fidrat- - a piece of flesh-meat; a lump of dates compacted together
(BK 2 555, Lane 2351)
Cf. findīr ‘piece (of meat)’ (BK 2 555) (with a secondary -n-?). To the semantic shift ‘fat’ > ‘piece of meat’ cf. SED I No. 180 *lVpˀ-. Cf. also fudurr- ‘a fat, plump boy; boy that has nearly attained to puberty’ (BK 2 555, Lane 2352)
Arabic
fdy - to buy out, to ransom; to redeem
(Lane 2353)
See further Hommel 1879 299-301 where the translation ‘lynx, caracaľ adopted for fahd- in some European studies is rightly rejected (cf. also Sima 2000: 57).
Arabic
fihr- - a stone such as fills the hand
(Lane 2453)
The Arabic designation of the Purim feast, ˀal-fuhr-, goes back to Hebrew pūr “lot” (HALOT 920) and is remarkable in view of the secondary hinsertion. It may have been influended by Aramaic forms like Syr. puḥrā “convivium” (LSyr. 563), Mnd. puhra “feast, banquet” (MD 367), cf. especially the variant fuḫr- reported in Lane 2453 (EDA I 52).
Arabic
faḥa(n) - seeds that are used in cooking, for seasoning the food
(Lane 2347)