![]() He ( Ibrahim A.S.This is the whole Tajweed Qur'an divided into 4 large parts, each part comes with a nice hardcover, each page contains 15 lines as any standard Quran, comes with an interpretation of selected words placed on the margins on every page. "To Him ( Allahu Subhanahu wa-Ta'ala) alone is attributed" "And whoever is obedient (devoutly obeys)" "Recite,, what has been revealed to you" "Exalted is the One ( Allahu ‘Azza wa-jalla) is who " ![]() "And prohibited are the ones who are married" The associated names of each Juz’ in the Qurʼān: ĭistribution of sūrah across ajzāʼ, with the length of the bar corresponding to a sūrah being proportionate to the number of letters of the sūrah in the juzʼ divided by the total number of letters in the juzʼ. Juzʼ ‘amma is named, like most ajzāʼ, after the 1st word of its 1st verse (in this case chapter 78). The most commonly memorized juzʼ is juzʼ ‘amma, the 30th juzʼ, containing chapters ( sūrah) 78 through 114, with most of the shortest chapters of the Qurʼān. These maqraʼ are often used as practical sections for revision when memorizing the Qurʼān. There are 240 of these quarters ( maqraʼs) in the Qurʼān. Each ḥizb (group) is subdivided into four quarters, making eight quarters per juzʼ, called maqraʼ (lit. ![]() "two groups", singular: ḥizb, plural: aḥzāb), therefore, there are 60 aḥzāb. Some use these divisions to facilitate recitation of the Qurʼān in a month-such as during Ramadan, when the entire Qurʼān is recited in the Tarawih prayers, typically at the rate of one juzʼ a night.Ī juzʼ is further divided into ḥizbāni (lit. During medieval times, when it was too costly for most Muslims to purchase a manuscript, copies of the Qurʼān were kept in mosques and made accessible to people these copies frequently took the form of a series of thirty parts ( juzʼ). There are 30 juz in the quran.ĭivision into ajzāʼ has no relevance to the meaning of the Qurʼān and anyone can start reading from anywhere in the Qurʼān. It is also known as para (پارہ/পারা) in Iran and the Indian subcontinent. A juzʼ ( Arabic: جُزْءْ, plural: أَجْزَاءْ ajzāʼ, literally meaning "part") is one of thirty parts of varying lengths into which the Quran is divided. ![]()
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