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naql, vulg. naqal (inf. n. of نقل 'to transport,' etc.), s.f. Transporting, carrying from one place to another, removing; transportation; removal; translation;—transmission;—transfer, alienation (of property);—transcribing; copying; imitating; mimicking; acting; mimicry;—imitation of a copy; a transcript, copy; a duplicate;—a history, narrative, relation, report, account; tale, story; anecdote; fable:—naqlu`l-naql, A copy of a copy:—naqlba-jinsihi, or naql mut̤ābiq-ě-aṣl, An exact counterpart of the original, a true copy:—naqlbahī, s.f. Day-book; waste-book; recordbook:—naql-ě-ḵẖilāf, A false copy;—a misquotation:—naql karnā, v.t. To relate, narrate;—to make a copy (of, -kī), to copy; to imitate, to mimic; toact, to represent or personate (a character):—naql-ě-muṣaddaq, An attested or authenticated copy:—naql-ě-makān, s.m. Moving from a place, removing, removal;—emigration;—conveying (to another place);—transmigration;—dying;—the first stage of a journey, orhalting-place at a very little distance (where they remain some time to collect what may have been forgotten of the requisites for travelling; this first stage is often made long before they really mean to set off, seizing a lucky moment to commence a journey in);—naql-ě-makān karnā, v.n. To remove; to emigrate, etc.:—naql-navīs, s.m. A copier, copyist:—naql-navīsī, s.t. Copying; sectionwriting:—naql honā, v.n. To be related, to be said;—to be copied (from, -se):—naql hai,. It is related, etc.
Origin: Arabic