ك • ل • س
كَلَسَ
: see 2.
كلّس
, inf. n. تَكْلِيسٌ, He plastered (طَرَّ) a building with
كِلْس; as also ↓
كَلَسَ, inf. n. كَلْسٌ: he made smooth [with plaster]: when a thing is thickly plastered, it is termed مُقَرْمَدٌ. (TA.) See كِلْسٌ. As used by the alchemists, [He calcined a substance;] he dissolved a body so that it became like
كِلْس. (TA.)
كَلَّاسٌ
: see مُكَلِّسٌ.
كَلَّاسَةٌ
[
A time-kiln: so in the present day.]
كَيْلُوسٌ
[Chyle; from the Greek
χυλός;] a term applied by the physicians to the food when it is digested in the stomach before it departs thence and becomes blood; also called كَيْمُوسٌ. (L.) [But the latter word more properly signifies “ chyme, ” and in this sense is used by modern physicians.]
كِلْسٌ
(S, K) and by poetic licence. ↓
كِلِّسٌ (IJ) i. q.
صَارُوجٌ [i. e. Quick time, and the mixtures thereof, with which are plastered tanks, or cisterns, and baths, &c.], (S, K.) or the like thereof, (TA,) with which one builds: (S, TA:) or that with which a wall, or the inside of a palace or the like, is plastered, resembling
جِص [or gypsum], without baked bricks. (TA.) A poet says, (S,) namely 'Adee Ibn-Zeyd, describing El-Hadr, a city between the Tigris and Euphrates, (TA,)
[He raised it high, of marble, and covered it with quick time, and there were nests for the birds in its tops]: or, accord. to As, the right reading is وَخَلَّلَهُ كِلْسًا, with خ, meaning, and put صاروج into the interstices of its stones; and he used to laugh at him who related it in the former manner, with ج. (TA.) But see 2.شَادَهُ مَرْمَرًا وَجَلَّلَهُ كِلْسًا فَلِلطَّيْرِ فِى ذُرَاهُ وُكُورُ
كِلِّسٌ
: see كِلْسٌ.
مُكَلِّسٌ
A lime-burner; (Golius, on the authority of Meyd;) [as also ↓
كَلَّاسٌ: or this latter signifies a seller of quick lime.]