@arumnatzorkhang: The Quran is not composed in Classical Arabic, but instead in an Old Hijazi dialect. #linguistics #language #arabic #islam #quran

Arum Natzorkhang
Arum Natzorkhang
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Monday 10 November 2025 01:40:36 GMT
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aedog27
aedog27 :
Bros knowledge is impeccable
2025-11-10 02:39:21
1665
gueswhijay
gueswhijay :
And they tell us the Quran never changed 😂
2025-11-11 01:06:01
552
ebarer
ebarer :
Hopefully this video wouldn’t get flooded by nationalists
2025-11-10 02:13:02
745
al_hanifiyyah
الْحَنِيفِيَّةُ :
There are no mistakes in the Quran. “It is a book in which there is no doubt.”
2025-11-13 00:28:22
103
700od
7ooda :
the quran uses multiple Arabic dialects not only Hijazi so can’t just remove all the hamza every word with haza should be studied carefully…. The irab is like universal formal Arabic rules that they tried to make the Quran adhere to but with out changing the meaning but it changed the Rhyme and rhythm
2025-11-10 05:23:33
242
codyallenscurlock
Cody :
There are no words to describe how much joy these videos bring me
2025-11-10 01:48:40
232
ffafaifaizfaizafaizan
Faizan :
What it “should be” is dictated by how it was preserved which was through memorisation that can be traced back to the Prophet ﷺ. It is known that there are multiple “readings”/qira’aat of the Quran due to it being revealed in multiple ways.
2025-11-11 00:21:58
23
hiellahi1
Omnia :
Native speakers of arqbic can prounce words without the vowels being written down. The adition of written down vowels came about to simplify learning arabic for converts
2025-11-10 06:33:11
75
pman172
Pman172 :
But the Koran is the absolute world of God and has never been changed 🙄
2025-11-10 08:23:10
25
peccator.contritus
peccator.contritus :
wait, so the Quran is not perfectly preserved letter for letter, just by looking at the way it's written?
2025-11-10 13:37:15
52
faithnpeace2
Noha Abdul Qadir :
In Qurayshi Arabic, the “hamza” (the glottal stop, like the sound in “أكل” or “مؤمن”) was often not pronounced in the middle of words So instead of saying "يَأْكُل" (ya’kul), they would say "ياكل" (yaakul). It even quotes Ali ibn Abi Talib, who said: > “We are a people who do not pronounce the hamza (‘nabr’), and if it weren’t that Jibreel (Gabriel) brought the Qur’an with hamza and nabr, we wouldn’t pronounce them.”
2025-11-10 17:18:40
45
malithan.radin
Malithan :
The كأس thing doesn’t make sense for the formation of the plural كؤوس assume a hamza could it be something akin to mal’ak ملأك where it’s malāk in every other semitic language except arabic had put a hamza there wich is also assumed in the plural ملائكة and naturally over time it lost the hamza in hijazi
2025-11-10 07:01:13
23
singularitas2474
Singularitas :
I knew you were going to get a lot of backlash for this video 😅 But great summary of the evidence! I wanted to add that the indefinite accusative is still intact in Old Hijazi (-ā), as well as in adverbs. It's also possible that some of the case endings persisted in a liaison kind of manner in the definite article (ul-, al-, -il), according to Ahmad al-Jallad
2025-11-10 10:37:08
73
a____7797
C :
How is bro pronouncing them so accurately
2025-11-10 04:38:26
17
haziq_arabicteacher
Haziq Halim :
The Quran is primarily preserved via mass oral transmission in a variation of pronunciation approved & taught by the prophet ﷺ . The usmani script & other scripts are secondary forms of preservation that serve to accomodate these variations as narrated in Warsh, Hafs, etc
2025-11-10 07:13:01
25
unknownerror379
Unknownerror :
it's like there their and they're we're understand what this means because it's our language, where as someone from another country wouldn't so all that was done was, when all was completed and companions decided to add diatical marks
2025-11-10 05:19:54
23
msm_0001
I_AM_MSM🧕🏻 :
This clearly shows the UTHMANI script carries all the 7 Ahrouf that the Holy Qur'an was revealed in, the 7 Arabic dialects that were there at the time, to make it easy for the reciters to read it in their dialect. This is from the mercy of Allah
2025-11-10 12:35:40
5
gazawi123
Gazawi123 :
The Quran revelation was spoken word. It’s never changed. Dialects change but meanings remain the same
2025-12-05 00:48:51
5
akhraoverdunya
Youssef Ahmed :
so...what?
2025-11-29 22:15:41
5
roger.wayne
rogerwayne :
muslims know this well
2025-11-10 02:31:14
24
laybackmuslim
laybackmuslim :
Are there any riwayaat that have maintained the old hijazi dialect or did all of the chains of riwayaat somehow turn into Classical Arabic
2025-11-10 02:24:43
12
xjruajs
User02048273 :
That theory is quite shallow, other canonical recitaional modes from Hejaz simply drop the Hamzah, Nafi and Abu Ja’far for example, the widespread recitational mode is Asim whose recitation is based off a rare Tamimi dialect, no such thing as “mass corrections”.
2025-11-10 04:31:12
43
haleem.ragab1
العندليب "Portfolio" :
you have to study this bro; you miss a lot of information you don't know, it's not an over correction or even like that; Quran has 7 ways of reading and 10 different accents, every one of these has rules but doesn't effect meaning; go and search for that.
2025-11-10 17:49:40
53
printerlickersaurus
Russian_penguin :
@Russian_penguin: Personally disagree. While some rhymes do appear, a significant amount also disappear of you remove case endings. For example, many rhyme schemes depend on the indefinite accusative ending, وَكِيلاَ شَكُورَا كَبِيرَا etc. If these case endings were to be removed, the majority of rhymes in some surahs would be lost indicating that the author indented for these case endings to be pronounced. Additionally there were Arab tribes who pronounced the word كاس as كَأْس same as there were tribes who pronounced the word مومنون as مُؤْمِنُون while some others pronounced it as مُومِنُون. Additionally, the Quran was an oral recitation so it would be very difficult for a group of people to alter the way the text was already being pronounced by at-lest tens of thousands of people
2025-11-10 03:25:09
13
mothursday
Mohamed Khamis :
In this theory, are you considering the way the Quran was spread and recited or you are only considering manuscripts? I think this theory implies that muslims gradually changed their pronunciation. Is that correct? I personally think that this is highly unlikely given the way the Quran was taught and memorized. Also, the dialect of the prophet being without iirab, this is totally the opposite of the muslim narrative. The iirab was added to match the dialect of the prophet. I am not a specialist in language but I would need strong evidence to accept such counter narratives.
2025-11-10 06:19:46
9
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