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It is unclear what this question is asking.

If it is asking what the Arabic word for "rhyme" is, qaafiya (قافية).

If it is asking how rhyming works in Arabic, it is worth noting that it is fundamentally different than in most Western languages. If we take English as an example, bear, care, and chair are all seen to be words that rhyme because they share the last syllable (ayr) with a different beginning consonant. (The fact that the spelling of the syllable differs in each case is irrelevant.) In Arabic words are considered to rhyme if they bear the same form - called wazan (وزن) in Arabic. In Arabic, most words have a three-letter root, called a jadher (جذر), which is then configured into a wazan (which adds additional vowels and consonants in a specific pattern of prefixes, infixes, and suffixes) to give specific meanings. An example of three Arabic words that rhyme would be qasaa'ed (قصائد), daraa'eb (ضرائب), and 3ajaa'ez (عجائز) [which mean poems, taxes, and elderly people respectively] since they all are of the wazan fa3aa'el (فعائل) which does the following infix where the dashes are the three letters of the jadher: -a-aa'e- .

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Rhyming in Arabic is fundamentally different than in most Western languages. If we take English as an example, bear, care, and chair are all seen to be words that rhyme because they share the last syllable (ayr) with a different beginning consonant. (The fact that the spelling of the syllable differs in each case is irrelevant.) In Arabic words are considered to rhyme if they bear the same form - called wazan (وزن) in Arabic. In Arabic, most words have a three-letter root, called a jadher (جذر), which is then configured into a wazan (which adds additional vowels and consonants in a specific pattern of prefixes, infixes, and suffixes) to give specific meanings. An example of three Arabic words that rhyme would be qasaa'ed (قصائد), daraa'eb (ضرائب), and 3ajaa'ez (عجائز) [which mean poems, taxes, and elderly people respectively] since they all are of the wazan fa3aa'el (فعائل) which does the following infix where the dashes are the three letters of the jadher: -a-aa'e- .


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