LOGOI

The corpus record — Arabic

شُعَيْب

shu'ayb

$aEiybN * A [ leathern water-bag such as is called ] mazaAdap [q. v.]; (A'Obeyd, S, K;) as also raAwiyapN and saTiyHapN : (A'Obeyd, S:) or one that has been repaired, or pieced: (TA:) or one that is made of two hides: (K:) or one that is made of two hides facing each other, without fiy^aAm at their

Every figure on this page is a live query of the corpus record.

Where it lives

  • The Quran 11 · 0.86/10k

What it meant — Lane's Arabic-English Lexicon

$aEiybN * A [ leathern water-bag such as is called ] mazaAdap [q. v.]; (A'Obeyd, S, K;) as also raAwiyapN and saTiyHapN : (A'Obeyd, S:) or one that has been repaired, or pieced: (TA:) or one that is made of two hides: (K:) or one that is made of two hides facing each other, without fiy^aAm at their corners; fy^Am in [the making of] mazaAyid being the taking of the hide and folding it, and then adding at the sides what will widen it: or one that is pieced ( tufoA^amu ) with a third skin, between the two skins, that it may be rendered wider: or one that is made of two pieces joined together: (TA:) or one that is sewed ( maxoruwzap , K and TA, in the CK maHozuwzap ,) on both sides: (K:) called thus because one part is joined to another: (L, TA:) pl. $uEubN . (K, * TA.) ― -b2- Also An old, worn-out skin for water or milk: (K:) because it is pieced, or repaired: (TA:) pl. as above. (K.) ― -b3- And A camel's saddle; syn. raHolN : because it is joined, part to part: so in the saying of El-Marrár, describing a she-camel, A_i*aA hiYa xar~ato xar~a mino Eano yamiynihaA $aEiybN bihi A_iHomaAmuhaA waluguwbuhaA [ When she falls down, or fell down, there falls down, or fell down, from her right side a saddle by reason of which was her fevered and jaded state ]. (TA.) ― -b4- And rajulN $aEiybN i. q. gariybN [ A man who is a stranger, &c.]. (AA, TA voce gariybN .)

In the wild

6 of 11 attestations shown.

Quran text from Tanzil (tanzil.net), distributed verbatim per its license. Morphological facts derived from the Quranic Arabic Corpus (corpus.quran.com, Kais Dukes), stated as facts with source credit. Dictionary senses from Lane, An Arabic-English Lexicon (1863-93, public domain), via the Perseus Digital Library.