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The word itself is derived from the word Hayat, which means "life". [10] The original meaning of Haya refers to "a bad or uneasy feeling accompanied by embarrassment". Importance
Hayat TV (Turkey), a Turkish TV channel; Hayat Folk, a Bosnian music TV channel dedicated to traditional "Sevdalinka" songs (founded in 2012) Hayat Music, a Bosnian music TV channel dedicated to world and Bosnian popular music (founded in 2012) Hayat Plus, a Bosnian satellite channel by Hayat TV (also known as Hayat Sat)
Al-Hayat Media Center (Arabic: مركز الحياة للإعلام) is a media wing of the Islamic State. [1] [2] It was established in mid-2014 and targets international (non-Arabic) audiences as opposed to their other Arabic-focused media wings and produces material, mostly Nasheeds, in English, German, Russian, Urdu, Indonesian, Turkish, Bengali, Chinese, Bosnian, Kurdish, Uyghur, and French.
This Arabic version was the source for the Latin translation De Animalibus by Michael Scot [1] in Toledo before 1217. [2] Several complete manuscript versions exist in Leiden, London, and Tehran , [ 3 ] but the text has been edited in separate volumes corresponding to the three Aristotelian sources.
Hayat Al-Fahad or El Fahed [2] (Gulf Arabic: حياة الفهد, romanized: Ḥayāt il-Fahad, Gulf Arabic pronunciation: [ħəyäːt‿ɪlfəhəd]; born 1948) is a Kuwaiti actress, broadcaster, writer and producer best known for her Kuwaiti plays and the pop culture TV shows Khalti Qumasha, Ruqiya wa Sabika, Jarh Al Zaman, 'ndama Tu'Gany Al Zuhor.
View a machine-translated version of the Arabic article. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
This article about an Islamic studies book is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
A lost book named Amrtakunda, the Pool of Nectar, was written in India, in either Hindi or Sanskrit.This was supposedly translated into Arabic as Hawd ma' al-hayat, the Pool of the Water of Life, in Bengal in 1210, though the scholar Carl Ernst suggests that the translation was actually made by a Persian scholar, perhaps in the 15th century, a man who then travelled to India and observed Nath ...