لم يسبق الى مثله غريب - traducción al Inglés
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لم يسبق الى مثله غريب - traducción al Inglés

HUMAN SETTLEMENT
Abu Ghurayb; Abu Ghraib (city); Abu Gharab; Abu Ghuraib; Abu Guraib; Ab-e Gharib; Ab-e Ghereyyeb; Abi Ghurayb; Abu Grahib; Abu grave; Abu graive; Abu graiv; Abu graib; Hard site; Abu-Ghraib; Abu Graib; Abu Garaib; Abu grabe; Abu grab; Abugrabe; Abu Graihb; Abu Ghraib city; ابو غريب; Abu Ghreb; Abu Ghareb; Abū Ghurayb; Ghraib; أبو غريب; Abu Gehb; Abu Ghrab; Abu Ghraib, Iraq; Abughraib

لم يسبق الى مثله غريب      

novel (ADJ)

novel         
  • 1474: The customer in the copyist's shop with a book he wants to have copied. This illustration of the first printed German [[Melusine]] looked back to the market of manuscripts.
  • Intimate short stories: ''The Court and City Vagaries'' (1711).
  • 1719 newspaper reprint of ''Robinson Crusoe''
  • [[Laurence Sterne]], ''[[Tristram Shandy]]'', vol.6, pp. 70–71 (1769)
  • Chaucer]] reciting ''[[Troilus and Criseyde]]'': early-15th-century manuscript of the work at [[Corpus Christi College, Cambridge]]
  • [[Chinua Achebe]], Buffalo, 2008
  • [[Dan Brown]]
  • [[Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn]], Vladivostok, 1995
  • [[J. K. Rowling]], 2010
  • [[Madame de Pompadour]] spending her afternoon with a book ([[François Boucher]], 1756)
  • [[Richard Head]], ''The English Rogue'' (1665)
  • Pamela]]'' (1741)
  • First edition of [[Aleksis Kivi]]'s ''[[The Seven Brothers]]'' (1870)
  • Paper as the essential carrier: [[Murasaki Shikibu]] writing her ''[[The Tale of Genji]]'' in the early 11th century, 17th-century depiction
  • [[Harriet Beecher Stowe]]'s ''[[Uncle Tom's Cabin]]'' (1852)
  • Waverley]]'' (1814)
NARRATIVE TEXT, NORMALLY OF A SUBSTANTIAL LENGTH AND IN THE FORM OF PROSE DESCRIBING A FICTIONAL AND SEQUENTIAL STORY
Novels; Proto-novel; Modern novel; Histories (history of the novel); Candidates for the first novel; Early novels; Proto-novels; Literary novel; Novel (literature); History of the novel; History of novels; The novel; Poetic Novel; 20th-century novels; 18th-century novels; 19th-century novels; 20th century novels
ADJ
جديد ، لم يسبق الى مثله غريب ، غير مألوف
N
الرواية ، القصة
دعاء         
  • صلاة العيد]] - [[النجف]]
  • آية مخطوطة على قماش استعمل في تغليف جدار الكعبة، ونصها (وَإِذَا سَأَلَكَ عِبَادِي عَنِّي فَإِنِّي قَرِيبٌ أُجِيبُ دَعْوَةَ الدَّاعِ إِذَا دَعَانِ ...)
  • شيشاني]] يدعو بعد الصلاة أثناء إحدى المعارك في عقد التسعينات
  • النصف الثان من الدعاء
ذكر وطلب من الله عز وجل
الاوقات التي تجاب فيها الدعوات; الدعاء; فضل الدعاء; Dua; أدعية; دعاء الله; دعاء الى الله

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Wikipedia

Abu Ghraib

Abu Ghraib ( (listen); Arabic: أبو غريب, Abū Ghurayb) is a city in the Baghdad Governorate of Iraq, located just west of Baghdad's city center, or northwest of Baghdad International Airport. It has a population of 189,000 (2003). The old road to Jordan passes through Abu Ghraib. The government of Iraq created the city and Abu Ghraib District in 1944.

The placename has been translated as "father of little crows" (in the sense of "place abundant in small crows"), but this translation has been suspected of being a folk etymology, and the name may be related to gharb ("west") instead.

Abu Ghraib was known for the Abu Ghraib Infant Formula Plant, which Western intelligence agencies perennially claimed to be a biological weapons production facility. The plant was built in 1980 and painted with a dappled camouflage pattern during the Iran–Iraq War. It was bombed during the Gulf War, and the Iraqi government allowed CNN reporter Peter Arnett to film the destroyed building along with a conspicuous hand-painted sign that read, "baby milk factory". Iraq partially rebuilt the facility afterward, and US Secretary of State Colin Powell falsely cited it again as a weapons production plant in the run-up to the Iraq War, even though the CIA's own investigation had concluded that the site had been bombed “in the mistaken belief that it was a key BW [Biological Weapon] facility.” Also, an examination of suspected weapons facilities by the Iraq Survey Group later determined that the plant, in disuse for some time, housed discarded infant formula, but found no evidence of weapons production.

The city is also the site of Abu Ghraib prison, which was one of the sites where political dissidents were incarcerated under former ruler Saddam Hussein. Thousands of these dissidents were tortured and executed. After Saddam Hussein's fall, the Abu Ghraib prison was used by American forces in Iraq. In 2003, Abu Ghraib prison earned international notoriety for the torture and abuses by members of the United States Army during the post-invasion period.