سطل
1 سَطَلَهُ,
inf. n. سَطْلٌ, said of a medicine, It intoxicated him: but it is a vulgar word. (
TA.)
b2: [And hence, (assumed
tropical:) He, or it, charmed, or fascinated, or delighted, him.]
7 اِنْسِطَالٌ A state of intoxication produced by the حَشِيش [or herb, or perhaps species of hemp,] known by the name of زيه; as also ↓ اِسْتِطَالٌ. (De Sacy's Chrest. Ar., 2nd ed., i. 282; from the book entitled كتاب الكواكب السائرة فى اخبار مصر والقاهرة.) [Both
app. post-classical: see 1, of which each is quasi-
pass.]
8 اِسْتِطَالٌ: see what next precedes.
Q. Q. 2 جَآءَ يَتَسَيْطَلُ He came alone, having nothing with him. (Ibn-'Abbád,
K.) سَطْلٌ A طُسَيْسَة [or small vessel of the kind called طَسّ, or طَسْت,
q. v.], (
M,
K,) like the تَوْر [
q. v.], (
M,) having a loop-shaped handle, (
M,
K,) like that of the مِرْجَل; (
TA;) well known: (
S,
Msb:) a genuine Arabic word: (
M:) or an arabicized word: [said by Golius to be in
Pers\. سَطَلٌ:] and صَطْلٌ is a
dial. var. thereof: (
Msb:) a vessel of copper, a large [vessel of the kind called] طَاس [
q. v.], for the hot bath; (
MA;) the thing [i. e. vessel] in which water is drawn from the hot bath: (
KL:) [in the present day applied to a kind of pail, of tinned copper, which the women take with them to the hot bath, containing the water that they require for washing after the other operations of the bath; and also used for various other purposes; as also ↓ سَطْلَةٌ:] and ↓ سَيْطَلٌ signifies the same: (
S,
M,
K,
KL:) or this last signifies, (
K,) or signifies also, (
M,) a [vessel of the kind called] طَسْت; (
M,
K;) not the well-known [vessel called] سَطْل: (
K:) the
pl. [of mult.] of سَطْلٌ is سُطُولٌ (
M,
Msb,
K) and [of pauc.] أَسْطَالٌ. (
Msb.) سَطْلَةٌ: see the next preceding paragraph.
سَاطِلٌ Dust rising, or rising high; as also طَاسِلٌ. (
K.) سَيْطَلٌ: see سَطْلٌ.
A2: Also A tall man: (
K:) or سَيْطَلٌ نَيْطَلٌ a man tall, or long, in body. (Ibn-'Abbád,
TA.) أُسْطُولٌ A ship of war, prepared for fighting with. the unbelievers on the sea: mentioned by El-Makreezee in the “ Khitat; ” and he says, “I do not think this word to be [genuine] Arabic: ” (
TA:) [it is evidently from the Greek στόλος:] several writers mention it among arabicized words. (
MF,
TA.)