Stopping on the Ends of Words Part 8

Application of the lessons on stopping on the ends of words with a strong
ending
This lesson is a brief explanation of the
application of the previous lessons on stopping on the end of words. This
lesson ends the section on stopping on the ends of words with a strong ending.
We now can apply the different ways of
stopping on one word in recitation.
If we stop on the word
ُ
it can be stopped on in the following ways:
1.
with
one of the three possibilies:
a.
and
as a shared medd
when stopping on four counts (two reasons for the same lengthening);
b. 5 counts as
alone,
if we are lengthening all of the
five counts,
c. 6 counts as
only, and this case can only be if we are lengthening all of
six vowel counts.
.
2.
with
only, the medd
will be only four or five counts.
has
the same rules and counts as when continuing.
3.
with counts and mudood as in number one
(4, 5, and 6, with the same conditions laid out and explained in number one).
If we stop on the word
,
the following are the possible ways of stopping with the three different
schools of thoughts of stopping on the pronoun
:
1.

Stopping with only a pure sukoon and the three ways of
(2,4,6).
2.

Stopping with seven different possibilities:
The pure sukoon and the three different counts
(2,4,
or 6); these are the first three possibilities.
Stopping with
with
the three different counts of
,
these would be the second three possibilities.
Two vowel counts only
stopping with
. We
treat the word stopped on with
as we treat it when continuing; this
would be the seventh possibility.
3.

Stopping with a pure sukoon and three different
counts of
. There
is prohibition of
and
since a
preceded
.