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  1. Occupation. Novelist. Language. Urdu. Nationality. Pakistani. Notable awards. Pride of Performance Award in 1992. Sharif Hussain ( Urdu: شریف حسین ), who used the pseudonym Nasīm Hijāzī ( Urdu: نسیم حجازی, commonly transliterated as Naseem Hijazi or Nasim Hijazi) (19 May 1914 – 2 March 1996), was an Urdu novelist.

  2. One of the oldest in Urdu, this tradition is still alive. Naseem Hijazi is rightfully considered the greatest novelist in the genre of historic novel. His real name was Sharif Hussain. He was born in the year 1914 in the village of Sujanpur, near Dhariwal, in East Punjab.

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  4. t. e. Hijazi script ( Arabic: خَطّ ٱَلحِجَازِيّ, romanized : khaṭṭ al-ḥijāzī) is the collective name for several early Arabic scripts that developed in the Hejaz (the northwest of the Arabian Peninsula ), a region that includes the cities of Mecca and Medina.

    • Classification
    • Phonology
    • Grammar
    • Writing Systems
    • See Also

    Old Ḥijāzī is characterized by the innovative relative pronoun ʾallaḏī (Arabic: ٱلَّذِي), ʾallatī (Arabic: ٱلَّتِي), etc., which is attested once in the inscription JSLih 384 and is the common form in the QCT, as opposed to the form ḏ- which is otherwise common to Old Arabic. The infinitive verbal complement is replaced with a subordinating clause ...

    Consonants

    The sounds in the chart above are based on the constructed phonology of Proto-Semitic and the phonology of Modern Hejazi Arabic. Notes: 1. The consonants ⟨ض⟩ and ⟨ظ⟩were voiced, in contrast with Northern Old Arabic, where they may have been voiceless 2. The glottal stop /ʔ/ was lost in Old Hejazi, except after word-final [aː]. It is still retained in Modern Hejaziin few positions. 3. Historically, it is not well known in which stage of Arabic the shift from the Old Hejazi phonemes /p/, /g/, /...

    Vowels

    In contrast to Classical Arabic, Old Hejazi had the phonemes [eː] and [oː], which arose from the contraction of Old Arabic [aja] and [awa], respectively. It also may have had short [e] from the reduction of [eː] in closed syllables: The QCT attests a phenomenon of pausal final long -īdropping, which was virtually obligatory.

    Example

    Here is an example of reconstructed Old Hejazi side-by-side with its classicized form, with remarks on phonology: Notes: 1. Basmala: final short vowels are lost in context, the /l/ is not assimilated in the definite article 2. Line 2: the glottal stop is lost in /qurʾān/ (> /qurān), proto-Arabic */tišqaya/ collapses to /tašqē/ 3. Line 3: /taḏkirah/ < */taḏkirat/ < */taḏkirata/. The feminine ending was probably diptotic in Old Hejazi, and without nunation 4. Line 4: /tanzīlā/ from loss of nuna...

    Proto-Arabic

    Proto-Arabic nouns could take one of the five above declensions in their basic, unbound form.

    Old Hejazi

    The Qur'anic Consonantal Text presents a slightly different paradigm to the Safaitic, in which there is no case distinction with determined triptotes, but the indefinite accusative is marked with a final /ʾ/.

    Dadanitic

    A single text, JSLih 384, composed in the Dadanitic script, from northwest Arabia, provides the only non-Nabataean example of Old Arabic from the Ḥijāz.

    Transitional Nabataeo-Arabic

    A growing corpus of texts carved in a script in between Classical Nabataean Aramaic and what is now called the Arabic script from Northwest Arabia provides further lexical and some morphological material for the later stages of Old Arabic in this region. The texts provide important insights as to the development of the Arabic script from its Nabataean forebear and are an important glimpse of the Old Ḥejāzī dialects.

    Arabic

    The QCT represents an archaic form of Old Hejazi.

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  5. Old Hijazi. From WikiIslam, the online resource on Islam. It’s been taken for granted by both academics and Muslim scholars that Classical Arabic was the language of the Quran and Arabs before Islam and during the first three centuries of Islam. This is reflected in the way Muslims recite the Quran and Hadith today.

  6. After the creation of Pakitan, his family migrated to Pakistan. Thus, Naseem Hijazi spent whole life in the Pakistan. He settled in Lahore and had died March 1996. Works/Naseem Hijazi Novels List. As mentioned above, he is one of the greatest Urdu novel writers. Naseem Hijazi wrote near 19 stories in life and got fame in Urdu books lovers.

  7. Naseem Hijazi collection of short stories, articles, and ebooks in Urdu, Hindi & English. Read more about Naseem Hijazi and access their famous audio, video, and ebooks.”.

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