1. بَحِيرَةٌ
The corpus record — Arabic
بَحِيرَة
bahiyrah
baHiyrapN Hyr Hyrp bHyrh bHyrp A she-camel having her ear slit: (S, * A, Msb, K *:) [and, as a subst., or an epithet in which the quality of a subst. is predominant,] a she-camel of which the mother was a saAy^ibap ; (Fr, S, Mgh, Msb, K;) i. e., of which the mother had brought forth ten females cons
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Where it lives
- The Quran 1 · 0.08/10k
What it meant — Lane's Arabic-English Lexicon
baHiyrapN Hyr Hyrp bHyrh bHyrp A she-camel having her ear slit: (S, * A, Msb, K *:) [and, as a subst., or an epithet in which the quality of a subst. is predominant,] a she-camel of which the mother was a saAy^ibap ; (Fr, S, Mgh, Msb, K;) i. e., of which the mother had brought forth ten females consecutively before her, and of which the ear was slit; (Mgh;) or of which the mother had brought forth five, of which five the last, if a male, was slaughtered and eaten, but if a female, her ear was slit and she was left with her mother; (Mgh, * Msb;) the predicament of which was the same as that of her mother; (Fr, S, K;) i. e., what was unlawful with respect to her mother was unlawful with respect to herself: (TA:) or a she-camel, or ewe, or she-goat, that had brought forth five young ones, and of which the fifth, if a male, was slaughtered, and its flesh was eaten by the men and women; but if a female, her ear was slit, and it was unlawful to the Arabs to eat her flesh and to drink her milk and to ride her; but when she died, her flesh was lawful to the women: (K:) so says Az, on the authority of Ibn-'Arafeh: (TA: [but it appears from the explanation in the Msb, quoted above, that it was the slit-eared young she-camel here mentioned, not the mother, that was thus termed:]) or a she-camel, or ewe , or she-goat, which, having brought forth ten young ones, had her ear slit, (K,) and no use was made of her milk nor of her back, (TA,) and she was left at liberty to pasture, (K,) and to go to water, (TA,) and her flesh, when she died, was made unlawful to the women of the Arabs, but was eaten by the men: (K:) or one that was left at liberty, without a pastor: (K:) or, as some say, syn. with saAy^ibapN ; i. e., say they, a she-camel which, having brought forth seven young ones, had her ear slit, and was not ridden, nor used for carrying: (Msb:) or a she-camel that had brought forth five young ones, the last of which was a male, in which case her ear was slit, and she was exempted from being ridden and from carrying and from being slaughtered, and not prevented from taking of any water to which she came, nor from any pasturage, nor even ridden by a weary man who, having become unable to proceed in his journey, his means having failed him, or his camel that bore him stopping with him from fatigue or breaking down or perishing, might chance to find her: (Aboo-Is- hák the Grammarian, TA: [and the like, but less fully, is said in the Mgh:]) or, applied specially to a ewe, or she-goat, one that, having brought forth five young ones, had her ear slit: (L, K, TA: [in the CK, for buHirat is put nuHirat :]) it also signifies a she-camel (L) abounding in milk: (L, K:) the pl. is baHaAy^iru and buHurN ; (L, K;) the latter a strange form of pl. of a fem. sing. such as bHyrp ; and said to be the only instance of the kind except SurumN pl. of SariymapN , meaning “ having her ear cut off. ” (TA.) It is said in a trad., that the person who instituted the practices relative to the bHyrp and the HaAmiY , and the first who altered the religion of Ishmael, was 'Amr the son of Loheí the son of Kama'ah the son of Jundab; and these practices are forbidden in the Kur v. 102. (TA.)
2. بُحَيْرَةٌ
buHayorapN Hyr Hyrp bHyrh bHyrp A small sea; a lake: as though they imagined the word baHorapN [as syn. with baHorN ]: otherwise there is no reason for the p . (M, TA.) ― -b2- See also baHorN : and see baHorapN , in two places.
In the wild
- بَحِيرَةٍ Quran 5:103 (Al-Ma'idah 103)
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.