Sūrat Qaf is the 50th chapter of the Qur'an, named after the Arabic letter "Qaf" that appears at its beginning. The chapter addresses themes of divine creation, the afterlife, and accountability, and is considered significant in Islamic tradition for its spiritual and theological teachings.
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Qaf (Arabic: ق, the letter qāf), is the 50th chapter (sūrah) of the Qur'an with 45 verses (āyāt). The name is taken from the single discrete Quranic "mysterious letter" qāf that opens the chapter. It is the beginning of the Hizb al-Mufassal, the seventh and the last portion (manzil). Concepts which "Qaf" deals with the Resurrection and the Day of Judgement.
Regarding the timing and contextual background of the believed revelation (asbāb al-nuzūl), it is a "Meccan surah", which means it is believed to have been revealed in Mecca, rather than later in Medina.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).