Words are very powerful and can be used for the pursuit of good and bad outcomes. The Quran has equated good and bad words to good and bad trees.
This verse of the Quran in analogical form states that a good word is like a good tree becuase it has roots which run deep into the earth, which draw sustenace in order to provide growth and fruits to the tree. Due to the deeprootedness of the tree it will continue to grow healthily towards the heavens. If the tree was not rooted well into the earth it would not grow properly or even die.
When positive and good words are used in our everyday life they can have deep impact on the soul of a person and provide growth and development. Negative and bad words can be very harmful towards a person and can also be soul destroying .
According to the Quranic verse we are reminded to use positive and good words. i.e become good trees. It is only after becoming good trees that we would bear good fruits. This fits in very neatly with Jesus when he said of humans that "you will know them by their fruits". Also, "Even so, every good tree bears good fruit, but a bad tree bears bad fruit. A good tree cannot bear bad fruit, nor can a bad tree bear good fruit".
No, the word 'fixed' is not a noun; the word fixed is the past participle, past tense of the verb to fix. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective (a fixed object; a fixed rate of interest).The word 'fix' is a noun (fix, fixes) as well as a verb (fix, fixes, fixing, fixed).The noun 'fix' is a singular, common noun; a word for a position of difficulty or embarrassment; an act of bribery or fraud; a sports contest whose outcome has been arranged in advance; a dose of something strongly desired or craved, a shot of a narcotic.The noun form for the verb to fix are fixer, fixation, and the gerund, fixing.A related noun form is fixture.
Here are a couple of statements starting with the pronoun 'whose': 'Whose' is an extremely difficult word with which to begin a statement. 'Whose' is the possessive case of 'who' or 'which'; it almost always begins a question.
Yes it is. ex. of usage: Whose shirt is this?
whose that answer is incorrect. The abbr. or contraction for who has is who's, and it is also the abb. for who is ( who's) Who has (who's) Who is (who's) whose is possesive, or shows ownership, e.g., whose jacket was stolen? Whose car is this?
No. Who is a relative pronoun. The related possessive is whose.
A vector whose direction (angles) and line of application are fixed, but whose point of application is not fixed.
i believe it is Mary as she has a surah named after her and is mentioned several times in the quran
Muslims follow the prophet Muhhamad, from the Quran.
Steadfast: 1. fixed in direction; steadily directed: a steadfast gaze. 2. firm in purpose, resolution, faith, attachment, etc., as a person: a steadfast friend. 3. unwavering, as resolution, faith, adherence, etc. 4. firmly established, as an institution or a state of affairs. 5. firmly fixed in place or position. Isa 26:3 NIV - You will keep in perfect peace him whose mind is steadfast, because he trusts in you.
Ibraheem (Alaihis-salaam)
although it doesnt directly say, but yes, the words are stitched with gold embroidery (read gold threads) and they are verses from the Quran..and they change each year.. I dont know as to whose authority they choose which verses.. But I suppose it doesnt matter.. maybe they rotate a new verse every year so that the whole Quran will eventually be on the kiswah( the actual cloth) at some time or another.
Prophet Mousa (Moses) PBUH.
Alexander Pushkin.
Gases.
The only lady whose name is explicitly mentioned in the Holy Quran & for many times is the virgin Mary, May Allah be pleased with her.
John 20:23 - "Whose sins you shall forgive they are forgiven them. Whose sins you shall retain, they are retained."
Among Muslims, the Quran is quite influential. Non-muslims probably see it as derivative from older religions, such as Judaism and Christianity, both of whose prophets Islam takes as its own.