Tajwid
In the context of the recitation of the Quran, tajwīd (Arabic: تجويد tajwīd, IPA: [tadʒˈwiːd], 'elocution') is a set of rules for the correct pronunciation of the letters with all their qualities and applying the various traditional methods of recitation (Qira'at). In Arabic, the term tajwīd is derived from the verb جود (jawada), from the triliteral root ج-و-د (j-w-d), meaning enhancement or to make something excellent. Technically, it means giving every letter its right in reciting the Qur'an.
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Tajwīd or the science of tajwīd in Islam is a science by which you know the pronunciation of Qur’anic words as pronounced by the Prophet Muhammad bin Abdullah. The beginning of the science of tajwīd was when the Islamic state expanded in the third century of Hijra, where error and melody increased in the Qur’an due to the entry of many non-Arabs to Islam. So the scholars of the Qur’an began to write the rules and rules of intonation. It is said that the first person to collect the science of tajwīd in his book Kitāb al-Qirā'āt was Imām Abu ʻUbaid al-Qāsim bin Salām (774 - 838 CE) in the third century of Hijra.[1]
History
The history of Quranic recitation is tied to the history of qira'at, as each reciter had their own set of tajwid rules, with much overlap between them.
Abu Ubaid al-Qasim bin Salam (774 - 838 CE) was the first to develop a recorded science for tajwid, giving the rules of tajwid names and putting it into writing in his book called al-Qiraat. He wrote about 25 reciters, including the 7 mutawatir reciters.[2] He made the reality, transmitted through reciters of every generation, a science with defined rules, terms, and enunciation.[3][4]
Abu Bakr Ibn Mujāhid (859 - 936 CE) wrote a book called Kitab al-Sab’ fil-qirā’āt "The Seven of the Recitations." He is the first to limit the number of recitations to the seven known.
Imam Al-Shatibi (1320 - 1388 CE) wrote a poem outlining the two most famous ways passed down from each of seven strong imams, known as ash-Shatibiyyah. In it, he documented the rules of recitation of Naafi’, Ibn Katheer, Abu ‘Amr, Ibn ‘Aamir, ‘Aasim, al-Kisaa’i, and Hamzah. It is 1173 lines long and a major reference for the seven qira’aat.[5]
Ibn al-Jazari (1350 - 1429 CE) wrote two large poems about Qira'at and tajwid. One was Durrat Al-Maa'nia (Arabic: الدرة المعنية) , in the readings of three major reciters, added to the seven in the Shatibiyyah, making it ten. The other is Tayyibat An-Nashr (Arabic: طيبة النشر), which is 1014 lines on the ten major reciters in great detail, of which he also wrote a commentary.
Religious Obligation
Knowledge of the actual tajwīd rules is a community duty (farḍ al-kifāya), meaning that at least one person in every community must know it. There is a difference of opinion on the ruling for individuals. Dr. Shadee el-Masry states that it is an individual obligation (farḍ al-'ayn) on every Muslim to recite the opening chapter of the Qur'an (al-fatiha) with correct tajwīd, though they do not need to know the terms and definitions of the rules themselves.[6] Sheikh Zakariyya al-Ansari stated that it is sinful to recite in a way that changes the meaning or changes the grammar. If it does not change these two things, then it is not sinful, even if it is a clear error.[7]
Qur'an and Hadith on Tajwīd
The central Quranic verse about tajwid is verse 73:4: "...and recite the Qur'an with measured recitation." The word tartīl (Arabic: ترتيل), as used in this verse, is often also used in hadith in conjunction with its command. It means to articulate slowly, carefully, and precisely.[8]
Abu Dawud's hadith collection has a chapter heading titled "Recommendation of (reciting with) tartīl in the Qur'an." It begins with the narration: "The Messenger of Allah peace and blessings be upon him said: One who was devoted to the Qur'an will be told to recite, ascend and recite carefully (Arabic: رتل rattil) as he recited carefully when he was in the world, for he will reach his abode when he comes to the last verse he recites (Sunan Abi Dawud 1464)." This narration describes the importance of the manner of recitation and its positive effects in the afterlife. The next narration describes the importance of prolongation (Arabic: مدا maddā): "Qatadah said: I asked Anas about the recitation of the Qur'an by the Prophet, peace and blessings be upon him. He said: He used to express all the long accents clearly (Arabic: كَانَ يَمُدُّ مَدًّا) (Sunan Abi Dawud 1465)." This narration also shows that even the companions of the prophet used some terms which are still used today in tajwīd rules.
Arabic alphabet and grammar
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The Arabic alphabet has 28 basic letters, plus hamzah (ء).
← read from right to left ←
ا ب ت ث ج ح خ
د ذ ر ز
س ش ص ض ط ظ
ع غ ف ق
ك ل م ن ه و ء ي
The Arabic definite article is ال al- (i.e. the letter alif followed by lām). The lām in al- is pronounced if the letter after it is قمرية "qamarīyah" ("lunar"), but if the letter after it is شمسية "shamsīyah" ("solar"), the lām after it becomes part of the following letter (is assimilated). "Solar" and "lunar" became descriptions for these instances as the words for "the moon" and "the sun" (al-qamar and ash-shams, respectively) are examples of this rule.
- Lunar letters
← read from right to left ←
ا ب ج ح خ ع غ ف ق ك م هـ و ي
- Solar letters
← read from right to left ←
ت ث د ذ ر ز س ش ص ض ط ظ ل ن
Emission points
There are 17 emission points (makhārij al-ḥurūf) of the letters, located in various regions of the throat, tongue, lips, nose, and the mouth as a whole for the prolonged (madd or mudd) letters.
The manner of articulation (ṣifat al-ḥurūf) refers to the different attributes of the letters. Some of the characteristics have opposites, while some are individual. An example of a characteristic would be the fricative consonant sound called ṣafīr, which is an attribute of air escaping from a tube.
Thickness and thinness
The emphatic consonants خ ص ض ط ظ غ ق, known as mufakhkham letters, are pronounced with a "heavy accent" (tafkhīm). This is done by either pharyngealization /ˤ/, i.e. pronounced while squeezing one's voicebox, or by velarization /ˠ/. The remaining letters – the muraqqaq – have a "light accent" (tarqīq) as they are pronounced normally, without pharyngealization (except ع, which is often considered a pharyngeal sound).
ر (rāʼ ) is heavy when accompanied by a fatḥah or ḍammah and light when accompanied by a kasrah. If its vowel sound is cancelled, such as by a sukūn or the end of a sentence, then it is light when the first preceding voweled letter (without a sukun) has a kasrah. It is heavy if the first preceding voweled letter is accompanied by a fatḥah or ḍammah. For example, the ر at the end of the first word of the Sūrat "al-ʻAṣr" is heavy because the ع (ʻayn) has a fatḥah:
وَالْعَصْرٍ
ل (lām) is only heavy in the word Allāh. If, however, the preceding vowel is a kasrah, then the ل in Allāh is light, such as in the Bismillah:
بِسْمِ اللّٰه
Prolongation
Prolongation refers to the number of morae (beats of time) that are pronounced when a voweled letter (fatḥah, ḍammah, kasrah) is followed by a madd letter (alif, yāʼ or wāw). The number of morae then becomes two. If these are at the end of the sentence, such as in all the verses in "al-Fatiha", then the number of morae can be more than two, but must be consistent from verse to verse. Additionally, if there is a maddah sign over the madd letter, it is held for four or five morae when followed by a hamzah (ء) and six morae when followed by a shaddah.[9] For example, the end of the last verse in "al-Fatiha" has a six-mora maddah due to the shaddah on the ل (lām).
صِرَٰطَ ٱلَّذِينَ أَنْعَمْتَ عَلَيْهِمْ غَيْرِ ٱلمَغْضُوبِ عَلَيْهِمْ وَلاَ ٱلضَّآلِّين
Sākinah (vowelless) letters
Nūn sākinah and tanwīn
Nūn sākinah (= syllabe-closing /n/)) refers to instances where the letter nūn is accompanied by a sukun sign, some cases of which involve tanwīn's nun with a sukun. There are then four ways it should be pronounced, depending on which letter immediately follows:
Iẓhār
- iẓhār ("clarity"): the nūn sound is pronounced clearly without additional modifications when followed by "letters of the throat" (ء ه ع ح غ خ). Consider the nūn with a sukun pronounced regularly in the beginning of the last verse in "al-Fatiha":
صِرَٰطَ ٱلَّذِينَ أَنْعَمْتَ
Iqlāb
- iqlāb ("conversion"): the nūn sound is converted to a /m/ sound with imperfect closure if it is followed by a ب.[10] Additionally, it is pronounced with ghunnah, i.e. nasalization which can be held for two morae. Consider the nūn sound on the tanwīn on the letter jīm that is pronounced as a mīm instead in the chapter Al-Hajj:
وَأَنْبَتَتْ مِنْ كُلِّ زَوْجٍ بَهِيجٍ
Idghām
- idghām ("merging"): the nūn sound fully assimilates to the following sound if the latter is و م ي ل ر or another ن . With ر and ل, there is no nasalization (ghunnah). The last 4 letters also receive ghunnah in the process (ي and و with ghunnah are pronounced as [ȷ̃:] and [w̃:]).[10] Idghām only applies between two words and not in the middle of a word. Consider for example the nūn that is not pronounced in the fifth line (the Shahada) in the Call to Prayer:
أَشْهَدُ أَن لَّا إِلَٰهَ إِلَّا ٱللَّٰهُ وَأَشْهَدُ أَنَّ مُحَمَّداً رَّسُولُ ٱللَّٰهِ
Ikhfāʼ
- ikhfāʼ ("concealment"): the nūn sound is not fully pronounced (i.e. the tongue does not make full contact with the roof of the mouth as in a regular /n/ sound) if it is followed by any letters other than those already listed, includes a ghunnah. Consider the nūn that is suppressed in the second verse of the chapter Al-Falaq:
مِنْ شَرِّ مَا خَلَقَ
Mīm sākinah
The term mīm sākinah refers to instances where the letter mīm is accompanied by a sukun. There are then three ways it should be pronounced, depending on which letter immediately follows:
- idgham mutamathilayn ("labial merging") when followed by another mīm (usually indicated by a shaddah): the mīm is then merged with the following mīm and includes a ghunnah;
- ikhfāʼ shafawī ("labial concealment"): the mīm is suppressed (i.e. lips not fully closed) when followed by a ب, with a ghunnah; Consider the mīm that is suppressed in the second verse of the chapter Al-Fil:
- تَرْمِيهِمْ بِحِجَارَةٍ
- iẓhār shafawī ("labial clarity"): the mīm is pronounced clearly with no amendment when followed by any letters other than those already listed.
Qalqalah
The five qalqalah letters are the consonants ق ط د ج ب. Qalqalah is the addition of a slight "bounce" or reduced vowel sound /ə/ to the consonant whose vowel sound is otherwise cancelled, such as by a sukūn, shaddah, or the end of sentence.[11] The "lesser bounce" occurs when the letter is in the middle of a word or at the end of the word but the reader joins it to the next word. A "medium bounce" is given when the letter is at the end of the word but is not accompanied by a shaddah, such as the end of the first verse of the Sūrat "al-Falaq":[11]
قُلْ أَعُوذُ بِرَبِّ ٱلْفَلَقِ
The biggest bounce is when the letter is at the end of the word and is accompanied by a shaddah, such as the end of the first verse of Sūrat "al-Masad":[11]
تَبَّتْ يدَاۤ اَبِی لَهَبٍ وَّتَبَّ
Waṣl
Waṣl is the rule of not pronouncing alif as a glottal stop /ʔ/, assimilating to its adjacent vowel. It is indicated with the diacritic waṣlah, a small ṣād on the letter alif (ٱ). In Arabic, words starting with alif not using a hamzah (ا) receive a waṣlah...
بِسْمِ ٱللهِ ٱلرَّحْمٰنِ ٱلرَّحِيمِ
In most of the cases, the vowel that must be used before the alif waṣlah is obvious (the short or long vowel before alif waṣlah); but if it is preceded by a word ending on a sukun, then these are the rules:
Ending | Acquired value of sukūn after alif waṣlah | Example |
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Tanwin /-n/1 | Tanwin + kasrah /-ni/ | مُحَمَّدٌ ٱلكَرِيمُ Muhammad the generous. /muħamːaduni lkariːm/ |
Plural mim2 | Damma /-u/ | عَلَيْهِمُ السَّلام
Peace be upon them. /alayhimu s-salām/ |
All other cases3 | Kasra /-i/ |
1 In the case of Tanwin and alif waṣlah, the intrusive kasrah between them is not graphically represented.
2 Plural mim is the ending of هُمْ or كُمْ as noun suffixes and تُمْ as a verb suffix, which normally end as /hum/, /kum/ and /tum/ respectively. But in some cases /hum/ becomes /him/; nevertheless, it continues as /him-u/. These three always take a damma /-u/.
3 مِنْ is an exception to this, which always takes a fatha /-a/ if it be conjoined with the next word.
Waqf
Waqf is the Arabic pausa rule; all words whose last letter end on a harakah become mute (sukūn) when being the last word of a sentence.
Last letter of a word with a ḥarakah | Inherited value of the ending ḥarakah in pausa (waqf) | Examples |
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ء (أ إ ئ ؤ) ب ت ث ج ح خ د ذ ر ز س ش ص ض ط ظ ع غ ف ق ك ل م ن ه و ي Ending on any ḥarakah | Sukūn /∅/ | بَيْتْ - بَيْتٌ house اَلرَّبّْ - اَلرَّبُّ The Lord |
ـًا ـًى | ـَا ـَى | مُسْتَشْفَى - مُسْتَشْفًى hospital شُكْرَا - شُكْرًا Thank you |
ة Ending on any ḥarakah | هْ | مَلِكَهْ - مَلِكَةٍ queen |
In the case of the proper name عمرو /ʕamrun/, it is pronounced /ʕamr/ in pausa, and the last letter و wāw has no phonetical value(this writing convention is merely for the differentiation from the name عُمَر /ʕumar/). And in fact, عمرو is a triptote (something rare in proper nouns, since they are usually diptotes).
عمرو /ʕamr/ (a proper name) | |
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Nominative | عَمْرٌو |
Accusative | عَمْرًو |
Genitive | عَمْرٍو |
Pausal form (waqf) | عَمْرْو |
Manners
Manners of the heart
- One should be humble.
- One should understand that the Qurʼan is not the word of man.
- One should contemplate and ponder over the meaning of the text.
- One should try not to be affected by distracting thoughts.
- One should feel that every message in the Qurʼan is meant personally for himself or herself.
External manners
- One should be vigilant of the physical purity of body, clothes, and place.
- One is encouraged to face the Qiblah.
- One should stop at a verse of warning and seek protection with God.
- One should stop at a verse of mercy and ask God for mercy.
- One should use pure Literary Arabic pronunciation, e.g. pronouncing the letter ج (jīm) as [d͡ʒ], not as [ɡ] or [ʒ].
- One should have wuḍūʼ "purity" and read only for the sake of God.
See also
- Qāriʾ
- Qāriʾ Mahmoud Khalil Al-Hussary
- Qāriʾ Abdul Basit 'Abd us-Samad
- Qāriʾ Mohamed Siddiq El-Minshawi
- Qāriʾ Mustafa Ismail
- Qāriʾ Muhammad Rifat
- Qāriʾ Ahmad bin Ali Al-Ajmi
- Qāriʾ Mishary Rashid Alafasy
- Qāriʾah Maria Ulfah
- Qāriʾ Muhammad Farooq
- Qāriʾ Shakir Qasmi
- Qāriʾ Husain Burhanuddin
- Qira'at
- Quran reading
- Qur'anic punctuation
- Tarteel
- Tilawa
Analogous and related fields
- Elocution, the analogous modern Western study.
- Pronuntiatio, the analogous classical Western study.
- Shiksha, Hindu Vedic recital study.
- Phonetics
References
Notes
- "Kitab al-Qir'at". Archived from the original on December 20, 2010. Retrieved September 7, 2020.
- Ajaja, Abdurrazzak. "القراءات : The readings".
- el-Masry, Shadee. The Science of Tajwid. Safina Society. p. 8. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
- "What is Tajweed?". Online Quran Teachers. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
- "Ijazah in Ash-Shatibiyyah". Online Quran Teachers.
- el-Masry, Shadee. The Science of Tajwid. Safina Society. p. 7. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
- Azam, Tabraze. "The Sunna Method of Reciting the Qur'an and the Legal Status of Reciting With Tajwid". Seekers Guidance. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
- Wehr, Hans (1993). The Hans Wehr Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic (4th ed.). Spoken Language Services; 4th edition. p. 376. ISBN 0879500034. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
- "Madd sukoon". readwithtajweed.com. Retrieved 2011-06-02.
- Nelson (2001), p. 22.
- "Hifdh:qalqalah". Albaseera.org. 2009-12-05. Archived from the original on 2012-03-23. Retrieved 2011-06-26.
Books and journals
- Nelson, Kristina (2001). The Art of Reciting the Qur'an. Cairo; New York: American University in Cairo Press.
- Tajwid: The Art of Recitation of the Holy Qur'an by Dr. Abdul Majid Khan, Tughra Books 2013. http://www.tughrabooks.com/books/detail/tajwid-the-art-of-the-recitation-of-the-quran
- "Theory and Practice of Tajwid," Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and Linguistics, IV, Leiden, Brill, 2007 (or still in press)
External links
- Essential Ilm, lessons about Arabic and reciting the Quran with tajweed.
- Tajweed podcast, iTunes tajwīd podcast in English for English speakers.
- Knowledge of Tajweed, Ruling and Meaning of Tajweed