Ulema – מילון אנגלי-אנגלי
Ulama
Ulama (; , singular , "scholar", also spelled
ulema; female is
alimah (singular) and
uluma (plural)), is defined as the "those recognized as scholars or authorities" in the "religious hierarchy" of the Islamic religious sciences. The guardians of legal and religious tradition in Islam. Often they are "Imams of important mosques, judges, teachers in the religious faculties of universities", or the body of Muslim Islamic scholars have been trained in the whole body of Islamic law and in other Islamic disciplines, but may also be used to include the village
mullahs and
imams on the lowest rungs of the ladder of Islamic scholarship.In as much they correspond most closely to the class of the Scribes or Rabbis in Judaism.
ulema
Noun
1. the body of mullahs (Muslim scholars trained in Islam and Islamic law) who are the interpreters of Islam's sciences and doctrines and laws and the chief guarantors of continuity in the spiritual and intellectual history of the Islamic community
(synonym) ulama
(hypernym) body
(member-meronym) Mullah, Mollah, Mulla
ulema
nm.
ulema, mullah, teacher or learned man of the sacred Islamic law, Muslim scholar interpreter of the doctrines of Islam
Ulema
(n.)
A college or corporation in Turkey composed of the hierarchy, namely, the imams, or ministers of religion, the muftis, or doctors of law, and the cadis, or administrators of justice.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter.
About
ulema
(n.) = mullah.
Nota: Doctor o maestro de la ley musulmana.
Ex: Iran's mullahs have approved sex-change operations despite their conservative Muslim and cultural beliefs.