Maḥmà «d ibn ÿAlë al-SarÃÂë was a fourteenth-century CE scholar, known from one of the main surviving works composed in KhwÃÂrazm Turkish, namely ().
Nahjatü l-FarÃÂdës is known in Turkish today as NehcüâÂÂl-Ferâdîs or Nehcü'l-Feradis, and has also been known as FezâilüâÂÂl-MuâÂÂcizât. It appears to have been composed in 1358 and is similar in both language and content to the more widely attested Qiá¹£aá¹£-i Rabghà «zë by NÃÂá¹£ir al-Dën Rabghà «zë. The text contains four sections, each divided into ten chapters. The first section describes the life of Muḥammad; the second gives information about founding figures of Islam, including four caliphs and FÃÂá¹Âima; the thirds discusses good deeds; and the fourth discusses bad deeds. As of 2006, over ten manuscripts were known.