نَفَتَتِ القِدْرُ
1.
, (S, K,) aor
نَفِتَ
, verbal noun نفِيتٌ (S) and نَفْتٌ and نَفَتَانٌ, (L,) The cooking-pot boiled: (K:) or threw forth what resembled arrows, by reason of [its vehement] boiling: (S, L:) [see also نَفَثَت, and نَفَطَتْ] or [boiled so that] the broth, or gravy, stuck to its sides: (K:) or the broth boiled in the cooking pot, and what dried thereof stuck to the sides of the pot: L:) you say [also]
القِدْرُ تَنَافَتُ, and تَنَافَطُ, [for تَتَنَافتُ and تَتَنَافَطُ]. (S, L [but in the latter, these two verbs are written without the syll. points].)
2.
يَنْفِتُ غَضَبًا, as also يَنْفِطُ, (assumed tropical:) He boils with anger. (S:)
3.
4.
صَدْرُهُ
يَنْفِتُ بِالْعَدَاوَةِ (tropical:) [His breast boils with enmity]. (A.) [See also نَفَثَ.]
5.
نَفَتَ, aorist
نَفِتَ
, verbal noun نَفْتٌ and نَفَتَانٌ (L, K) and نَفِيتٌ and نَفَاتٌ, (L,) (assumed tropical:) He (a man, L) was angry: (K, L:) or نَفَتَانٌ resembles coughing: [so that the verb seems to signify he made a noise like coughing, by reason of anger:] (L:) or he blew in anger: (L:) or he blew, (نَفَخَ, as in the copies of the K in my hands,) or swelled, or became inflated, (انتفخ, as in the TA,) by reason of anger. (K.)