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- Q371249 subject Q8258325.
- Q371249 subject Q8258336.
- Q371249 subject Q8258382.
- Q371249 subject Q8798464.
- Q371249 subject Q9165990.
- Q371249 abstract "ʿArūḍ or Arud (Arabic: العروض al-ʿarūḍ) is often called the Science of Poetry (Arabic: علم الشعر ʿilm aš-šiʿr). Its laws were laid down by Al-Khalil ibn Ahmad al-Farahidi (d. 786), an early Arab lexicographer and philologist, who did so after noticing that poems consisted of repeated rhythms in each verse. He wrote his first book, Al-Ard, describing 15 types of verses. It is said that he used to climb down into a well in order to enjoy the poems during his study. Later Al-Akhfash al-Akbar described a 16th meter, al-Mutadārik.Al-Khalil was primarily a grammarian, and using the grammatical terminology of his day he employed the termsḥarf mutaḥarrik "mobile letter" and ḥarf sākin "quiescent letter" to devise a classification of syllables.A ḥarf mutaḥarrik is a consonant which is followed by a vowel, and a ḥarf sākin is a consonant which is not followed by a vowel. He combined these as fundamental prosodic elements to define a number of prosodic sequences.ʿArūḍ is the study of poetic meters, which identifies the meter of a poem and determines whether the meter is sound or broken in lines of the poem. The study of ʿarūḍ is said to have begun within the first century AH in a region called ʿArūḍ near Mecca in Saudi Arabia, which is why it was called ʿarūḍ.".
- Q371249 wikiPageExternalLink index.php?journal=jcce&page=article&op=download&path%5B%5D=600&path%5B%5D=pdf_1.
- Q371249 wikiPageWikiLink Q1866303.
- Q371249 wikiPageWikiLink Q192624.
- Q371249 wikiPageWikiLink Q293515.
- Q371249 wikiPageWikiLink Q3086110.
- Q371249 wikiPageWikiLink Q4702172.
- Q371249 wikiPageWikiLink Q8258325.
- Q371249 wikiPageWikiLink Q8258336.
- Q371249 wikiPageWikiLink Q8258382.
- Q371249 wikiPageWikiLink Q8798464.
- Q371249 wikiPageWikiLink Q9165990.
- Q371249 comment "ʿArūḍ or Arud (Arabic: العروض al-ʿarūḍ) is often called the Science of Poetry (Arabic: علم الشعر ʿilm aš-šiʿr). Its laws were laid down by Al-Khalil ibn Ahmad al-Farahidi (d. 786), an early Arab lexicographer and philologist, who did so after noticing that poems consisted of repeated rhythms in each verse. He wrote his first book, Al-Ard, describing 15 types of verses. It is said that he used to climb down into a well in order to enjoy the poems during his study.".
- Q371249 label "Arabic prosody".