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- In the seventh century, the expansion of the Islamic empire and the encounter between Arabs and non-Arabic speakers contributed to the development of Arabic. New orthographies were developed to introduce diacritical markings into the script. Grammarians worked to standardize and theorize language structures.
www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10.1086/694316
As more and more non-Arabic speakers were drawn to Islam, the Quran became the most important bond among Muslims, Arabs and non-Arabs alike, revered for its content and admired for the beauty of its language.
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Jun 25, 2019 · Why Is Arabic so Important to Understanding the Faith of Islam? Regardless of their linguistic, cultural, and racial differences, Muslims form one community of believers. This community is based on their shared faith in One Almighty God and the guidance He has sent down to mankind.
Nov 29, 2011 · The Arabic language, which is the mother tongue of over 250 million people across the Middle East and North Africa, serves not only as a powerful symbol of Arab national identity, but is also the sacrosanct language of the scripture of Islam. Its fortunes have been decisively influenced by its close association with the faith.
Jul 23, 2008 · Arabic logic can be said to be Islamic in two senses, both—in my opinion—of limited significance. First, it is as a result of the Muslim conquests from the seventh century on that Arabic came to be the primary language of learning.
- Tony Street, Nadja Germann
- 2008
Oct 25, 2024 · Scholars have struggled to define Arabic as a language. On the one hand, one can point to the language of the Qurʾān (or Koran, the sacred book of Islam) as the ideal archetype (or al-lughah al-fuṣḥah, “the most eloquent language”); it is the language of the common Islamic expression inshallah (meaning "if God wills").
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
The Arabic language spread all over the former Islamic State from the Atlantic Ocean to the banks of the Indus. The advent of Islam, therefore, marked a crucial stage in the history of the Arabic language.
The great interest in codification to make Arabic a capable and uniform instrument of communication arose first in relation to Islām, and then was furthered by national, political, administrative, commercial, and economic motives.