top of page

All Posts

جاء vs أتى

Today, you will discover one of the most amazing secrets of the Quran — that Allah picks every single word on purpose. We'll learn about two Arabic words that both mean "to come," but they are NOT the same! Part 1: Meet the Two Words In Arabic, there are TWO words that mean "to come": Word #1: أَتَى Feels: LIGHT, EASY, SMOOTH Like: a feather floating down Used for: things that are gentle, easy, or just normal Word #2: جَاءَ Feels: HEAVY, HARD, WEIGHTY Like: carrying a big bag

Qalb Vs Fuʾād

Imagine you're reading the Quran, and you find this verse about Prophet Moses's mom: "And the fuʾād of Moses's mother became empty. She almost spilled the secret, if We hadn't tied up her qalb*..."* [Quran 28:10] Both fuʾād and qalb are usually translated as "heart" in English. So someone asks the sheikh Dr. Fāḍil al-Sāmarrāʾī : "Wait — why did Allah use TWO different words for 'heart' in the SAME verse?? Is there a difference?" Great question! Because Allah never uses two d

Mention (full form) vs. Omission (shortened form) – الذكر والحذف

Every letter in the Quran is placed deliberately. When the Quran sometimes uses the full form of a word and sometimes a shortened form (with a letter dropped), this is never arbitrary — the length of the word corresponds to the magnitude, duration, or frequency of the action it describes. Example 1 : is His saying: ﴿تَنَزَّلُ الْمَلَائِكَةُ وَالرُّوحُ فِيهَا بِإِذْنِ رَبِّهِم مِّن كُلِّ أَمْرٍ﴾ [al-Qadr 97:4] — "The angels and the Spirit descend therein, by the permission of

Quranic precision behind the the usage of singular and plural

Lets discuss a linguistic feature of Classical Arabic where certain nouns like طفل (ṭifl) and غلام (ghulām) can grammatically serve as singular, dual, and plural with the same form — which is why the Quran in verse 24:31 says الطفل الذين (using al-ṭifl — singular in form — with alladhīna — a plural relative pronoun). The seeming mismatch is actually a known feature of the language. He also notes that the explicit plural aṭfāl does exist and is used elsewhere in the Quran (as

Worship like IBRAHIM - فَأَتَمَّهُنَّ

The Word فَأَتَمَّهُنَّ in Quran 2:124 The verse reads: وَإِذِ ابْتَلَىٰ إِبْرَاهِيمَ رَبُّهُ بِكَلِمَاتٍ فَأَتَمَّهُنَّ "And [remember] when Abraham was tried by his Lord with words (commands), immediately he fulfilled them perfectly..." Morphological Breakdown The word فَأَتَمَّهُنَّ consists of three parts: فَ (fa-) — a connective particle meaning "and then" / "so", indicating sequence or result. The Letter فَ (Fa) The fa here is فَاءُ التعقيب (Fa of immediate sequence). I

WHY ماتاب instead of تَوبَة ?

Why did Allah used ماتاب (mataba) instead of تَوبَة (tawbah) ? And whoever repents and does good has truly turned to Allah properly. (25:71) وَمَن تَابَ وَعَمِلَ صَـٰلِحًۭا فَإِنَّهُۥ يَتُوبُ إِلَى ٱللَّهِ مَتَابًا Allah could have just said ‏تاب (taba)’ in this ayah and moved on. Repentance accepted, case closed. But He used a different word: مَتَابا (mataba). Both ‏توبة (tawbah) and مَتَابا (mataba) mean repentance, but they do not carry the same weight. In Arabic, the extr

bottom of page