HaAq~apN HAq HAqh HAqp : see HaqiyqapN , in two places. [In the sense in which it is there explained, its pl. is HawaAq~u ; and so in other senses; agreeably with analogy: see the second of the sentences here following.] ― -b2- Also A severe calamity or affliction, the happening of which is fixed, or established; and so ↓ Haq~apN ; (K;) which signifies also, [according to another explanation,] like ↓ Huq~apN , [simply,] a calamity; or a great, formidable, terrible, or momentous, thing, or event: (Az, K:) and HaAjapN HaAq~apN a want that befalls, or happens, and is severe, or distressing. (Msb.) ― -b3- And AlHaAq~apu [in the Kur lxix. 1 and 2] means The resurrection: (S, Msb, K:) because in it shall be [manifest] the true natures ( HawaAq~ ) of things, or actions; or because in it shall be [or shall happen (Bd)] severe calamities ( HawaAq~u AlA^umuwri ); (Fr, S, Bd, K;) namely, the reckoning and the recompensing: (Bd:) or because in it things shall be surely known (Bd, Jel) which are denied; namely, the raising of the dead, and the reckoning, and the recompensing: (Jel:) or because including within its sphere [all] the created beings. (Msb. [Several other reasons are assigned; but these which I have mentioned appear to be the most generally approved.]) ― -b4- See also HaAq~N , in two places.
The corpus record — Arabic
حَآقَّة
haaaqqah
HaAq~apN HAq HAqh HAqp : see HaqiyqapN , in two places. [In the sense in which it is there explained, its pl. is HawaAq~u ; and so in other senses; agreeably with analogy: see the second of the sentences here following.] ― -b2- Also A severe calamity or affliction, the happening of which is fixed, o
Every figure on this page is a live query of the corpus record.
Where it lives
- The Quran 3 · 0.23/10k
What it meant — Lane's Arabic-English Lexicon
In the wild
- حَا^قَّةُ Quran 69:1 (Al-Haqqah 1)
- حَا^قَّةُ Quran 69:2 (Al-Haqqah 2)
- حَا^قَّةُ Quran 69:3 (Al-Haqqah 3)
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.