Arabic vocabulary
How to say “leisure” in Arabic, with pronunciation and an example from OpenArabic texts.
وإن قرأته للفرجة لا للحجة، وللدنيا لا للآخرة،
If you study it for leisure, not for proof, and for this world, not the hereafter,
لِلْفُرْجَةِ — for leisure. The 'li-' marks the purpose — 'for amusement / spectacle.' The wrong reason: reading logic as entertainment, not for proof. In the -i form after the preposition; set against 'not for argument' next.
From: Revelation Over Philosophy →OpenArabic teaches words like فُرْجَةٌ through real bilingual reading with native audio and spaced-repetition practice.
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