Mustahabb

Mustahabb (Arabic: مُسْتَحَبّ, lit. 'beloved thing') is an Islamic term referring to recommended, favoured or virtuous actions.

Mustahabb actions are those whose ruling (ahkam) in Islamic law falls between mubah (neutral; neither encouraged nor discouraged) and wajib (compulsory). One definition is "duties recommended, but not essential; fulfilment of which is rewarded, though they may be neglected without punishment".[1] Synonyms of mustahabb include masnun and mandub. The opposite of mustahabb is makruh (discouraged).

Examples

There are thousands of mustahabb acts,[2] including:

gollark: The API is also entirely undocumented, which is probably why.
gollark: I only realized that it probably shouldn't do that while discussing it with AlexDevs, but nobody noticed so it's probably fine.
gollark: SPUDNET's long polling thing simply ignores that.
gollark: Are routers compatible with Gaming Ethernet generally?
gollark: Oh no. I might need to buy a Gaming Ethernet switch!

References

  1. Reuben Levy, The Social Structure of Islam, p. 202
  2. Turner, Colin (2013-12-19). Islam: The Basics. Routledge. p. 133. ISBN 9781134296910. Retrieved 8 July 2014.

See also


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