jurufN jrf and ↓ jurofN , (S, Msb, K, &c.,) the latter a contraction of the former, (Msb,) [ An abrupt, water-worn, bank or ridge; ] a bank ( jaAnibN Ksh and Jel in ix. 110) of a valley, the lower part of which is excavated by the water, and hollowed out by the torrents, so that it remains uncompact, unsound, or weak; (Ksh ib.;) a bank, or an acclivity, of a water-course of a valley and the like, when the water has carried away from its lower part, and undermined it, so that it has become like what is termed a daHol , with its upper part overhanging; (L;) a portion of land (or sand, S in art. thr ) which the torrents have partially swept away, or worn away, (↓ tajar~afatohu , S, K, or ↓ jarafatohu , Msb,) and eaten; (S, Msb, K;) a portion of the lower part of the side of a valley, and of a river, eaten by the torrent; (M, TA;) the side of the bank of a river, that has been eaten by the water, so that some part of it every little while falls: (Har p. 47:) and the latter, [or each,] a place which the torrent does not take away; as also ↓ jirofN ; (K;) [i. e. a bank, or ridge, that remains rising abruptly by the bed of a torrent or stream: ] pl. [of pauc.] (of jurufN , TA) A^ajoraAfN , (K,) like A^aTonaAbN pl. of TunubN , (TA,) and [of mult.] (of jurofN , though it is implied in the K that it is of jurufN , TA) jirafapN , like jiHarapN (S, K) pl. of juHorN , (S,) and juruwfN . (ISd, TA.)
The corpus record — Arabic
جُرُف
juruf
jurufN jrf and ↓ jurofN , (S, Msb, K, &c.,) the latter a contraction of the former, (Msb,) [ An abrupt, water-worn, bank or ridge; ] a bank ( jaAnibN Ksh and Jel in ix. 110) of a valley, the lower part of which is excavated by the water, and hollowed out by the torrents, so that it remains uncompact
Every figure on this page is a live query of the corpus record.
Where it lives
- The Quran 1 · 0.08/10k
What it meant — Lane's Arabic-English Lexicon
In the wild
- جُرُفٍ Quran 9:109 (At-Tawbah 109)
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.