释义 |
Definition of hijab in English: hijabnoun hɪˈdʒɑːbhɪˈdʒɑb 1A head covering worn in public by some Muslim women. Example sentencesExamples - The conference condemned attacks on the Muslim population and defended the right of Muslim women to choose to wear the hijab or burqa.
- But when I got into the building, I saw tens and twenties of Muslims - women in hijabs, people who said As-Salaam-Alaikum to us.
- A High Court today ruled in favour of Denbeigh High School which already allows pupils to wear shalwar kameez and hijab as uniform.
- In many cities women in Christian congregations have started wearing the hijab to identify with Muslim women.
- This impression is further reinforced by the pronouncements of some orthodox ulema that wants to see Muslim women wrapped in hijab.
- The ban will likely include large Christian crosses, Jewish yarmulkes, Muslim hijabs and turbans worn by Sikhs.
- The French Assembly is wrong to ban Muslim headscarves, the hijab, in public schools.
- Just as police officers are more professionally aware while in uniform, so I had a stronger sense of being a Muslim wearing my hijab.
- Still, the Muslim headscarf, or hijab, that I wear makes me feel as if I am under a microscope.
- My hijab, the head covering many Muslim women like myself wear out in public, had caught her attention.
- If the banning of the hijab in France protects Muslim girls from racist attack, then it will have done some good.
- Last year, after deciding to wear the hijab, or Islamic head scarf, and follow her faith more closely, she knew her routine would have to change.
- Muslim women wear the hijab for a number of reasons beyond the obvious religious motivations.
- Some Muslim women wear the traditional hijab in public.
- Can you please explain to me in the light of Qur'an and Hadith what is the hijab for my husband to his brother's wives?
- Their faces covered by the Muslim hijab, they lolled dead in their seats.
- The Principal decided the Muslim veil or hijab was a threat to the secular French public school system.
- Chapter Four describes interviews with seven Muslim women who wear hijab.
- As shown on this Seattle-area Muslim woman, the hijab often leaves the entire face open.
- Not all Muslim women wear the hijab, because not all practise their religion at the same level.
- 1.1 The religious code which governs the wearing of the hijab.
Example sentencesExamples - Certainly hijab is a distinctly Muslim notion, but what about the Western religion of plastic surgery, bodily perfection, fashion horses etc?
- Many Muslims argue that hijab (head cover) does not come from the Koran but from the later interpretation of Islamic law.
- One suggestion that occurs repeatedly is that Islam does not require Muslim women to observe hijab or veil.
- Today, the figure-obscuring dress code known as hijab remains the Revolution's most visible and enduring legacy.
- Violating the hijab code was made punishable by 100 lashes of the cane and six months imprisonment.
Origin From Persian, from Arabic ḥajaba 'to veil'. Rhymes barb, carb, garb, nawab, Punjab, sahib Definition of hijab in US English: hijabnounhiˈjäbhɪˈdʒɑb 1A head covering worn in public by some Muslim women. Example sentencesExamples - The French Assembly is wrong to ban Muslim headscarves, the hijab, in public schools.
- Muslim women wear the hijab for a number of reasons beyond the obvious religious motivations.
- Just as police officers are more professionally aware while in uniform, so I had a stronger sense of being a Muslim wearing my hijab.
- The ban will likely include large Christian crosses, Jewish yarmulkes, Muslim hijabs and turbans worn by Sikhs.
- If the banning of the hijab in France protects Muslim girls from racist attack, then it will have done some good.
- A High Court today ruled in favour of Denbeigh High School which already allows pupils to wear shalwar kameez and hijab as uniform.
- Chapter Four describes interviews with seven Muslim women who wear hijab.
- Not all Muslim women wear the hijab, because not all practise their religion at the same level.
- But when I got into the building, I saw tens and twenties of Muslims - women in hijabs, people who said As-Salaam-Alaikum to us.
- My hijab, the head covering many Muslim women like myself wear out in public, had caught her attention.
- Last year, after deciding to wear the hijab, or Islamic head scarf, and follow her faith more closely, she knew her routine would have to change.
- Can you please explain to me in the light of Qur'an and Hadith what is the hijab for my husband to his brother's wives?
- This impression is further reinforced by the pronouncements of some orthodox ulema that wants to see Muslim women wrapped in hijab.
- As shown on this Seattle-area Muslim woman, the hijab often leaves the entire face open.
- Still, the Muslim headscarf, or hijab, that I wear makes me feel as if I am under a microscope.
- Some Muslim women wear the traditional hijab in public.
- The Principal decided the Muslim veil or hijab was a threat to the secular French public school system.
- The conference condemned attacks on the Muslim population and defended the right of Muslim women to choose to wear the hijab or burqa.
- Their faces covered by the Muslim hijab, they lolled dead in their seats.
- In many cities women in Christian congregations have started wearing the hijab to identify with Muslim women.
- 1.1 The religious code which governs the wearing of the hijab.
Example sentencesExamples - Violating the hijab code was made punishable by 100 lashes of the cane and six months imprisonment.
- One suggestion that occurs repeatedly is that Islam does not require Muslim women to observe hijab or veil.
- Many Muslims argue that hijab (head cover) does not come from the Koran but from the later interpretation of Islamic law.
- Today, the figure-obscuring dress code known as hijab remains the Revolution's most visible and enduring legacy.
- Certainly hijab is a distinctly Muslim notion, but what about the Western religion of plastic surgery, bodily perfection, fashion horses etc?
Origin From Persian, from Arabic ḥajaba ‘to veil’. |