ازق
1 أَزَقَ,
aor. ـِ (
K;) and أَزِقَ,
aor. ـَ (
IDrd,
K;)
inf. n. (of the former,
TA) أَزْقٌ, (
S,
O,
K,) and (of the latter,
TA) أَزَقٌ, (
IDrd,
K,) or the latter is used by poetic licence for the former; (
As,
Sgh;) He, or it, (said of a man,
MF, or of a man's bosom or mind,
K,) became strait, or straitened; (
IDrd,
S,*
O,*
K,
MF;) أَزْقٌ being thus
syn. with أَزْلٌ: (
S, O:) or it (a man's bosom or mind) became straitened in war or fight; (
K;) or he (a man) became straitened in his bosom or mind, in war or fight: (
TA:) as also ↓ تأزّق, with respect to both these significations; (
K;) or this signifies it (a man's bosom or mind) became strait, or straitened; like تأزّل; (
Fr,
S;) and ↓ تآزق signifies the same as تأزّق. (
Z, in Golius.) [See also 10.]
A2: أَزَقَهُ,
inf. n. أَزْقٌ, He straitened him: the verb being
trans. and
intrans. (
MF.) 5 تَاَزَّقَand 6: see 1.
10 اُسْتُؤْزِقَ عَلَى فُلَانٍ The place became strait to such a one, (
K,
TA,) so that he was unable to go forth [into it, to war or fight]. (
TA.) مَأْزِقٌ A place of straitness, or a strait place, (
S,
K,
TA,) in which people fight. (
TA.) and hence, A place of war or fight. (
S.) and مَأْزِقُ العَيْشِ The place of straitness of life, or living. (
Lh.)
Pl. مَآزِقُ. (
TA.)