رَامِكٌ
1.
2.
See also 1, last sentence.
3.
Also, and
رَامَكٌ, (S, Msb, K,) the former of which is the more usual, or more approved, (TA,) A certain thing, black, (S, Msb, K,) like pitch, (Msb,) that is mixed with musk, (S, Msb, K,) and is then called (يُجْعَلُ) musk. (Msb.) [Freytag, as on the authority of the K, in which nothing more is said respecting it than what I have given above, describes it thus: “ Res ex aliis rebus composita, nempe atramento sutorio, mali Punici cortice, gummi Arabico aliisque rebus, quibus admisceri solet muscus. ”] A poet says, (S,) namely, Khalaf Ibn-Khaleef El-Akta', (O, TA,)
[Verily thou hast such excellence as renders thee above my companionship; but musk sometimes unites with رامك]. (S, O.)إِنَّ لَكَ الفَضْلَ عَلَى صُحْبَتِىوَالمِسْكُ قَدْ يَسْتَصْحِبُ الرَّامَكَا
4.
[
رَامَكٌ, from the Pers. رَامَكْ, is also the name of A certain astringent medicine, used as a remedy for dysentery &c. In the printed edition of the “ Kánoon ” of Ibn-Seenà (Avicenna), book ii. p. 253, it is erroneously written رمك.]