AYOUB
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Everything posted by AYOUB
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Thanks sticking your neck out after 24hrs. I'm sure you were busy watching the games.:cool: Interesting even you couldn't justify why and how you think LFC will finish top. Calaakulli excuse, I'll be posting "Stoke, Sunderland, LFC" fucussed mini league to track your 4x prediction. IA.
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Fadlan "mental taswiirka" hablaha hanagaga ciyaarina. As for geezers, Xaaji X, is the easiest to picture because one only needs to picture a "mental" person. Any person.:cool: Norf looks like 1980s Abdi Bile with 2011 hairdo. NGONGE? Do you know Cabduqaadir Nadaara from Universal Tv? Imagine his shorter, fatter twin. You don't know Nadaara? Imagine a Somali Danny Devito and that's NGONGE.
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'To me it's the month of Ramadan, as a Muslim I believe that this is a very special month,' the father, Tariq Jahan, told the crowd. 'For us Muslims we believe the gates of heaven are open and the gates of hell are shut this month, so that gives me the strength to believe that the three boys did not die in vain, they died for this community and I hope that this community will remember them,' Jahan said. Patience, Perseverance, and Prayer During times of deep trial, despair, and sadness, Muslims seek comfort and guidance in the words of Allah in the Qur'an. Allah reminds us that all people will be tried and tested in life, and calls upon Muslims to bear these trials with "patient perseverance and prayer." Indeed, Allah reminds us that many people before us have suffered and had their faith tested; so too will we be tried and tested in this life. There are dozens upon dozens of verses that remind Muslims to be patient and trust in Allah during these times of trial. Among them: "Seek Allah's help with patient perseverance and prayer. It is indeed hard except for those who are humble." (2:45) "Oh you who believe! Seek help with patient perseverance and prayer, for God is with those who patiently persevere." (2:153) "Be sure We shall test you with something of fear and hunger, some loss in goods, lives, and the fruits of your toil. But give glad tidings to those who patiently persevere. Those who say, when afflicted with calamity, 'To Allah we belong, and to Him is our return.' They are those on whom descend blessings from their Lord, and mercy. They are the ones who receive guidance." (2:155-157) "Oh you who believe! Persevere in patience and constancy. Vie in such perseverance, strengthen each other, and be pious, that you may prosper." (3:200) "And be steadfast in patience, for verily Allah will not suffer the reward of the righteous to perish." (11:115) "Be patient, for your patience is with the help of Allah." (16:127) "Patiently, then, persevere - for the Promise of Allah is true, and ask forgiveness for your faults, and celebrate the praises of your Lord in the evening and in the morning." (40:55) "No one will be granted such goodness except those who exercise patience and self-restraint, none but persons of the greatest good fortune." (41:35) "Verily man is in loss, except such as have faith, and do righteous deeds, and join together in the mutual enjoining of truth, and of patience and constancy." (103:2-3) As Muslims, we should not let our emotions get the better of us. It is certainly difficult for a person to look at the tragedies of the world today and not feel helpless and sad. But believers are called to put their trust in their Lord, and not to fall into despair or hopelessness. We must continue to do what Allah has called us to do: put our trust in Him, perform good deeds, and stand as witnesses for justice and truth. "It is not righteousness that you turn your faces towards East or West. But it is righteousness to believe in Allah and the Last Day, And the Angels, and the Book, and the Messengers; To spend of your substance, out of love for Him, For your kin, for orphans, for the needy, for the wayfarer, for those who ask, and for the ransom of slaves; To be steadfast in prayer And give in charity; To fulfill the contracts which you have made; And to be firm and patient, in pain and adversity And throughout all periods of panic. Such are the people of truth, the God-fearing. Qur'an 2:177 Verily, with every difficulty there is relief. Verily, with every difficulty there is relief. Qur'an 94:5-6 http://islam.about.com/od/prayer/a/patience.htm
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^ waxaa iskadaayo, what position are Liverpool, Stoke and Sunderland going to finish this season, in your 4x opinion.
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^ no wonder some folks confuse you for "the old man". Che, there's no argument here, it has gone for taraweeh.
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N.O.R.F;740783 wrote: Why do you need to watch the game 3 or 4 times? Hahaha Su'aali nin weyn. He problaby watches as a group first. The he sits alone right on front TV like a kid with poor vision watching cartoons. Then he watches with Arabic commentry. Mind boggles why he watches the 4th time, maybe to make up his mind? Four witnesses by himself!
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^ Specsavers? NGONGE;740761 wrote: Sunderland are going to give lots of people a lot of problems. Waa runtaa, Sunderland, (Stoke and Liverpool) will give problems to a lot of teams.
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Nassirow, everyone seem to be claiming the credit for Shabaab's withdrawal from Xamar. The question is; what next if or when the Youths are out of the picture? How long before these foreign boots leave as well? Considering their current influence (control even if one takes their actions like the sacking of PM Formaggio in to account) on Xamar, who can stop them making their stay long term? It would be interesting to hear supporters of the TFG give their cents on these points.
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^ Over here, they call the nomads' state "tipsy" and the girl "legless". You need to learn these terms to understand Brits when they tell you about their weekends. More vocab for you here >> http://forum.davidicke.com/archive/index.php/t-149023.html PS Your bloggs would even be better when you start doing " better things" with your time. W salaams
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^ Now you don't care? Boy do you have qiiro swings! Waa waxa kaa keenay in aad marna shabaab taageertid, marna taraweexda kaligaa tukatid. Anyways take air of yourself.:cool:
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Aaliyyah, judging from your random stories, you'd make an interesting blogger, me thinks. You portray a Muslimah recognisable even by the legless Indian, yet so approachable even a tipsy nomad fancies their chances. PS had the usual Suxuur. So far, so good xamdulillah.
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Che -Guevara;740699 wrote: You remind of this moron calling himself Kaahin from Ottawa I believe calling SSC folks terrorist as if Canadians could spare him next he's at airport. What's your moron from Ottawa, SSC, terrorism got to do with the cartoonka aad ku qiirootay?:confused: Qiiradan orggiga kaweyn! Hang on, I've cracked the code; the link is the airport! Soo maaha? :cool:
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^ Waraa qatar aa tahay macalinka. Valenteenah.;740665 wrote: 17 pages and several months planning = no Go-karting and no confirmation of sky diving. Where's Sheh, these days? 17 pages and hundreds of £s! I think Ibti is the best person to tell this epic story. How could a group of girls keep a secret this long? Sheh can correct her when her memory fails. Then again, something that scary can't be forgotten, unless something forgettable happened after the jump:o Femme, I know. I was being reer magal. A proper nomad would have said; "can I marry you?".
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Che -Guevara;740641 wrote: I'm not type for qiiro, just matter of reality whether you wrap yourself in buluugey or your secessionist flag, this sort of humiliation don't differentiate between skinnies but again you think the world cares who is Somaliland. It is cheap qiiro, because there no humiliation, none whatsoever. You need to channel this qiiro of yours somewhere worthy not a cartoon. May I suggest you stop praying taraweeh alone and maybe you might be able to channel your qiiro in the imaam's recitation.
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oba hiloowlow;740638 wrote: lool kan odayga ku qafiifay muxuu ahaa waa wareey,, Check in the "Fadlan Wiilkan Caawiya" file.
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^ Don't hold your breath. The old man has changed a lot. I'm not talking about his transformation from the old beduin who never minded geezers invading his personal space on the tube to "iga durka" stance. I've noticed much more, just don't know why.
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NGONGE;740631 wrote: A home draw on the first game of the season is not a bad result. The performance mertied more than that though. Indeed, especially against your rivals (like Sunderland and Stoke).
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^ Haddanaad iska dhigi jirin, miyaad ahaan jirtay? Mise haddaad waxaad aheyn iska dhigaysa?:cool:
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Che -Guevara;740581 wrote: I hate Somalis being humiliatated like that. Aah so sweet of you. To borrow a line from that famous movie; if you get a cheaper qiiro than ^^^.... It's only a cartoon on a screen from a story by an opposition website yaa sahbi.
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^ Ma waagi "xamari" aad iska dhigi jirtay? I think the topic that's left a lot of unanswered questions is girls' "parachute jump" that never took place. C'on girls, what happened on that "eventful" day? Time to spill the cambuulo! (For the new SOLers, I'm talking about this) >> http://www.somaliaonline.com/community/showthread.php/1097-Female-SOL-Londoners/page15?highlight=Parachute
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Todd Heisler/The New York Times A Ugandan soldier leads Richard Rouget, a military adviser with Bancroft Global Development, to the roof of a building to monitor a firefight More photos> http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011/08/10/world/africa/20110811_SOMALIA.html?ref=africa#10
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By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN, MARK MAZZETTI and ERIC SCHMITT Published: August 10, 2011 MOGADISHU, Somalia — Richard Rouget, a gun for hire over two decades of bloody African conflict, is the unlikely face of the American campaign against militants in Somalia. A husky former French Army officer, Mr. Rouget, 51, commanded a group of foreign fighters during Ivory Coast’s civil war in 2003, was convicted by a South African court of selling his military services and did a stint in the presidential guard of the Comoros Islands, an archipelago plagued by political tumult and coup attempts. Now Mr. Rouget works for Bancroft Global Development, an American private security company that the State Department has indirectly financed to train African troops who have fought a pitched urban battle in the ruins of this city against the Shabab, the Somali militant group allied with Al Qaeda. The company plays a vital part in the conflict now raging inside Somalia, a country that has been effectively ungoverned and mired in chaos for years. The fight against the Shabab, a group that United States officials fear could someday carry out strikes against the West, has mostly been outsourced to African soldiers and private companies out of reluctance to send American troops back into a country they hastily exited nearly two decades ago. Full article > http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/11/world/africa/11somalia.html
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- Femme -;740487 wrote: So I implore all the freaks - both guests and members alike - come and ask your weird questions and maybe step on a few lazy toes here and there. Will you marry me?
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These "Black" youths need educating. If you want to loot loads of people's hard earned money be a banker or an expenses-fiddling MP. If you want to burn down a country, be a soldier and you can be paid to do your hobbies in exotic foreign places like Iraq, Afghanistan or Libya. The PM should cancel the Notting Hill Carnival to teach these "blacks" a lesson.
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