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The word تاب tāb has a range of meanings: "heat, burning, radiance, lustre, twist, curl". [15] [16] The word مشکین moškīn or meškīn [17] can also mean "black". [18] Meisami translates as "musk-black curls". Dehkhoda's dictionary defines xūn dar del oftādan (literally, "blood falls in the heart") as to become troubled or grieved. [19]
A version appears as the introduction to the 14th-century anonymous contemplative treatise, The Cloud of Unknowing: God, unto whom alle hertes ben open, and unto whom alle wille spekith, and unto whom no privé thing is hid: I beseche thee so for to clense the entent of myn heart with the unspekable gift of thi grace that I may parfiteliche ...
A method provided by the 1866 version of "The Raccolta" is shown below. [4] The recitation begins with the sign of the cross and an Act of contrition. Each sorrow is announced, (and in some versions of the recitation, a meditative prayer is said, or a segment from the Hymn Stabat Mater Dolorosa).
Let every heart prepare him room, 𝄆 And heaven and nature sing, 𝄇 And heaven, and heaven, and nature sing. Joy to the world! the Saviour reigns; Let men their songs employ; While fields and floods, rocks, hills, and plains 𝄆 Repeat the sounding joy, 𝄇 Repeat, repeat the sounding joy. No more let sins and sorrows grow,
[2] [3] Some of his autographs and manuscript copies are extant and permit conclusions about his artistic development. [4] Of the eight funeral sentences in the BCP, Purcell set the four that are performed at the grave, but not the ones opening a burial service. He combined two of these four sentences into one movement: [4]
[2] In English, however, a translator must choose either one or the other, and interpretation has varied. Those who take the genitive as subjective translate the phrase as meaning that things feel sorrow for the sufferings of humanity: the universe feels our pain. Others translate the passage to show that the burden human beings must bear, ever ...
Two Hearts. Flirty, festive, and super fun, this emoji has a playful, frisky spirit you're gonna wanna call on when sliding into a crush's DMs, texting your new fella, or just commenting on your ...
One magpie at the birth of Jesus, perhaps presaging sorrow for Mary: [3] Piero della Francesca's The Nativity Children's game hopscotch played in Lancashire, England with lyric close to the 1846 version of the rhyme. The rhyme has its origins in ornithomancy superstitions connected with magpies, considered a bird of ill omen in some cultures ...