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Iran Islam Shia Mirror Quran Ayah Basmala Bismillah in Nice Arabic Calligraphy on Natural Yellow Agate Sterling Silver 925 Ring
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  • Iran Islam Shia Mirror Quran Ayah Basmala Bismillah in Nice Arabic Calligraphy on Natural Yellow Agate Sterling Silver 925 Ring
  • Iran Islam Shia Mirror Quran Ayah Basmala Bismillah in Nice Arabic Calligraphy on Natural Yellow Agate Sterling Silver 925 Ring
  • Iran Islam Shia Mirror Quran Ayah Basmala Bismillah in Nice Arabic Calligraphy on Natural Yellow Agate Sterling Silver 925 Ring
  • Iran Islam Shia Mirror Quran Ayah Basmala Bismillah in Nice Arabic Calligraphy on Natural Yellow Agate Sterling Silver 925 Ring

Iran Islam Shia Quran Ayah Basmala Bismillah carved in Nice Arabic Calligraphy on Natural Yellow Agate Sterling Silver 925 Ring

€131.94

Iran Islam Shia Mirror Quranic Ayah bismi-llāhi r-ramāni r-raḥīmبسم الله الرحمن الرحيم( meaning In the name of God; The Most Gracious, the Most Merciful ) carved in Nice Arabic Calligraphy on Natural Yellow Agate Aqeeq Aqiq Akeek Sterling Silver 925 Ring

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Weight:  17.5 grs.

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Mirror writing means that the writing is readable from both sides of right & left while Arabic is written from right to left.

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Islamic Tradition & Hadith insists that muslims should wear rings with Gemstones like Agate (Aqeeq) as it is to protect the person wearing it.

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Basmala (Arabic: بسملة‎ basmala) or Bismillah (Arabic: بسم الله‎) is an Arabic noun used as a collective name for the whole of the recurring Islamic phrase b-ismi-llāhi r-raḥmāni r-raḥīmi, It is sometimes translated as "In the name of God, Most Gracious, Most Merciful". This phrase is recited before each sura (chapter), except for the ninth (according to others it constitutes the first verse of 113 suras/chapters of the Qur'an), and is used in a number of contexts by Muslims. It is recited several times as part of daily prayers, and is usually the first phrase in the preamble of the constitutions of Islamic countries.

    بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم
    bismi-llāhi r-raḥmāni r-raḥīm
    In the name of God; The Most Gracious, the Most Merciful.

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[2]: b-s-m-l (ب س م ل). This abstract consonantal root was used to derive the noun basmala and its related verb forms, meaning "to recite the basmala". The practice of giving often-repeated phrases special names is paralleled by the phrase "Allāhu Akbar" (الله أكبر). (usually translated "God is [the] Greatest," or "God is Great"), which is referred to as the "Takbir" (also Ta'awwudh and others); this method of coining a quadriliteral name from the consonants of such a phrase is paralleled by the name Hamdala for Alhamdulillah.

Recitation of the basmala is known as tasmiyya (تسمية).

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