Narrations of Abd al-rahman bin Abdullah Al-Asmai' s nephew in the book (Jamharat Allugha) –study and lexico-
Abstract
The importance of the research lies in collecting the narrations of Abd al-Rahman bin Abdullah, none of whose works have reached us, the conditions and their decline, along with what was lost and dropped from the narrations of Arab scholars in the second century after the Hijra, and the large number of narrations chosen by Ibn Duraid in Jamharat al-Lughah. The narrations of Abd al-Rahman were Bin Abdullah, the exalted cup among the narrations. As for Ibn Duraid, he collected the narrations of Abd al-Rahman bin Abdullah in Jamharat al-Lughah by the editor, either from the books of Abd al-Rahman bin Abdullah that have not reached us, or from the books of his uncle al-Asmai (D. 216 A.H.) on the authority of the one who narrated from him, or by hearing the narration with a chain of transmission on the authority of Abu Dawud al-Sijistani. (D. 275 A.H.) on the authority of Al-Allamah Al-Asmai on the authority of Yunus bin Habib (D. 182 A.H.), or someone who wrote them. Abdul Rahman bin Abdullah derived his linguistic material from his uncle Al-Asmai and from some of the Bedouins, in addition to hearing from those who heard the Bedouins in the desert, even if he did not say that explicitly, but it is not without the idea that he heard from them, as he heard other Arabic scholars. Those who lived with him