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Concordance Index matches for
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Click a link in this box to access results from A Concordance of the Qur’an.
- abase
- ahāna(*h w n)
- able
- qadīr(*q d r)
- abuse
- sabba(*s b b)
- acquit
- kaffara(*k f r)
- barraʾa(*b r ʾ)
- acquittal
- barāʾah(*b r ʾ)
- admit
- adkhala(*d kh l)
- admonish
- waʿaẓa(*w ʿ ẓ)
- affair
- amara(*a m r)
- afraid, to be
- khashiya(*kh sh y)
- allow
- adhina(*a dh n)
- anger (n)
- ghaḍiba(*gh ḍ b)
- sakhiṭa(*s kh ṭ)
- anger (v)
- askhaṭa(*s kh ṭ)
- angry, to be
- ghaḍiba(*gh ḍ b)
- sakhiṭa(*s kh ṭ)
- annul
- nasakha(*n s kh)
- answer (v)
- istajāba(*j w b)
- apart (from God)
- allāh(*a l h)
- appear
- badā(*b d w)
- appoint
- jaʿala(*j ʿ l)
- apportioned, that which is
- farīḍah(*f r ḍ)
- argue
- ḥājja(*ḥj j)
Ṭibb (Subject Entry)
See Medicine . ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Tijānī, Aḥmad al- (Biography)
Aḥmad al-Tijānī ( 1737 – 1815 ) was the founder of the Tijānīyah Ṣūfī order. Abū al-ʿAbbās Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad al-Tijānī was born at ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Tijānīyah (Subject Entry)
The Tijānīyah movement arose out of controversy. From its very inception ( c. 1782 ce ), its members challenged the accepted notions of monastic ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Trade (Subject Entry)
Three complications arise in assessing trade by Islamic countries in the modern period. First, the identification of countries as Islamic is a recent development, ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Traditions (Subject Entry)
See Ḥadīth . ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Tribes (Subject Entry)
In both historical and contemporary times, tribes have played important roles in the Islamic world. Tribal groups facilitated the rapid spread of Islam across ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Trinidad and Tobago (Subject Entry)
Trinidad and Tobago is a religiously diverse state with a Muslim community that, though small, has nevertheless been significant in the country's history and ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Tunisia (Subject Entry)
From almost the introduction of Islam in Tunisia, most Tunisians of the Muslim faith, like most other people of the Maghrib, have been Sunnī ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Turābī, Ḥasan al- (Biography)
Ḥasan al-Turābī ( b. 1932 ), was a Sudanese Islamist and political leader. He was born in central Sudan and grew up in a ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Turkey (Subject Entry)
One of the successor states created from the ruins of the Ottoman Empire after World War I, Turkey became the first secular state in ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Turkish Literature (Subject Entry)
The articulation of Islamic themes and values in Turkish literature of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries differs from that of the preceding era, for ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Turkmenistan (Subject Entry)
The Turkmen tribes that converted to Islam during the period of the Seljuks have remained Sunnī Muslims, though many of their religious practices are ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Twelvers (Subject Entry)
See Ithnā ʿAsharīyah ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Uganda (Subject Entry)
Islam entered what is today the small, landlocked Republic of Uganda in the nineteenth century from two directions: from the east through the present ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
ʿUlamāʿ (Subject Entry)
[this entry contains two subentries: Sunnī ʿulamāʿ Shīʿī ʿUlamāʿ] Sunnī ʿulamāʿ The Arabic word ʿulamāʿ is the plural of ʿālim , literally “man of ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
ʿUmar al-Mukhtār (Subject Entry)
See Mukhtār, ʿUmar al- . ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
ʿUmar Tal (Biography)
ʿUmar Tal ( c. 1794 – 1864 ),more fully al-Ḥājj ʿUmar ibn Saʿīd , was a Senegalese Islamic militant leader and thinker. Al-Ḥājj ʿUmar ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Umayyad Caliphate (Subject Entry)
Although it is generally accepted that the first Umayyad to come to the position of the caliphate was ʿUthmān ibn ʿAffān ( r. 644 ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Ummah (Subject Entry)
The Arabic term ummah refers to a people or a community, united by certain features that they share in common, such as customs, ethnicity, ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
Ummah-Anṣār (Subject Entry)
The Sudanese Ummah (Community) Party was formed in February 1945 by pro-independence nationalists, most of whom were supporters of Sayyid ʿAbd al-Raḥmān al-Mahdī, the ...
Source: The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World
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