Research Questions
Lexical Analysis
The term دَحَاهَا is exclusively a verb — a Form I past tense verb from the root د-ح-و. Classical lexicons (Lisān al-ʿArab, al-Muʿjam al-Wasīṭ) define the root meaning as: to spread out, to flatten, to extend across a surface. The action is about preparation for habitation — not a description of geometry.
The root د-ح-و appears in classical Arabic in descriptions of spreading a mat, laying out food, or preparing a flat surface. Ibn Manẓūr records: دحا الشيء يدحوه دحواً: بسطه — "he spread a thing, he spread it out." The core sense is always functional: making something spread and flat for use.
The 'Egg-Shaped' Claim
The popular concordist claim that daḥā means "egg-shaped" arises from noting that دَحِيَّة (daḥiyya) in some Arabic dialects can refer to an ostrich egg or a round thing. The argument: "daḥā shares root letters with daḥiyya, therefore daḥāhā means 'He made it egg-shaped.'"
This is a false etymology. The two words are derived differently. Daḥā (to spread/flatten) and daḥiyya (a rounded thing) do not share a productive root relationship in the classical lexicons. More importantly, daḥā in classical Arabic usage consistently means to spread/flatten — the opposite connotation to a rounded shape. The action of spreading a surface flat and the claim that the result is rounded are in direct tension.
Classical Tafsīr
"Allāh spread the earth out and made it level." Al-Ṭabarī consistently reads daḥāhā as spreading out and preparing the earth for habitation — not as a description of its shape. He connects it to the verses about the earth being made a bed and a resting place.
Jāmiʿ al-Bayān, al-Ṭabarī
"To flatten, spread, and make it suitable for habitation." Al-Qurṭubī notes that the verse's context — following the statement about the raising of the heavens and the darkening of the night — is about the sequential ordering of creation for life, not geometry.
Al-Jāmiʿ li-Aḥkām al-Qurʾān, al-Qurṭubī
"He brought forth its water and its pasture and caused its mountains to be firmly set." Ibn Kathīr's commentary on daḥāhā focuses entirely on the emergence of life-sustaining features from the earth — no reference to shape whatsoever.
Tafsīr al-Qurʾān al-ʿAẓīm, Ibn Kathīr
Morphological Analysis
| Arabic | Transliteration | Form | Analysis |
|---|---|---|---|
| دَحَاهَا | Daḥāhā | Form I past tense verb. Root: د-ح-و | Subject: implicit هو (He/God). Object pronoun ها = the earth. Meaning: He spread it out, He prepared it. Exclusively a verb — never a shape descriptor. |
| بَعْدَ ذَلِكَ | Baʿda dhālika | Temporal adverb + demonstrative | 'After that' — places the spreading of the earth after the raising of the heavens in the verse sequence. |
Concluding Remarks
Conclusion
daḥā cannot accurately be translated as 'egg-shaped.' This popular concordist claim does not survive linguistic scrutiny. The root means to spread, flatten, or extend — describing function (making the earth habitable) not geometry. The verse is about preparation for life, not a description of planetary morphology. No classical scholar interpreted it as describing a shape.