What violates the apparent grammatical rules in the hadith of the Prophet

Author

Faculty of Arabic Language in Mansoura - Al-Azhar University - Egypt

Abstract

The noble Prophet’s hadith, whether it was transmitted verbally or by meaning, represents the classical language, which is judged to be the highest level Arabic has reached. The transmission of hadith with meaning and the multiplicity of narrations should not be an obstacle to deducing rulings and approving the rules; Because this is also contained in the poetic evidence that the grammarians invoked and relied on to establish the rules. The multiplicity of the hadith narration may be due to the difference in the narration of the Companions from the Prophet - may God’s prayers and peace be upon him - and they are eloquent and articulate with a statement whose words are invoked. The noble Prophet’s hadith should precede all Arab speech, including poetry and prose, in the section on protest in grammar and language, and this is the approach worthy of being followed. And the rule should be carried on the hadith of the Prophet, not the hadith on the rule, especially if the hadith is narrated in the Sahih, such as Al-Bukhari and Muslim. And sometimes the hadith comes in a language that is not well-known or not popular, but it has evidence to support it, so it must be accepted and not be accused of error or violation of the rule.

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