enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Mouawad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mouawad

    Mouawad is a family-owned international company of Lebanese origin that makes and sells jewelry, objects of art, and luxury watches. [1] The firm has headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, with a Middle East headquarters at Jumeirah Lakes Towers in Dubai, as well as locations in Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, and the United States. [2]

  3. Urdu Lughat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urdu_Lughat

    [citation needed] It is published by the Urdu Lughat Board, Karachi. The dictionary was edited by the honorary director general of the board Maulvi Abdul Haq who had already been working on an Urdu dictionary since the establishment of the Urdu Dictionary Board, Karachi, in 1958. [1] [2] [3] Urdu Lughat consists of 22 volumes. In 2019, the ...

  4. Diwan (Nasir Khusraw) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diwan_(Nasir_Khusraw)

    The Diwan, or Divan (Persian: دیوان), is a collection of poems written and compiled by Nasir Khusraw (1004–1088 AD). Khusraw composed most of his poems in the Valley of Yumgan, a remote mountainous region in Badakhshan (in present-day Afghanistan). The Divan contains around 11,000 verses of Khusraw's own poetry, reflecting philosophical ...

  5. Urdu literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urdu_literature

    Urdu literature (Urdu: ادبیاتِ اُردُو, “Adbiyāt-i Urdū”) comprises the literary works, written in the Urdu language.While it tends to be dominated by poetry, especially the verse forms of the ghazal (غزل) and nazm (نظم), it has expanded into other styles of writing, including that of the short story, or afsana (افسانہ).

  6. Diwan (poetry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diwan_(poetry)

    A Mughal scribe and Daulat, his illustrator, from a manuscript of the Khamsa of Nizami, one of the most famous Persian diwan collections. In Islamic cultures of the Middle East, North Africa, Sicily [1] and South Asia, a Diwan (Persian: دیوان, divân, Arabic: ديوان, dīwān) is a collection of poems by one author, usually excluding his or her long poems ().

  7. Works of Muhammad Iqbal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Works_of_Muhammad_Iqbal

    Allama Muhammad Iqbal. Sir Muhammad Iqbal also known as Allama Iqbal (1877–1938), was a Muslim philosopher, poet, writer, scholar and politician of early 20th-century. He is particularly known in the Indian sub-continent for his Urdu philosophical poetry on Islam and the need for the cultural and intellectual reconstruction of the Islamic community.

  8. List of hadith books - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hadith_books

    Primary Hadith Collection (Primary Hadith books are those books which are collected, compiled and written by author or their students themselves). The Book of Sulaym ibn Qays by Sulaym ibn Qays; Kitab ul Momin by Hussain bin Saeed Ahwazi; Al-Mahasin by Ahmad b. Muhammad al-Barqi; Qurb al-isnad by Abd Allah b. Ja'far al-Himyari; Al-Amali of ...

  9. Qasida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qasida

    Well-known examples of this genre include the poems of the Mu'allaqat (a collection of pre-Islamic poems, the most being the one of Imru' al-Qays), the Qasida Burda (Poem of the Mantle) by Imam al-Busiri, and Ibn Arabi's classic collection Tarjumān al-Ashwāq (The Interpreter of Desires).