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Tarawih prayer at Taipei Grand Mosque, Taiwan. Tarawih (Arabic: تَّرَاوِيح, romanized: tarāwīḥ) are special Sunnah prayers involving reading long portions of the Quran, and performing up to 20 rakahs (cycles of prostrations required in Islamic prayer), which are performed only in the Islamic month of Ramadan.
Compared to regular compulsory prayer. Sohaib Sultan states that the steps for Sunnah prayer (Takbir, al-Fatihah, etc.) are exactly the same as for five daily obligatory prayers, but varying depending on the prayer are the number of rakat [2] (also rakʿah (Arabic: ركعة rakʿah, pronounced; plural: ركعات rakaʿāt), which is a unit of prayer.
Iftar (Arabic: إفطار, romanized: ifṭār) is the fast-breaking evening meal of Muslims in Ramadan at the time of adhan (call to prayer) of the Maghrib prayer.. This is their second meal of the day; the daily fast during Ramadan begins immediately after the pre-dawn meal of suhur and continues during the daylight hours, ending with sunset with the evening meal of iftar.
Al-Jāmi' al-Kāmil Fī al-Hadīth al-Sahīh al-Shāmil or in short al-Jāmi' al-Kāmil (Arabic: الجامع الكامل في الحديث الصحيح الشامل), known in English as The Comprehensive Collection of all Authentic Prophetic Narrations or The Authentic Hadith Encyclopaedia, [2] [3] is a secondary hadith collection book, compiled by the Islamic scholar Imam Ziya-ur-Rahman ...
The book has been published by many publishers but mainly in Arabic language: . Musnad al-Firdaws (مخطوطة مسند الفردوس), published by Maktaba Ustadh Doctor Mohammad bin Torkey, Turkey مكتبة الأستاذ الدكتور محمد بن تركي التركي.
The book has been published in various languages by many organizations around the world: al-Mu`jam al-awsat [4]; Mu'jam al-Awsat (7 vol) المعجم الأوسط للطبراني: Published: DKI, Beirut, 2012 (Beirut, Lebanon) [5]
[3] [4] The best-known example of this genre is Imam Nawawi's Forty Hadith, which was written to include all the fundamentals of the sacred Islamic law. Khomeini completed his collection in 1939, and it was first published in 1940. [1] He quotes the Arabic text of each hadith in the book with its Persian translation and discusses its various ...
Usul-e-Hadith ala Mazhab al-Hanafi: Kandhlawi began writing this book on the fundamentals of Hadith specific to the Hanafi school in the month of Jumada al-Awwal in the year 1342 AH and completed it in two days. However, he continued to write marginal notes on the texts of that book until 1388 AH, according to what was in his mind.