LOGOI

The corpus record — Arabic

جُند

jund

junodN jnd [a coll. gen. n.] An army; a military force; a legion; a body of troops or soldiers; (L, K;) a collected body of men prepared for war: (Mgh:) auxiliaries: (S, L, Msb, K:) n. un. ↓ junodiY~N [signifying a trooper; a soldier; an auxiliary ]; like as ruwmiY~N is n. un. of ruwmN : (Msb:) pl.

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Where it lives

  • The Quran 29 · 2.27/10k

What it meant — Lane's Arabic-English Lexicon

junodN jnd [a coll. gen. n.] An army; a military force; a legion; a body of troops or soldiers; (L, K;) a collected body of men prepared for war: (Mgh:) auxiliaries: (S, L, Msb, K:) n. un. ↓ junodiY~N [signifying a trooper; a soldier; an auxiliary ]; like as ruwmiY~N is n. un. of ruwmN : (Msb:) pl. of the former, junuwdN (S, A, Mgh, Msb) and [pl. of pauc.] A^ajonaAdN . (Mgh, Msb.) It is said in a trad., ↓ AlA^arowaAHu junuwdN mujan~adapN (S, A, L) Souls are troops collected together: meaning that they are created of two parties, each party agreeing together, and disagreeing with the other party, like two armies opposed, each to the other. (L.) ― -b2- Also Any kind, or species, of creatures, or created things, regarded as alone, by itself, or apart from others. (K, * TA.) It is said in a prov., A_in~a lil~hi junuwdFA minohaA AlEasalu Verily to God belong kinds, or species, of created things [ by means of which He effects his purposes as by armies or auxiliaries ], of which is honey: (Z, K:) first said by Mo'áwiyeh, when he heard that El-Ashtar had been given to drink some honey containing poison, in consequence of which he died: and used on the occasion of rejoicing at a misfortune that has befallen an enemy: it occurs in the history of El-Mes'oodee thus; A_in~a lil~hi junodFA fiY AlEasali . (MF.) ― -b3- Also, [as a term used in Syria, and afterwards by the Arabs from Syria in Spain,] A city [ with its territory; i. e. a province, or district ]: (K:) or particularly a city of Syria [ with its territory ]: (AO, TA:) pl. A^ajonaAdN . (TA.) Syria consists of five AjnAd ; namely, Dimashk [or Damascus], Hims [or Emessa], Kinnesreen, El-Urdunn [or the Jordan], and Filasteen or Falasteen [or Palestine]: (S, M, A:) they were thus called because the military forces were thence collected. (A.) [See mixolaAfN .]

In the wild

6 of 29 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.