خندرس
خَنْدَرِيسٌ Wine; (
S,
K;) so called because of its oldness: (
S:) or old wine: (
TA:) [
accord. to some,] derived from خَدْرَسَةٌ, a word not explained: (
K:) by some said to be of the measure فَنْعَلِيسٌ, so that its radical letters are خدر; because wine is مُخَدِّر [i. e. a cause of torpor or languor]: by some said to be from خَرْسٌ; but to this it is objected that د is not augmentative: the truth is, that it is of the measure فَعْلَلِيلٌ, as
Sb says: (
MF:) by the author of the
L and others, it is mentioned after art. خنس: (
TA:) or it is a Greek word, arabicized: (
K:) [but I know not how this is, unless, as an
epithet applied to wheat, (see what follows,) it be supposed to be from χόνδρος:]
IDrd thought it to be an arabicized word: it may be an arabicized word from the Persian خَنْدَهْ رِيشْ, meaning “ having a laughing beard,” [or rather “one whose beard is laughed at,” i. e., “a laughing-stock,”] because he who makes use of it [namely of wine] has his beard laughed at. (
TA.)
b2: You also say, حِنْطَة
خَنْدَرِيسٌ Old wheat: (
IDrd,
S,
K:) and تَمْرٌ
خَنْدَرِيسٌ old dates. (
TA.)