Search for crossword answers and clues
Not halal, in Arab cuisine
Answer for the clue "Not halal, in Arab cuisine ", 5 letters:
haram
Alternative clues for the word haram
Word definitions for haram in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Haram (; ) is an Arabic term meaning "sinful", often in reference to an act forbidden in Islam. Haram or Al-Haram may also refer to:
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
see harem .
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. forbidden by Islam: unlawful, sinful. n. (context Islam English) A sin.
Usage examples of haram.
David Street past the jog where it becomes es-Silsileh, two hundred yards towards the Haram, then north on el-Wad, and the Souk el-Qattanin comes in on your right.
Haram it turned due north, running between the Western Wall and the Dome of the Rock, less than fifty feet from where the Souk el-Qattanin became the Bab el-Qattanin, the Gate of the Cotton Merchants, which was the Haram entrance closest to the Dome itself.
Arch was at the next Haram entrance down, but surely there was a shaft here somewhere?
Close by came Rrisa, his brown face contracted with fanatic hate of the Beni Harb, despoilers of the Haram sanctuary.
There lay the despoilers of the Haram, the robber-tribe of Sheik Abd el Rahman, helpless in blank unconsciousness.
What will not the orthodox tribes give for this arch-Shiah, this despoiler of the sacred Haram at Mecca?
The swarming Haram enclosure presented one of the most extraordinary spectacles ever witnessed by human eyes.
An astonishing change, however, swept over the infuriated mob in the Haram and throughout the radiating streets.
Every man in the Haram, the minarets, the arcade, and the radiating streets heard every word I said, gentlemen, as plainly as if I had spoken directly into his ear.
A perfect silence fell on the Haram and the city for perhaps half a mile on all sides of the sacred enclosure Haram and streets, roof-tops, squares all looked as if suddenly covered with deep snow.
Nothing more natural than that a cold draught should have soughed from the pent interior of the temple, or that the air-liner, slowly turning as she hung above the Haram, should with her vast planes have for a moment thrown her shadow over the square.
The Haram grew all a confusion of wild-waving arms, streaming robes, running men who stumbled over the paralyzed forms of their coreligionists.
The sales rep at Haram had the slightly-unbelievable name of Mike Fright.
The merchant was accused of having made zina with two of his concubines at the same time, while his four wives and a third concubine were let to watch, and all together those circumstances were haram under Muslim law.
I gradually learned from the proceedings that even the most vilely haram offense is not punishable by Muslim law unless at least four eyewitnesses testify to its having been committed.