Dahr

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The triliteral root dāl hā rā (د ه ر) occurs in the Quran 2 times.

The triliteral root wāw qāf tā (و ق ت) occurs in the Quran 13 times.

The triliteral root hamza nūn yā (أ ن ي) occurs in the Quran 36 times.

In The Quran

(45:24) They said, "There is nothing but this worldly life; we die and we live and nothing destroys us except the time (Arab. الدَّهْرُ, l-dahru)!" They have no knowledge about this; they only conjecture.

(76:1) Was there not a period of the time (Arab. الدَّهْرِ, l-dahri) when the human being was nothing to even be mentioned?

In Hinduism

In Hinduism, Dharā (Sanskrit: धरा; support) is one of the Vasus, gods of the physical cosmos. He represents the earth and the element earth, though Earth is usually the goddess Prithvi rather than a god. Dhārā (Sanskrit: धारा) is a Sanskrit term used to refer to the flow of a stream or waterfall. [1]

Dharma

Dharma (/ˈdɑːrmə/; Sanskrit: धर्म, translit. dharma, pronounced [dʱəɾmə] (About this sound listen); Pali: धम्म, translit. dhamma, translit. dhamma) is a key concept with multiple meanings in the Indian religions – Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism. There is no single-word translation for dharma in Western languages. [2]

See Also

Special relativity

LIGO

First observation of gravitational waves