المساعد الشخصي الرقمي

مشاهدة النسخة كاملة : the most valuable gift



ناعمتن بالحيل
10-01-2010, 10:41 PM
مسآآآآآآآآآكم وررررررررد حبآيبي


جآيتكم بخدمه وأتمنى انكم تسآعدوني:smile (84):





انا قدمت امتحان الانجلشش وعلامتي فيه جيده وعطتنا ورقه تحسسين بس ماعرفت احلها قسم كسرت خاطر نفسسي:smile (97):

لا وناويه ادخلانجلش بعد

الموهيم انا بكتب لكم السؤال ووروني شطارتكم بالانجلش:guy face (62):

write a paragraph about tha most valuable gift you have ever received .make sure your
paragraph has a tobic sentences that develops one main idea about that
item followd supporting sentences which explain why this item is considered so special



topic sentences
.................................................. ...........................

supporting sentences1
.................................................. ..............................
supporting sentence2
.................................................. .................................
supporting sentence3
.................................................. ......................................
concluding sentences
.................................................. ....................................
يلا حلو الفراغااااااااااااااااااا ت:smile (64):

لاتقولون هذي غبيه ماتعرف الا ادري ان الموضوع عن اثمن هديه بس ماعرف طريقة حـــــــــــــــــــــلهـ :smile (24):

فرجاااااءً اللي يعرف لايبخل علي بالجووواب بليييزززززز

لحد يرد ع الموضوووع الا وكاتبلي الحل فضلا لا أمرا:smile (64):


لكم مني اطييييييييييييييب تحييييه:smile (92):

M.o_o.N
11-01-2010, 12:09 AM
Quran is the holy Islamic book in our religion and it has many benefits we can get from it

Islam has always pushed its males to be able to read the Quran. A boy achieves manhood when he has read the Quran through once. However, the Quranic reading tradition of Islam does not mean that Muslim societies have had a high rate of literacy.
Firstly, only males, until very recently, had any teaching in reading. And writing was of lesser importance.
Secondly, the Quran is written in Classical Arabic of the 6th century. It would be like learning to read in Latin for a European. Useful to a point, but not necessarily meaning that you are literate in the sense we know it now. Many of those who did learn to read the Quran, had only a limited understanding of what it said (indeed, it has been estimated that up to 25% of the Quran is not understood clearly even by Quranic experts, due to the language not being a spoken one, and there being few other texts in it, to help in understanding Quranic Arabic)
Thirdly, even those who read Quranic Arabic were not necessarily able to read the Arabic of their own day, or, if outside Arabia, their own language. In fact, the regional languages were often discouraged. The Berbers of North Africa have often complained about Arabic imperialism towards their own language and literature.
On the other hand, there were centers of learning where men had extremely high skills in literacy in both Quranic Arabic, their own dialect/language and the ability to read other languages such as Greek for the purposes of translating texts into Arabic (eg Fez, Alexandria, Timbuktu, Al-Andalus etc). In these centers, Greek skills such as astronomy, mathematics, architecture and philosophy were kept alive.



so my best gift that i had given is the holly Quran and it is something beneficial


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