Wash-
ins. ejlF^fTi?. Washed.
RT'^oj ^,. i. To get thin and
lean ; to waste away.
f^cT p. Wasted, declined.
f^fcT/. s The earth. 2 pop.
Care about, v. ^K, "^TSI.
r^rcTsf n. s The horizon
(rational), -f^fa^gr /. The sine
of the arc of the parallel
of declination corresponding to
the ascensional difference.
kTB" p. Thrown or cast. 2
fig. Aspersed.
Id"^ a. (s) Quick, speedy,
swift, ad. Quickly.
mr/. s See ^4k.
f^r^cT/. See r%?:r'Tcr.
^r'T. p. (s) Wasted, ema-
ciated. 2 Destroyed, annihilated.
a. Thin, lean, tender. sffWi?] a.
s Perishable, decayable.
^^/. Care about.
/^ ^rr n. (s) Milk. 2 Water.
3 The milk or white sap of
plants. 4/. Ricemilk.
61
^Rffi'-J The ocean of milk.
One of the seven seas.
^5: n. (s) A fault, foible.
2 a. Small, or little, lit. fi;;.
^i-Tr /. (s) Hunger, ^^r^t^
g-sf^g-^ p. Oppressed,&c.,with
hunger.
^f^cT p. Hungry, hungered.
^®W p. (s) Stirred, agitated,
Ut. fig.
^^ n. (s) A field. 2 A
sacred spot; a place of pilgrimage.
3 A place, spot. 4 A body, any
extended figure. 5 The body
(of a man or an animal) con-
sidered as the field of the in-
dwelling and working of the
soul. 6 The wife of. 7 A per-
fect fast. V. ^■^, %T,gt^- Note.
%^ is never used of religious
fasting. 8. Plane figure, geometry.
9 A diagram. %^5i, A son, the
offspring of the wife by a kins-
man, or a person duly appointed
to bring issue to the husband.
This is one of the twelve kinds
of issue acknowledged by the
old Hindu law.
^^r^ -SS" The tutelar divi-
nity of a place ; the local and
guardian deity of.
y-^qr^-SS" n. Area. 2 fig.
The quotient, product, fruit, &c.
(of any business) : xjt"^ 3rl^T
^^^T^ f. Land cultivated
or cultivable. 2 Sacred ground.
^^^rr^r/. Pilgrimage to a
^^fr^ Dwelling at a "^^.
%^^T€t, ^^^. That dwells
at a ^^.
t^ See ^f^^. 2 8. A pea-
sant.
^7 s Throwing, casting. Ex.
of comp. m^ -"^^ -^W-^^.
2 Sending away. 3 A single
time ; an instance of occurrence :
a single action, or the whole
period occupied by it ; as ■^*1T-
^^■^ n. s Throwing. 2 Send-
ing away.
^^^ V. c. To throw. 2 To
send away.
^TH^tT ad. Positively, at all
events. *i^ ^^t ^^ il'<T.
^^ n. (s) Well-being, hap-
piness. 2 Friendly embrace.
V. g, ■^■(^. a. s Well, happy.
^'Tlf^JliT- n. A friendly em-
brace. V. %.
^r%/. s The earth.
^M" (s) Agitation ; commo-
tion, disturbance. 2 The com-
motion of anger, — passion, rage.
^n^T^ V. i. To undergo agi-
tation, perturbation ; to be ve-
hemently moved in gen.
^rW cT p. Agitated, excited.
»\
^f*^ a. s (Possible) to be
agitated.
^K n. (s) Shaving (esp.the
head).
^TThe thirty-sixth consonant,
^f a. (s) That knows ; as
?f^^, 5fH" p. s Made known,
taught.
5r(H' /■ s The understanding.
2 Knowledge or knownness.
^TfcT / See ^fircT. p. Under-
stood.
5f[^°^ a. s (Possible, neces-
sary, &c.) to be known, intel-
ligible, knowable.
^r^r a. (s) That knows. 2
That knows well ; an intelligent
and wise person.
5rrl% f. (s) Caste or tribe :
genus, or kind : a caste, or a
genus.
^rfcT^^ n. s TntelUgence,know-
ledge. 2 Capacity of knowing.
^TR n. (s) Knowledge in
gen. 2 Knowledge of a specific
and religious kind, — that which
5rR^
482
IT?T
is derived from meditation and
the study of philosophy ; which
teaches man the divine origin
anil nature of his immaterial ])or-
tion, and the unreality of cor-
poral enjoyments, sntferings and
experiences, and the illnsoriness
of the external and ohjective
universe ; and which sanctify-
int: him during Hfe from earthly
attachments and fleshly affec-
tions, accomplishes for him after
death emancipation from in-
dividual existence and reunion
with the universal spirit. 3
Understanding ; i. e. the in-
teUeetual faculty or tlie product
of the application and exercise
of it — sense, sa|)ience, judg-
ment. 4 An impression upon the
understanding; a conception of.
5rfn^3T f. The ulory of in-
telligence. 2 The un<icrstand-
ing as a light, 3 See SJTDTrTl-
gffo,?T fig- li 2, 3.
^l^^ a. Filled to the full
witli understanding.
^TR^^P^T n. The mental eye :
attrih. That has a mental eye.
irr^r^^r <n The lamp of the
understanding.
5r[=R^'fTTr /. s Knovvledo-e
through the consecution of
iileas : growing knowledge. This
word will serve to render
Association of ideas.
STHRcT A hermitage for deep
spiritual study or meditation.
Hence familarly, a jail.
^RHfT D II van as a mad to
the attainment of absorption
into the universal spirits.
sfRHmr a. That seeks finiil
emancipation through'gT*I'?T'T.
5fR?:Rr^r ^\ZJ^ /. a term
for a wise man.
sTR^eTf /; A siL-^nificant term
for the Hemp -plant.
sTf^T^iT s The doctrine that
salvation is tlirongh the know-
ledge of Brahma or spirit.
sTR^R a. (s) Having know-
ledge, wisdom.
5TR^[J A disease, — palsy
or wind affecting the hrain,
and prompting the patient to
chatter volubly on learned and
profound subjects.
JTI^r^q"^ a. s Whose body
is Knowledge. A title of the
Ueity.
5ff'Tr^5ri'T rt. Divine, spiritual,
or sacred science, and profane,
secular, or experimental science ;
knowledge by report or instruc-
tion and knowledge by sight
or experience.
jfRI^l'l n. (s) The colly rium
of understanding. See Rev. iii.
18.
^TRl^qr^ The practice of
contemplation upon the ex-
panded and all-constituting
spirit of the objective universe.
5TRf a. Wise, sensible,
knowing. 2 By eminence. That
possesses religious knowledge.
See ^T'ST sig. 2.
^THIST^ V. A sense, an or-
gan through which knowledge
is acf|uired.
5fRR?5T Instruction in
knowledge, esp. in the know-
Ied.re of the Divine nature or of
one's own soul.
IfRfqW^r f .s The third
division of '^^Ttl'iT, — seeking
of wisdom through study of
the Vedas and Shastras.
^flM* a. That makes known ;
that indicates.
^TTT'l II. (s) Making known ;
communicating, teaching.
sTlT^R a. s (Proper) to be
maile known; to be taught.
^Vm^ V. c. Poet. To make
known; to declare, tell: to apprize.
^rri'T^ ;). (s) Made known,
declared : made knowing, in-
structed, apprized.
^\^^ n. s (Possible, purposed,
&c,) to be made known; to be
taught or told.
♦\
5T^ o.. (Possible, necessary,
&c.) to be known or understood.
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