1. حَبِطَ
1 HabiTa HbT , aor. HabaTa , inf. n. HabaTN , (Az, S, K, &c.,) He (a beast, Az, S, or a camel, ISd, K) ate much, (S,) or had pain in his belly from pasture which he found unwholesome, or from eating much of herbage, (ISd, K,) so that he became swollen, or inflated, thereby (S, ISd, K) in his belly, (S,) and there would not come forth from him (S, ISd, K) what was in it, (S,) or anything; (ISd, K;) he did not void either thin dung or urine, his belly being bound: (Az:) or he (a sheep, or goat, ISk, S) became swollen, or inflated, in his belly, in consequence of eating [ the herb called ] *uraq , (ISk, S, K, *) which is the Hanoda quwq [i. e. the herb lotus, melilot, or bird's-foot-trefoil ]: (ISk, S:) or he (a beast) lighted upon good pasturage, and ate immoderately, so that he became swollen, or inflated, and died: (Z, IAth:) or, in speaking of a horse, you do not say, HabiTa Alfarasu , but HabiTa quSayoraY Alfarasi , or xaASiratuhu , or mawoqifuhu , because it means that the horse's belly became swollen, or inflated: (ISd, Z, L:) you say also, HabiTa baTonuhu his belly became swollen, or inflated, so that he died: (Az, TA:) or his (a man's) belly became swollen, or inflated, by food &c.: (Mbr, TA in art. HbTA^ :) and HabiTa is also said of the skin, meaning it became swollen, or inflated. (TA.) [See also Q. Q. 3; and see HabaTN below.] ― -b2- Hence, app., i. e. from HabiTa said of the belly, (Az, TA,) or it is from this verb said of a beast, (Z, IAth, TA,) HabiTa Eamaluhu , (Az, S, Msb, K, &c.,) aor. HabaTa ; (Az, Msb, K;) and HabaTa , aor. HabiTa ; (AZ, Az, Msb, K;) the latter, says Az, heard by AZ from an Arab of the desert, but I have not heard it on any other authority; (TA;) inf. n. HaboTN , (Az, S, K, [but in the Msb it seems to be indicated that it is HabaTN ,]) with the b quiescent, (Az, S,) thus differing from the inf. n. of HabiTa said of the belly, (Az, TA,) and HubuwTN , (Az, S, Msb, K,) which latter, accord. to AZ, is the inf. n. of HabaTa like Daraba ; (T, TA;) (tropical:) His work, or deed, became null, or void, or of no account; it went for nothing; it perished; (Az, Msb, TA;) for like as he of whom one says HabiTa baTonuhu perishes, so does the work, or deed, of the hypocrite: (Az, TA:) or it became ineffective of reward; its reward became annulled. (S, K.) And hence also, (Z, TA,) HabiTa damuhu , aor. HabaTa , (Z, Msb, K, TA,) but not HabaTa also, as is implied in the K, (TA,) and in this case the inf. n. is HabaTN , (Msb, * TA,) with the b movent, (TA,) (tropical:) His blood (the blood of one slain, K) went for nothing; unretaliated, and uncompensated by a mulct. (Msb, K, TA.) ― -b3- HabiTa said of the water of a well, i. q. A^aHobaTa , q. v. (TA.) ― -b4- Said of a wound, (S, Ibn-' Abbád, K,) aor. HabaTa , (K,) inf. n. HabaTN , with fet-h to the b , (S, K,) It had scars remaining after having healed: (Ibn-' Abbád, K: *) or it broke open again; or became recrudescent; syn. Eariba [which has the signification given above on the authority of Ibn-' Abbád as well as what follows it] and nukisa . (S.) [See also HabaTN below.]
2. حَبَطٌ
HabaTN HbT [inf. n. of HabiTa , q. v.:] A beast's having the belly swollen, or inflated, so that what is in it does not come forth, in consequence of eating much: (S:) or pain in the belly, of a camel, from pasture which he finds unwholesome, or from herbage of which he has eaten much, so that he becomes swollen, or inflated, therefrom, (ISd, K,) in his belly, (TA,) and nothing comes forth from him: (ISd, K:) or a swelling, or inflation, of the belly, (K,) or a beast's having the belly swollen, or inflated, (ISk, S,) from eating [ the herb called ] *uraq : (ISk, S, K:) [see 1:] and a swelling in the udder or other thing: (K:) or, accord. to the M, the slightest swelling in the udder: or, as some say, swelling, or inflation, wherever it be, from disease or other cause. (TA.) It is said in a trad., A_in~a mim~aA yunobitu Alr~abiyEu mDA yaqotulu HabaTFA A^awo yulim~u [ Verily, of what the ( rain, or season, called ) rbyE causes to grow, is what kills by inflation of the belly, or nearly does so ]. (S, TA.) ― -b2- The scars, or marks, of a wound, or of whips, upon the body, after healing: or the swollen scars, or marks, ( of whips, TA,) not lacerated: when mangled and bleeding, they are termed Euluwb [pl. of Ealob ]: (K:) the excrescent flesh upon the scars of wounds. (Sgh.)
3. حَبِطٌ
HabiTN HbT part. n. of HabiTa ; A camel [or other beast having his belly swollen, or inflated, so that what is in it does not come forth, in consequence of eating much: or] having pain in the belly, from pasture which he finds unwholesome, or from herbage of which he has eaten much, so that he is swollen, or inflated, therefrom, [ in his belly, ] and nothing comes forth from him: (K:) [see HabaTN :] pl. HabaATaY (K) and HabaTapN . (M, TA.) You say also farasN HabiTu AlquSayoraY A horse swollen, or inflated, in the flanks. (TA.)