Namaz ka tarika is a very useful app to learn how to perform Salah / Salat
This android app is a complete guide for namaz to let the Muslim user and the newly converted know how to offer prayers five times a day. Prayers in includes:
☆ Istikhara prayers
☆ Funeral prayer
☆ Jumma prayer
☆ Eid prayer
☆ Salattasbeeh
This app contains complete guide of Muslims Namaz (salah) in Urdu. You can also call this app "Namaz Ka Tariqa (tareeqa)".
Aasan Namaz Guide in Urdu app also contains 40 Masnoon Dua's which is very helpful for kids and elders. This app contains following topics:
1. Eman ka bayan
2. Taharat ka bayan
3. Wuzu / Wudu ka tareeqa
4. Ghusal ka tareeqa
5. Tayamum ka tareeqa
6. Namaz ka bayan
7. Namaz e Juma
8. Namam ki niyat
9. Azan / Adan
10. Takbir ya aqamat
11. Azkar e namaz
12. Namaz parhne ka tareeqa
13. Mard aur aurat ki namaz ka farq
14. Namaz e witr parhne ka tareeqa
15. Namaz ke faraiz, wajbaat, sunan & makroohaat
16. Sajda sahoo
17. Namaz qasar
18. Eid / Eidain ka bayan
19. Sajdah talawat
20. Taraweeh ka bayan
21. Namaz e janaza / janazah
22. 40 masnoon dua'in
Salah (Arabic: ٱلصَّلَاة aṣ-ṣalāh, Arabic: ٱلصَّلَوَات aṣ-ṣalawāt, meaning "prayer" or "invocation") also known as Namaz (from Persian: نماز) in non-Arab Muslim countries, is the second of the Five Pillars in the Islamic faith, and an obligatory religious duty for every Muslim. It is a physical, mental, and spiritual act of worship that is observed five times every day at prescribed times. While facing towards the Kaaba in Mecca (Makkah), the holy city of Muslims, one stands, bows, prostrates oneself, and concludes with sitting on the ground. During each posture one reads certain verses (ayah / ayat), phrases, and prayers. Ritual purity is a precondition.
Salat consists of the repetition of a unit called a rakʿah, a sequence of prescribed actions and words. The number of rakaʿahs varies according to the time of day.
Etymology
Ṣalāh ([sˤɑˈlɑː] صَلَاة) is an Arabic word that means to pray or bless. It also means "contact," "communication," or "connection".
English usage
The word salah is used by English-speakers only to refer to the formal obligatory prayers of Islam. The English word "prayer" may not be adequate to translate salaah, as "prayer" could translate several different forms of Muslim worship, each with a different Arabic name, such as duʿāʾ (reverent supplication; Arabic: دُعَاء) and dhikr / zikar / ziker.
Namaz
In non-Arab Muslim countries the most widespread term is the Persian word namāz (نماز). It is used by speakers of the Indo-Iranian languages (e.g., Persian, Kurdish, Bengali, Urdu, Balochi, Hindi), as well as by speakers of Turkish, Azerbaijani, Russian, Chinese, Bosnian and Albanian. In the North Caucasus, the term is lamaz (ламаз) in Chechen, chak (чак) in Lak and kak in Avar (как). In Malaysia and Indonesia, the term solat is used, as well as a local term sembahyang (meaning "communication", from the words sembah - worship, and hyang - god or deity).
Salat in the Quran
The noun ṣalāh (صلاة) is used 82 times in the Qur'an (Quraan, Kuran, Koran), with about 15 other derivatives of its triliteral root. Words connected to salaat (such as mosque / masjid, wudu / wuzu / wudhu, dhikr, etc.) are used in approximately one-sixth of Qur'anic verses. "Surely my prayer, and my sacrifice and my life and my death are (all) for Allah", and "I am Allah, there is no god but I, therefore serve Me and keep up prayer for My remembrance". are both examples of this.
Exegesis of the Qur'an can give four dimensions of salah.