Alhamdulillah (الحمد لله) means "Praise to God" in Arabic, similar to the Hebrew Halelu Yah. In everyday speech it simply means "Thank God!"
The phrase is first found in the second verse of the first surah of the Qur'an. So frequently do Muslims and Arabic-speaking Jews and Christians invoke this phrase that the quadriliteral verb Hamdala حمدل, "to say al-Hamdu li-'llah" was coined, and the derived noun Hamdalah حمدلة is used as a name for this phrase.
In Islam, Alhamdulillah is used in the following situations:
The triconsonantal root H-m-d (ح م د), meaning "praise," can also be found in the names Muhammad, Mahmud, and Ahmad. Allah, "God", is the Arabic cognate of the ancient Semitic name for God, El.
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"Alhamdulillah".
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