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Al-Awza'i differed with other schools of jurisprudence in holding that apostates from Islam ought not be executed unless their apostasy is part of a plot to take over the state. [9] In the introduction to his work al-Jarh wa-l-Ta'dil, Ibn Abi Hatim al-Razi preserves a corpus of ten letters attributed to al-Awza'i. In these letters, al-Awza'i ...
The Hanafi school applies zakat on all agricultural produce according to the opinion of Imam Abu Hanifa. According to Imam Abu Yusuf and Muhamad bin Al Hasan, it only applies to plants whose produce can last (through storage) for a year. [12] When zakat applies to a plant, the nisab is five Wasaq. Each wasaq is valued as sixty Sa'.
3.7 Faculty of Islamic Economics and Business [Fakultas Ekonomi dan Bisnis Islam (FEBI)] 3.8 Faculty of Science and Technology (Fakultas Sains dan Teknologi, FST) 3.9 Faculty of Social and Political Science (Fakultas Ilmu Sosial dan Ilmu Politik, FISIP)
The Arabic word nisba (نسبة; also transcribed as nisbah or nisbat) may refer to: Nisba, a suffix used to form adjectives in Arabic grammar, or the adjective resulting from this formation comparatively, in Afro-Asiatic: see Afroasiatic_languages#nisba; Nisba (onomastics), a word used as an element in an Arabic name
In Arabic names, a nisba (Arabic: نسبة nisbah, "attribution"), also rendered as nesba or nesbat, is an adjective surname indicating the person's place of origin, ancestral tribe, or ancestry, used at the end of the name and occasionally ending in the suffix-iyy for males and -iyyah for females.
Misbah (Arabic: مصباح, romanized: Miṣbāḥ) or Musbah is a Muslim Arabic name meaning "lamp" or "light". [1] This name has originated from The Qur'an from Ayatu-n-Nur, also known as the Ayat of light, from the following verse: