بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم قل هل تربصون بنا إلا إحدى الحسنيين ونحن نتربص بكم أن يصيبكم الله بعذاب من عنده أو بأيدينا فتربصوا إنا معكم متربصون
سلام عليكم الاخوة الاعزاء
نتمنى من الله عز وجل أن تكون هذه الصفحة بمثابة عون لكم في مسار طريقكم الى الحق إن شاء الله ودراسة وفهم القرءان الكريم.
في حال كان عندكم أي تعليق أو إقتراح الرجاء الاتصال بنا على موقعنا في الانترنت
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We developed our font "openquran.ttf" depending on the font "me_quran.ttf". This was especially made to view quranic scriptures in a right manner. Just download and install in your Fonts folder (C:\WINDOWS\Fonts). Its free to use for none commercial use!
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To search in one of the offered translations, click on the upper right side of the search menu to choose you search table!
Transliterations are only needed if the user is searching for the exact form of an arabic letter. E.g. ( أ ) Alif with Hamza above is one form of the groupe of Alif letter or ( إ ) is another form
If "Non-Transliteration" is checked, in this case our software will search for:
Arabic Root Search and Dictionary, containing a Root List with all roots and verses and a Link to the online Lane’s Lexicon AR-EN Dictionary. These can also be downloaded for Free.
If you speak a European language, the root system of Arabic may be an unfamiliar concept. Arabic words are made from a few component letters, commonly called a “root”. A root usually consists of three letters (sometimes 2 or 4), which convey a basic idea. By adding various vowels (i.e. changing pronunciation) as affixes*, associated meanings can be derived. For example, the Arabic letters: Siin–Lam–Miim (see above: س ل م and remember Arabic words go from right to left, unlike languages with latin characters) are the root for the following words: salaam (peace), islam (submission/compliance/conformance/surrender), muslim (one who submits/complies/conforms/surrenders). In all these words, you will see the root (component letters) are the same, and in the same order, i.e. Siin-Lam-Miim.
In a root language, words mean what they mean because they are built from other words; these base words are called roots. Now, while most languages are concept languages, there are some words that can be likened to the root system, e.g: if you learn what the word “act” means, you should have no problem when you hear the word “actor” or “action” - you use the root to understand the word built from the root.
Classical Arabic as one of the most primitive Semitic languages is primarily a root language. Almost every word gets its meaning from the roots it is built from rather than by associating a concept with the word. This gives Arabic an almost crystal clear aspect to it; there is little ambiguity or confusion in a classical Arabic sentence. The language is one of clarity, directness, and certainty - qualities that are hard to achieve in other languages.
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