daqaiq (s. daqiqah)
(Language: Arabic)
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Finesse, subtlety.
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dar al-‘ahd
(Language: Arabic)
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"The abode of agreement"
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dar al-harb
(Language: Arabic)
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"The abode of war"; denotes the opposite of dār al-islām.
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dar al-islam
(Language: Arabic)
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"The abode of Islam"
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dar al-sulh
(Language: Arabic)
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"The abode of peace"
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Darqawi
(Language: Arabic)
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(name) a Sufi (male), died 1823.
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Darqawiyah
(alternate spellings: Derqawiyah)
(Language: Arabic)
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Sufi order.
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Deoband
(Language: Place Name)
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An influential seminary founded in 1867 at Deoband, India by ‘ulamā’
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dhakir
(Language: Arabic)
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“The one who invokes” or “remembers”; in Sufism, dhākir usually means the human devotee who practices invocation as a spiritual method; it can also mean the supreme Self as the sole agent of consciousness; see dhikr, Madhkūr.
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Dhat
(Language: Arabic)
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Essence, Quiddity.
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dhikr
(alternate spellings: zikr)
(Language: Arabic)
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"remembrance" of God, based upon the repeated invocation of His Name
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dhimmi
(Language: Arabic)
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"One who is protected"; referring to non-Muslims living within the borders of the Islamic state who participated in maintaining it.
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double-truth theory
(Language: English)
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A famous debate in medieval philosophy according to which there are two distinct sets of truth: religious and philosophical.
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