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The ''Basmala'' ( '), also known by its incipit ''Bismillah'' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase ' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful". This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.〔See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').〕 It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries. In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah. In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD . == Name == The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:〔''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263.〕 b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.〔 Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' (). 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む 'Basmala'' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' (). The ''Basmala'' ( '), also known by its incipit ''Bismillah'' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase ' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful". This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.〔See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').〕 It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries. In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah. In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD . == Name == The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:〔''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263.〕 b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.〔 Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' (). 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む ' ( '), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' (). The ''Basmala'' ( '), also known by its incipit ''Bismillah'' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase ' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful". This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.〔See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').〕 It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries. In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah. In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD . == Name == The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:〔''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263.〕 b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.〔 Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' (). 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む ), also known by its incipit ''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' (). The ''Basmala'' ( '), also known by its incipit ''Bismillah'' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase ' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful". This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.〔See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').〕 It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries. In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah. In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD . == Name == The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:〔''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263.〕 b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.〔 Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' (). 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む 'Bismillah'' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' (). The ''Basmala'' ( '), also known by its incipit ''Bismillah'' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase ' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful". This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.〔See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').〕 It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries. In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah. In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD . == Name == The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:〔''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263.〕 b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.〔 Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' (). 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む ' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase ' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' (). The ''Basmala'' ( '), also known by its incipit ''Bismillah'' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase ' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful". This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.〔See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').〕 It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries. In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah. In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD . == Name == The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:〔''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263.〕 b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.〔 Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' (). 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' (). The ''Basmala'' ( '), also known by its incipit ''Bismillah'' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase ' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful". This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.〔See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').〕 It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries. In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah. In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD . == Name == The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:〔''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263.〕 b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.〔 Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' (). 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む 'Basmala'' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().">ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む ' ( '), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().">ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む ), also known by its incipit ''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().">ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む 'Bismillah'' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().">ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む ' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase ' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().">ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().">ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む 'Basmala'' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().">ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む ' ( '), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().">ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む ), also known by its incipit ''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().">ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む 'Bismillah'' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().">ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む ' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase ' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().">ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The '''''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().">ウィキペディアで「Bismilla redirects here-->The ''Basmala''''' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む 'Basmala'' ( ''''), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む ' ( '), also known by its incipit '''''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む ), also known by its incipit ''Bismillah''''' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む 'Bismillah'' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase '''' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む ' (, "In the name of God") is the name of the Islamic phrase ' "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful".This is the phrase recited before each ''sura'' (chapter) of the Qur'anexcept for the ninth.See, however, the discussion of the eighth and ninth ''sura''s at Al-Anfal (the eighth ''sura'').It is used by Muslims in various contexts (for instance, during daily prayer) and is usually the first phrase in the preambles to the constitutions of Islamic countries.In Arabic calligraphy, the ''Basmala'' is the most prevalent motif, even more so than the Shahadah.In Unicode, the Basmala is encoded as one ligature at codepoint U+FDFD .== Name ==The word ''basmala'' was derived from a slightly unusual procedure, in which the first four pronounced consonants of the phrase ''bismi-llāhi...'' were used as a quadriliteral consonantal root:''A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language'' by J.A. Haywood and H.M. Nahmad (London: Lund Humphries, 1965), ISBN 0-85331-585-X, p. 263. b-s-m-l (. This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun ''basmala'' and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the ''basmala''". Other oft-repeated phrases in Islam given their own names include "''Allāhu Akbar''" (, called the ''Takbir'' and usually translated as "God is () Greatest" or "God is Great") and the phrase beginning "''A`ūdhu billāhi...''" called the ''Ta'awwudh''. The method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of a phrase is paralleled by the name ''Hamdala'' for ''Alhamdulillah''.Recitation of the ''Basmala'' is known as ''tasmiyya'' ().」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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