Abu Ahmad ibn Adi al-Jurjani: He has authentic hadiths according to the people of Kufa, and he is consistent, and I hope there is nothing wrong with him
Abu Bakr ibn Ayash: I only abandoned narrating from him because of his bad religious sect
Abu Hatim al-Razi: A narrator of authentic hadiths
Abu Hatim ibn Hibban al-Busti: Mentioned him among the trustworthy narrators
Abu Dawud al-Sijistani: Rejected, we do not write down his hadiths
Abu Sa'id ibn Yunus al-Masri: We used to pass by Fathr while he was rejected, and we would not write from him
Abu Nu'aym al-Isfahani: He raised his status and declared him trustworthy, and said: He was firm in hadith, and once: He was not weak in my opinion
Abu Nu'aym al-Fadl ibn Dukin: Declared him trustworthy, and said: Firm in hadith
Ahmad ibn Hanbal: Trustworthy, narrator of authentic hadiths, and once: Narrates many hadiths, exaggerates in Shiism
Ahmad ibn Shu'ayb al-Nasa'i: Trustworthy, retentive, knowledgeable, and once: There is nothing wrong with him
Ahmad ibn Salih al-Jili: Trustworthy, narrator of good hadiths, with a little Shiism
Ibrahim ibn Ya'qub al-Jawzajani: An extremist, not trustworthy
Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani: Truthful, accused of Shiism
al-Daraqutni: An extremist, and al-Bukhari did not use him as a source
Zakaria ibn Yahya al-Saji: Truthful, trustworthy, but not precise
Muhammad ibn Sa'd كاتب الواقدي: Trustworthy, but some people consider him weak
Muhammad ibn Abdullah ibn Numayr: Retentive, knowledgeable
Authors of Tahrir Taqrib al-Tahdhib: Trustworthy, and al-Bukhari narrated from him while paired with others
Yahya ibn Sa'id al-Qattan: He considered him trustworthy, he was pleased with him and spoke well of him
Yahya ibn Ma'in: Trustworthy
Ya'qub ibn Sufyan al-Faswi: Truthful