Description
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Jawhari's fame rests on his dictionary Tād̲j̲ al-lug̲h̲a wa-ṣiḥāḥ al-ʿarabiyya, commonly known as al-Ṣiḥāḥ or al-Ṣaḥāḥ, which represents a milestone in the development of Arabic lexicography. He used the last radical of the roots as the primary basis for the arrangament of the Ṣiḥāḥ. For centuries it was the most widely used Arabic dictionary and was abridged, rearranged, supplemented, commented upon, and translated into Persian and Turkish. This volume is the Turkish translation made by the famous Ottoman jurist Mehmed ibn Mustafa al-Wani, who distinguished himself in the fields of lexicography and literature in the 16th Century. The work is the first printed book in Arabic script in the Islamic territory by Ibrahim Müteferrika who founded the press. The first volume includes the Sultan's decree permiting the working of the press, followed by the fatwa by Grand Mufti Abdullan and the supportive declarations of several authorities. It also contains the epistle, "Vesīlet üṭ-ṭibaa" in which Mütefferika urged that printing be not only allowed but even supported by the Ottoman state., النص داخل إطار., جذور الكلمات مطبوعة في الهامش., .تجد كلمات مفتاحية, تظهر في النص تأشير بعض المصطلحات بخط في أعلاها., Main Heritage Shelves General, PJ6636.T8 J39 1729 vol.2, Book, vol.2, Item-ID: i2193860x, BIB-ID: 2336203, باللغة العربية وباللغة التركية., Watson, William J. "Ibrāhīm Müteferriḳa and Turkish Incunabula". Journal of the American Oriental Society, 88:3 (Jul./Sep. 1968), pp. 435-441, The mysterious printer Ibrahim Müteferrika and the beginnings of Turkish booktprinting. The press. In: http://muteferrika.mtak.hu/en/nyomda.htm |