ulema

listen to the pronunciation of ulema
English - Turkish
i., bak. ulama
ulema
ulama
{i} ulema
Turkish - Turkish
(Osmanlı Dönemi) (Âlim. C.) Âlimler. Osmanlı devrinde yüksek ilim ve fıkıh âlimleri. İlmiye mensubları
(Hukuk) Alimler
Sarıklı din bilginleri
islam bilginlerine verilen ad
Bilginler
Osmanlı devletinde kadınlara ve müderrislere verilen ad
Kadılara ve müderrislere verilen ad
(Osmanlı Dönemi) âlimler
ulama
Konuşmada art arda gelen kelimelerden birincisinin sonundaki ünsüzün, ikincisinin başındaki ünlüye ses bakımından bağlanarak söylenmesi: Ayırt etmek, ağaç altı, tertip etmek, art arda gibi
ulama
ünsüzle biten bir sözcüğün, ünlüyle başlayan sözcüğe bağlanarak okunması
ulama
Ulamak işi
ulama
Ulanmış
ulama
Ulanan parça, ek, katkı, ilave
ulama
Ek, ilave
English - English
The guardians of legal and religious tradition in Islam; clerics
That of Turkey alone now has political power; its head is the sheik ul Islam
the body of mullahs (Muslim scholars trained in Islam and Islamic law) who are the interpreters of Islam's sciences and doctrines and laws and the chief guarantors of continuity in the spiritual and intellectual history of the Islamic community
A college or corporation in Turkey composed of the hierarchy, namely, the imams, or ministers of religion, the muftis, or doctors of law, and the cadis, or administrators of justice
A college or body composed of the hierarchy (the imams, muftis, and cadis)
ulama
{i} body of mullahs, body of teachers or learned men of the sacred Islamic law
ulama
the body of mullahs (Muslim scholars trained in Islam and Islamic law) who are the interpreters of Islam's sciences and doctrines and laws and the chief guarantors of continuity in the spiritual and intellectual history of the Islamic community
ulama
(sing , alim), Islamic scholars
ulama
Collective term for Muslim religious scholars
ulama
Orthodox religious scholars within Islam; pressed for a more conservative and restrictive theology; increasingly opposed to non-Islamic ideas and scientific thinking (p 315)
ulema

    Hyphenation

    u·le·ma

    Etymology

    (noun.) 1688. From Arabic علماء (‘ulamā’), plural of عالم (‘ālim) ‘learned one’.
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