bold = Main text
   Part, Sura      grey = Comment text

 1  I             |      many a tale is told of a chief who gave away his last camel,
 2  I             |      intimately bound up. The chief god of this vague national
 3  I             |       most high.~ ~Hubal, the chief of the minor deities; this
 4  I             |       2, p. 132.~ ~Allât; the chief idol of the tribe of THaqîf
 5  I             |       19-20.~ ~The Kaabah, or chief shrine of the faith, contained,
 6  I             |   changed it to Muslim.~ ~The chief seat of the cult of the
 7  I             |    tribe.~ ~'Amr ibn La'hy, a chief of the Benu 'Huzâ'hah, now
 8  I             |     who afterwards proved its chief support.~ ~His conversion
 9  I             |       hypocrites,'~ ~ ./. the chief man among them being one
10  I             | caravan comprised most of the chief men of Mecca, besides its
11  I             |      had persuaded the Meccan chief to become a Muslim, which
12  I             |       Abdallâh ibn Ubai was a chief whose influence operated
13  I             |    high,' was regarded as the chief god of their pantheon: The
14  I             |      the Qur'ân itself.~ ~The chief prophets recognised by the
15  I,      III   |       the Word from God,-of a chief and a chaste one, and a
16  I,       VI(2)|     their fields to Allah the chief God, and other portions
17 II,     XXVI   |     leave? Verily, he is your chief who has taught you sorcery,
18 II,   XXXIII(2)|           The tent of an Arab chief is looked upon as a place
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