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Merge ASSEMBLY and PRESS,
then merge PETITION and SPEECH...
and, WHAT DO YOU GET?
I don't know, but they're separated by a set of imaginary goalposts, lol.
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Merge ASSEMBLY and PRESS,
I couldn't stop laughing for a couple minutes!
Serious Islam question - sort of a two-part: At least here in the "West" I've often heard about Muslims genuflecting, while facing East. What if, though, they're in some place such as Indonesia or Syria, where Mecca is not to the east? And, if a devout Muslim faces in the actual direction of Mecca, rather than arbitrarily facing east wherever they are, do they face Mecca according to the direction on a globe, or do they use a Mercator map, which can have a very different outcome?
^ I believe they face Mecca, no matter which direction it is. I remember watching a documentary on a new British battleship and the head chef was Muslim. He couldn't go up on deck to pray, of course, so the captain granted him the use of a small room. It was about twice as long as it was wide. All the chef did was to put a hand-painted sign with the word 'MECCA' on the wall. No matter which direction the ship was travelling, he was always facing Mecca for his prayers.
I find this very hard to believe.
Anyway, since the world is round, no-one outside KSA is ever "facing Mecca" because in a straight line from where you are standing, you always end up in outer space. But of course Mo didn't get that.
I find this very hard to believe.
Anyway, since the world is round, no-one outside KSA is ever "facing Mecca" because in a straight line from where you are standing, you always end up in outer space. But of course Mo didn't get that.
^
The translations are usually so awful reading them is impossible. I also don´t get how many Muslims are supposed to read the Quran every day, yet are supposedly illiterate.
Loved the Nike stones in #6900. Best one in months.
This is kind of funny too.
^
That link does with a couple of Arabic words the same thing that the King James translators did with some Old Testament Hebrew words -- left them untranslated. The most common example is "selah" which appears many times in the Psalms; a rabbi I studied with called it "a liturgical hiccup" and said no one knows what it means.
