Hi @ammar
wrong fs type, bad option, bad superblock… usually suggests a damaged or unclean volume. Note that Linux tools cannot help with an NTFS filesystem;
Your NTFS volume needs repairing using chkdsk in a Windows environment. If you have a multiboot system (with Windows and Linux), you can simply boot into Windows and run chkdsk from an administrative command prompt. This should repair any damage and that should allow you to access the volume again from Linux.
If you do not have a multiboot system, please read the following link for information on how to recover. It’s a long article, and unfortunately in English, but if you work though it (at your own pace) it should help resolve the issue.
Everything you need is contained within the following article. All that is required from you is to read and understand it. Feel free to return to this thread for any clarification needed, and someone will no doubt help where they can. Please remember, this is a Linux forum, and knowledge of Windows and Microsoft filesystems may be limited among forum members.
Cheers.
Edit:- It seems you have another thread; somewhat shorter.