Sūrat al-Layl (, "The Night") is the ninety-second sūrah (chapter) of the Qur'an, containing twenty-one āyāt (verses). This sūrah is one of the first ten to be revealed in Mecca. It contrasts two types of people, the charitable and the miserly, and describes each of their characteristics.
"Al-Lail" (The Night) is the ninety-second chapter of the Qur'an, consisting of twenty-one verses that were revealed early in Islam's history in Mecca. The chapter contrasts the characteristics of charitable people with those who are miserly, presenting these two types of people as examples of different moral paths.
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Sūrat al-Layl (, "The Night") is the ninety-second sūrah (chapter) of the Qur'an, containing twenty-one āyāt (verses). This sūrah is one of the first ten to be revealed in Mecca. It contrasts two types of people, the charitable and the miserly, and describes each of their characteristics.
==Summary== 1-4 Oaths by various natural objects 5-13 The obedient blessed and the covetous accursed 14-16 The covetous warned with hell-fire 17-21 True believers shall be rewarded hereafter
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