Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mera Naam Yousuf Hai (Urdu: میرا نام یوسف ہے, transl. My name is Yousuf), previously titled Zulekha Bina Yusuf [1] (زلیخا بنا یوسف, "Yousuf without Zulekha"), is a Pakistani television drama serial, which originally aired on A-Plus Entertainment from 17 March 2015 till 27 October 2015, comprising a total of 20 episodes.
The book received positive reviews in English-speaking media; The Guardian contrasted this with its "chilly reception" in Turkey. [1] Reviewing it for the same newspaper, Anita Sethi called it an "intricate, multilayered new novel, which excels both in its resplendent details and grand design" and "emotionally forceful". [2]
Yusuf al-Qa'id (Arabic: يوسف القعيد, romanized: Yūsuf al-Qaʿīd; born 2 April 1944 [1]) is a writer, novelist, and member of the Parliament of Egypt. He is best known for his novel War in the Land of Egypt .
Grace delivers a boy, to be called Itumelang Clovis Radiphuti. Phuti's aunt appears, but Phuti stands up for their choice for modern ways of caring for the infant, and she soon leaves. In the town to get a gift for the new baby, Mma Ramotswe sees the new location of the Minor Adjustment Beauty Salon, and speaks with the proprietor, Mma Soleti.
FX has handed a series order to The Beauty, a new drama series co-created by Ryan Murphy and frequent collaborator Matt Hodgson (9-1-1, American Sports Story, Glee). Evan Peters (AHS, Dahmer ...
The novel follows the story of Yusuf, a boy born in the fictional town of Kawa in Tanzania at the turn of the 20th century. Yusuf's father is a hotelier and is in debt to a rich and powerful Arab merchant named Aziz. Early in the story Yusuf is pawned in exchange for his father's owed debt to Aziz and must work as an unpaid servant for the ...
Hazz al-quhuf is composed in the style of a literary commentary on a 42-line poem purported to be written by a peasant (Arabic: فلاح, fallāḥ) named Abu Shaduf. [1] In his commentary, al-Shirbini describes different customs of peasants and urban dwellers, and notes regional distinctions between the Sa'idi people of Upper Egypt, people of the Nile Delta in Lower Egypt, and the poorest ...
Most of what is known about Diyab's life comes from his autobiography, which he composed in 1763, at an age of around 75. It survives as Vatican Library MS Sbath 254, though the first few pages are missing, and its lively narrative has been described as picaresque, [7] and a valuable example of the colloquial, eighteenth-century Middle Arabic of Aleppo, influenced by Aramaic and Turkish. [8]