-
Medina circa A.H. 85 (A.D. 704), ibn Isḥaq's
grandfather was Yasār ibn
Khiyar (according to some ibn Khabbar,
Kuman or Kutan), one of
forty Christian...
- clan of the
Quraysh tribe of Mecca. His
mother was Umm
Hisham bint Abi'l
Khiyar Abd
Yalil ibn Abd Manaf. Ibn Muti
resided in Medina, the
political centre...
-
Zahirite law. He
studied the school's
precepts and
methods under Abu al-
Khiyar al-Dawudi al-Zahiri of Santarém Muni****lity and was
eventually promoted...
-
Almohads and Ibn Hazm followed. Ayyad's
comments on Ibn Hazm's
teacher Abu al-
Khiyar al-Zahiri were positive, as was Ayyad's
characterization of his own father...
-
grammarian of the
Arabic language Ibn
Ishaq (or Muḥammad ibn Isḥāq ibn Yasār ibn
Khiyār), Arab
Muslim historian who
wrote a
biography of
Muhammad Muhammad ibn Ishaq...
-
Khiarzar (Persian: خيارزار, also
Romanized as Khīārzār, Khīār Zār, and
Khīyar Zar; also
known as Kheyār Zard) is a
village in
Shabankareh Rural District...
- the Near East and
South Asia (e.g.
khiyaar "cu****ber" from Persian: خيار
khiyār ).
Other loan
words have also
displaced their native synonyms in some dialects...
-
Mahbouby Sidi
Ahmedou Bilal Oumel Vadly Mohameden Al
Mahboub Ivoukou Taleb Khiyar Taleb Mohamed Mariem Dahy Dahi
Mohamed El
Moctar El
Ithnayne Amar Oumoulh****en...
-
conditions for witnesses.
Besides that, the
rulings on the
dissolution rights or
khiyar,
talaq and all the
conditions related to it,
including the
muhallil (a type...
- son,
Yahya b.
Muhammad al-Ṣūlī; and al-Abbas b. Ali,
known as Ibn Burd al-
Khiyār. See: See also: The Banu
Hamdun were
known for
their boon companionship...