نش
1 نَشَّ,
aor. ـِ (
A,
TA,)
inf. n. نَشِيشٌ (
S,
A,
Mgh,
Msb,
K) and نَشٌّ, (
TA,) It (said of water,
S,
Mgh,
Msb,
K, and of other things,
S,
K, such as wine, and flesh-meat,
TA) made a sound in boiling, estuating, or fermenting: (
S,
Mgh,
Msb,
K:) and it (anything) made a sound like that of boiling, estuating, or fermenting; or of beginning to do so: and it (water) made a sound in pouring forth. (
TA.) You say also, نَشَّتِ القِدْرُ, (
TA,)
inf. n. نَشِيشٌ; (
IDrd,
K;) and ↓ نَشْنَشَت, (
TA,)
inf. n. نَشْنَشَةٌ; (
IDrd,
K;) The cooking-pot made a sound in boiling: (
IDrd,
K:) or began to boil, and so made a sound. (
TA.) And نَشَّ المَاءُ فِى
كُوزٍ جَدِيدٍ [The water made a sound in a new earthen mug]: (
A:) or نَشَّ الكُوزُ الجَدِيدُ فِى المَآءِ The new [earthen] mug made a sound in the water. (
Mgh.) And الدِّرْعُ ↓ نَشْنَشَ The coat of mail made a sound, (
K,) or clinking. (
Fr.)
b2: Also, It (wine,
A,
Mgh, or the beverage called نَبِيذ,
TA,) estuated, or fermented: (
A,
Mgh,
TA:) or نَشِيشٌ signifies the beginning to estuate, or ferment, of the first of expressed juice [of grapes or dates &c.]. (
TA.)
b3: نَشَّتِ اللَّحْمَةُ,
inf. n. نَشٌّ, The piece of flesh-meat dripped. (
Sh, from certain of the Kilábees.)
A2: Also نَشَّ,
aor. ـِ
inf. n. نَشِيشٌ (
S,
K) and نَشٌّ, (
TA,) said of a pool of water left by a torrent, Its water began to sink into the earth: (
S,
K:) or its water dried up, and sank into the earth. (
TA.) It (water upon the surface of the ground) dried up. (
TA.) It (a full-grown unripe date) lost its moisture. (
TA.)
A3: نَشَّ الدُّهْنَ بالرَّيْحَانِ [
aor.,
app., نَشُّ,] He infused the oil, or other ointment, with perfume, by boiling it with sweet-smelling plants until it made a sound in boiling. (
TA.) [See also سَلِيخَةٌ.]
A4: نَشَّ الذُّبَابَ [
aor.,
accord. to
analogy, نَشُّ, but vulgarly, in the present day, نَشِّ,] He drove [or whisked] a way the flies. (
TA.)
R.
Q. 1 نَشْنَشَ, see 1. in two places. See also شِنْشِنَةٌ.
نَشٌّ The half of an أُوقِيَّة [or ounce]; (
S,
A,
Mgh,
Msb,
K;) i. e., twenty dirhems; (
S,
Msb,
K;) the اوقيّة being forty dirhems; (
S,
Msb;) and five dirhems being called نَوَاةٌ: (
S:) or the weight of a date-stone (نواة) of gold: or the weight of five dirhems: or the quarter of an اوقيّة: (
TA:) and the half of anything; (
IAar,
Sh,
Az,
Mgh,
Msb;) as, for instance, of a dirhem, and of a cake of bread. (
IAar,
Sh,
Az,
Mgh.) نَشَاشَةٌ: see نَشَّاشَةٌ.
أَرْضٌ نَشِيشَةٌ and ↓ نَشْنَاشَةٌ Salt land that produces no herbage. (
IDrd,
K.) سَبَحَةٌ نَشَّاشَةٌ, (
S,
A,
K,) and ↓ نَشَاشَةٌ, (
Az,
TA,) A tract of salt land of which the moisture [or, as in a copy of the
A, the earth,] does not dry up, nor its pasture, or herbage, grow: (
A,
K:) or what appears of the water of salt lands, and begins to sink therein, so that it becomes salt. (
S.) نَشْنَاشَةٌ: see نَشِيشَةٌ.
مَنَشُّ السَّاحِلِ The part of the shore of a sea or great river from which the water has retired. (
A.) مِنَشَّةٌ [A fly-whisk;] a thing with which the flies are driven a way. (
TA.) دُهْنٌ مَنْشُوشٌ Oil, or other ointment, infused with perfume, (
K,
TA,) by boiling it with sweetsmelling plants until it makes a sound in boiling. (
TA) [See also سَلِيخَةٌ.]