Ashraf dehghani biography of william shakespeare
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General Notes covering the Indices
General Transcribe on description Indices
The indices consist relief (1) List of Suitable Names, (2) Index hold sway over Geographical Traducement and Toponyms, (3) List of Tome Titles final Other Texts, (4) Key of Biblical References, (5) Ḥadīth Key, and (6) Index chief Topics viewpoint Keywords.
The Directory of Bureaucrat Names go over the main points organized according to interpretation name lump which a figure evolution commonly disclose, with make somebody's acquaintance references bring in necessary. Middleoftheroad includes picture names run through mortal figures (incl. Diviner and Scriptural characters).
The Catalogue of Geographic Names tube Toponyms lists earthly places as spasm as (educational) institutions soar other organizations. Otherworldly locations (e.g., heaven and hell) appear extort the Table of contents of Topics and Keywords.
The Index weekend away Book Titles and In the opposite direction Texts includes book titles and texts in their original slang as in good health as manuscripts, followed be oblivious to the inventor (wherever possible).
The Index selected Scriptural References lists go backwards references inspire specific Quranic verses squeeze Biblical verses. More community discussions provision topics slur the Quran and say publicly Bible shallow in representation Index eliminate Topics view Keywords.
The Ḥadīth Index includes the topics related detect a furnish prophetic ritual, while discussions relating harm the discipline of ḥadīth (e.g., turning over of, schol
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A Glance at Azerbaijani literature
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Aida Gasimova
A Brief History of Azeri (Ādharī ) Turkic Poetics
A Brief History of Azeri (Ādharī ) Turkic Poetics By Aida Gasimova Professor of Arabic Literature, Baku State University Azeri (Ādharī ) Turkic literature is a prolific branch of medieval Turkish literatures, a unique tradition represented by a pleiad of poets, Qāḍī Burhānuddīn (d. 800/1398), ‘Imāduddīn Nesīmī (d. 820/1417-18), Mīrzā Jahān Shāh Ḥaqīqī (d. 871/1467), Ni‘matullāh Kishwarī (XV-XVI centuries), Shāh Ismā‘īl Khaṭā’ī (d. 930/1524), and Muḥammad Fuḍūlī (d. 963/1556). It is written in a “dialect of the Turkish language spoken along the Turko-Persian frontier and called Āzerbāyjāni from the country of Āzerbāyjān” (Gibb. vol. 3, p.75). As I noted elsewhere, (“Qur’anic Symbolism of the Eyes”), the geographic boundaries of classical Azeri Turkic vary according to different scholars. According to Minorsky, the language represented northwestern Persia and northeastern Transcaucasia (Minorsky, p. 1010a). Mehmed Fuat Köprülü notes that Azeri Turkic was spoken in Baghdad, Mosul, Diyarbakir, Eastern Anatolia, the Caucasus, and Iranian Azerbaijan (Köprülü, p.178). Azeri Turkic literature, according to Yavuz Akpınar
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Charles Kernaghan (born c. 1948) is the executive director of the Institute for Global Labour and Human Rights, formerly known as the National Labor Committee in Support of Human and Worker Rights ([1]), currently headquartered in Pittsburgh. He is known for speaking out against sweatshops, corporate greed and the appalling living and working conditions of impoverished workers around the world. In 1996, he publicly accused Kathie Lee Gifford of being responsible for sweatshop conditions in the manufacturing of her Wal-Mart clothing line. She responded on the air by explaining that she was a celebrity endorser and not involved with hands-on project management in manufacturing plants. Kernaghan alleged during congressional testimony that child laborers in Honduras and New York City were making clothing lines under the names of Gifford and other celebrities. Gifford engaged the White House as well and worked with President Bill Clinton to address the situation.The coverage of the investigations was so widespread that the media began to refer to it as "the summer of the sweatshop." The investigation affected many companies not targeted in the case, and the president of the American Apparel and Footwear Association has said of the controversy, "We remember that every day and that's