Neh-met Allah means God's grace which is used by Arab Muslims and Arab Christians.
The phrase "God willing" in Arabic is "Insha'Allah."
God in Arabic is commonly referred to as "Allah" (الله).
God, of course. If you say Grace at the atble.
To say "God is the greatest" in Arabic, one would say الله أكبر (Allahu Akbar).
Allah is the Muslims word for God. However, Allah is the Arabic word of God, the same God for Jews and Christians. In the Arabic version of the Bible, it is used the word Allah for God. Arab Christians say Allah (as God in English) and they say in Arabic 'Isa Ibn Allah' that means Jesus son of God (Isa in Arabic is Jesus, Ibn in Arabic is son, and Allah in Arabic is God).
Allah'u'Abha.
In Arabic, the word grace is Na'amah.It is written نعمة.grace
Thank you Literally, "mabrouk" means "blessed" but it is usually translated as "congratulations". You can respond with "mabrouk", with "hamdulillah" (grace be to God), or with "ashkarak" (I thank you).
It is important to make the distinction between the two uses of "God bless you" in English which are not translated the same way in Arabic: "God bless you" as a command wishing God to grant somebody prosperity and "God bless you" as the rejoinder when someone sneezes.Blessingif you are talking to a male , say " Allah ybarek feek" (الله يبارك فيك)if talking to a female, say " Allah ybarek feeki " (الله يبارك فيك)if talking to two persons or more , say " Allah ybarek feekom ". (الله يبارك فيكم)SneezingArabs typically say "Al-Hamdu-l'Allah" which means "Grace be to God" (الحمدلله) when somebody sneezes. It is important to note than non-Muslims speaking Arabic use this expression just as often as Muslims.
Muslims praise Allah (God in English); the same God of the Jews and the Christians. Arabic Christians read 'Allah' as God in their Arabic Bibles. Some Arabic Christians say 'Allah Al Ab' in Arabic that means 'God the father'.
alhamdu lillah
Not an Arabic name. However if you pronounce it as shahn شحن it may mean: shipping (as in shipping of a parcel or so), charge (as in charging of batteries).