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|f This research is based on two broad topics, preceded by an introduction and a prelude, followed by a conclusion and a list of references. As for the introduction, there is a discussion about the subject of the study, with regard to the preface, the researcher discussed it in three elements, namely:\nFirstly: Ibn al-Wardi and his works. In which there is a discussion about Ibn al-Wardi and his introduction.\nSecondly: A brief overview of Lamiyah (a work of poetry in which every line ends with the Arabic letter lam) Ibn al-Wardi, through a brief presentation of the following:\na) The text of the Lamiyah of Ibn al-Wardi b) interpretation of Lamiyah of Ibn al-Wardi. c) Takhmees (Five-Folding) of Lamiyah of Ibn al-Wardi.\nThird: The terms of the study include:\n1. What is meant by Takhmees, which is the addition of three hemistiches to each of the verses of the poem, which is based on its meter and the rhyme of the opening verses?\n2. Constructions of prosody, musical constructions and the difference between them. The poet limited the difference between them to the fact that musical construction is the most common; It includes all the colors of dissenting and changing the rhythm that cares about everything that is regular and sequential within the poem, because the character of music is contrary and change, and the characteristic of rhythm is regularity and sequencing.\nThen the first topic came under the title: “The Effect of Takhmees on the construction of prosody of Lamiyah of Ibn al-Wardi”. The researcher discussed it through the following: \nFirst: Rhythm which means the criteria that distinguishes poetry from prose, and everything that is characterized by regularity and sequencing in one poem. The researcher, with examples and interpretation, explained the effect of the pentameter hemistiches of Bahraini of Lamiyah of Ibn al-Wardi on the construction of the poem in its Hasw, and Arooz and Zarb of its verses.\nSecond: Rhyme: this is the repeated passage in the poem. The researcher presented the definitions of rhyme, its features, its characters, its limits, and the forms of rhyme letter in it, and the disadvantages with examples and explanation in work of both poets, and the impact of this on the construction of the poem.\nThird: Necessity: The researcher listed the forms of necessity that came in works of both poets, and what distinguishes each one from the other, with the examples of the verses of the Lamiyah and the hemistiches of Takhmees.\nThen the second topic is entitled “The Effect of Takhmees on the Musical Structure of Lamiyah of Ibn al-Wardi”. The researcher discussed it through:\nFirstly: al zehafat wal ealal: the researcher shows the most important al zehafat wal ealal that occurred in the verses of the Lamiyah, and in the hemistiches of Takhmeesm and their effect on music.\nSecond: The defects of rhyme: The researcher found out that Ibn al-Wardi was far more away than the al Qadhi Bahraini in falling into the defects of the rhyme. The researcher presented some of the defects of the rhyme that came in the hemistiches of Takhmees on the Lamiyah of Ibn al-Wardi, and their effect on musical construction.\nThird: Breaking the meter of prosody: this is the defect that affects the meter of the prosody and contravenes the rhythm. This poem is free of any form of this defect, and there is only one place where it occurred in the hemistiches of Bahraini. The researcher pointed it out, and it is likely caused by misreading or error in the vowelization.\nThen the conclusion of the research came to observe the most important findings of the research, including the following:\n1. Sheikh Bahraini in hemistiches of his Takhmees of Lamiyah of Ibn al-Wardi followed the meter and the rhythm and rhyme, which represent the prosodic structure of the poem.\n2. The rhyme in work Bahraini took many kinds of rhyme in its limits, forms and types, unlike the Lamiyah, which came abstract and restricted to the vowel-less rhyme letter, which was neither without Radif nor established.\n3. The Bahraini in his hemistiches relied on the opening verse in its rhyme. The rhyme letter came, taking most of the letters of the alphabet. As far as Ibn al-Wardi he built the rhyme letter of his poem on the vowel-less Laam.\n4. Ibn al-Wardi's rhyme was free of defects because it is free from Radif and foundation, while the hemistiches of Bahraini did not get away from it, and the Lamiyah in its hemistiches was free of manifestations of necessity that could be judged by ugliness.\n5. Both poets resort to the al zehafat and wal ealal that are famous in this meter, and they are found in the works of other poets.\nThis conclusion is followed by the researcher's recommendation to clarify the studies for the prosodic and musical structure, and the list of references relied upon by the researcher in collecting the research material in alphabetical order.\nIn fact, this Takhmess did not go out of the prosodic and musical structure of the Lamiyah of Ibn al-Wardi. Hence, the hemistiches of Bahraini are considered a sequel to the poem and an explanation of it and a confirmation of the ruling and sermons of the Lamiyah.\nAnd Allah is the source of strength and guide to the straight path.\nThe researcher\nThis abstract translated by Dar AlMandumah Inc. 2018
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