Be with me in my hour of need.
They are called "aspirations or ejaculatory prayers. "
Dura prayers are specific prayers in the Zoroastrian tradition that are recited at sunset. These prayers are considered essential for connecting with divine energy and seeking protection from spiritual harm. Unlike other prayers, dura prayers are recited facing the sun, symbolizing the eternal struggle between light and darkness.
Perhaps psalm praying means praying the psalms in short, and praying long prayers like the prayers at the root of the psalms.
We have the ten Commandments, the Lord' Prayers. In short the entire bible is important.
When you prayer for someone other then yourself.
Hindus offer their prayers first to Lord Ganesha. Than after any other God is prayed.
The kaddish are not a who. The Kaddish is a family of related prayers in the Jewish liturgy. Technically, these are doxologies, that is, short prayers of praise that are used to punctuate longer services, dividing or marking the ends of sections of a service. There is the long Kaddish, the short Kaddish, the Kaddish after study, and the mourner's Kaddish. The latter is a relatively short Kaddish reserved to be said by mourners (if any are present).
Abraham Hawkins has written: 'Kingsbridge and Salcombe, with intermediate estuary, historically and topographically depicted' 'Short prayers for the morning and evening of every day in the week' -- subject(s): Prayers
hannukahh
Dio ascolta le preghierine is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "God listens to short prayers".Specifically, the masculine noun Dio is "God". The verb ascolta means "(he/it/she) does listen, is listening, listens" and "(formal singular you) are listening, do listen, listen". The feminine plural definite article le means "the". The feminine noun preghiere ("prayers") and the diminutive suffix -ine ("dear, little, short, sweet") translate as "brief/little prayers".The pronunciation will be "DEE-o a-SKOL-ta ley PREY-gheyh-REE-ney" in Italian.
There are thousands of short Hebrew prayers. Here is one: Baruch Hashem (ברוך ה׳) which means "blessed is the name". It is the Jewish equivalent of "Thank God" or "Praise the Lord".
Mix up where? living near each other people of faith is ok, Ride in the bus with other people in faith is ok Work with other people of other faith is ok Muslims can't mix their prayers with other religions prayers.