ه • ل • ت
هَلَتَ
, [aor.
هَلُتَ
, and
هَلِتَ
?] inf. n. هَلْتٌ, He peeled a thing; or deprived it of its outer covering, or crust; syn. قَشَرَ. (K.) هَلَتَ الدَّمَ, as also سَلَتَ, He peeled off, or scraped off, (قشَرَ,) the [dried] blood with a knife. (Lh, L.) هَلتَ دَمَ
البَدَنَةِ, [as also سَلَتَ,] He scratched the skin of the
بدنة [or beast brought to Mekkeh for sacrifice, or there sacrificed, or the right reading is النَّدَبَةِ, i. e. the sear. (see سَلَتَ,)] with a knife, so that he made the blood to appear. (Lh, L, TA.)
انهلت يَعْدُو
i. q.
انسلت, (in the CK, انهلت
بَعُدَ وانسلت,) He withdrew himself privately, or stole away, without being known to do so, running. (Ibn-El-Faraj, K.)
هَلْتَاتٌ
هَلْتَى
A certain plant; (S, K;) when it dries, it becomes red; and when it is eaten, and grows, it is called
جَمِيمٌ: or, accord. to Az, a certain tree, growing like the
صِلِّيَان, except that its colour inclines to red: or, accord. to Aboo-Ziyád, as AHn says, a plant of the kind called
طَرِيفَة, growing like the
صلّيان
and the
نَصِىّ, red when fresh and moist, and more red when it has dried: it is watery; and the camels and sheep &c. scarcely ever eat it when they find any other herbage to serve them in its stead. (TA.)