More books:
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5. "نفس الصباح في غريب القرآن وناسخه ومنسوخه" by Abu-Jaafar Ahmad Ibn Abd Al-Samad Ibn Abd Al-Haqq Al-Khazraji (أبو جعفر أحمد بن عبد الصمد بن عبد الحق الخزرجي), died 582 H., published in 1994 by the Ministry of Awqaf and Islamic Affairs in Morocco, edited/verified by Professor Muhammad Izzudeen Al-Me'yar Al-Idrisi. Parts I and II (total 812 pages).
Just now finished that book. It added a whole bunch of abrogation claims (total so far:
361!). Almost all of them are clearly without merit. Most of the book is a summary of what Makki said in his book الإيضاح and what An-Nahhaas said in his book الناسخ والمنسوخ. Al-Khazraji had no opinion on most claims, but he did agree with all claims about the sword verse.
I wouldn't recommend this book except for the student who wants to exhaust all abrogation claims. I was also unnerved by the many typos in the book, even typos in Quranic verses. That is doubly strange from a religious scholarly book since it was commissioned by King Al-Hasan II of Morocco. You'd think it would be better checked before publication.
The main value of the book, IMHO, is the vocabulary section, which is most of the book.