Mufti
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This article forms part of the seriesIslam |
| Vocabulary of Islam |
| Five Pillars |
| Profession of faith |
| Prayer - Alms |
| Fasting |
| Pilgrimage to Mecca |
| Holy Cities |
| Mecca - Medina |
| Jerusalem |
| Najaf - Karbala - Kufa |
| Events |
| Hijra - Islamic calendar - Eid ul-Fitr |
| Eid ul-Adha - Aashura - Arba'in |
| Buildings |
| Mosque - Minaret |
| Mihrab - Kaaba |
| Islamic architecture |
| Functional Religious Roles |
| Muezzin - Imam - Mullah |
| Ayatollah - Mufti |
| Interpretive Texts & Practices |
| Qur'an - Hadith - Sunnah |
| Fiqh - Fatwa - Sharia |
| Sects |
| Sunni (Schools of thought: Hanafi, Hanbali, Maliki, Shafi'i) |
| Shi'a: Ithna Asharia, Ismailiyah, Zaiddiyah |
| Others: Mu'tazili - Kharijite |
| Movements |
| Sufism |
| Wahhabism - Salafism |
| Non-Mainstream Sects/Movements |
| Ahmadiyyah |
| Related Faiths |
| Druze; Bahá'í Faith |
See also
Mufti also refers to ordinary clothes, especially when worn by one who normally wears, or has long worn, a military or other uniform.