حضرت ḥaẓrat for A. حضرة, inf. n. of حضر 'to be present'
P حضرت ḥaẓrat (for A. حضرة, inf. n. of حضر 'to be present'), s.f. Presence;—dignity;—a title applied to any great man, the object of resort, your or his Majesty, Highness, Excellency, Eminence, Worship, or Holiness, &c. (when so used respectfully instead of a pronoun or name the gender of the person to whom it has reference is adopted):—ḥaẓrat-salāmat, Greeting to your Highness, &c.;—I bow to your Highness:—ḥaẓrat z̤ill-ě-subḥānī, His Majesty the Shadow of God, the king:—ḥaẓrat ʻīsā, Jesus Christ:—ḥaẓrat maryam, The Virgin Mary:—baṛe ḥaẓrat, s.m. A superior;—a consummate knave or rascal.
هجرت hijrat for A. هجرة, v.n. fr. هجر; see hajr
P هجرت hijrat (for A. هجرة, v.n. fr. هجر; see hajr), s.f. Separation (of lovers or friends); departure (from one's country and friends);—emigration to Mecca, or from a country of infidels to a land of Muslims;—the Hijra (vulg. 'Hegira'), or flight of Muḥammad from Mecca to Medina (which happened on the 16th of July, A.D. 622, and, in the reign of the Caliph Omar, was ordered to be considered as the commencement of the Muḥammadan era):—hajrat, s.f. One year.
حاضرا ḥāẓirāt
A حاضرا ḥāẓirāt, = A P حاضراتي ḥāẓirātī, s.f. pl. (of ḥāẓir), Invocation of spirits; exorcising evil spirits; commanding or imprisoning evil spirits; raising the devil:—ḥāẓirāt karnā (-kī), To invoke evil spirits, &c.; to exorcise.