Abu Bakr al-Bazzar: Trustworthy
Abu Hatim al-Razi: Trustworthy
Abu Hatim ibn Hibban al-Busti: A pious and devout jurist, following the school of the people of the Hijaz, branching out from their principles, memorizing from them
Abu Dawud al-Sijistani: Trustworthy
Abu Zur'a al-Razi: Trustworthy
Ahmad ibn Shu'ayb al-Nasa'i: Trustworthy
Ahmad ibn Salih al-Misri: Trustworthy, man of the Sunnah
Ashhab ibn Abd al-Aziz al-'Amiri: More knowledgeable than Malik
Ibn Hajar al-'Asqalani: Trustworthy jurist and author
Al-Khatib al-Baghdadi: He was a learned jurist, and once, he was truthful and trustworthy
Al-Dhahabi: He was a respected Imam
Abd al-Rahman ibn Yusuf ibn Kharash: Truthful
Abd Allah ibn Wahb al-Misri: I performed Hajj in the year 148 and a trustworthy person proclaimed: 'No one gives religious verdicts except Malik ibn Anas and Abd al-Aziz ibn Abi Salama'
Muhammad ibn Isma'il al-Bukhari: Trustworthy
Muhammad ibn Sa'd, the scribe of al-Waqidi: Trustworthy, narrated many hadiths, and the people of Iraq narrated more from him than the people of Medina
Musa ibn Harun al-Hammal: Reliable and accurate
Hisham ibn Abd al-Malik al-Tayalisi: He was fit for the position of minister
Yahya ibn Ma'in: Truthful and trustworthy, and once: He is less than Layth and Ibrahim ibn Sa'd, he was only a man who spoke about predestination and theological discourse, then he left it and turned to the Sunnah, and it was not his habit to narrate hadith. When he arrived in Baghdad, they wrote from him