different between hadith vs sayings
hadith
English
Wikiquote
Etymology
Arabic ??????? (?ad??, “Prophetic tradition”), from ???????? (?adda?a, “to tell, relate, report”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ha?di??]
Noun
hadith (countable and uncountable, plural hadith or hadiths or ahadith)
- (countable, religion, Islam) An eyewitness account of a saying or action of Muhammad (or sometimes one of his companions) not otherwise found in the Quran.
- (countable, religion, Islam) A particular accepted collection of such accounts, as from a single source or within a particular branch of Islam or Islamic jurisprudence.
Synonyms
- (uncountable): the Hadith, the Sunna
- (countable): tradition, saying, deed, etc.
Derived terms
- hadithic
Related terms
- (adj.): hadith, hadithic, Hadithic
- Sunna
Translations
Finnish
(index ha)
Noun
hadith
- hadith (collection of Muhammed's sayings)
Declension
Portuguese
Noun
hadith m (uncountable)
- Alternative form of hádice
hadith From the web:
- what hadith was used in doom
- what hadith means
- what hadith says music is haram
- what hadith do shia follow
- what hadiths are authentic
- what hadith qudsi
- what hadith says about marriage
- what hadith says about hijab
sayings
English
Noun
sayings
- plural of saying
sayings From the web:
- what sayings are trending
- what sayings does woody say
- what sayings mean
- what sayings did shakespeare create
- what sayings come from shakespeare
- what sayings really mean
- what are examples of sayings
- what are common sayings
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- hadith vs sayings
- hadith vs ahadith
- sunnah vs hadith
- quran vs hadith
- hadith vs isnad
- muslim vs hadith
- sunna vs hadith
- said vs saying
- utterance vs saying
- saying vs statement
- saying vs doing
- saying vs quoting
- saying vs reciting
- saying vs speaking
- saying vs speech
- adolescence vs convergence
- adults vs adolescence
- adolescence vs teen
- adolescence vs pubescence
- adolescence vs protection