كيوبيد إله الحب بإغريق - traduction vers Anglais
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كيوبيد إله الحب بإغريق - traduction vers Anglais

ARABIC TERM MEANING "DEITY" OR "GOD"
ʾilāh; Ilāhat; 'ilāh; Ilāh; Ilahat; 'ilah; ʾilāha; Illāh; إله; آلهة; ʾIlah; ʾIlahat

كيوبيد إله الحب بإغريق      
Cupid
Cupid      
n. كيوبيد إله الحب بإغريق
CUPID         
  • chariot]] of the war god, from the reign of [[Trajan]] (98–117 AD)
  • Caravaggio's ''Amor Vincit Omnia'']]
  • ''Cupid the Honey Thief'', by [[Lucas Cranach the Elder]]
  • ''[[Cupid Carving His Bow]]'' (1620s) by [[François Duquesnoy]], [[Bode Museum]], Berlin
  • ''Cupid Riding on a Dolphin'' (1630) by [[Erasmus Quellinus II]]
  • Tiepolo]]
  • A blindfolded, armed Cupid (1452/66) by [[Piero della Francesca]]
  • The god of love (Cupid) shoots an arrow at the lover, from a 14th-century text of the ''[[Roman de la Rose]]''.
  • ''Psyché et l'amour'' (1626–29) by [[Simon Vouet]]: Psyche lifts a lamp to view the sleeping Cupid.
  • Bronze ''Cupid Sleeping'' on a lion skin (1635–40), signed ''F,'' based on the marble attributed to [[Praxiteles]]
ROMAN DEITY, COUNTERPART OF EROS
Amor (mythology); Cupid's arrow; Cupid (holiday character); Dan Cupid

ألاسم

كيوبيد إله الحب بإغريق; صورة كيوبيد

Définition

shahada
[?a'h?:da]
¦ noun the Muslim profession of faith ('there is no god but Allah, and Muhammad is the messenger of Allah').
Origin
from Arab. sahada 'testimony, evidence'.

Wikipédia

Ilah

ʾIlāh (Arabic: إله; plural: آلهة ʾālihat) is an Arabic term meaning "god". In Arabic, ilah refers to anyone or anything that is worshipped. The feminine is ʾilāhat (إلاهة, meaning "goddess"); with the article, it appears as al-ʾilāhat (الإلاهة). The Arabic word for God (Allāh) is thought to be derived from it (in a proposed earlier form al-Lāh) though this is disputed. ʾIlāh is cognate to Northwest Semitic ʾēl and Akkadian ilum. The word is from a Proto-Semitic archaic biliteral ʔ-L meaning "god" (possibly with a wider meaning of "strong"), which was extended to a regular triliteral by the addition of a h (as in Hebrew ʾelōah, ʾelōhim). The word is spelled either إلٰه with an optional diacritic alif to mark the ā only in Qur'anic texts or (more rarely) with a full alif, إلاه.

The term is used throughout the Quran in passages discussing the existence of God or the beliefs in other divinities by non-Muslims. Notably, the first statement of the šahādah (the Muslim confession of faith) is "There is no god (ʾilāh) except the God (Allāh)."