بُرْقَةٌ
1.
2.
Rugged ground in which are stones and sand and earth mixed together, (S, K, TA,) the stones thereof mostly white, but some being red, and black, and the earth white and of a whitish dust-colour, and sometimes by its side are meadows (رَوْض); (TA;) as also
أَبْرَقُ and
بَرْقَاءُ: (S, K, TA:) or a portion of such land (أَرْض) as is termed
بَرْقَاءُ, which consists of tracts containing black stones mixed with white sand, and which, when spacious, is termed
أَبْرَقُ: (JK:) [and] a mountain mixed with sand; as also
أَبْرَقُ: (IAar, TA:) the plural of بُرْقَةٌ is بُرَقٌ (K, TA) and بِرَاقٌ; (JK, S;) and that of
ابرق is أَبَارِقُ, (JK, S, K,) after the manner of a subst., because the quality of a subst. is predominant in it; (TA;) and that of
برقاء is بَرْقَاوَاتٌ. (As, IAar, S, K.) The بُرَق of the country of the Arabs are more than a hundred; and are distinguished by particular adjuncts, as بُرْقَةٌ الأَثْمَادِ and بُرْقَةُ الأَجَاوِلِ &c. (K.) One says قُنْفُذُ بُرْقَةٍ [A hedge-hog of a
برقة], like as one says ضَبُّ كُدْيَةِ (S)
3.
[The colour denoted by the epithet
أَبْرَقُ: in a mountain, a mixture of blackness and whiteness: see حَقْبَاءُ, voce أَحْقَبُ.]