yaAquwtN * , [coll. gen. n., The sapphire, of whatever variety: the ruby, oriental ruby, or red sapphire, also called yAqwtN A^aHomaru ; of which there are several varieties, whereof one is the carbuncle; also called yAqwtN jamoriY~N : the sapphire, commonly so called, or blue sapphire, also called yAqwtN A^azoraqu : and the topaz, oriental topaz, or yellow sapphire, also called yAqwtN A^aSofaru : the jacinth, or hyacinth, accord. to Golius, who observes, as on the authority of the Teyfáshee, that by this name are called various gems of the East; four species thereof being enumerated; the red, the yellow, or gold-coloured, the blue, or azure, and the white: that the sapphire and the chrysolite are also thus called: but that, by the word used absolutely, the red jacinth, or hyacinth, commonly called the ruby, is meant: which last remark is agreeable with modern usage:] a well known gem; (K;) of which there are many varieties, (TA,) the most excellent whereof is that called AlyAqwtu AlA^aHomaru Alr~um~aAniY~u , (K,) also called AlbahoramaAniY~u ; [the finest kind of ruby or carbuncle; ] said to be brought from Sarandeeb [or Ceylon]: it has the property of exhilarating, and of conjoining [separated friends]; (TA;) and is profitable for disturbance of the mind (occasioned by the black bile, TA) and palpitation, and weakness of the heart and stomach, if drunk; [being app. reduced to powder for that purpose, as is done with some other gems in the East;] and for congealment of the blood, if hung [upon the person]: (K:) it is a Persian word, (S,) arabicized: (S, K:) of the measure faAEuwlN : n. un. with p ; and pl. yawAqiytu . (S.)
The corpus record — Arabic
يَاقُوت
yaaquwt
yaAquwtN * , [coll. gen. n., The sapphire, of whatever variety: the ruby, oriental ruby, or red sapphire, also called yAqwtN A^aHomaru ; of which there are several varieties, whereof one is the carbuncle; also called yAqwtN jamoriY~N : the sapphire, commonly so called, or blue sapphire, also called
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Where it lives
- The Quran 1 · 0.08/10k
What it meant — Lane's Arabic-English Lexicon
In the wild
- يَاقُوتُ Quran 55:58 (Ar-Rahman 58)
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.