هدر

See also: هذر and ه ذ ر

Arabic

Etymology

From the root ه د ر (h-d-r).

Verb

هَدَرَ (hadara) I, non-past يَهْدِرُ or يَهْدُرُ‎ (yahdiru or yahduru)

  1. (transitive, intransitive) to rumble, to roar, to shout, to rut, to bubble, to growl, to bray, to swirl, to come off noisily (human, beast, sea, cannon, whatever)
  2. (transitive, intransitive) to seethe, to boil, to simmer, to scald
    • a. 710, الأخطل [al-ʾaḵṭal], Theodor Nöldeke and August Müller, editors, Delectus veterum carminum arabicorum, Berlin: H. Reuther’s Verlagsbuchhandlung, published 1890, page 54:
      إِذَا هَدَرَ الْعَصِيرَ رَأَيْتَهُمْ حُمْرًا عُيُونُهُمُ مِنَ الْمُسْطَارِ
      ʾiḏā hadara l-ʿaṣīra raʾaytahum ḥumran ʿuyūnuhumu mina l-musṭāri
      When they seethe the juice you see them red in the eyes from the defrutum.
  3. (intransitive) to be spilled, to run off, to go amiss, to vanish to no avail, to go for nothing

Conjugation

Verb

هَدَّرَ (haddara) II, non-past يُهَدِّرُ‎ (yuhaddiru)

  1. (intransitive) to rumble, to roar, to shout, to rut, to growl

Conjugation

Noun

هَدْر or هَدَر (hadr or hadar) m

  1. verbal noun of هَدَر (hadar) (form I)

Declension

Noun

هُدْر (hudr) m

  1. fall, downfall, tumble

Declension

Adjective

هِدْر (hidr) (masculine plural هِدَرَة (hidara), feminine plural هِدَر (hidar))

  1. indolent, tardy, clumsy, hulking

Declension

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