[2547] The great Classical Arabic linguist ʿAbdulqāhir al-Jurjānī, who is one of the most highly regarded all-time figures who specialize in Qur’an stylistics, considers this aya the single-most inimitable aya in the whole Qur’an and the very pinnacle of the grandeur of Qur’anic stylistics (cf. al-Jurjānī, Dalā’il al-‘Iʿjāz, p. 32-33). Different stylists and linguistically inclined exegetes point out the choice of lexis, fluency, the majestic employment of the passive voice, terseness, among other facets of the weaving of this aya (cf. al-Zamakhsharī, Abū Ḥayyān, al-Qāsimī, Ibn ʿĀshūr).
Needless to say, such grandeur of style is both Godly and language-bound and simply cannot be replicated in any other language.