The takbir is an Arabic name for the phrase Allahu Akbar (Arabic: الله أكبر translit: Allāh-u-Akbar), a common Arabic expression, which can be translated as "God is Great,""God is Greater,"*
Allahu Akbar is a shortened form of the Arabic phrase Allahu Akbar min kulli shay, which means "God is greater than everything." Akbar is the elative form of the adjective kabīr.
The phrase is said during each stage of both obligatory prayers, which are supposed to be performed five times a day, and superogatory prayers, which are performed at will. The Muslim call to prayer, or adhan, and to commence the prayer, or iqama, also contains the phrase, which is heard in cities all over the Muslim world.
The actual title of this phrase is takbīr (), while the phrase itself is "Allahu Akbar". In the Islamic world, instead of applause, often someone will yell "takbīr" and the crowd will respond "Allahu Akbar" in chorus.
The phrase "Allāhu Akbar" is written on the center of the flag of Iraq, along the borders of the central white stripe on the flag of Iran, and beneath the Shahadah in the 2004 draft constitution of Afghanistan in white script on the central red background.
Аллах Акбар | Allahu Akbar | Allah akbar | Allahu Akbar | Allahu Akbar (islam) | Allahu Akbar | Allahu Akbar