Search Islamic Glossary
Displaying 1 through 10 of
23 terms found. (10 terms displayed).
Ya sin
3400
Sura 36, the heart of the qur' an. (Source:Taha Publication)
Sura 36, the heart of the qur' an. (Source:Taha Publication)
Ya`qub
3503
The prophet jacob, also called isra'il. (Source:Taha Publication)
The prophet jacob, also called isra'il. (Source:Taha Publication)
Yafith
3501
Japheth. (Source:Taha Publication)
Japheth. (Source:Taha Publication)
Yahndi
1820
A jew. (Source:Taha Publication)
A jew. (Source:Taha Publication)
Yahya
3502
The prophet john the baptist, the son of zakariyya. (Source:Taha Publication)
The prophet john the baptist, the son of zakariyya. (Source:Taha Publication)
Yajuj wa majuj
1976
(Or ya'juj wa ma'juj) the people of gog and magog who are to burst forth near the end of time to wreak destruction. (Source:Taha Publication)
(Or ya'juj wa ma'juj) the people of gog and magog who are to burst forth near the end of time to wreak destruction. (Source:Taha Publication)
Yalamlama
1389
The miqat of the people of yemen. (Source:Taha Publication)
The miqat of the people of yemen. (Source:Taha Publication)
Yamin
869
(Plural ayman) oath. oaths form a complementary role to evidence in islamic law. if a person is accused of an offence without the evidence of sufficient witnesses of good standing, he or she may swear an oath as to his or her innocence to avert punishment. (Source:Taha Publication)
(Plural ayman) oath. oaths form a complementary role to evidence in islamic law. if a person is accused of an offence without the evidence of sufficient witnesses of good standing, he or she may swear an oath as to his or her innocence to avert punishment. (Source:Taha Publication)
Yaqin
3095
Absolute unshakeable certainty and certitude; `ilm al-yaqin (knowledge of certainty) is given by proof or evidence; 'ayn alyaqin (source or eye of certainty) is given by witnessing and unveiling; and haqq al-yaqin (the truth of yaqin) is knowledge obtained according to what the witnessed so wills. (Source:Taha Publication)
Absolute unshakeable certainty and certitude; `ilm al-yaqin (knowledge of certainty) is given by proof or evidence; 'ayn alyaqin (source or eye of certainty) is given by witnessing and unveiling; and haqq al-yaqin (the truth of yaqin) is knowledge obtained according to what the witnessed so wills. (Source:Taha Publication)
Yasir
1821
Slight, insignificant, immaterial. (Source:Taha Publication)
Slight, insignificant, immaterial. (Source:Taha Publication)