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The
Saakinah
Rules Part 3
The Oral Clarity
The
previous two tidbit lessons, now located in the tidbit archives mentioned that
there are three rules for the
saakinah:
1. The Ikhfa’ Shafwee (oral hiding), 2. The Idghaam Mithlayn Sagheer (the
merging of the two alike), and 3. The Ith-haar shafawee.
The
first two rules, ikhfa’ and idghaam were already discussed, and this lesson
will explain the ith-haar rule. The
linguistic definition of ith-haar (as a review) is: clear, obvious Its
applied tajweed definition: Pronouncing
every letter from its articulation point without a ghunnah on the clear
letter. Its
letters: 26 letters, the rest of the Arabic letters after excluding the
letters of ikhfa’ shafawee and idghaam of the meem saakinah.
As stated in the lesson of ikhfa’ shafawee, the letter that causes
the ikhfa’ of the
saakinah
is the
, and in the
idghaam mithlayn of the
saakinah,
we learned that the letter causing this idghaam is another
. If any
other letter follows a
saakinah,
the meem is then is pronounced clearly. This
can be in one word, or between two words. Examples:
Within
two words:
NOTE:
There needs to be special care taken that the
of
the
is
complete when a
or
a
follows it. This
care is needed in that the reader should be careful to close his lips
completely and say the
saakinah
clearly with no partial opening of the lips.
The possibility of saying the
saakinah
with an partial opening of the lips before these two letters is due to the
proximity of the articulation point of the
to
the
and
, as they all use the
lips for articulation. TEST YOUR UNDERSTANDING OF THIS SECTION 1.
What are the three possible rules of the
saakinah? 2.
What letter(s) cause which rule? 3.
How is the ikhfa’ of the
saakinah
done in tajweed? 4.
Can there be an idghaam of a
saakinah
within one word? If yes, give an
example, if no, state why. 5.
When is it necessary to make extra certain we are pronouncing the
saakinah
clearly?
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