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I do not use God, because of the origin of the word
What's the origin of the word God?
I do not use God, because of the origin of the word
http://www.bibleanswerstand.org/God.htmWhat's the origin of the word God?
http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=What's+the+origin+of+the+word+God.... the word 'God' that we use for the Supreme Being, comes from a very pagan origin. ....
http://www.turntoislam.com/forum/showthread.php?p=294978#post294978What is "Laa ilaha illallah."?
In Arabic the way to write Laa ilaha illallah is " لا اله الا الله "
See the ا (alif) in the word Allah there? The Alif could be erase, but why was it written in there? Because it is Alif lam makrifat, means that what Muslim meant by the word "Allah" is definite, not indefinite and not abstact (Nakirah).
That means Allahu Ta'ala is only the Creator, the Cherisher, the Sustainer, and the One God who owns the Asma'ul Husna which He made known through His Kitab, and through His messengers, and which He keep inside His knowledge which is Ghaib (not known but by Him).
If the writing is like this " لا اله الا لله " the alif before the lafazh Allah is erase, then it is becoming Allah the abstract, which won't be Al Ilah, the word Allah was derived from Al Ilah " ال اله" not "اله" the rule in Arabic is that when the word written the form of Nakirah means abstract, while when written in the form of Makrifat (with Al : ال) means that it is a DEFINITE noun (Isim).
So forever, Islam will never worship duality of Allah as one or Oneness of Allah in duality, or Trinity of Allah in 1 or oneness of Allah in Trinity.
Only Allah the Al Ilah, Ilah means 1 God, if 2 God: Ilahaini.
Assalamu'alaikum wa rahmatullahi wa barakaatuh (May peace, development, safe from guile, and Allah's mercy and His blessings be upon thee).
What's the origin of the word God?
But:
by writing God with a capital G instead of god, isn't it like saying that there is only one God?
God --> Allah or al-ilah
god --> ilah
gods --> the plural of al-ilah is al aliha and Allah is derived from al-ilah.
So what's the difference?
I've always wondered about this...
can you give a reference from a linguist (other than from anti-Islam sites according to whom it is name of a pagan god worshipped by Arabs of old and Muslims of today)To be correct, "Allah" is not a contraction of "al-ilah". "Allah" is a proper name applied to the Being Who exists necessarily, by Himself, comprising all the attributes of perfection, i.e. the Being Who is perfect in every way (in His knowledge, power etc.), and possesses the best and the noblest qualities imaginable in the highest degree.
The term "al-ilah" (the-god/deity") is a generic title, and a different word from "Allah".
can you give a reference from a linguist (other than from anti-Islam sites according to whom it is name of a pagan god worshipped by Arabs of old and Muslims of today)
following your peculiar brand of Arabic
Abdullah is not a contraction of Abdul Allah, jazakillah is not jazaki Allah, Noor-ud-deen is not noor al deen and so on and so forth
name a few dictionaries/lexicons so that I can look them up tooAnti-Islam sites say the opposite of what I said, as their arguments are based on the name "Allah" being a contraction of "al-ilah". What I'm saying is what several Arabic-English lexicons say: That the word "Allah" is a proper name, and not a contracted word.
How can it be a contracted word if it is unique, and specific to only the one, true god? The name "Allah" has never been applied (and can never be applied) to anyone else besides Him.
name a few dictionaries/lexicons so that I can look them up too
oh BTW what did Hebrews call the Almighty? can you remind me?
after all that searching you found 2, is there not any that differ?There is the Dictionary of the Holy Qur'an, 1st edition, by Abdul Mannan Omar. There is also Edward William Lane's Arabic-English Lexicon.
^^could you also comment on this too please?Abdullah is not a contraction of Abdul Allah, jazakillah is not jazaki Allah, Noor-ud-deen is not noor al deen and so on and so forth
my actual intent was to ask whether the Muslims from time of Hz. Adam down to hz. Eesa had been using wrong terms to describe the Supreme Being, and that only after the nabuwat of Last Rasul we discovered the true "Name? or that the all originally knew him as Allah but later corrupted it in to various forms?It's Eloah or Elohim, correct?
oh, and I believe that you misunderstood them too due to them not being very good
"Allah" is a name/proper noun; a single, inseparable and unique word in Arabic, which has always been used to refer specifically to the Almighty by Arabic-speakers. That is an established fact.
after all that searching you found 2, is there not any that differ?
^^could you also comment on this too please?
my actual intent was to ask whether the Muslims from time of Hz. Adam down to hz. Eesa had been using wrong terms to describe the Supreme Being, and that only after the nabuwat of Last Rasul we discovered the true "Name? or that the all originally knew him as Allah but later corrupted it in to various forms?
Yes, now people use Allah as a proper noun but it's not a proper noun. It does come from the word al-ilah. Allah comes from the "Idgham" of the two L in al-ilah.
thank you very much you've told me all I needed to know, I'll take your leave nowWell, I already knew about those two. If there are any that differ, can you name them?
None of them use the prefix "al" (meaning "the") at the beginning, and only 'Abdullah is a proper name. I'm not saying that contractions don't exist in Arabic, I'm simply saying that the name "Allah" is not a contraction.
This isn't about a "true" name, as all the names are descriptive. This is about the name "Allah", which is a unique name, and not a derivative, or a contraction, of other words.
What is the basis for this?
"Allah" is a name/proper noun; a single, inseparable and unique word in Arabic, which has always been used to refer specifically to the Almighty by Arabic-speakers. That is an established fact.
I read it in some books, but they are difficult to translate and I don't have the time to do it.
As someone who's been speaking arabic all my life, this seems obvious to me. I know that some might disagree but if you know arabic grammar than you will know what I am talking about.
Idgham is to mix to identical letters and replace them with one with a "chadda" on it.
Al-Ilah has 2 L so the became one L with a chadda on it : الله
Saying that Allah comes from Al-Ilah is not a bad thing. Ilah is used many times in the Holy Quran.
What proves that Allah is a proper noun and was not a contraction of al-Ilah? Why is this an established fact?
Yes, it would seem obvious (it did to me at first, and I don't even speak Arabic), but, it's still an assumption based on observation, and not an established fact.
The proof is how it is used in the Qur'an and Arabic in general, and the fact that it has only ever been applied to the Almighty. That makes it a proper name, as well as a unique one.
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