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The Arabic word أَكْبَر (ʾakbar) is the elative form (bigger) of the adjective kabīr. When used in the takbīr it is usually translated as biggest, but some authors translate it as bigger. [7] [8] [9] The term takbīr itself is the stem II verbal noun of the root k-b-r, meaning "big", from which akbar "bigger" is derived.
"Allahu Akbar" (Arabic: الله أكبر, lit. ' God Is the Greatest ') is an Egyptian pro-military patriotic song composed by songwriter Abdalla Shams El-Din in 1954 and written by poet Mahmoud El-Sherif in 1955.
Arabic language; Other religions; ... also known as Ism Allah al-Akbar ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; ...
Allahu Akbar (Arabic: الله أكبر) is an Arabic phrase, called Takbir, meaning "God is greater" or "God is [the] greatest". Allahu Akbar or Allahu Ekber and similar variants may also refer to: Allahu Akbar (anthem), the national anthem of Libya from 1969 to 2011; Allahu Akbar (1959 film), Egypt, a love story set in the dawn of Islam
The raka'ah begins when the worshipper initiates the salah with the words "Allah is Greater" (Allah-Hu-Akbar), this is known in Arabic as the Takbir (lit. ' the Glorification of God '). [1] Takbir must be said at the start of the Salah or the prayer is invalidated. [1]
Appears above the sword, with this text from Surah As-Saff, the 61st chapter of the Qur'an, verse 13: "نَصرٌ مِنَ اللَّـهِ وَفَتحٌ قَريبٌ", "Victory from Allah and an eminent conquest" Islamic State of Iraq/Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant: 2006–present On the top of the flag and the circle Kuwait: 1940-1961
u+fdf1 ﷱ arabic ligature qala used as koranic stop sign isolated form (قلى, stylized as قلے) u+fdf2 ﷲ arabic ligature allah isolated form (اللّٰه) u+fdf3 ﷳ arabic ligature akbar isolated form , as in the phrase الله اكبر allāhu akbar; u+fdf4 ﷴ arabic ligature mohammad isolated form
In Sufism Hu is the pronoun used for Allah or God. Allah Hu means "God, Just He!" In Arabic Allah means God and with Hu, as an intensive added to Allah, means "God himself." Hu is also found in a variant of the first part of the Islamic credo, wherein lā ilāha illā Allāh "there is no god but God," is shortened to lā ilāha illā Hu(wa) meaning "There is no God but He".