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The Quranic Arabic Corpus (Arabic: المدونة القرآنية العربية, romanized: al-modwana al-Qurʾāni al-ʿArabiyya) is an annotated linguistic resource consisting of 77,430 words of Quranic Arabic. The project aims to provide morphological and syntactic annotations for researchers wanting to study the language of the Quran.
Quranic 9th-century manuscript page, surah 2:175-76 and 2:176-77. Corpus Coranicum is a digital research project of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities. The project makes sources accessible that are relevant for the history of the Quran. These primary texts include Jewish, Christian, and other textual remains from the ...
Kurdish-corpus.uok.ac.ir (Kurdish-corpus Sorani dialect) University of Kurdistan, Department of English Language and Linguistics; Bijankhan Corpus A Contemporary Persian Corpus for NLP researches, University of Tehran, 2012; Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project; Quranic Arabic Corpus (Classical Arabic) Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature
Arabic (classical) Quranic Arabic Dependency Treebank (QADT) (Quranic Arabic Corpus) Dependency: Open source (GNU general public license) Classical Armenian: PROIEL Treebank [8] Dependency: Open source (Creative Commons license) Coptic: Universal Dependencies, Coptic Scriptorium Dependency: CC BY Croatian: Croatian Dependency Treebank: Dependency
Classical Arabic or Quranic Arabic (Arabic: العربية الفصحى, romanized: al-ʻArabīyah al-Fuṣḥā, lit. 'the most eloquent classic Arabic') is the standardized literary form of Arabic used from the 7th century and throughout the Middle Ages, most notably in Umayyad and Abbasid literary texts such as poetry, elevated prose and oratory, and is also the liturgical language of Islam.
Al-Ma'idah (Arabic: ٱلْمَائدَة, romanized: al-Māʾidah; lit. 'The Table [Spread with Food]') is the fifth chapter of the Quran, containing 120 verses.. Regarding the timing and contextual background of the revelation, it is a Medinan chapter, which means it is believed to have been revealed in Medina rather than Mecca.
Al-Ḥijr (Arabic: الحِجْرْ, lit. 'The Stoneland') [1] is the 15th sūrah (chapter of the Quran).It has 99 āyāt (verses).. Regarding the timing and contextual background of the revelation (asbāb al-nuzūl), it is an earlier Meccan surah, received by Muhammad shortly after chapter 12, Yusuf, during his last year in Mecca.
Al-Maʻārij (Arabic: المعارج, “The Ascending Stairways”) is the seventieth chapter of the Qur'an, with 44 verses . The Surah takes its name from the word dhil Ma'arij [1] in the third ayah. The word appears twice in the Quran.