فجل
1 فَجِلَ,
aor. ـَ
inf. n. فَجَلٌ; (
Msb,
K;) and فَجُلَ, (
O,) or فَجَلَ, (
K,)
aor. ـُ (
O,
K,)
inf. n. فَجْلٌ; (
K;) He, or it, was, or became, thick, and soft, or flaccid: (
O,
Msb,
K:) so says Ibn-'Abbád. (
O.) 2 فجّلهُ,
inf. n. تَفْجِيلٌ, He made it broad, or wide. (
K.) 8 افتجل أَمْرًا, (
K,) or أَمْرَهُ, (Ibn-'Abbád,
O,) He forged [a case or matter &c., or his case &c.];
syn. اِخْتَلَقَهُ; (Ibn-'Abbád,
O,
K;) and invented it, or excogitated it;
syn. اِخْتَرَعَهُ. (Ibn-'Abbád, O.) فُجْلٌ (
S,
O,
K) and ↓ فُجُلٌ, (
O,
K,) both mentioned by
AHn, (
O,
TA,) or ↓ فِجْلٌ, (
Msb,) thus, with kesr, commonly pronounced by the vulgar, (
TA,) [The radish, raphanus sativus; (Forskål's Flora Ægypt. Arab., lxix. no. 327; and Delile's Floræ Ægypt. Illustr., no. 608;)] a certain أَرُومَة [or root of the kind termed rhizoma], (
K,
TA,) that occasions abominable eructation; (
TA;) a herb, (
Msb,) well known: (
S,
Msb:) said by
IDrd to be not a genuine Arabic word; and thought by him to be derived from فَجِلَ signifying as
expl. above: (
Msb:)
n. un. with ة, (
K,) i. e. فُجْلَةٌ (
S, O) and فُجُلَةٌ (O) [and فِجْلَةٌ]: it is a gardenplant, found in abundance; and there is a Syrian sort, said to be produced by putting together the seeds of the colza and [those of] the فجل: (
TA:) it (i. e. each sort,
TA) is good for pain of the joints, and jaundice, (
K,
TA,) and sciatica, and the نِقْرِس [i. e. gout, or specially in the foot or feet], (
TA,) and pain of the liver (
K,
TA) arising from cold, (
TA,) and the biting and stinging of vipers and scorpions: (
K,
TA: [several other supposed properties thereof mentioned in the
K, and many more mentioned in the
TA, I omit as unimportant:]) what is most potent thereof is its seed; then, its peel; then, its leaf; then, its flesh. (
K,
TA.) What is called حَبُّ الفُجْلِ is Another remedial thing: (
K:) this فجل is not of the species of herb mentioned above: (
O,
Msb,
TA:) so says
AHn: the hakeem Dáwood says, it is one of the species of this فجل, a wild species, elongated, abounding in the Sa'eed of Egypt: (
TA:) [it is the raphanus oleifer, mentioned by Delile (Floræ Ægypt. Illustr., no. 609,) as cultivated in Nubia and in Egypt, and called in Arabic “ symâgah: ”] from it (or from its seed,
TA) is made the oil of the فجل (دُهْنُ الفُِجْلِ); (
Msb,
K,
TA;) and it is known by the appellation of السَّيْمَعَةُ [correctly السَّيْمَغَةُ]. (
TA.) [Delile,
ubi suprà, no. 571, mentions فِجْل الجَمَل, as a name of The cakile maritima of Tournefort; the bunias cakile of Linn.: and in the same, no. 396, he mentions فِجْل الجَبَل as the Arabic name of The rumex spinosus of Linn.; as does also Forskål, in his work cited above, p. lxv., no. 213, and again in p. 76.]
فِجْلٌ: see the next preceding paragraph.
فُجُلٌ: see the next preceding paragraph.
فَجَّالٌ A seller of فُجْل [or radishes]. (
TA.) فَاجِلٌ
i. q. قَامِرٌ [Playing, or a player, at a game of hazard]: (
O,
K,
TA:) so says
IAar: (
O,
TA:)
accord. to some copies of the
K,
i. q. فَاجِرٌ, which is a mistake. (
TA.) فَنْجَلٌ: see أَفْجَلُ.
فَنْجَلَةٌ (
S,
K) and ↓ فَنْجَلَى (
K) A manner of walking in which is a laxness, or slackness, (
S,
K,) like that of the old man. (
S.) فَنْجَلَى: see what next precedes.
فَيْجَلٌ: see فَيْجَنٌ, in art. فجن.
أَفْجَلُ and ↓ فَنْجَلٌ [A man] having a wide space between the feet (
K,
TA) and the shanks. (
TA.)