Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Tajweed

Tajweed 


Tajweed ( ﺗﺠﻮﻳﺪ ) is an Arabic word meaning correct pronunciation during recitation. It is a set of rules which dictate how the Qur'an should be read. It comes from the root word 'ja-wa-da' meaning to make well, make better or improve.

Letters and Vowels


Introduction


The Arabic Alphabet

The table shows the letters of the alphabet in their possible states, depending on whether they are isolated or together with other letters in a word. If it is in a word, its form is affected by its position within the word, whether initial, middle or final. This causes a letter to have 4 possible forms, 1 when alone, and 3 when in a word: initial, middle and final.
MERGED
ISOLATED
Final Middle Initial
ـأ  ـأ أ أ
ـبـ بـ ب
ـتـ تـ ت
ـث ـثـ ث
ـج ـجـ جـ ج
ـح ـحـ حـ ح
ـخ ـخـ خـ خ
ـد ـد د د 
ـذ ـذ ذ ذ
ـر ـر ر ر 
ـز ـز ز ز  
ـس ـسـ سـ س
ـش ـشـ شـ ش 
ـص ـصـ صـ ص 
ـض ـضـ ضـ ض 
ـط طـ ط
ـظ ـظـ ظـ ظ
ـع ـعـ عـ ع
ـغ ـغـ غـ غ
ـف ـفـ فـ ف  
ـق ـقـ قـ ق  
ـك ـكـ كـ ك 
ـل ـلـ لـ ل  
ـم ـمـ مـ  م
ـن ـنـ نـ ن 
ـه ـهـ هـ  ہ 
ـو ـو و  و 
ي  ـيـ  يـ ي

NOTE :
There are 6 letters that do not allow any letter to join with them from the left. These letters are :
 و ز ر ذ د أ


Letters

The correct recitation of the Qur'an that is achieved by giving each letter its due (using the organs of speech) through:
  • The vowel movements - Harakaat
  • Prescribed point of exit (where the sound of each letter should come from) - Makhraj
  • The manner of articulation (the characteristics of the letters and recitation) - Sifa

There are 16 letters of the Arabic alphabet which can be likened to various letters of the English alphabet :

Arabic Letter Closest English Equivalent Arabic Word Example Surah : Verse English word example Audio
ب B 78:12 Bravo
ت T 79:6 Tango
ج J 78:9 Juliet
د D 79:30 Delta
ز Z 79:13 Zulu
س S 78:4 Sierra
ش Sh 78:39 Shoe
ف F 78:3 Foxtrot
ك K 78:4 Kilo
ل L 78:10 Leema
م M 78:3 Mike
ن N 78:9 November
ه H 78:3 Hotel
و W 78:16 Water
ء A 78:14 Alpha
ي Y 78:18 Yankee
The following letters do not have an English equivalent. These are :
  ‌‌  ‌  ‌ ‌
ث خ ذ ر ص ض
ط ظ ع ‌غ ق    

Vowels (Harakaat)

In the English language we use letters for vowels, whereas in the Arabic language we use symbols, or a combination of symbols and letters. Also, the Arabic language has short and long vowels, whereas the English language has just the one type.
SHORT VOWELS (1 count)

Symbol Name Also Known As Sound Example of Sound Example of Arabic letter  
Fattah Zabar a cat
Kasrah Zay i / e me
Dammah Paysh u who
LONG VOWELS (2 counts)

Symbol/ Letter Other Sound Extract from Verse Surah :Verse  
ٰ ىٰ aaaa
aa

(114:2)
(114:3)
(93:1)
  ea/ee (114:5)
  oo (112:3)
MISCELLANEOUS

Symbol/ Letter Name Description Extract from Verse Surah :Verse  
/ Sukoon / Saakin Indicates the absence of a vowel. Joins 2 letters together (112:4)
Shaddah Indicates a doubled letter (joins 2 letters and also tightens the pronunciation to illustrate 2 of the same letter), to the point that you pause on it for a fraction of a secondE.g
(113:5)
SHADDAH ()
The letter on which the symbol appears is read by doubling it. (e.g R would become RR) So the first letter (R) is read as if there would be a sukoon (stop) on the it and the second (R) with a harakat (vowel)
E.g
'Tabba' ( ) should be read as 'tab-ba' (2 ب 's),
not as 'tab' ( )
(1 ب )

In its original form it can be dissected as Caution - when there are a couple or a few tashdeeds together in one, two or three words, then utmost care should be taken to ensure that all the tashdeeds are recited correctly. It is a common mistake to be neglectful of these collective tashdeeds
Example
Extract from Verse Surah :Verse  
(113:4)
(7:157)

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