A '''Rak'a ( ', lit. "bow"; plural: '''') is a single iteration of prescribed movements and supplications performed by Muslims as part of the prescribed obligatory prayer known as salah. Each of the five daily prayers observed by Muslims consists of a number of raka'at.
A '''Rak'a ( ', lit. "bow"; plural: '''') is a single iteration of prescribed movements and supplications performed by Muslims as part of the prescribed obligatory prayer known as salah. Each of the five daily prayers observed by Muslims consists of a number of raka'at.
==Procedure== After performing the ritual ablution for prayer, a believer must renew their innermost niyyah (intention), to ensure that their prayer is offered solely for the sake of God. The niyyah for the salah is not announced, as it is private. For example, before beginning the prayer, one may intend in their heart to pray a specific number of units, such as four, as part of their prayer (raka'at before you start your prayer.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).