فَتِيقٌ

1.
[i. q. مَفْتُوقٌ i. e. Slit, rent, &c.]. نَصْلٌ فَتِيقُ الشَّفْرَتَيْنِ means [An arrow-head] having two forking portions; (Lth, O, K;) as though [each] one of them were slit [from the other]: (Lth, O:) [or it may mean sharp in the two edges: for] سَيْفٌ فَتِيقُ الغِرَارَيْنِ signifies A sword sharp [in the two edges]: and سَيْفٌ فَتِيقٌ, A sharp sword: (TA:) [whence,] رَجُلٌ فَتِيقُ اللِّسَانِ A sharp-tongued man: (S, O, K:) or chaste, or eloquent, and sharp, of tongue: or chaste, or eloquent, of tongue, perspicuous in speech. (TA.)
2.
الصُّبْحُ الفَتِيقُ (tropical:) The shining dawn. (As, S, O, K.)
3.
See also فَتْقٌ, last sentence but one.
4.
جَمَلٌ فَتِيقٌ (tropical:) A camel swollen, or inflated, in the flanks, by reason of fatness; تَفَتَّقَ سِمَنًا: (As, S, O, K:) and نَاقَةٌ فَتِيقَةٌ a fat she-camel. (TA.)
5.
And فَتِيقٌ is used in the sense of فَتْقٌ: thus in the saying of 'Amr Ibn-El-Ahtam,
لَهَا مِنْ أَمَامِ المَنْكِبَيْنِ فَتِيقُ
[apparently describing a she-camel: I can only conjecture the meaning to be, Having, in the part before the shoulders, a crease like a gash, occasioned by fatness]. (O.)

Perseus ID: n32935