عين مجردة - tradução para Inglês
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عين مجردة - tradução para Inglês

BEINGS IN PARADISE IN ISLAMIC BELIEF
Houris; Huriyah; Houries; 72 Virgins; Huri; 72 black eyed virgins; Black eyed virgins; 72 virgins; Seventy virgins; 100 virgins; حورية; Ḥūrīyah; Ḥūr; Hoori (Islam); حور عين; 77 virgins; 7 virgins
  • Sikh]] ceiling fresco of divine female figures from an abandoned [[Gurdwara]] located in Mangat village in Pakistan
  • Houris in paradise, riding camels. From a 15th-century Persian manuscript.

جوز         
  • مركز
  • بذرة جوز بقشرتها الصلبة داخل القشرة الخضراء
  • نواة جوز كاملة غير مقسومة.
عين جمل; الجوز; شجرة عين الجمل
hickory, nut, nuts, walnut
naked eye         
  • The naked eye
  • A photographic approximation of a naked eye view of the [[night sky]] from a small rural town (top) and a [[metropolitan area]] (bottom). [[Light pollution]] dramatically reduces the visibility of [[star]]s.
  • newspaper=ESO Picture of the Week}}</ref>
PRACTICE OF ENGAGING IN VISUAL PERCEPTION UNAIDED BY A MAGNIFYING OR LIGHT-COLLECTING OPTICAL DEVICE, SUCH AS A TELESCOPE OR MICROSCOPE. VISION CORRECTED TO NORMAL ACUITY USING CORRECTIVE LENSES IS CONSIDERED "NAKED"
Bare-eyed; Naked-eye stars; Naked-eye; Naked Eye; Unaided eye; Naked-eye object; Bare eye; Bare eyes; Nakedeye; Naked eye resolution; Bare eyed; Naked-eyed; Naked eyed; Naked eye astronomy; Naked-eye visibility; Visible to naked eye; Visible to the naked eye; Visible with the naked eye; Visible with naked eye; Nake eye
عين مجردة
نبع         
  • مالطة]]
نقطة تدفّق المياه الجوفيّة خارج الأرض
الينابيع; الينبوع (مسطح مائي); الينابيع المعدنية; نبع; عين ماء; Spring (hydrology); ينابيع; العيون المائية

spring (N)

Definição

houri
n.
[Term of the Mahometans.] Nymph of Paradise.

Wikipédia

Houri

In Islamic religious belief, houris (Pronounced ; from Arabic: حُـورِيَّـة ,حُورِيّ, romanized: ḥūriyy, ḥūrīya), are women with beautiful eyes who are described as a reward for the faithful Muslim believers in Paradise. The term is used four times in the Quran, where they are mentioned indirectly several other times, (sometimes as azwāj, lit. companions), and Hadith provide a "great deal of later elaboration". They have been said to have "captured the imagination of Muslims and non-Muslims alike". Muslim scholars differ as to whether they refer to the believing women of this world or a separate creation, with the majority opting for the latter.