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The Question & Answer (Q&A) Knowledge Managenet
The Internet has many places to ask questions about anything imaginable and find past answers on almost everything.
informal. : to give or spend money or take some action in order to do or support something that one has been talking about It’s time for the mayor to put his money where his mouth is and increase funding for schools.
Used with nouns: “I usually part my hair in the middle.” “The clouds parted and the sun came out.” “The crowd parted as the singer walked through the aisle.”
If you part with money, you spend it or give it to someone, although you may not want to: You really have to be a Dylan fan to part with $50 for “Highway 61 Interactive,” released earlier this year.
From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishflog something to deathflog something to deathBritish English informal to repeat a story or use an idea etc so often that people become bored with it They take a good idea and flog it to death.
How many lashes can one man stand? It depends on how you’re lashed. It’s very unlikely that the doctor will die from his sentence if it is administered in the usual Saudi Arabian way—i.e., broken up into weekly bouts of 50 lashings each. (Women are given 20 to 30 at a time.)
The word flog is a derogatory term to describe a person considered to be. pretentious, conceited or foolish, and evidence suggests it is Australian.
Hale, the United States Congress banned flogging on all U.S. ships on 28 September 1850, as part of a then-controversial amendment to a naval appropriations bill.
When an unmarried male commits adultery with an unmarried female, they should receive one hundred lashes and banishment for one year. And in case of married male committing adultery with a married female, they shall receive one hundred lashes and be stoned to death. — 17:4191.
26 Thus, the punishment for zina according to the Qur’an (chapter 24) is 100 hundred lashes for the unmarried male and female who commit fornication, together with the punishment prescribed by the Sunnah for the married male and female, i.e., stoning to death.
But Islam does not forbid love. Ismail Menk, a renowned Islamic scholar, argues in one of his lectures that love, within boundaries and with expectations of marriage, is an accepted fact of life and religion — if done the right way. This “right way,” he says, is by involving the families from an early stage.