Also known as Surah 113, Surah of the Daybreak, Sura 113, The Daybreak
Al-Falaq (, al-falaq in Arabic language is (break apart; burst; cleave; fissure)[1] and was also explained as (creatures or creation) whereas it meant (Daybreak) in old explanations.
Al-Falaq is the 113th chapter of the Quran, with a title derived from an Arabic word meaning "daybreak" or "break apart," though scholars have also interpreted it as referring to creation or creatures more broadly. The chapter is significant in Islamic tradition as one of the final chapters of the Quran and is commonly recited in Muslim daily prayers and spiritual practice.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Al-Falaq (, al-falaq in Arabic language is (break apart; burst; cleave; fissure)[1] and was also explained as (creatures or creation) whereas it meant (Daybreak) in old explanations.
However, this surah refer to God (رب الفلق) as the creator, who had created from nothing, the whole universe and all creatures, and we may understand that God almighty (as having complete power; omnipotent) had split the Nothingness (the zero) into two halves (positive and negative) and kept these two halves apart in the form of atoms by his eternal power which in modern science is known to be the basis of the whole universe.
via Wikipedia infobox
Al-Falaq Recited 1000 Times: By Abdul Rehman Al-Sudais
Watch at Internet Archive →via archive.org
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).