Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Its author is Syed Hashim bin Sulaiman bin Ismail al Huseini al Bahrani, the shiism scholar of “traditions believer” (akhbari maslak), commentator, traditionist and author. In this commentary that is in traditional ( rawayi ) method, he has explained the subjects of religious sciences, narration, prophet news (meaning the accounts of ...
Al-Awāmil al-Mi’ah (The Hundred Elements) - A short text on 100 modifiers, or particles, in Arabic and their different uses with examples. Dalā’il al-Iʿjaz (Intimations of Inimitability) Iʿjaz al-Qur’ān (The inimitability of the Qur'an) Al-Jumal (Sentences) Kitab ʿArūd (Poetic Structure) Al-Maghna fī Sharḥ al-Idah’, thirty volumes
The prominent Khutba-i-Tafsir-i-Bayan al Quran by the author occupies a very pivotal place in all editions, because in this ‘Khutba’ Thanwi has discussed the causes for compiling this Tafsir. He Says: "I used to ponder about the compilation of a precise exegesis of Quran which can touch the important aspects and dimensions of society ...
Abdallah ibn 'Alawi al-Haddad (Arabic: عبد الله ابن علوي الحدّاد, romanized: ʿAbd Allāh ibn ʿAlawī al-Ḥaddād; Arabic pronunciation: [ʕbd ɑllah ibn ʕlwij ɑl-ħadda:d]) (born in 1634 CE) was a Yemeni Islamic scholar.
The root "l-m" and its derivatives appear around 750 times in the Qur'an, accounting for approximately 1 percent of the total 78,000 words in the Qur'an. [2] The first revelation received by Muhammad instructed him to proclaim or read in the name of his Lord and acknowledge God as the teacher of humanity. It stated that God, who taught through ...
Hidāyat al-Qurān (Urdu: ہدایت القرآن, lit. 'The guidance of the Qur'an') is a classical Sunni tafsir, composed first by Muhammad Usman Kashif Hashmi and then completed after his passing by Saeed Ahmad Palanpuri in 2016. Kashif Hashmi started this Urdu commentary and completed the Tafsir of Juz' 1–9 and 30. Due to some reasons, he ...
15:87-- And we have given you seven often repeated verses [referring to the seven verses of Surah Fatihah] and the great Quran. (Al-Quran 15:87) [146] Al-Suyuti, the noted medieval philologist and commentator of the Quran thought five verses had questionable "attribution to God" and were likely spoken by either Muhammad or Gabriel. [141]
Abu al-Layth Nasr ibn Muhammad al-Samarqandi (Arabic: أبو الليث نصر بن محمد السمرقندي, romanized: ʾAbū al-Layth Naṣr ibn Muḥammad al-Samarqandī; 944–983) was an Islamic scholar of the Hanafi school and Quran commentator, who lived during the second half of the 10th century.