mashallah
See also: Mashallah
English
Etymology
From Arabic مَا شَاءَ ٱللّٰه (mā šāʔa llāh).
Interjection
mashallah
- (Islam) Expressing the speaker's gratitude for a blessing or their recognition of divine intervention in its occurrence. God willed it.
- 2019, Maggie Paxson, The Plateau, Penguin, →ISBN, page 308:
- Mashallah, I hear Akhmad say. Mashallah. I ask him what it means. “Mashallah, it's to be thankful. Something wonderful.” It means, literally, “God wills it.” And yet it seems, there's a kind of joy inside the word, too. Some large, cosmic gratitude.
- (Islam) Expressing the speaker's wish for a fortune to be maintained, especially against the evil eye; used in congratulation.
- Coordinate term: knock on wood
- 2014, Na'ima B. Robert, She Wore Red Trainers: A Muslim Love Story, Kube Publishing Ltd, →ISBN:
- 'Mashallah, fine set of boys you've got here, sir,' he smiled, shaking us all by the hand, and giving Jamal a mock punch on the shoulder. 'Y'all new to the masjid?' ' Yes, we are,' Dad answered him. 'It's our first time here as a family.'
- An indication of excitement, surprise or astonishment. Wow!
Related terms
- Allah
- inshallah
- what hath God wrought (similar literal meaning and historically in usage)
Translations
God has willed it
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Anagrams
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