Wednesday 5 February 2020

Tajweed Letters are main in Quran recitation


The tajweed letters which are shrouded in rules three and four are the exemption to this standard.

These letters are:  laam raa yaa noon meem waa baa

At the point when one of the left letters follows early afternoon qalqalah letters saakinah or tanween, ikhfaa must be finished. This is the point at which the early afternoon saakinah or tanween is covered up in the nose. Here, the mouth is to be formed in a manner with the end goal that it is "readied" for the following letter.



For instance, on the off chance that the following letter is a taa with a dhammah, at that point the mouth can say this by transforming it into a little "o" shape, and the tongue places itself in the perfect spot inside the mouth. This can happen across two words or be contained in one. Ikhfaa must be sounded for two tallies, i.e., the time it takes to state the words, "one-two."

Coming up next is rule two of four for the Noon Al-Saakinah/Tanween. We as a whole perceive the youngsters' down, stow away, and look for. Here, the Noon Al-Saakinah must be covered up [i.e., not articulated clearly].

What is the Meaning of Tajweed - Rule Two Ikhfaa — Al-sitr (where the Noon/Tanween is no articulated, i.e., is covered up). The primary guideline set six letters that follow the early afternoon al-saakinah. All things considered, it must be checked unmistakably of the rest of the letters in the Arabic letter set, the subsequent guideline, ikhfa letters apply.

Letters are currently where the Hukum Tajwid words are joined without the Tanween. A few understudies [and I know all in all a few] experience difficulty, in the first place, attempting to consolidate two words without the "nn" sound in the middle. They wind up "inclining toward" the laam or raa and saying them as if there is a shaddah on these two letters. Be that as it may, there isn't.

In any case, here yourself may fight that there is. Take a gander at the model above. There is a shaddah on the laam in the two occasions for the words likulli and lumazah. This shaddah isn't there for shaddah purposes. It has been put there as a sign to the peruser that the Tanween (or Noon Saakinah) isn't to be articulated by any means, not even through the nasal section.

You don't have to peruse all these idgham letters. It is anyway prescribed that you get familiar with the six ith-haar, and seven special cases, letters thus when perusing, do a speedy verify whether the letter isn't one of the six ith-haar letters or the exemption letters above, at that point do ikhfaa. This requires a long time to get acknowledged too, and soon you'll overlook you even need to do a check since you disguise it.

In addition, it'd be almost difficult to attempt to draw out a "nn" sound from your nasal section when needing to shape your mouth for a"h" sound for haa, or an "a" sound for alif.

No comments:

Post a Comment