The
Mudood (Lengthenings) Part 7
Lengthening
Caused by Sukoon
The
previous few lessons explained the different lengthenings caused by hamzah.
These lessons are now located in the tidbit archives.
This lesson starts a new subsection in the lengthenings, that of a lengthening
caused by a sukoon. Two types of
lengthenings caused by a presented (or temporary) sukoon will be explained in
this lesson. The next type of
lengthening caused by permanent or fixed sukoon will be explained insha’
Allah over several future lessons.
The
Lengthening with a Presented Sukoon

Its
definition:
This medd occurs when there is only one letter after one of the three medd
letters, it is the last letter of the word, this last letter has any vowel on
it, and we are stopping on the last letter with a presented sukoon.
Just
a reminder: The three medd letters are, the alif with a fat-h
before it, the
saakinah
with a kasrah before it, and the
saakinah
with a dhammah before it.
It is
called “presented sukoon” because the sukoon is presented on the letter
when stopping on it, otherwise the letter is read with its vowel.
Note: If the last letter is a hamzah there are then two medd in one,
and
.
This will be explained, insha’ Allah in the
or
stronger of two causes section,
soon.
Its rule: It is
permitted to lengthen this medd two, or four, or six counts when stopping on
it. When not stopping on it, the
last letter is read with a vowel and the medd letter is lengthened two vowel
counts, the normal measure for
,or natural lengthening.
Examples:
Click
here to listen to this medd with 2 counts
Click
here to listen to this medd with 6 counts
The
Soft Lengthening
Its
Definition:
It occurs when a “leen” letter
(
or
with a
sukoon, preceded by a letter with a fathah) is followed by one letter only in
the same word and we stop on the last letter in the word with a presented
sukoon.
Its rule:
It is allowed to lengthen this medd 2-4-or 6 vowel counts when stopping
on the word. When continuing reading (not stopping on this word), there is a
slight lengthening of the “leen” letter, referred by the scholars as
"
"
which is
less than two vowel counts, but longer than one vowel count.
Examples:
Click
here to listen to this aayah
The
difference between
and
|
|
|
Its
letters
|
Two
letters: only the
and
|
The
three medd letters: alif and
and
|
Types
of letters
|
“Leen” letters:
and
saakinah
with a fat-h before them
|
Medd letters:
Alif saakinah with a fat-h before it
saakinah with a kasrah before it
saakinah with a dhammah before it
|
Its
state when continuing
|
Shorter
than the natural medd, but longer than one vowel count
|
The
medd letters are lengthened two vowel counts, the natural measure of
the letter
|
The
presented sukoon lengthening
(
) is
stronger than the
.
If the weaker of the two (
) precedes the stronger (
)
in a phrase, the stronger should then be the same length or longer in length
than than the weaker. An example of this in the following aayah:
When
we stop at the word
, we stop with the soft
lengthening (
).
This “leen” lengthening can be lengthened 2, 4, or 6 counts.
Three words later, if we stop on the last word of the aayah
, we stop with a presented
sukoon lengthening that must be equal to the selected length of the “leen”
medd or stronger. If for example
we stop on the word
with
two vowel counts, we can stop on the word
with
our choice of 2, 4, or 6 counts, since all are equal to or greater than the
two vowel counts we used for the “leen” lengthening.
If however, we stop on the “leen” lengthening on the word
with
four vowel counts, we can only stop on the word
with
the presented sukoon lengthening with either four or six vowel counts.
When
the stronger medd which is the presented sukoon lengthening
(
) precedes the weaker soft lengthening
(
), the
weaker medd then must be equal or less in length than the stronger one. An example of this is in the aayah:
If
we stop on the word
there
is a presented sukoon lengthening, since there is an alif before the last
letter, and we put a presented sukoon on the last letter when stopping.
We can stop on the presented sukoon lengthening (
) with 2, 4, or 6
vowel counts. A second place to
stop in this aayah is on the word
.
There is a
saakinah
preceded by a fat-h making a “leen” letter and this is followed by only
one letter. When stopping on this
word, we put a presented sukoon on the last letter of the word, in this case
, and now have a soft
lengthening (
).
The “leen” lengthening must be equal or less than the presented
sukoon lengthening. If we stop on
the word
with
four vowel counts, we can only stop on the word
with
two or four vowel counts. If we
stop on the word
with
two vowel counts, we can only stop on the word
with
two counts. Lastly, if we choose to stop on the word
with
six vowel counts, we then can stop on the word
with
two, four, or six vowel counts, since all are equal or less to the six vowel
counts we used for the presented sukoon lengthening on the word
.