کهاٿ खाट khāṭ
H کهاٿ खाट khāṭ [Prk. खट्टा; S. खद्वा], s.f. A bedstead;—a cot on which a corpse is conveyed to the burning-ground, a bier:—khāṭ-se utār-lenā, v.t. To take down (a dying man) from his bed:—khāṭ-se lag-jānā, v.n. To be bed-ridden:—khāṭ-khaṭolā, s.m. Bed and baggage, goods and chattels.
کهٿ खट khaṭ
H کهٿ खट khaṭ [S. षट्], adj. Six:—khaṭ-pad (ʻsix-legged'), s.m. A species of large black bee:—khaṭ-pūrā (ʻhaving six compartments'), s.m. A kind of rake for breaking up the soil into small beds:—khaṭ-rāg (ʻsix songs'), s.m. Discordant singing; jarring, discord, wrangling;—khaṭ-rāg lānā, To make a noise or row; to create discord:—khaṭ-ras, s.m. The six tastes (see ras):—khaṭ-śāstr, s.m.=shaṭ-śāstra, q.v.s.v. shaṭ.
کهٿ खट khaṭ contrac. of khāṭ, q.v.
H کهٿ खट khaṭ (contrac. of khāṭ, q.v.), s.f. Bedstead, bed (used in comp.):—khaṭ-bunā, s.m. A bed-weaver:—khaṭ-ćhappar, s.m. A tester-bedstead (=ćhapar-khaṭ):—khaṭ-kīrā or kīṛā, (dialec.) khaṭ-kirwā, or khaṭ-gīr, or khaṭ-mal, s.m. A bug:—khaṭ-mutwā, s.m. A piss-a-bed.
کهيت खेत khet
H کهيت खेत khet [Prk. खेत्तं; S. क्षेत्रं], s.m. Ground, land, soil; a field; field (of battle); (in Geom.) a plain superficies, a surface;—a sacred spot or district, a holy place;—origin, breed, caste:—khet ānā, v.n. To be slain in the field (of battle); to become helpless:—khet-bāṅt, s.m. Allotment of land (to villagers):—khet-patr, or khet-ḵẖat, s.m. Mortgage of a field:—khet-ćiṭṭhā, s.m. A rough field-book:—khet ćhoṛnā, To flee from the field (of battle):—khet-dār, s.m. The owner or occupant of a field:—khet rakhnā, v.t. To kill in the field (of battle):—khet rahnā 'To remain in the field,' to be slain in battle:—khet kāṭnā To reap a field:—khet-karm, s.m. Husbandry. &c. (=khetī, q.v.):—khet karnā, To cultivate, till (land);—to begin to rise, to appear (the moon):—khet kamānā, To prepare the ground or soil, to manure land:—khet-nāp, s.f. 'Surface-measurement'; plane geometry:—khet nikālnā, To clear land:—khet nalānā, or khet nikānā, or khet marānā, To weed a field:—khet-wār, adv. According to the fields; field by field; per field.
کهٿ खट khaṭ
H کهٿ खट khaṭ [prob. onomat.; cf. S. खटखटाय], s.f. Sound of knocking or rapping, &c.; knock, rap; (in comp.) noise, clatter, racket, row; wrangling, &c.:—khaṭ-paṭ, or khaṭ-ā-paṭī, s.f. Rattle, noise, sound, clatter (of a horse's hoofs, &c.), clang, clashing (of weapons); wrangling, squabbling, quarrelling, contention, strife, conflict:—khaṭ-paṭiyā, adj. & s.m. Noisy, rackety; contentious, quarrelsome;—a noisy fellow; a quarrelsome person, &c.:—khaṭ-paćrā, adj. & s.m. (f. -ī), Fomenting quarrels, mischief-making, mischievous, turbulent, seditious;—one who stirs up strife, mischief-maker, sedition-monger, &c. (syn. fitna-angez):—khaṭ-khaṭ, s.f. Repeated or continuous knocking or rapping; rat-tat;—noise, sound, clatter, hammering; wrangling, &c. (=khaṭ-paṭ):—khaṭ-khaṭā s.m. Jar, discord, contention, wrangling;—trouble, difficulty; entanglement, complication; hitch; care, anxiety; troublesome business or affair, task, worldly affair; expedient, artifice, art, way, means (syn. bakherā);—a rattle (to frighten away birds, &c.):—khaṭ-khaṭ karnā, To knock, rap, rattle, make a clatter, &c. (=khaṭkhaṭānā):—khaṭ-khaṭiyā (-iyā = S. इकः; Prk. इयो), adj. & s.m. Noisy, rackety; restless, fidgety, uneasy; contentious, quarrelsome;—a noisy fellow; a wrangler, brawler, &c.