7.
Two hamzahs meeting in two words
If
two hamzahs meet between two words, i.e. the first hamzah is the last letter
of the first word and the second hamzah is the first letter of the second
word, there are different ways of reading the words depending on the vowels
of the two different hamzahs.
A.
Two hamzahs with agreeing vowels
If
the two hamzahs have the same exact vowel, as in:
,
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then Warsh has two allowable ways of reading them:
1. Reading with
of
the second hamzah and reads the first hamzah clearly (with
).
2. Reading with
of the second
hamzah a medd letter and a complete medd (
)
of six vowel counts if the letter following is saakin, and two vowel counts
(
)if
a voweled letter is after the second hamzah.
B.
Two hamzahs with different vowels
If
the two hamzahs have different vowels, then there are read as follows:
If
the first hamzah has a
and the second kasrah or a dhammah, the second hamzah is read with
. Examples are:
.
If the first hamzah has a dhammah or a kasrah and the
second hamzah has a
,
then the second hamzah is read with
, meaning it changes
into a the letter that goes with the vowel on the first hamzah. This
means
it changes into a
with an accompanying
in this first
example:
and it
changes into a
with an accompanying
in the following example:
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If
the first hamzah has a dhammah and the second has a kasrah, then there are
two allowed ways of reading, either with
of the second or
. An example
of this is found in the following:
.
Both ways are allowed. If reading with
in this case, the
second hamzah changes into a
with an accompanying
.
End
of lesson on
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