The Impact of Qur’anic Structure on the Eloquence of the Arabic Language

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61212/jsc/515

Keywords:

Qur’anic Structure, Inimitability, Eloquence, Arabic Rhetoric, Aesthetic Taste

Abstract

The Qur’anic structure (al-nazm al-Qur’ānī) represents a transformative milestone in

Arabic rhetoric. Before the Qur’an, Arabs evaluated eloquence mainly by verbal strength and

natural taste, without recognizing the stylistic power of syntactic order. The Qur’an introduced a

miraculous linguistic system distinguished by the precise arrangement of words, harmony of

meanings, and coherence of expression.

Although many studies have explored Qur’anic inimitability, few have specifically examined how

its structural organization shaped Arabic eloquence and rhetorical sciences. This study asks: How

did the Qur’anic structure influence the eloquence of the Arabic language?

The research aims to (1) analyze the Qur’an’s role in the emergence and development of Arabic

rhetorical sciences, and (2) identify how its unique order established new standards of clarity and

expressiveness.

Findings show that the Qur’an revolutionized rhetoric not merely in style but in intellectual

approach—redirecting focus from verbal magnificence to contextual relations between words

and meanings. Scholars studying the Qur’an’s syntax and stylistic features extracted core rhetorical

principles such as precedence and delay, ellipsis and mention, brevity and elaboration, and

figurative imagery. These rules were not formally defined before the Qur’an; they were derived

from reflection on its linguistic precision and coherence.

Ultimately, the Qur’anic structure deepened rhetorical perception, distinguishing between near

and subtle meanings and fostering an advanced aesthetic sensibility that penetrates beyond words

into the intricate harmony of linguistic composition.

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Published

2025-12-01

How to Cite

The Impact of Qur’anic Structure on the Eloquence of the Arabic Language. (2025). Journal of Scientific Conferences (JSC), 3(3), 350-370. https://doi.org/10.61212/jsc/515

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