🌺πŸ’₯*Linguistic Benefit* Golden Words πŸ₯°πŸ’₯🌺 The Difference Between (Arab) and (Arabi) First: What does the word "Arabi" mean? The word "Arabi" means completeness, perfection, and freedom from imperfection and defects.
It has no connection to Arabs as a nationality.
The phrase "an Arabic Quran" means a complete Quran, free from imperfection and defects.
The interpretation of the word "'urba" (with a damma on the 'ayn and the ra' and a fatha on the ba') is that it describes the houris in the verse:
(So We made them virgins, pure companions of equal age for the companions of the right hand).) Thus, the houris are described as complete and free from imperfection and defects.
As for the "Arabs," who are mentioned in the Quran as a form of disparagement, they are not the desert dwellers.
Because the Quran is too exalted and noble to disparage people based on ethnicity or race. If the "Arabs" were meant to be the desert dwellers, God Almighty would have described them as Bedouins, as stated by Joseph, peace be upon him:
(And He brought you from the desert after Satan had sown dissension between me and my brothers.) So who are the Bedouins? The extra transitive hamza in the word "Arabs" has shifted the meaning to the opposite, as in (qist) and (aqsit).
Qist: injustice.
Aqsit: justice.
*Arab: complete and free from defect* *A'rab: defective and covered by defect* In the Arabic language, this is called the hamza of removal.
The Bedouins are a group characterized by