What Is Tajweed - (PDFDrive)
What Is Tajweed - (PDFDrive)
with
     Tajweed
 This material is taken from the website
         readwithtajweed.com
t me ben
The Etiquette of proper recitation of Qur'an
Allah ( ) only accepts deeds that are correct and sincere. A sincere deed is
                 one done for Allah (      ) alone and a correct deed is one done according to
                 the rules of Sharia' (Islamic law). Therefore a reader should follow certain
                 principles when reciting. The most important rules are as follows:
                    1. The reader to be free of that which breaks a minor ritual ablution
                       (wudu) and to be free of that which breaks a major ritual ablution
                       (ghusl). (The reader should be in a state of ritual purity).
2. The place (in which he reads) should be legally pure (tahar)
                    3. The reader should begin with ta'wwuth          ّﻮذ
                                                                        َﻌ
                                                                         ﺗ
                                                                         َ    (seeking refuge in Allah
from Shaitaan), be it at the beginning of the surah or the middle. This
is according to Allah's ( ) words:
                           'So when you recite the Quran, seek refuge in Allah from
                           Satan, the expelled.' 
(Surah Nahl ; 16:98)
4. The reader should say ﴾ ﴿ at the
beginning of each surah, except surah Tauba.
5. The reader should read with spiritual openness (khushu) out of
respect for the Qur'an. Allah ( ) says:
                           'If We had sent down this Qur'an upon a mountain, you would
                           have seen it humbled and breaking down from fear of Allah...'
(Surah AlHashr ; 59:21)
                    6. The reader should read with thoughtfulness, reflecting about the
                       meaning of what one reads
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      'Then do they not reflect on the Qur'an...'
(Surah Muhammad ; 47:24)
7. The reader should beautify his/her voice during reading  without
pretence. Bara' ibn Azb said: 'the Messenger of Allah ( ) said:
"Beautify the Qur'an with your voices" (1).
And from Abu Harayra (RA):
      "He is not of us, he who doesn't recite the Qur'an in a
      melodious voice." (2)
      The purpose of beautifying one's voice is to facilitate the
      understanding of the meaning and to move anyone that might hear it
      and to appreciate the beauty of the style and words. Reciting it
      melodiously to entertain (as a song would) is haraam (forbidden). A
      truly beautiful and melodious recital is that which depends on correct
      pronunciation and perfect application of the tajweed rules.
   8. It is required of anyone who hears the Qur'an recited whether from a
      reader (Qari) or a radio/television/computer or other source, to listen
and think about the verses. As Allah ( ) has said:
      'so when the Qur'an is read, then listen to it and pay attention
      that you may receive mercy"
(Surah AlA'raf ; 7:204)
   9. The reader should read the Qur'an using tajweed and recite it in the
      best way.
 10. The reader should hold back the urge to yawn during reading until it is
     gone.
11. The reader should attest to the truth of Allah's words and witness to
the call and testament of the Prophet ( ).
 12. The reader should avoid interrupting a recitation for the purpose of
     talking to people, except when necessary.
and to seek refuge with Allah ( ) at verses of warning.
(1) Sunan Abi Dawood, v.2. Book of Prayer; Chapter: Istihbab at'Tarteel fee
al'Qira'a. Hadeeth 1468 alMaktaba alAsriya Sayda, Beirut
(2) Sahih Bukhari, v. 9, The Book of Tajweed, p.188, printing Dar Ihya al
Turath alArabi Cairo, in the year 1378h. 1958 CE
Ref: Useful Tips from the Science of Tajweed, Al'Hajjah
Hayat Ali Al Hussaini, translated by Dr Da'ad al Hussaini.
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What is Tajweed?
Introduction
TARTEEL
The teaching used in this website is Hafs 'An 'Aasim by the way of
Shaatibiyyah              ()
For a detailed insight into the different
qiraat, here are some recommended links
http://www.abouttajweed.com/
http://islamthought.wordpress.com/2008/12/14/qirat-of-the-quran/
When Islam was being spread (and it was done so at a very quick pace and also
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into non-Arab speaking countries) not everyone's tongue was accustomed to the
Arabic letters and sounds. Thus, when reciting the Qur'an, much error and
distortion occurred and the Muslim scholars feared (the perpetration of) that
error and distortion.
It was at this point that some of them recorded the rules and foundations that
regulate the correct pronunciation of Qur'an, and they named this the Science
of Tajweed.
The rules were not made up by these Scholars. In fact, all they did was closely
observe the perfect readers who read as they were taught by the Prophet () and
wrote down for later generations the rules of recitation of the earlier generations.
From the outset, Tajweed was a Science that cannot be learnt only from a book
and will always retain this inherent quality.
The most important part of Tajweed is learning about correct positions of the
organs of speech and the manner of articulation. The Qur'an can lose its
meaning if the letters are not pronounced correctly.
Tajweed is not intended to be about just learning rules and committing them to
memory, but rather the correct application of those rules while reciting the
Qur'an.
When 'tajweed' is observed, the reading will flow smoothly and eloquently. The
reader will also be sure he is following the holy Prophet's () example by reciting
the Qur'an just as the Prophet () did and just as it was revealed to him -
InshaAllah. Failure to adhere to those rules may result in an unacceptable
manner of reading, altering the entire meaning of the words and making one
guilty of the unintentional utterance of the words of disbelief (kufr). Incorrect
recital of the Qur'an constitutes LAHN, which may deprive the reader of any
reward in the Hereafter, and Allah () Knows Best.
Definitions
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Tajweed technically - the correct recitation of the Qur'an that is achieved by
giving each letter its due (using the organs of speech) through:
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Introduction
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
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NOTE :
There are 6 letters that do not allow any letter to join with them from the left.
These letters are :
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Letters
The correct recitation of the Qur'an that is achieved by giving each letter its due
(using the organs of speech) through:
There are 16 letters of the Arabic alphabet which can be likened to various
letters of the English alphabet :
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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.
aa (114:2)
ى aa
aa (114:3)
(93:1)
ea/ee (114:5)
oo (112:3)
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MISCELLANEOUS
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
not as 'tab' ( )
(1 ) ب
Example
(113:4)
(7:157)
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Being able to recite the letters correctly is the foundation of tajw eed, and this is achieved by know ing where the
sound originates. This can then help in practising the pronunciation of the letters correctly.
How ever, Makhaarij must be used hand in hand w ith sifa (characteristics of the letter) in order to pronounce the
letter completely and correctly, as the Makhraj provides the origin and the Sifa provides extra information required to
pronounce the letter properly.
E.g
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Al Jawf
This is all the empty space that occurs from the chest, up the throat and out through the mouth.
It is the makhraj of the long vowels sounds (also known as the elongated letters) and is elongated for 2 counts:
                                                                                                        (Surah
 Letter       Description                 Extract from Verse
                                                                                                        : Verse)
                                                                                                        (1:5)
                 upon which
              there is a
 Alif
              (sukoon)and is
                                                                                                        (1:6)
              preceded by a
                   (fathah)
                                                                                                        (1:7)
                 upon which
 Waw          there is a
              (sukoon)and is                                                                            (2:3)
              preceded by a
                  (dammah)
                                                                                                        (1:4)
                  upon which
 Yaa          there is a
              (sukoon)and is                                                                            (1:7)
              preceded by a
                   (kasrah)
(11:49)
NB in the Qur'an, the sukoon        may not alw ays be shown on the letter, but as a general rule, whenever a letter does not carry a vow el, it means
that it has a sukoon, even if it is not actually present.
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Al Halq
In the throat there are 3 makhaarij and each one has 2 letters:
Remember to practise pronouncing letters by placing a sukoon in front of the letter as shown.
Al Lisaan
Many letters come from the mouth: that is the tongue and its connection w ith the different areas of the
teeth and mouth
There are 4 main makhaarij that can be divided into 10 sub-categories:
1. The furthest back part of the tongue - this has 2 sub categories:
1. The furthest back part of the tongue - this has 2 sub categories:
i. is pronounced by the extreme back of the tongue touching the upper palate
       ii.     The makhraj is slightly in front of the . This time the tongue should not
             meet the upper palate other than what is necessary to pronounce the letter. So the sound still
             comes from the back of the tongue, except this time the tongue is not elevated.(    )
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         ,     and
     These are all pronounced when the middle part of the tongue comes in contact w ith what lies opposite to it from the
     roof of the mouth
i. The rear side of the tongue touches the upper back teeth (upper molars) in
                either one of 3 w ays : from the right side, from the left side OR from both sides.
                The left side of the tongue is most commonly used as it is easier than the right,
           i.            These letters pretty much come from the same place - the difference betw een them is slight but
                important. The tip of the tongue meets the base of the top front teeth (place where the gums and teeth meet):
Is most forw ard and exact at the poin t where the gums and teeth meet ( )
Is behind the a little. The back of the tongu e should also meet the upper palate as it is a thick
letter ( )
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                ii.
The back of the tongue elevates to meet the the upper palate as it is
a thick letter ( )
For this letter, the teeth should be pressed together that the air
iii. the tip of the tongue meets the edge of the front upper teeth:
incisor teeth ( )
                                    is articulated by putting pressure on the edge of the roots of the upper incisor teeth. The
                                back of the tongue elevates to meet the upper palate as it is a thick letter (        )
Ash Shafatain
This is simply the lips, and has 2 sub-categories:
The edge of the upper front teeth meet the in side low er lip (the w et part) ( )
This is not the of elongation from the jaw f. This letter w i ll carry a harakaat.
                       Pronounced by pressing the lips together firmly and quickly. Similar to the letter      but there is
                       more of a bounce as you press the lips then quickly release them again. (        )
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Al Khayshoom
The nasal cavity is located at the furthest point of the nose (the bridge of the nose). It is the opening that connects the mouth w ith the
nose. This connection is where the ghunnah exits. The ghunnah is a sound that is resonated and the tongue is not used to produce it .
The duration of the ghunnah sound is for 2 counts.
Rules of / tanween
          Rules of
Example
                                                                                     Extract from
 Letter        Extract from Verse                Surah :Verse                                               Surah:Verse
                                                                                     Verse
(78:1) (78:5)
(78:16) (78:17)
Quick Tip..
Ensure that the follow ing letters are differentiated and pronounced correctly.
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But why do we need sifaat when we already know the origin of the letter
(makhraj)?
Makhaarij only provides information as to where the sound of the letter comes
from, whereas sifaat provides extra information with regards to the
characteristics of the letter in order to produce the correct sound.
Opposite
Hems Jahr
(whispered) (voiced)
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Shiddah Rakhaawa
(explosive) (softness)
INBETWEEN Tawassut
Itbaaq Infitaah
(closed) (opened)
Ithlaaq Ismaat
Hems (whispered)
    The quality of hems is found in the following 10 letters which are called
    mahmuusah ﻣﻬُﻣﻮَﺳﺔ
Examples of Hems
The whispering is also present when the letter has a harakaat (other than
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       sukoon), but it is not as strong (it is more of a natural hems whereas
       when it carries a sukoon you have to emphasize the hems more)
       However, the letters      and       ONLY have hems when they carry a
       sukoon (as they carry another characteristic, shiddah)
E.g ) ( ُسِسَس
       This is achieved by stopping the air flow at the makhraj of the letter
       The quality of jahr are found in the remaining letters which are called
       majhuurah ()َﻣْﺠُﻬﻮَرة
Shiddah (Explosive/Strength)
Definition: strong stoppage of the sound upon pronunciation of the letter when
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it carries a SAKOON
       The quality of tawassut is found in the following 5 letters which are called
       mutawassitah ()ُﻣﺘََﻮﱠِﺳﻄﺔ
Itbaaq (closed)
Definition: contact between the back of the tongue and the upper palate of the
mouth.
 E.g     ص
         َ ص
           ِ ص
             ُ ()                    E.g   ُطِطَط   ()
Definition: separation of the tongue from the upper palate, thus pronouncing in
an opened manner.
       for some of these letters, the tongue may be raised, but actual contact
       will not occur (refer to ista'ala)
Ithlaaq
Definition: the speed of which the letters are pronounced because of the ease
of the makhraj.
       The area of pronunciation of these letters, that is, the edge of the tongue
       or the edge of the mouth namely the lips, can be considered as factors
       contributing to the smooth and easy manner of pronunciation
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Ismaat (opposite to ithlaaq)
Definition: the elevation of the back of the tongue to the back roof of the mouth
upon pronunciation of the letter, no matter what harakaat.
       During pronunciation, the back of the tongue is raised towards the upper
       palate. This will produce a thick, round sound
       These are known as full mouth / thick letters and are thus pronounced
       with a full mouth
       The quality of ist'ala is found in the following seven letters which are
       called musta'liyah ()ُﻣْﺴَﺘْﻌِﻠَﯿﺔ
       For ista'ala the tongue is just RAISED, whereas for itbaaq it actually
       makes CONTACT
       The elevation is less when these letters carry a
       During pronunciation, the tongue is not raised, but kept downward in its
       normal position. This downward position will cause a flat sound
       These are also known as empty-mouth / thin letters and are thus
       pronounced with an empty mouth
       The quality of istifaal is found in the remaining letters which are called
       mustafilah ()ُﻣْﺴﺘَِﻔﻠَﺔ
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SIFAAT WITHOUT OPPOSITES
       The letter always has this sound no matter what harakaat, though the
       safeer becomes stronger when it carries a SAKOON
       The quality of safeer is found in the following 3 letters which are called
       safeerah (ﺻِﻔﯿﺮة
                      َ)
E.g (111:1)
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       The qalqalah is necessary for these letters because they have the
       attributes of jahr (stoppage of the flow of breath) and shiddah (stoppage
       of the flow of sound), so without qalqalah, there would be no sound!
 1. Sughrah (minor)
 2. Kubrah (major)
Sughrah (minor)
The qalqalah letter will appear either in the middle or end of a word, but the
reader will continue the recitation and will not stop on it
E.g (108:3)
Kubrah (major)
If the qalaqalah letter appears at the end of a word and the reader stops on it
(for whatever reason), the qalqalah sound is at its clearest / strongest
E.g (109:3)
       The quality of leen is found in the following 2 letters when they carry a
       sakoon and the letter before it carries a fathah. They are called layyinah
       ()ﻟﯿﱠِﻨﺔ
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Definition: to pronounce a letter with the filling of the mouth with air allowing the
sound to spread greatly over the mouth.
elongated manner. When pronounced, the sound of the letter will remain from
the beginning of the makhraj till the end (the extension of the sound covers the
entire sound of the tongue)
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                                                  ALL
Hems            فحثه شخص سكت                      REMAINING              Jahr
                                                  LETTERS
                                                  ALL
Itbaaq        طظصض                                REMAINING              Infitaah
                                                  LETTERS
Contact between back of
                                                    Separation of tongue from
tongue and upper palate
                                                    upper palate(empty mouth)
(full mouth)
                                                  ALL
Ithlaaq       فر من لب                            REMAINING              Ismaat
                                                  LETTERS
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                                 Whistle/   الصفير
                                  صزس
Elongated/ االستطالة
                                                          Bouncing/     القلقلة
      ض                                                        قطب جد
ر رل
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تثدذرزسشصضطظلن
ءب ج ح خ ع غ ف ق ك م ه و ي
ال the
ال + ﺑﺎ ب = ا ﻟ ﺒﺎ ب
The 1st letter of the word that follows  الwould determine the pronunciation
depending on whether it is a sun or moon letter
EXAMPLE 1
Requirements :
       Presence of ال
       followed by a sun letter
Effect:
       the letter alif of the  الis assimilated with the sun letter
       the letter laam of the  الis ignored
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      the sun letter carries a shaddah
َﺷﻤﺲ Sun
ال The
If you want to join the preceding word onto the  الword, then you ignore the ال
completely
EXAMPLE 2
Requirements :
      Presence ofال
      followed by a sun letter
      and preceded by another word
Effect :
      the last letter of this word joins straight onto the sun letter
      so the  الis ignored completely
(95:1)
(3:195)
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(1:3)
(51:1)
(2:143)
(2:277)
(2:22)
(25:29)
(112:2)
(9:91)
(2:260)
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(4:75)
(2:274)
(75:2)
EXAMPLE 1
Requirements :
      Presence of ال
      followed by a moon letter
Effect :
َﻗﻤﺮ Moon
ال The
If you want to join the preceding word onto the  الword, you only ignore the letter
alif of the ال
EXAMPLE 2
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Requirements :
    Presence of ال
    followed by a moon letter
    and preceded by another word
Effect :
    the last letter of this word joins straight onto the letter laam of the alif
    therefore ignoring the letter alif only
(1:7)
The letter joins straight onto the and only the alif is ignored
(12:6)
(2:127)
(7:40)
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(69:2)
(52:35)
(10:88)
(10:90)
(2:191)
(16:107)
(18:9)
(1:7)
(56:1)
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(56:55)
(15:99)
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There are two types of hamzah that appear in the Qur'an. Both are read and
treated differently
Pronounced Skipped
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If the reader starts reading        If the reader connects the word which
from the word starting with         begins with hamza tul wasl with the letter
hamza tul wasl, then it             preceding it, this letter is directly connected
should be pronounced.               to the letter following hamza tul wasl.
     Hamza tul wasl will be assigned with a dammah, if the 3rd letter of the
     verb carries a dammah.
3rd Letter Hamza tul Wasl Extract from Verse Surah : Verse
     Exceptional cases. The following words are the only verbs in the Qur'an
     where the 3rd letter carries a dammah but a kasrah is assigned to the
     hamza tul wasl (if he starts reading with it) :
ٱ ﻣ ﻀ ﻮا
ٱ ﻣ ﺸ ﻮا
ٱﺑﻨ ﻮا
ٱ ﻗ ﻀ ﻮا
ٱْﺋُﺘﻮا
     Hamza tul wasl will be assigned with a kasrah, if the 3rd letter of the verb
     carries a fathah or kasrah.
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The letter Hamzah appears in many different forms in the Arabic language, but
pronounced the same
Note that the Alif and Hamzah are 2 different letters. The letter Alif in the Arabic
language is always free from any type of harakah. If an Alif seems to have a
harakah, then in actual fact it is a Hamzah
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E.g (79:27)
E.g (21:62)
1. Where the letters Hamzah and Aeyn      appear together, ensure that
   both are differentiated clearly
E.g (114:1)
E.g (99:6)
E.g (21.81)
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   َ ٱلﱠ ِذ
   ين                 ۡٱب ُن
                                                         ٱد ُخلوا               ٱھ ِدنا
  Hamza tul wasl       Hamza tul wasl                  Hamza tul wasl         Hamza tul wasl
    will be               will be                        will be                 will be
   assigned              assigned                       assigned                assigned
     with                  with                           with                    with
  FATTAH                KASRAH                         DAMMAH                  KASRAH
EXCEPTIO!
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Tafkheem
To produce this sound the back of the tongue rises in the mouth. This elevation
of the tongue produces a thick or heavy sound.
There are 5 categories for when the produces a thick, round sound:
E.g (91:13)
(91:14)
E.g (91:6)
(102:2)
E.g (78:21)
E.g (89:28)
E.g (103:1)
(103:2)
Tarqeeq
To produce this sound, the back of the tongue lowers so that a flat sound
is produced.
E.g (79:36)
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(80:37)
E.g (79:17)
E.g (100:11)
(85:11)
E.g (89:5)
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Rule Example
                                                           (110:2)
                                                                     ﴾                   ﴿
    When it carries
1                  a       fattah
                 or a       dammah                         (110:1)
                                                                     ﴾               ﴿
                                                           (108:2)
                                                                         ﴾       ﴿
    When it carries a      sukoon and is preceded by
2                    a     fattah
                 or a       dammah                         (102:2)
                                                                     ﴾                   ﴿
5
    ي
    ‘   ’ and carries a    , and the letter before that
    carries either
                                                           (103:3)
                                                                     ﴾           ﴿
                  a       fattah
                or a       dammah
                                                           (77:33)
                                                                     ﴾       ﴿
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TARQEEQ
Rule Example
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Like the letter 'ra', the letter 'laam' can also be pronounced as a thick / full mouth
(tafkheem) or thin (tarqeeq) letter.
Tafkheem
To produce this sound, the tongue elevates in the mouth producing a thick/
heavy sound.
2 categories:
Examples
fathah (112:1)
Dammah (110:1)
Dammah (2:185)
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Dammah (2:189)
CAUTION!
If the letter preceding the name 'Allah'  ﷲis a thin one, be careful not to
pronounce it thick as this can easily be done due to the letter laam being
pronounced thick
E.g (2:7)
Tarqeeq
To produce this sound, the back of the tongue lowers so that a flat sound
is produced
3 categories:
E.g (85:8)
(82:19)
E.g (3:144)
E.g (111:1)
(111:2)
(108:2)
Miscellaneous
When the letter preceding the name 'Allah' is a      , the harakaat of the
letter preceding the   will determine if the in Allah's name is pronounced
thick or thin
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The letter  لin the word ﷲ                    The letter  لin the
is read heavily whenever                      word  ﷲis read lightly
we start with  ﷲor when it                    whenever it is
is preceded by dammah or                      preceded by kasrah.
fattah.
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The rules of are called shafawee (  ) َﺷﻔﻮيas the makhraj of the is the lips
(shafatain = pair of lips)
Idghaam Shafawee
Example
(104:8)
(106:4)
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Ikhfaa Shafawee
Another opinion in which this particular ghunnah is recited, is that the lips should
remain slightly open, just enough as to allow a sheet of paper to pass through
Example
(105:4)
(88:22)
Ith-haar Shafawee
Example
(98:8)
(98:8)
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SUMMARY
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Idghaam                                        Ith’haar
Shafawee           Ikhfaa                      Shafawee
                   Shafawee
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A noon saakin ( ) and tanween are considered the same because the sound of
a tanween sounds just like a noon saakin. Because of this similarity, the two
take the same rules
Example
Ith'haar
To pronounce the letters from their makhraj, clearly and distinctly, without any
changes
    Presence of         or tanween
    followed by any letter of the throat ء ه ح خ ع غ
Examples
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(108:2)
(79:40)
(79:33)
(7:43)
(80:18)
(80:10)
TANWEEN
(101:11)
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(99:7)
(102:8)
(95:6)
(113:3)
(97:5)
Idghaam
The 6 letters of Idghaam are collected in the following word :
)ي ر م ل و ن( َﯾْﺮَﻣُﻠْﻮن
 1. Without ghunnah
 2. With ghunnah
It is called the complete idghaam and its determining letters are and
Examples
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TANWEEN
(79:26) (104:1)
(101:7)
(81:25)
It is called the incomplete idghaam, and its four determining letters are collected
in the word
)ي م و ن( َﯾُﻣْﻮن
     Presence of           or tanween
     followed by any of the following : ي م و ن
     ghunnah is pronounced, 2 counts
Examples
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(99:7) (90:5)
(13:11) (13:34)
(111:5) (86:6)
(92:19) (14:11)
TANWEEN
(89:23) (78:40)
(111:1) (106:4)
(111:5) (105:4)
(14:44) (2:58)
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NOTE
The rule of idghaam will be applied on a provided it is the last letter of the word.
If it appears in the middle of a word, then there will be no idghaam
There are only 4 such words in the entire Qur'an to which this rule applies
NB :
Iqlaab
The changing of a sound from its original makhraj, in this case changing the or
tanween into a
(98:4)
(104:4)
Ikhfaa
The concealment of the sound
    Presence of        or tanween
    followed by any of the 15 remaining letters of the alphabet
    These are
(this ghunnah is slight, not too deep, unlike the idghaam and or)
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When an ikhfaa occurs, the makhraj of the or tanween is ignored and instead it
is pronounced at or near the makhraj of the letter of ikhfaa. Therefore, the
reader should make his tongue distant from the makhraj of the and close to the
makhraj of the letter of ikhfaa during ghunnah, ready to pronounce the letter of
Ikhfaa.
TANWEEN
(78:40) (92:14)
(101:6) (78:14)
(80:2) (89:20)
(91:10) (89:21)
(78:40) (90:14)
(78:14) (18:74)
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(79:35) (18:22)
(78:39) (78:12)
(94:7) (89:22)
(88:6) (30:54)
(79:37) (34:15)
(78:40) (4:57)
(78:18) (90:14)
(94:3) (78:40)
(81:28) (79:12)
NOTE
Example
Tafkheem (107:5)
(thick)
Tafkheem (98:3)
(thick)
Tarqeeq (2:9)
(thin)
Tarqeeq (2:10)
(thin)
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Idghaam
 www.readwithtajweed.com /tajweed_Idghaam.htm
Idghaam ()ِإدﻏﺎم
Outside the rules of or Tanween, Idghaam can also occur in the Qur'an due to
certain circumstances as will be mentioned now in this section
    As the 2 letters are the same, they therefore share the same makhraj and
    sifaat
    So the first letter is blended into the second, hence the second letter
    takes a shaddah (          )
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    This applies whether it is in one or two words (whether both letters fall
    into the same word, or one letter falls at the end of the first word, and the
    second letter falls into the start of the second word)
Examples
(24:33)
(2:16)
Examples
(90:14)
Requirement :
    This occurs when 2 letters have the same makhaarij, but different sifaat
    The 1st letter is saakina, the 2nd is mutaharrik
Effect :
Further Notes :
1. The makhraj of
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(2:256)
Example
(10:89)
Example
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(3:122)
Incomplete Idghaam
Example
(5:28)
(4:64)
Example
(7:176)
1. The makhraj of
Complete Idghaam
Example
(11:42)
This idghaam occurs when 2 letters have a makhraj that are close together
(whereas the previous 2 idghaam shared the same makhaarij)
1. The makhraj of
Complete Idghaam
Example
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(18:22)
Incomplete Idghaam
Example
(77:20)
Complete Idghaam
Example
(77:20)
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(79:8)
(79:15)
(79:15)
ALL THE OTHER MADD ARE BUILT ON THIS BASIC / NATURAL MADD
RULE, DEPENDING ON WHAT COMES AFTER IT
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Mutasil Waajib
Requirements :
Effect :
Further Notes :
Examples
(110:1)
(13:25)
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(89:23)
Munfasil Jaa'iz
Requirements :
Effect :
Examples
(108:1)
(66:6)
(106:4)
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Exercise - Identify the Munfasil Jaa'iz Madd, then click on 'answer'
NB :
For non-arabic speaking people, it may not always be clear as to whether the
hamzah is part of the first word, or the second
E.g.
                                     (2:21)
The right hand side is how it will appear in the Qur'an, the left hand side is the
make-up of this.
It seems that the hamzah is part of the first word, when actually it is part of the
second. Therefore, as a general rule, it may be safer for such people who are
not 100% sure to remain consistent with their counts for both mutasil and
munfasil - i.e choose the same length of elongation for both, either the 4 or 5
counts.
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This occurs when there is a sukoon placed on a letter by the reader due to
stopping in the recitation (whether in the middle or end of an ayah)
Requirement :
Effect :
    Elongate 2, 4 or 6 counts
    Preferred 4 or 6
Examples
(89:11)
(95:6)
(95:7)
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Madd Leen
This occurs when a word contains a dipthong, and the reader chooses to stop
on it (whether in the middle or end of an ayah), therefore placing a sukoon () on
the last letter
Requirement :
    Madd letter
    Followed by a sukoon (and the reader has chosen to stop on it)
Effect :
    Elongate 2, 4 or 6 counts
    Preferred is 4
Examples
(106:1)
(106:4)
Madd Laazim
Requirement :
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    Followed by sukoon         or shaddah
Effect :
Requirement :
Examples
(1:7)
(80:33)
Example
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(10:51)
       This occurs in some of the letters that are present at the beginning of
       certain surahs
       These surahs begin with some independent letters from the Arabic
       alphabet, which are attached to each other like ordinary words. The
       individual letters have to be pronounced by reading out their respective
       names.
E.g.
Requirement :
       These letters are the ones that are spelt with 3 letters and their middle
       letters are either madd or leen letters
Effect :
       Elongate 6 counts
       These letters are:
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68
26
50 2
38 19
19 26
Further Notes :
The letter that has a dipthong (leen) is the spelling of the word ()
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         However, according to the way of Tayyaba, it would be only 2
         counts
Heavy : when there is a letter of Idghaam after one of the 3 lettered words
EXAMPLE 1
(Surah 2)
Pronounce Ghunnah
EXAMPLE 2
(Surah 26)
Pronounce Gunnah
Light : when there is NO letter of idghaam after one of the 3 lettered words, but
the letter is still elongated for 6 counts
    The letters that are spelt with 2 letters (occur in the opening verses of
    some surahs) produce the natural prolongation of 2 counts
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    These letters are:
20
19
10
40
19
    One letter that doesn't take a madd at all is the alif, and this is due to
    there being no madd letters in the spelling of it
(Surah 2)
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Madd Sila
This occurs when the possessive pronoun (shown as when attached to the
previous letter), which denotes the 3rd person singular masculine, falls between
2 letters that carry a vowel.
MAJOR
Requirements :
Effect :
    Elongate 2, 4 or 5 counts
    Preferred 4 or 5
Further Notes :
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    Those who have no or little knowledge of the Arabic language may not
    understand the usage of the possessive pronoun        which basically
    refers to the third person singular masculine. A tiny   /    will be
    present to indicate this rule
The presence of a squiggly line indicates that it is preferred that the reader
elongates it for more than 2 counts
Examples
Verse) Verse)
(104:3)
(90:7)
(83:12) (12:54)
MINOR
Requirements :
Effect :
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Further Notes :
Examples
Verse)
(92:18)
(92:19)
(100:4) (100:5)
There are 4 instances in the Qur'an where the rules of MADD SILA will not
apply.
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  ﴾﴿
﴾﴿
﴾﴿
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Madd Badal
This Madd follows the same principal as a normal madd; the difference being
that the madd letter is a substitute for what was originally a hamzah.
Requirements :
Effect :
Elongate 2 counts
Further Notes :
The original form of these words was but a long vowel replaced the second
hamzah for ease in pronunciation.
Examples
 ِإْإﻣﺎن- (3:193)
أَْأدم - (2:31)
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Madd 'Ewad
An alif which carries 2 fathahs ,is called fathahtain, and is written as ًا
Requirements :
Effect :
Further Notes :
E.g
Examples
Verse) Verse)
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(100:1)
(100:2)
Madd Al-Farq
(10:59)
(27:59)
(6:143)
(6:144)
(10:51)
(10:90)
Madd Tamkeen
Requirements :
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Effect :
Examples
(4:86)
(2:61)
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Definition
'To stop on the last letter of a complete w ord, which is disconnected from the w ord after it, and giving the last
letter a sukoon and by breaking the breath, then taking a new breath to read the next w ord.'
(Jami-ul-w aqaf)
) on the last letter of a word before a stop, that letter is made into a sukoon
E.g
                                                                  will be
 (112:1)                                                          read
                                                                  as
E.g
W ill be read 'al faa faa' and not 'al faa fan'
E.g
E.g
                                                              will be
 (14:24)
                                                              read as
                                                              will be
 (7:156)
                                                              read as
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          If the last letter of a word contains a 'tashdeed' ( ), the mashaddad letter is changed into a saakin letter, BUT making
          sure the tashdeed is still read i.e. by spending more time on the letter
(refer to Shaddah )
                                                                 will be read
(111:1)
                                                                 as
(78:39)
NB remember to tighten / emphasize the saakin letter so to differentiate from an ordinary saakin letter
           following word. To read the last letter as sukoon ( ) and not to renew the breath is incorrect.
           The opposite of waqf is known as 'wasl'. Wasl means to join verses / sentences without stopping.
           Different letters / symbols are placed to indicate compulsory stops, recommended stops, better to read on, and other such
           commands:
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NB remember to tighten / emphasize the saakin letter so to differentiate from an ordinary saakin letter
        Different letters / symbols are placed to indicate compulsory stops, recommended stops, better to
        read on, and other such commands:
ۢ The compulsory stop  we have to stop, wasl is prohibited
ۙ The prohibited stop  we can not stop
        ۖ                The good stop  it is better to continue, but stopping is
                         allowed
ۗ The sufficient stop  it is better to stop
ۚ The quality stop  it is the same to stop or continue
        ۜ                The subtle stop/pause  stop vocal sound for a brief time,
                         without taking breath
 Necessary stop  denotes end of sentence
Stopping at either of the points but not at both
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Finishing Touches
 www.readwithtajweed.com /tajweed_finishing.htm
At-ta'awwuth ()َﺗَﻌّﻮذ
    You must always begin a recitation with the ta'awwuth
     It can be said quietly or aloud when one is reading alone, but if reading
    in a group, the first will say it aloud and then the other readers should say
    it quietly before their recitation
Basmala ()َﺑْﺴَﻤﻠَﻪ
'In the Name of Allah, Most Beneficient, Most
Merciful'
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COMPLETE SEPARATION
Not joining the end of the previous surah with the basmala of the next surah and
not joining the basmala with the words of that surah. The reader would not stop
at each of these points
PARTIAL SEPARATION
Stopping at the end of the surah, but then joining the basmala with the
beginning of the next surah
The opposite of this: joining the end of the surah with the basmala of the next
surah and then stopping, and then beginning the next surah by itself, is
FORBIDDEN
COMPLETE CONNECTION
Connecting everything together, the end of the previous surah with the basmala
and also the basmala with the beginning of the following surah
NB For Surah Taubah, you either stop at the end of the previous surah or join
onto the first ayah of Surah Taubah. There is no partial connection option as
there is no basmala
     This applies only when the alif is the last letter of the word
     The following uses of Alif are affirmed upon stopping and omitted upon a
     continuous reading :
1. Alif in أَﻧْﺎ
     This means 'I' in the English language. The alif is always omitted due to
     not stressing the individual but focussing on Allah the Most High, and not
     ones self or nafs
For the following 6 Alifs, the Alif is again omitted when continuing to recite, but
when stopping it is elongated 2 counts. This applies whether stopping in the
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middle or end of an ayah.
﴾﴿
﴾﴿
﴾﴿
﴾﴿
﴾﴿
﴾﴿
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    In both the verses below, the reader should read the letter        . The
    letter       should NOT be read even though it is written there
       1. ﴾﴿
       2. ﴾﴿
﴾﴿
﴾﴿
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1 (7:206)
2 (13:15)
3 (16:49)
4 (17:107)
5 (19:58)
6 (22:18)
7 (25:60)
8 (27:25)
9 (32:15)
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10 (38:24)
11 (41:37)
12 (53:62)
13 (84:21)
14 (96:19)
LAHN
To recite the Qur'an whilst being guilty of Lahney Jalee is haraam and to do so
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intentionally can plunge into the act of a major in, so much that it can lead one to
the brink of kufr. Whereas to commit Lahney Khafee is makrooh (undesirable,
not commendable).
Lahney Jalee
 1. Not to pronounce the letters from their correct origins and their respective
    qualities
E.g
 To recite   ﺻَﺪَق
                 َ         as      ﺻَﺪَك
                                       َ
E.g
1. To make omissions
E.g
E.g
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E.g
Lahney Khafee
Reading the Qur'an whilst being guilty of Lahney Khafee is makrooh. It does not
necessarily alter the meaning of the Qur'an. However, it does deprive the Holy
Qur'an of its real elegance and beauty.
 1. To overlook the rules of the thick / full mouth (tafkheem) letters and the
    thin / empty mouth (tarqeeq) letters.
 2. Not to adhere to the rules of ith'har, idghaam and ikhfaa in their
    respective places whilst reciting the Qur'an.
 3. Not to prolong a letter when a Madd is present
(soure: Basic Tajweed for Primary Madris. Shaykh Hasib Ahmed Ibn Yusuf
Mayet)
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Complete connection
Partial separation
                   Basmala
                                      Surah
  Surah
                                      Al-
  An-
                                      Falaq
  Naas
Complete separation
                   Basmala
  Surah                               Surah
  An-                                 Al-
  Naas                                Falaq
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لحن
                                                             خفي
                       جلي
• Means that the error is clear and                 Means hidden error. For instance,
  obvious like the sun. This error                  this refers to errors, which may
  can be caught both by the                         occur in Ikhfaa إخفاء, Iqlaab
  listener and reader. It is sinful to              إقالب, Idghaam  إدغامetc. This
  commit such an error.                             error is not very obvious and may
 For example:                                       be caught only by those who have
                                                    knowledge in Tajweed.
The reader changes the actual
 vowel (  )حركةin reading, such
 as reading fattah as dammah
 or vice versa;
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