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Classical Arabic Definition

Matching Results for Classical Arabic:

noria
A water wheel with attached buckets, used to raise and deposit water. Any machine using buckets to raise water to an aqueduct French: noria
classical music
the more serious forms of European and American music. Arabic: mwsyq klsyky (muusiqaa klasikiyya) f. Chinese:
pregnant
Carrying developing offspring within the body. (comparable) Having numerous possibilities or implications. (now poetic) Fertile, prolific (usually of ...
Modern Standard Arabic
Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) is the standard and literary variety of Arabic used in writing and in formal speech in the Arab world.
j
Arabic: The fifth letter of the Arabic alphabet. Its name is jym (jim), and is preceded by th and followed by H The third letter in traditional ...
Fus-ha
Modern Standard Arabic and Classical Arabic, taken together: "standard" Arabic, used in religious texts, in writing, and in formal speech, as opposed to ...
barrio
An area or neighborhood in a U.S. city inhabited primarily by people speaking Spanish or of Hispanic origin. Classical Nahuatl: A district of an altepetl
tarea
Spanish: task homework
Sl
Arabic: prayer Bowker, John, The Oxford Dictionary of World Religions, New York, Oxford University Press, 1997, p. 843
lqran
Arabic: the Qur an (The Islamic holy book).
kHwl
Arabic: alcohol, spirits
jeque
Spanish: sheik
cero
Asturian: zero Galician: zero
Euphrates
The river in the Middle East, 2780 kilometers in length, flowing southwest from Turkey, then southeast, and uniting with the Tigris before entering the ...
Joseph
Eleventh and favorite son of Jacob, by his wife Rachel. 1611, King James Version of the Bible (Authorized Version), Genesis 37:3 : Now Israel loved Joseph ...
sumac
Any of various shrubs or small trees of the genus Rhus including the poison ivy and poison oak. A sour spice popular in the Eastern Mediterranean made ...
sn
Arabic: year habitual practice, customary procedure, norm sn lnby (sunnat an-nabiy) the Sunna of the Prophet (his sayings and deeds)
enero
Spanish: January
mHbt
Persian: love affection kindness Urdu: love affection
Qur'an
English Alternative forms (obsolete) Alcoran (obsolete) Alkoran; Coran; Koran; Qoran; Qoran; Qur'an Etymology. From Arabic lquran (al-qur an ...
giraffe
A ruminant, of the genus Giraffa, of the African savannah with long legs and highly elongated neck, which make it the tallest living animal; yellow fur ...
Ottoman
A Turk from the period of Ottoman Empire Of the Islamic empire of Turkey.
abuelo
Spanish: grandfather Su abuelo es simpatico. - His grandfather is nice. (colloquial, affectionate) An old person. Loose tufts of hair in the ...
assassinate
To murder someone, especially an important person, by a sudden or obscure attack, especially for ideological or political reasons. (figuratively) To ...
girafe
French: giraffe boom (pole supporting a microphone)
sene
A unit of currency equivalent to a hundredth of a Samoan tala Danish: sinew, tendon
hasta
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hafta : has to; is required to. He hasta visit the doctor. goodbye
hymnwt
Classical Syriac: faith, belief faithfulness, fidelity trust, confidence truth, certainty constancy, firmness, security religion, doctrine, creed ...
unemployment
The state of having no job; joblessness. Unemployment made Jack depressed. The phenomenon of joblessness in an economy. Unemployment has been considered ...
humanism
The study of the humanities or the liberal arts; literary (especially classical) scholarship. [from 19th c.] (historical, often capitalized ...
Eve
Wikipedia Etymology. From Ancient Greek Eua (Eua), from Classical Hebrew khava h (hawwah). Pronunciation. enPR: ev, IPA: /i v/, SAMPA: /i:v/
Dari
A variety of Middle Persian, the court language of the late Sassanid period and of classical Persian poetry. The dialect of the Persian language as ...
Ottoman Empire
English Etymology. Ottoman, from the Middle French Ottoman, from post-classical Latin Ottomanus, from Arabic personal name thmn ( uthman) + Empire.
loco
A direction in written or printed music to return to the proper pitch after having played an octave higher or lower. crazy (western United States ...
perineum
Region between the genital area and the anus in both sexes Albanian: perineum
sine
In a right triangle, the ratio of the length of the side opposite an angle to the length of the hypotenuse Danish: plural of sin
policy
Etymology 1. From Middle French policie, from Late Latin politia ( citizenship; government ), classical Latin politia (in Cicero), from Ancient ...
epidermis
The outer, protective layer of the skin of vertebrates, covering the dermis The similar outer layer of cells in invertebrates and plants Latin ...
Sarah
Wife of patriarch Abraham, mother of Isaac. 1611 King James Version of the Bible, Genesis 17:15 And God said unto Abraham, As for Sarai thy wife, thou ...
grammar
A system of rules and principles for speaking and writing a language. (uncountable, linguistics) The study of the internal structure of words ...
oust
To expel; to remove. The protesters became so noisy that they were finally ousted from the meeting.
community
Group of people sharing a common understanding who reveal themselves by using the same language, manners, tradition and law. (see civilization ...
omicron
the name for the 15th letter of Classical and Modern Greek. The 16th in Ancient and Old Greek French: omicron (Greek letter)
shnh
Hebrew: A year : the time period representing one revolution of the Earth around the Sun. vrkh shl shnh hv kshtym shrh khvdshym ...

 

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Verses from the Qur'an in Classical Arabic, written in the cursive Arabic script.
from: Wikipedia: classical arabic,
Tue Apr 17 11:23:42 2012

Matching Results for Classical Arabic:

Attar
Farid al-Din Attar (Persian:فریدالدین عطار; c. 1142 – c. 1220) was a Persian mystical philosopher and poet. ... of a Distant Drum: Classical Arabic, Persian, Turkish, and Hebrew ...

Bertrand Russell
Mathematics may be defined as the subject in which we never know what ... People who have been puzzled by the beginnings of mathematics will, I hope, find ...

Muhammad
Muhammad (Arabic: محمد) (c. 570 – 8 June 632), full name: Muhammad Ibn Abdullah Ibn Abd ... in Knowledge of God in Classical Sufism : Foundations of Islamic Mystical ...


from: Wikiquote: classical arabic,
Tue Aug 30 16:12:59 2011