LOGOI

The corpus record — Arabic

عُمْرَة

umrah

EamorapN * : see EamaArapN . -A2- A^abuw Eamorapa means Bankruptcy, insolvency, or the state of having no property remaining; (Lth, O, K;) which is said to be thus called because it was the name of an envoy of El-Mukhtár the son of Aboo-'Obeyd, on the occasion of whose alighting at the abode of a pe

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Where it lives

  • The Quran 2 · 0.16/10k

What it meant — Lane's Arabic-English Lexicon

1. عَمْرَةٌ

EamorapN * : see EamaArapN . -A2- A^abuw Eamorapa means Bankruptcy, insolvency, or the state of having no property remaining; (Lth, O, K;) which is said to be thus called because it was the name of an envoy of El-Mukhtár the son of Aboo-'Obeyd, on the occasion of whose alighting at the abode of a people, slaughter and war used to befall them: (Lth, O, K: *) ― -b2- and (K) hunger. (IAar, K.)

2. عُمْرَةٌ

EumorapN * A visit, or a visiting: (S, Msb, K:) or a visit in which is the cultivation ( EimaArap ) of love or affection: (TA:) or a repairing to an inhabited, or a peopled, place: this is the primary signification. (Mgh.) ― -b2- Hence the Eumorap in pilgrimage [and at any time]; (S, O; *) i. e. [ A religious visit to the sacred places at Mekkeh, with the performance of the ceremony of AlA_iHoraAm ,] the circuiting round the Kaabeh, and the going to and fro between Es-Safà and El-Marweh: AlHaj~u [differs from it inasmuch as it is at a particular time of the year and] is not complete without the halting at 'Arafát on the day of 'Arafeh: (Zj, TA:) the Eumorap is the minor pilgrimage ( AlHaj~u AlA^aSogaru ); (Msb, and Kull p. 168;) what is commonly termed AlHaj~u being called sometimes the greater pilgrimage ( AlHaj~u AlA^akobaru ): (Kull:) pl. EumarN (S, O, Msb) and EumaraAtN or EumuraAtN or EumoraAtN . (Msb.) ― -b3- Also A man's going in to his [ newlymarried ] wife in the abode of her family: (IAar, S, K:) if he removes her to his own family, the act is termed EurosN . (IAar, S.)

In the wild

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.