ر • ه • ل

rhl · Vol. 3 · Lane (vols 1–5)

رَهِلَ لَحْمُهُ

, (S, K,) [aor. رَهَلَ ,] inf. n. رَهَلٌ, (JK, TA,) His flesh was, or became, quivering, and flaccid, or flabby: (S, K:) and (some say, TA) his flesh was, or became, inflated, or puffy, or swollen, (K, TA,) in any part: (TA:) or it was, or became, swollen without disease; (JK, K, TA;) he being flaccid by reason of fatness, (JK, TA,) and inclining to weakness. (TA.) [See also 5.]

رهّلهُ

, inf. n. تَرْهِيلٌ, It (flesh-meat) rendered it (i. e. his flesh) quivering, and flaccid, or flabby: (S, K:) or inflated, or swollen: or swollen without disease: (K: [see 1:]) or it (much sleep) rendered his face swollen, and the parts below, or around, his eyes puffy. (TA.)

ترهّل

He was, or became, soft in the flesh: and it (the flesh of a limb or member) was, or became, soft. (KL.) [See also 1.]

أَصْبَحَ مُرَهَّلًا

He was, or became, in the morning, swollen (K, TA) in his face, by reason of much sleep. (TA. [See 2. In some copies of the K, تَهَيَّجَ is erroneously put, in this explanation, for تَهَبَّجَ.])

رَهَلٌ

Yellow water [or fluid] in the سُخْد [app. here meaning the membrane that encloses the fœtus of a beast]. (IDrd, K.)

رَهِلٌ

Quivering, and flaccid, or flabby, flesh. (TA.) And رَهِلٌ الصَّدْرِ A horse quivering, and flaccid, or flabby, in the breast. (S, TA.)

رِهْلٌ

[in the Lexicons of Golius and Freytag رِهَلٌ] Thin clouds, resembling [falling] dew, (K, TA,) in the sky. (TA.)