Al-Ājurrūmiyyah () in full '''' is a 13th-century book of Arabic grammar (). Very concise for easy memorization, it formed the foundation of a beginner's education in Classical Arabic learning in Arab societies at the time and was one of the first books to be memorized after the Qur'an along with the Alfiya. It was written by the Moroccan, Berber Abū ʿAbd Allāh Sīdī Muḥammad ibn Dāʾūd al-Sanhajī (aka "Ibn Ajarrum") (d. 1324).
via Wikipedia infobox
via Wikidata · CC0
Al-Ājurrūmiyyah () in full '''' is a 13th-century book of Arabic grammar (). Very concise for easy memorization, it formed the foundation of a beginner's education in Classical Arabic learning in Arab societies at the time and was one of the first books to be memorized after the Qur'an along with the Alfiya. It was written by the Moroccan, Berber Abū ʿAbd Allāh Sīdī Muḥammad ibn Dāʾūd al-Sanhajī (aka "Ibn Ajarrum") (d. 1324).
In the Preface to his translation of the work, the Rev. J. J. S. Perowne writes:
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).