bold = Main text
   Part, Sura      grey = Comment text

 1  I             |   religion of the Arabs, had so far degenerated as to have scarcely
 2  I             |       worshipped that.~ ~But by far the greater number had ceased
 3  I             |        issued.~ ~The Kaabah, so far as the dim legends of antiquity
 4  I             |       care was to reconcile, as far as possible, the various
 5  I             |     rivalry, but they united so far as to make his their common
 6  I             |        adapting his religion as far as possible to their own,
 7  I             |    Mohammed, whose numbers were far inferior, awaited the issue
 8  I             |    veneration, and even goes so far as to call Him the 'Spirit'
 9  I             | heterogeneous materials, but by far the greater portion was
10  I             |        rhyme.~ ~The text was so far fixed by Zâid, but not the
11  I             |        though as yet possessing far from absolute authority.
12  I             |   allusions, and has reduced as far as~ ~ ./. possible the heterogeneous
13  I             |        this Mohammed is only so far responsible that he accepted
14  I             |  respect for the female sex, as far as was consistent with the
15  I             |      the original.~ ~I have, as far as possible, rendered an
16  I,      III   |        you.' They were that day far nigher unto misbelief than
17  I,        V   |        faces, and your hands as far as the elbows, and wipe
18  I,     VIII   |    valley, and they were on the far side, and the camels were
19  I,       IX   |        but the distance was too far for them; they will swear
20  I,       XI   |      Lord, and these are not so far from the unjust 5!~ ~[85]
21  I,       XI   |      only wish to better you so far as I can,-nor comes my grace
22  I,       XI   |        are the people of Lot so far from you! Ask pardon, then,
23 II,      XXI   |      they from it shall be kept far away; they shall not hear
24 II,      XXI   |      threatened with be near or far!'~ ~[110] Verily, He knows
25 II,     XXII   |      wind blows him away into a far distant place.~ ~'That-and
26 II,    XXIII(1)|            I.e. their works are far different to the good works
27 II,        L   |  brought near to the pious,-not far off.~ ~ ./. This is what
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