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bezoar

   Also found in: Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.01 sec.
be·zoar  (bzôr, -zr)
n.
A hard indigestible mass of material, such as hair, vegetable fibers, or fruits, found in the stomachs or intestines of animals, especially ruminants, and humans. It was formerly considered to be an antidote to poisons and to possess magic properties.

[Middle English bezear, stone used as antidote to poison, probably from Old French bezahar, gastric or intestinal mass used as antidote to poison, from Arabic bzahr, from Persian pdzahr : pd-, protector (from Avestan ptar-; see p- in Indo-European roots) + zahr, poison (from Middle Persian; see gwhen- in Indo-European roots).]

bezoar [ˈbiːzɔː]
n
(Medicine) a hard mass, such as a stone or hairball, in the stomach and intestines of animals, esp ruminants, and man: formerly thought to be an antidote to poisons
[from Old French bézoard, from Arabic bāzahr, from Persian bādzahr, from bād against + zahr poison]


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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
All this coast is much infested with ravenous beasts, monkeys, and serpents, of which last here are some seven feet in length, and thicker than an ordinary man; in the head of this serpent is found a stone about the bigness of an egg, resembling bezoar, and of great efficacy, as it is said, against all kinds of poison.
The bezoar, that was found in the heart of the Arabian deer, was a charm that could cure the plague.
 
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