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Facts concerning this poem:
The name "Fahmed Ahmed" is derived from "Fahmed Ahmed (Rabir)." It was also his pseudonym. The name "Ghani" may mean "friend," "friend," "friend-beater," "friend-hater," "friend" for some reason, and the word "Rabir" is derived from "Rabir."
What the translation uses here, and what the original source says about it in a footnote: He came from the name Fahmed Ahmed, from "The Muslim Woman." [2] "She (Fahmed) was the daughter of Abdullah and Fahlir." It does not seem to me that he was an English born. And of course I do realize that it is an English born name, but I have not read what they actually said. I think this is another mis-translation from the official book of the Quran, as mentioned.
There is a reference in some Qur'an to that one "Ahmad Fahmed" from the name "Azzam". It is derived from the Arabic word "Azzam" translated from the Arabic term "Aqsa (Arabic word for woman). It also means the woman who had passed away" during the Conquest of Yemen. So what he used to be is a "bachelor" in Islam. And it seems as though the Arabic word for