آگ आग āg
H آگ आग āg [S. अग्रि; Prk. अग्गि], s.f. Fire; flame; heat, excessive heat; (met.) anger, passion; love; lust; hatred; jealousy; intense hunger; venereal disease, syphilis;—adj. Hot as fire, very hot; fiery, hot-tempered, irritable; sharp, quick; scarce, dear:—āg uṭhānā, āg uṭhā-rakhnā (-meṅ), To create or cause a quarrel (among or between), to raise a disturbance; to enrage, provoke:—āg-bāg honā, v.n. To be exceedingly enraged (=āg honā):—āg bujhānā or bujhā-denā (-kī), To extinguish fire; to quench the thirst (of); to satisfy hunger, lust, appetite, &c.; to appease a tumult, pacify a quarrel, still resentment:—āg bujhnā, neut. of āg bujhānā, q.v.:—āg barsānā or barsā-denā (-par), To rain fire (upon), to pour in shot and shell, to bombard, cannonade;—āg barasnā, v.n. To be very hot; to be parched up; (hence) to become scarce and dear (fire, as it were, raining upon, -par, a thing, and parching it, and so, causing a scarcity); falling in abundance of shot and shell:—āg baṛnā (-kī), To have the fire of anger, hunger, &c. kindled, to be enraged; to be hungry, &c.:—āg-bagūla (or babūlā) honā, v.n. To be in a whirlwind of passion, to be mad with rage:—āg-boṭ, s.m. A steam-boat, a steamer:—āg bhaṛkānā (-kī), To stir or blow the fire (of), to fan the flame (of); to stir up, stimulate, excite:—āg bhaṛaknā (-kī), neut. of āg bhaṛkānā, q.v.:—āg bhaknā, To eat fire; to exaggerate greatly; to fabricate, invent; to lie grossly; to boast enormously:—āg-pānī-kā bair, Antagonism (such as that) of fire and water; natural antagonism; mortal enmity:—āg paṛnā, v.n. To be annoyed (by), enraged (at); to feel the burning (of heat, grief, hunger, &c.), to be very hot, &c.=āg barasnā, q.v.:—āg phāṅknā = āg bhaknā, q.v.:—āg phuknā or phuk-jānā, v.n. To be blown into a flame; to feel great heat; to be greatly excited, be worked into a fury, get into a towering passion:—āg-phūs-kā bair, Antagonism (like that) of fire and straw, &c.=āg-pānī kā bair, q.v.:—āg phūṅknā or phūṅk-denā, v.t. To blow the fire, fan the flame; to excite, inflame; to burn excessively, feel on fire:—āg-pe pānī ḍālnā, To throw water on the fire, to extinguish the fire; to quench thirst, &c.=āg bujhānā, q.v.:—āg-pe loṭnā, To roll on fire; to be uneasy or restless; to be consumed with jealousy, envy, &c.:—āg joṛnā = āg sulgānā, q.v.:—āg jhāṛnā, To shake off the ashes from a live coal; to strike fire (from a flint, &c.):—āg denā or de-denā, v.t. To set fire (to), apply a light or torch (to); to burn, consume, destroy:—āg dhonā = āg jhāṛnā, q.v.:—āg ḍālna or dārnā (-par or meṅ), To set fire (to), to burn:—āg-ruʼī, s.f. Lit. 'Fire-cotton'; tinder:—āg sulgānā, To kindle or make a fire; to inflame, excite sedition, foment a quarrel:—āg-se pānī ho-jānā, v.n. To recover from a violent fit of temper, to cool down:—āg-kā bāg̠, s.m. A goldsmith's furnace:—āg-kā putlā, s.m. An extremely active and energetic person; a man of quick apprehension, a sharp fellow:—āg-kā patangā, s.m. A spark of fire; a piece of fire, a burning coal:—āg karnā, To light or make a fire; to make (a thing) exceedingly warm; to excite anger or envy (com. used among women):—āg-ke mol, adj. Scarce, dear, high-priced:—āg gaṛnā (-meṅ), To sow discord, &c., see āg lagānā:—āg lagā-ke pānī-ko dauṛnā, Lit. 'To run for water after setting fire to'; to make a show of curing an evil caused by ooneself; to pretend to appease a quarrel which one has purposely excited; to play tricks, deceive:—āg lagānā (-ko, or -meṅ), To apply fire (to), set on fire; to burn, consume; to kindle the fire of strife, sow dissension, make mischief, cause a quarrel, create a disturbance; to inflame, excite, enrage; to eat up, consume; to squander, waste, ruin, destroy; to occasion loss (to); to reduce to poverty; to make a grand display, to do wonders; to treat as worthless or vile, to cast aside, throw or put away, abandon; to discard, disown; to treat with scorn, to scorn, despise; to pay too high a price, to buy dear; to swindle, cheat, pilfer:—āg-lagāʼū, adj. & s.m. Combustible, inflammable; an incendiary; a seditious person, firebrand, instigator of quarrels:—āg-lagnā, or lag-jānā, v.n. To be set on fire, to be on fire; to catch fire; to burn, be hot; to smart (as a wound); to burn with rage, indignation, envy, jealousy, &c., to be enraged or incensed; to be consumed with love, or grief; to feel intense hunger; to perish, wither, be blighted; to become scarce and dear:—āg-lage, intj. May it be burned! perish! blast thee! a murrain seize thee! plague take it!:—āg-lage-par billī-kā mūt ḍhūṅḍhnā, Lit. 'To look for a cat's urine when (the house) is on fire': to go in quest of small and rarely-found remedies to meet a present and great danger; to put off, delay or excuse oneself on vain pretences:—āg-lage-pe kūʼāṅ khodnā, To dig a well after fire has broken out; to shut the stable-door after the horse is stolen:—āg-lene ānā, Lit. 'To come for fire'; to pay a flying visit, to pay a doctor's visit:—āg-meṅ pānī ḍālnā = āg bujhānā, q.v.:—āg-meṅ jalnā or loṭnā (kisī-kī or g̠air-kī), To bring reproach upon; to accuse; to suffer for another:—āg-nikālnā (-se), To strike fire or a light (from flint, &c):—āg honā or ho-jānā, To become fire; to become very hot; to take fire, to burn with rage, be enraged.