-
shaitan or
shaytan (Arabic: شَيْطَان, romanized: shayṭān; pl.: شَيَاطِين
shayāṭīn; Hebrew: שָׂטָן; Turkish: Şeytan or Semum, lit. 'devil', 'demon', or 'satan')...
-
Islamic faith. It is said (ḥadīṯ) that
reciting this
verse wards off
devils (
shayāṭīn) and
fiends (ʿafārīt). Al-Suyuti
narrates that a man from
humanity and...
- that the
ghouls might be
burned jinn or devils. Accordingly, the jinn and
shayatin (devils) once had
access to the heavens,
where they eavesdropped, and returned...
-
speak to both
animals and djinn; he is also said to have
enslaved the
shayāṭīn (شياطين, lit. 'devils') with the
support of a
staff or ring
given to him...
- of fornication. Furthermore, he will be ****isted by an army of
devils (
Shayāṭīn). Nevertheless, the most
reliable supporters will be the Jews, to whom...
- (clear) fire, but is in
accord with a
common tradition depicting the
devils (
shayāṭīn), as
created out of smoke.
Although the
identification of
afarit with ghosts...
-
angels as a
whole are a
manifestation of God's
Names of Beauty.
Shaitan (
shayatin) on the
other hand are a
manifestation of God's
Names of majesty, such...
- have
their own
Shayātīn (plural of "Shaytan")
under command and are
subordinate to Iblis, who is
thought to be the
leader of
Shayātīn. Traditionally,...
- Look up
shaytan in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Shaytan pl.
Shayatin is a
Hebrew and
Arabic term
referring to
Satan or to satans. The name Shaytan...
- the head of
shayatin. They
tempt humans (and jinn) into sin. In
Islamic folklore,
Ifrit and
Marid are
usually two
powerful classes of
shayatin.
Other prominent...