In Arabic:
Thus, Sharh Hanafiyah literally means "A Hanafi Commentary." But no famous book bears that exact title. Likely candidates include:
| Actual Book Title | Author | What it comments on | |---|---|---| | Sharh Ma'ani al-Athar | Imam Al-Tahawi (Hanafi) | Hadith & legal reasoning | | Sharh al-Hidayah | Al-Marghinani (or later: Al-Babarti, Al-Siyalkuti) | Al-Hidayah (core Hanafi fiqh) | | Sharh al-Wiqayah | Ubayd Allah al-Mahbubi (and others) | Al-Wiqayah (fiqh for judges) | | Sharh Mukhtasar al-Quduri | Al-Ghunjār (or later: Al-Quduri himself) | Mukhtasar al-Quduri (early primer) | sharh hanafiyah page 89 hot
Given that the phrase includes the word "hot," it likely refers to a matter of strong disagreement – perhaps on ritual purity, marriage, or penal law.
Madhy is thin, white-yellowish fluid that exits during arousal without orgasm. Page 89 states: "Madhy is impure (najis). It nullifies wudu but does not require ghusl." The "hot" nuance: Even if a large amount of madhy exits due to extensive foreplay, no ghusl is needed—only washing the body and clothes, and renewing wudu. In Arabic:
Classical jurists used direct, unashamed language. Page 89 typically includes sentences like:
"If a person touches his own or his spouse's genitals and semen is emitted with pleasure, ghusl becomes obligatory. If only madhy exits, wudu is sufficient." Thus, Sharh Hanafiyah literally means "A Hanafi Commentary
Modern readers, unaccustomed to fiqh's clinical frankness, find it "racy." However, from a juridical lens, it is purely technical.