الزَّنْجُ
and الزِّنْجُ, (AA, S, Msb, K,) the latter being a dialect var. of the former, (Msb,) both of them chaste, (TA,) [but the latter is the more common,] and
الزُّنُوجُ (S, K) and
المَزْنَجَةُ, (K,) A certain nation of the blacks; (S, Msb, K;) [the inhabitants of the country called by us “ Zanguebar, ” including the “ Zingis ” of Ptolemy, near the entrance of the Red Sea, and a large portion of inner Africa:] their country is beneath, and to the south of, the equinoctial line; and beyond them is [said to be] no habitation, or cultivation: [sometimes applied to the Negroes absolutely; for] some say that their country extends from the western parts of Africa nearly to Abyssinia, [comprehending the whole of Nigritia properly so called, or at least the whole of the countries of the Negroes known to the Arabs of the classical ages,] and that part of it is on the Nile of Egypt: (Msb:) the n. un. is
زَنْجِىٌّ and زِنْجِىٌّ, (AA, A'Obeyd, ISk, S, K,) like as رُومِىٌّ is of رُومٌ: (TA:) and
أَزْنُجٌ occurs as a broken plural, meaning the divisions and subtribes [of that nation]: so says AAF, and so in the M. (TA.)