932 resultados para Arabic language--Grammar
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Anonymous. By John Kemp.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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The complaints on the adoption of Arabic by the Copts that are voiced by the Apocalypse of Pseudo-Samuel have often been quoted as the expiring words of the dying Coptic language. This article seeks to show that they are not to be taken so literally, and that they should rather be inserted in the context of a rift within the medieval Coptic church over the question of language choice, and beyond this, over that of accommodation with the Muslims. The use of Arabic by the episcopal church of Miṣr and by some prominent figures around it, which was linked to their proximity to the Fatimid court, was resented and denounced by more traditional circles, centred on the Patriarchate and on some important monasteries such as the one at Qalamūn where the Apocalypse was written. The suggestion is also made that the text is contemporary with the beginning of Coptic literary production in Arabic and with the introduction of Egyptian Christians at the caliphal court, namely in the last quarter of the tenth century, at the time of Severus ibn al-Muqqafa‘.
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Microfilm.
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li-ʻUthmān ibn Muṣṭafá al-Ṭarasūsī.
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taʼlīf Aḥmad Fāris al-mulaqqab bi-al-Shidyāq.
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li-Muḥammad ʻĪsá ʻAskar.
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Written in one column, from 6 to 23 lines per page, in black and red.
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li-Ibn al-Ḥājib.
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Written in one column, 19 lines per page, in black.
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Title from inside cover in a later handscript.
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Written in one column with poems in two columns, 29 lines per pages, in black and red.
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Written in one column, 21 lines per page, in black and red.
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بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم وبه يفتى وهو حسبى الحمد لله الذي لا يقبل ذاته الجليلة الزوال ... :Incipit
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Written from one to four columns, from 17 to 19 lines per page, in black.