This is all of it. I'll show it to you in English. Its in order.
Allahu akbar Allahu akbar Allahu akbar Allahu akbar
Ash-hadu alla ilaha illallah Ash-hadu alla ilaha illallah
Ash-hadu Anna Muhammadar rasulullah Ash-hadu Anna Muhammadar rasulullah
Haiya alal salah Haiya alal salah
Haiya alal falah Haiya alal falah
Allahu akbar Allahu akbar
La ilaha illallah.
Bilal (radiallahuanhu)
what is mr.key asking in the first four lines
Hadrat Bilal al-Habashi
This is actually incorrect. The Ismaili call the Adhan using the typical Shiite Adhan. The wording of this call can be read at the Related Link below.
Yes a sonnet consist out of 14 lines the first four aound like the second four and the first part of the last 6 lines(3 lines) sounds like the last 3 lines there is also a twist beteen the first 8 and last 6 lines
A muezzin is the person who performs the call to prayer (adhan) at a mosque. The first muezzin was an Ethiopian man named Bilal ibn Ribah, who was a companion of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh). Bilal was the first muezzin to perform the adhan in Makkah (Mecca).
The first four lines of the poem set the tone and introduce the central theme or idea. They often provide context for the rest of the poem and serve as an entry point for readers to understand the poet's perspective or emotion.
First, make a triangle. Then put the four dots anywhere on the triangle.
A stanza of four lines is called a quatrain.
The name for this pattern of four lines with an ab-ab rhyme scheme in each stanza is a quatrain.
The poem "Out in the Field with God" contains four stanzas. Each stanza varies in the number of lines, with the first stanza having six lines, the second and third stanzas having four lines each, and the final stanza having five lines.
All lines are not the same length in a limerick poem. To be a limerick, the first, second, and fifth lines have three metrical feet and lines three and four have two metrical feet. Also, the endings of lines one, two, and five rhyme, and the endings of lines three and four rhyme.