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The Qur'aan Lexicographical Model

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al-amiyr View Drop Down
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    Posted: 21 March 2013 at 9:38am


Post 1


The Qur'aan Lexicographical Model
I have attached Fig.001. There is nothing like it in the world. A complete Language Program designed by ALLAAH (God) Himself. Bring something like it or find fault with it. The Qur'aan is Perfect from every angle. And you have seen nothing yet.

The Program to generate all the Arabic Root Verbs. Read the notes below.



There is a debate that has been raging between scholars of the Qur�aan, especially between Muslim and non-Muslim protagonists that goes something like this:
� The Qur�aan claims to be a revealed book in an unadulterated or pure Arabic language but in reality it contains many words that are of foreign origin.�
In other words if the claim contained in the Qur�aan is proven to be incorrect then it would be clear evidence that the Qur�aan is not a divine book that was supposedly revealed to Muhammad (S+) for the guidance of the whole of humanity for all time. Henceforward it could or should be discarded and regarded as nothing more than a literary curiosity.

I would like to present this argument here from a completely different angle which I will show to be the correct one. This presentation of The Qur'aan Lexicographical Model is important because its understanding is necessary for the further understanding of the other models of knowledge contained in the Qur�aan. They are among others The Qur'aan Cosmological Model and The Hidden Book that I am discussing in other threads. Everything will be easy to understand; knowledge will be gained; and an appreciation will be shown to the magnificence of the beauty and design of the language in which the Qur�aan is manifested.

I will begin as follows by asking,
�Is there anybody out there who can give the answer to the following three questions?
1. What is the definition of Arabic?
2. What makes a word to be an Arabic word?
3. And what makes a word to be a non-Arabic word?�

Arabic is the name of a perfect language that has its origin in a program of mathematical knowledge brought into existence by (ALLAAH) God. And that is the fundamental theorem of language.
If a word has its origin in that program then it is defined as Arabic. But if a word does not have its origin in that program then it is defined as non-Arabic. And that is the first corollary or immediate deduction from the fundamental theorem of language.

A word is not defined as Arabic because the person who first uttered it was an Arab. Nor is a word defined as non-Arabic because the person who first uttered it was a non-Arab. The definition of what an Arabic or a non-Arabic word is has nothing to do with nationality.
And that is the first strike of the sword of truth against a fallacy of a definition of the origin of the words of language.

A great many words of the great many languages calling themselves non-Arabic can be defined as absolutely Arabic even though first uttered from the mouth of one who was non-Arabic. But this knowledge is known only to those who will have knowledge of The Qur'aan Lexicographical and Etymological Models
And a great many words of the languages calling themselves Arabic can be defined as absolutely non-Arabic even though first uttered from the mouth of one who was Arabic. But again this knowledge is known only to those who will have knowledge of The Qur'aan Lexicographical and Etymological models.

What is the Qur�aan Lexicographical Model?
The Qur�aan Lexicographical Model is a program of the design, order, and structure of all the words of the Arabic language. Beginning from the layout and forms of the fundamental verbal root letters; their various types; their further extended verbal dimensions; and all their possible derived words visually presented as a model of about a thousand pages arranged vertically and horizontally.

The Arabic language consists of an alphabet of 28 letters plus one special letter called alif; 3 short vowels written above or below the consonantal letters, which can be extended into 3 long vowels using the 3 universal letters alif, waaw, and yaa�; and two important diphthongs ay and aw. From here the entire structure of the language is build upon a well designed arrangement.

The fundamental verbal root letters
Roughly speaking the Arabic language is based on letters arranged in twos threes and fours with vowels in between and after. They are all verbs of the past tense.
Here is the complete list of examples of all the Arabic fundamental verbal root patters.

Verbs based on this pattern
XaaXa consonant- long vowel- consonant- short vowel
ML- = MaaLa = he or it inclined, sloped, bowed
TL- = TaaLa = he lengthened
SB- = SaaBa = he hit (the target)

Verbs based on this pattern

XaXXa consonant- short vowel- double consonant- short vowel
R-F- = RaFFa = he or it flashed or flared
T-R- = TaRRa = he sharpened (a pencil to a point)
L-B- = LaBBa = he abided (at a place)

Verbs based on this pattern
XaXaa consonant- short vowel- consonant- long vowel
T-W-- = TaWaa = he rolled up
L-W-- = LaWaa = he curved, bent (something)
H-W-- = HaWaa = he or it fell down

Verbs based on this pattern
XaXaXa consonant- short vowel- consonant- short vowel- consonant- short vowel
N-M-R- = NaMaRa = he numbered (numbers)
S-B-R- = SaBaRa = he was patient
K-M-L- KaMaLa = he or it was complete, whole, total

Verbs based on this pattern
XaX:XaXa consonant- short vowel- consonant- consonant- short vowel- consonant- short vowel
S-L:S-L- = Sal:SaLa = he or it formed a chain reaction
Z-L:Z-L- = ZaL:ZaLa = it quaked (the earth)
N-M:N-M- =  NaM:NaMa = it rippled (sand in the wind)

There you have it the complete verbal program (100%) upon which the entire Arabic language (99%+) is based and thus the Qur�aan and as we have already said wherein it is manifested.
And remember that this is only one Page of a Thousand Page Program called The Qur'aan Lexicographical Model.

To be continued in posts to follow inshaa allaah

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al-amiyr View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote al-amiyr Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21 March 2013 at 10:06am

Post 2

Can you imagine this- that the language with the largest vocabulary in the world (probably not excluding English as well) can be reduced to a singular program of five simple verbal patterns that produces:

007 056 (seven thousand and fifty six ) of nine forms of bi-literal (of two letters) verbal roots of the past tense;
065 856 (sixty five thousand eight hundred and fifty six) of three forms of tri-literal (of three letters) verbal roots of the past tense;
614 656 (six hundred and fourteen thousand six hundred and fifty six) of one form of quadri-literal (of four letters) verbal roots of the past tense;

687 568 (six hundred and eighty seven thousand five hundred and sixty eight) in total verbal roots of the past tense.

Then the bi-literal and tri-literal verbal roots of the past tense extend into another fourteen further extensions and dimensions producing another 1093 680 (one million and ninety three thousand six hundred and eighty) verbs of various shades of determined and calculated meaning.
The bi-literal and tri-literal verbal roots of the past tense extend into four further extensions and dimensions producing another 2 458 624 (two million four hundred and fifty eight thousand six hundred and twenty four) verbs of various shades of determined and calculated meaning.

How is it possible that such a thing could have emerged or evolved from the mind of man (and/or woman).
The Qur'aan says that of all the languages ALLAAH designed he chose the Arabic language that he placed and preserved in the hearts and minds of the barbaric people of Arabia so that when right time has come, His symbols would become perfectly explainable to the world. The Qur'aan states that no other language in the world completely fulfills that need; only Arabic.

Here is Fig. 002 The Dimensions of The Triliteral Verb Nr. 001



The above, so far, are but two parts of a thousand page program of the Arabic language that generates about a million books of the structure of the language. Do the language of the Qur'aan sound like an irrational and an unstable language. You have seen nothing yet.

To be continued inshaa allaah.

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