Stopping on the Ends of Words

Words are divided into two categories
pertaining to the ending of the word, in other words, the last letter. The
end of a word can be classified as
(strong),
meaning the last letter is not an alif or a
, or a
.
The second category for the end of a
word is called:
(weak),
meaning the last letter is an alif or a
,
or a
. This is exemplified in:.
.
We will be spending the
next several lessons on the subject of stopping on words with strong endings.
The Stop on a Word With a
Strong Ending
In a word with a strong ending (
),
the last letter of this word can have a sukoon when continuing or stopping,
such as in
, or it can be
voweled and the sukoon is presented
when stopping, as in
.
If the end of the word has a fixed sukoon, the stop can
only be with a sukoon, as the
in
.
If the end of the word was voweled and we are stopping on it with a
presented sukoon, then there are five possible ways of stopping on it.
1.
(the
pure, unmixed sukoon)
2.
(giving
only 1/3 of a vowel count)-to be discussed later
3.
(a
dhammah of the two lips, with no sound)-to be discussed later
4.
(deletion)
5.
(substitution)
We we start by explaining
then
in the next lesson
, insha' Allah,
to avoid confusion later when explaining some possibilities in the pure
sukoon category.
Stopping with
and
What is Allowed With it
The linguistic definition of
:
The request
Its applied tajweed
definition: Weakening of the sound with a vowel until most of its sound
disappears with that weakening. It is also defined as using part of a vowel.
When discussing
below,
please note that we are addressing the vowel on the last letter of a word.
The scholars have determined that the
weakening of the sound with a vowel, or reciting with part of a vowel is
one third when stopping with
. More is removed from the vowel than remains when reciting with
.
The sound is weakened due to the shortening of its time; the close listener
can hear it, even if blind.
Stopping with
can
be on dhammah of conjugated (
) and fixed
dhammahs (
) and can be on the kasrah of
conjugated (
)and fixed kasrahs (
). It does not matter if the letter
stopped on is without a shaddah, or with a shaddah, whether the last letter is
a hamzah or not, or whether it as a tanween or not. If there is a tanween it
must not be
1.
"Maftoohah"; meaning it must not
have a fat-h.
2.
(a
word with a tanween ending with alif maqsoora) , as in
.
The tanween in both of these cases is changed into an alif when stopping.
Again, it is not possible to stop on words ending with a tanween fat-h with
.
cannot
be on a fat-h whether it is conjugated or fixed and it also cannot be on a
presented kasrah or dhammah put on a letter to get rid of the occurrence of
two saakin letters juxtaposed.
Sheikh Ash-Shatabee in his prose:
,
described
in
the following way.
2
|
1. 1
 |
1. And your "rawm" is listening to your
vowel when stopping |
2. With a hidden sound every close one
{can hear} |
The word that we are stopping on using
,
meaning giving the dhammah or kasrah on the last letter 1/3 of its normal
vowel timing is treated as we do when continuing as far as tafkheem and
tarqeeq of the letter
, the counting of
, and the
observance of a qalqalah on the letters of qalqalah. In other words, there
would only be two counts on
, there would be
no qalqalah on the letters of qalqalah, and the tafkheem or tarqeeq of the
would depend on the vowel on the last letter.