Suñña is the Pāli word for "empty" or "void" (see Shunyata), most frequently found in Buddhist texts.
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.
Sunna also assigns the amount of the alms given to the poor and needy as well as the rituals of fasting and pilgrimage.
Sunna, sometimes comes out with new rules, revealed also from Allah like the illegality of marrying a woman and her aum at the same tinge, so as to keep strong the ties between relatives.
Sunna includes the prophet's sayings and deeds a well as his performance of worships before Muslim Muslims were careful in conceiving every word from the apostle and following it, and to learn from his saying and deeds.
Sunnas paintings, often small and always intensive, bring to mind the recollections that are recorded in flashes on the retina in the everyday life of a metropolis.
But Sunnas paintings are explicitly "unfocused" or "imperfect", bringing to mind a camera shaken at the moment of exposure, a stopped video image, or the mirrors of amusement parks.
Sunnas paintings are a reminder of the fact that a painting always involves a dialogue.