Sources of Islamic Law MCQs — Quran Hadith Ijma Qiyas Ijtehad | PPSC FPSC CSS NTS

Sources of Islamic Law MCQs — Quran, Hadith, Ijma, Qiyas & Ijtehad

65 solved Sources of Islamic Law MCQs — Holy Quran statistics, Hadith types and Sihah-e-Sitta, Ijma (consensus), Qiyas (analogy) and Ijtehad. Free quiz + PDF for PPSC, FPSC, NTS, CSS, PMS.

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Sources of Islamic Law — Complete Reference for Competitive Exams

The Sources of Islamic Law (Usul al-Fiqh) is one of the highest-scoring topics in PPSC, FPSC, NTS, CSS, and PMS One Paper Islamiat exams. Expect 5–10 MCQs per paper covering Quran statistics (surahs, ayats, paras, rukus), Hadith classification and major collections (Sihah-e-Sitta), and the principles of Ijma, Qiyas, and Ijtehad. This page covers all five sources in depth with verified facts.

The Five Sources of Islamic Law

#SourceArabic TermBrief Meaning
1stThe Holy QuranAl-QuranPrimary and supreme source; word of Allah
2ndHadith & SunnahAl-Hadith / Al-SunnahSayings, actions & approvals of the Prophet (PBUH)
3rdConsensusIjmaAgreement of Muslim jurists on a legal issue
4thAnalogyQiyasApplying existing ruling to a new analogous case
5thIndependent ReasoningIjtehadScholarly effort to derive law from its sources

Holy Quran — Key Statistics for Exams

Total Surahs: 114  |  Makki Surahs: 86  |  Madni Surahs: 28  |  Paras (Juz): 30  |  Manzils: 7

Rukus: 558  |  Sajdas: 14  |  Revelation period: 23 years (610–632 AD)  |  Language: Arabic

Longest Surah: Al-Baqarah  |  Shortest Surah: Al-Kauthar  |  Surah without Bismillah: At-Taubah  |  Heart of Quran: Surah Yaseen

Notable Quran Facts

CategoryDetail
First Surah revealedSurah Al-Alaq (96) — first 5 verses
First Surah in arrangementSurah Al-Fatihah
Longest ayatAyat 282, Surah Al-Baqarah (the Debt Verse)
Most repeated ayatFa-bi-ayyi ala’i rabbikuma tukadhdhibaan — 32 times (Surah Ar-Rahman)
Only lady named in QuranHazrat Maryam (AS)
Day of week mentioned in QuranFriday (Yawm al-Jumu’ah) — Surah Al-Jumu’ah
Most mentioned ProphetHazrat Musa (AS) — 136 times
Prophets named in Quran25
Compilation advised byHazrat Umer (RA) — advised Abu Bakr (RA)
First Hafiz of QuranHazrat Uthman (RA)
Title Jami-e-QuranHazrat Uthman (RA)
First English translationAlexander Ross (1649)

Sihah-e-Sitta — The Six Authentic Hadith Collections

BookCompilerHadith Count
Sahih BukhariImam Bukhari7,563
Sahih MuslimMuslim bin al-Hajjaj9,200
Sunan Nisaian-Nasai
Sunan Abu DawoodAbu Dawood
Sunan Tirmizial-Tirmidhi
Sunan Ibn MajahIbn Majah

Companion with most narrations: Hazrat Abu Hurairah (RA) — 5,374  |  Al Muwatta: 1,720 Hadith — first work combining Hadith and Fiqh

Musnad Ahmed: 30,000 Hadith  |  First written Hadith collection: Sahifa-e-Sadiqa (by Abdullah bin Amr RA)  |  Arbaeen: book of 40 Hadith

Sources of Islamic Law — Frequently Asked Questions

The five sources of Islamic law (Usul al-Fiqh) are: (1) The Holy Quran — primary and supreme source, (2) Hadith and Sunnah — sayings and actions of the Prophet (PBUH), (3) Ijma — consensus of Muslim jurists, (4) Qiyas — analogical deduction, (5) Ijtehad — independent scholarly reasoning.
The Holy Quran contains 114 Surahs. Of these, 86 are Makki (revealed in Makkah before Hijra) and 28 are Madni (revealed in Madinah after Hijra). The Quran also has 30 Paras, 7 Manzils, 558 Rukus, and 14 Sajdas.
Hadith (derived from tahdis, meaning ‘to inform’) refers to the reported news or information of the Prophet’s words. Sunnah (meaning ‘well-trodden path’) refers more broadly to the Prophet’s established way of life. Together, Hadith/Sunnah covers the Prophet’s sayings (Qawliyyah), actions (Filliyyah), and tacit approvals (Taqriyyah).
Sihah-e-Sitta (the Six Authentic Books) are the six most authoritative Hadith collections: Sahih Bukhari (7,563 Hadith), Sahih Muslim (9,200 Hadith), Sunan Nisai, Sunan Abu Dawood, Sunan Tirmizi, and Sunan Ibn Majah.
Qiyas (literally: to measure, compare and weigh up) is the fourth source of Islamic law — analogical deduction. Its four essential elements are: (1) Asl — the original case, (2) Hukm al-Asl — the legal ruling on the original case, (3) Far — the new case, (4) Illah — the effective cause connecting them. The term Qiyas was introduced by Imam Abu Hanifa.
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