ك • ه • د
كَهَدَ
, (S, K,) aor.
كَهِدَ
, inf. n. كَهْدٌ (K) and كَهَدَانٌ, (S, K,) He was quick; made haste; (L, K;) in his pace: (L:) he (an ass) ran; syn. عَدَا. (S, L.) كَهَدَ and ↓
اكهد
He was quick in service. (TA.) كَهَدَ
He was importunate, persevering, or urgent, in petitioning, or seeking, or desiring. (K.) كَهَدَ and ↓
اكهد
He was, or became, fatigued, tired, or weary. (K.) كَهَدَ and ↓
اكهد
He became jaded, harassed, or fatigued, by labour, or toil: as also كَدَهَ and أَكْدَهَ. (L.) كَهَدْتُهُ (so in the copies of the K; but differently in the S: [see 4:] TA I made him to be quick, or to hasten. (K.)
أَكْهَدْتُهُ
إِكْوَهَدَّ
It (a young bird) trembled, or fluttered, before its mother, that she might feed it: (S, L:) and he (an old man) trembled: (L:) i. q.
إِقْمَهَدَّ. (K.)
كَاهِدٌ
كَهْدٌ
كَهْدَاءُ
A female slave: (K:) so called because of her quickness in service. (TA.)
كَهُودُ اليَدَيْنِ
كَوْهَدٌ
One who trembles by reason of old age. (K.)
مُكْهَدٌ
: see كَاهِدٌ.