Sabaʾ is the 34th chapter of the Qur'an, named after the ancient Arabian people of Sabaʾ (also known as the Sabeans). The chapter contains stories and teachings relevant to Islamic faith and is part of the Qur'an's spiritual and moral guidance for Muslims.
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Saba’ (Arabic: سبأ, saba’) is the 34th chapter (sūrah) of the Qur'an with 54 verses (āyāt). It discusses the lives of Solomon and David, a story about the people of Sheba, challenges and warnings against the disbelievers as well as the promises related to the Day of Judgment.
Regarding the timing and contextual background of the surah-Al-saba (circumstances of revelation), it is an earlier Meccan surah, which means it was revealed in Mecca instead of later in Medina.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).