Q Read: A Step by Step Guide To Learning How To Recite The Qur'an Book 1
Q Read: A Step by Step Guide To Learning How To Recite The Qur'an Book 1
Q Read: A Step by Step Guide To Learning How To Recite The Qur'an Book 1
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CONTENTSPAGE
LetterIntroduction
LetterRecognition
JoiningLetters
HarakaFatha,Kasra,Dhamma
Sukun
LongVowels
HamzaandHiccup
Tanween
Maddah
SilentLetters
Tashdeed
HurufulMuqattaat
NunQutniandQalb
Stops
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LETTER INTRODUCTION
For example (
in shirt.
The most important lessons are from pages 2 to 2 as once taught correctly
and understood will lay a firm and solid foundation.
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Pronounced as Ja sound
Prounounced as Da sound
Pronounced as Ra sound
Pronounced as Z sound
Pronounced as Sh sound
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Pronounced at Fa
Pronounced as La
Pronounced as Ma
Pronounced as Fa
Pronounced as Wa
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LETTER RECOGNITION
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The children should now be familiar with all the letters of the alphabet.
Use the table below to test the letters before moving to the next page. The student should be able
to read in approximately 1 minute.
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JOINING LETTERS
The student should have mastered all the sounds on the previous page and be
able to recognize the letters easily.
It is important that the student is able to read the last table of every page
easily before moving to the next letter. This will ensure that the student is
able to recognize the letter in its different forms and will build fluency in
reading especially when other concepts are introduced such as kasra,
dhamma, sukun.
There are 6 letters known as Non Joining letters. These letters do not join to
other letters but allow other letters to join onto them they only join at the
end of the word eg
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Teachers Tips :
and
________________________________________________________________
Tail letters are
The tail stretches out to join hands with the next letter eg
________________________________________________________________
The letters
and
________________________________________________________________
For the letter
so it becomes
, take the baby from the middle and make it bigger to help the letter join
eg
________________________________________________________________
The letter
likes to be carried by
or
on a chair
___________________________________________________________________________
The letter ha
(ha wearing
glasses).
When it is in the middle of a word, it changes its shape to a
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(butterfly ha)
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Letter
Beginning
Middle
End
I
I
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Letter
Beginning
Middle
End
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Letter
Beginning
Middle
End
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Letter
Beginning
Middle
End
O
O
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Letter
Beginning
Middle
End
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Letter
Beginning
Middle
End
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Letter
Beginning
Middle
End
Iv
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Letter
Beginning
Middle
End
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Letter
Beginning
Middle
End
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Letter
Beginning
Middle
End
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Letter
End
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EXERCISE PAGE
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v
v
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Fatha
A small slanting stroke above the letter.
It is a short vowel whose sound is U as it sounds in umbrella, under or the
A as it sounds in Anwer, Asgher.
It should not be pronounced as the Aa in Africa, far.
Kasra
Introduce Kasra as being a small slanting stroke below the letter.
It is again a short vowel whose sound is I as it sounds in: it, bit, fit, sit.
It should not be elongated to ee as in eel, feel, beet.
It can also be explained as a Smiley face when going down the slide, you
smile and say Ee.
Dhamma
Introduce Dhamma as a small comma above the letter.
It is a short vowel U as it sounds in full, bull, pull.
It should not to elongated to oo as in fool, cool, tool.
It can also be explained as a Round mouth when going round the
roundabout, you say Oo.
Introduce the haraka one at a time, drawing them on top of the letters. Use
the 3 boxes for explaining Fatha, Kasra and Dhamma. Take as much time as
necessary. Do not rush.
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SUKUN
The Sukun is a semi circle above a letter.
It shows that the letter has no vowel and only the phonetic sound of the letter
should be pronounced.
A word can never begin with a sukun.
The sukun can only be read joined with the previous letter with a haraka
fatha, kasra or dhamma.
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By now the student should be familiar with words that have sukun. They will easily join the
letters that have a sukun. However most students will forget to pronounce a basic word
with the same 2 harakas such as 2 fathas or 2 dhammas as individual letters that are not
joined. They will tend to join the letters. The lines below will practice the concept of
differentiating non- sukun and sukun letters in words.
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LONG VOWELS
Long Vowel Fatha
A long vowel Fatha is written as an alif joined to the end of a letter or a
vertical stroke above a letter.
They lengthen the letter with a fatha to 2 harakaat (equals to about 2 Aas)
sounding like aa eg burn to barn ; fur to far.
= = +
= = +
Long Vowel Kasra
A long vowel Kasra is written as a ya with a sukun that is joined to the end of
a letter or a vertical stroke below a letter.
They lengthen the letter with the kasra to 2 harakaat (equals to about 2 Is) ;
sounding like ee eg bin to been, kip to keep.
= = +
= = +
Long Vowel Dhamma
A long vowel Dhamma is written as a wa with a sukun that is joined to the
end of a letter or an inverted dhamma above a letter.
They lengthen the letter with a dhamma to 2 harakaat (equals to about 2 Us) ;
sounding like oo eg full to fool.
= = +
= = +
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with a sukun after a letter with a fatha produces the sound aw eg Now.
A with a sukun after the letter with a dhamma elongates the the dhamma to 2 harakaat
eg boot, loot
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Aim
A sukun on the letter
The lines below gives practice to all the long vowel concepts introduced.
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Another way of writing Long Vowel Fatha is a short alif on top of the letter. It also
lengthens the letter with a fatha to 2 harakaat.
Another way of writing Long Vowel Kasra is a short alif at the bottom of the letter. It also
lengthens the letter with the kasra to 2 harakaat.
Another way of writing Long Vowel Dhamma is an inverted dhamma (like the number 6) on
top of the letter. It also lengthens the letter with a dhamma to 2 harakaat.
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This page consists of words that include all the sounds and rules covered in the previous
pages. Repeat this page as many times as necessary to improve accuracy and speed.
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v
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HAMZA
Hamza
does not change its form. It does not join to any letters and
or
A hamza above an alif or waw with a sukun on it cuts the short vowel a
and u respectively, producing a jerky or hiccup sound.
This hamza is known as Hamzatul Qat or the cutting hamzah eg:
Bu =
Bi =
Ba =
Yu minu The waw does not lengthen the letter yu to a yoo. Instead,
Sometimes the hamza is not written above the Alif. Only a sukun is written.
The hiccup/jerky sound will still be pronounced eg :
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Qa Ra Tu
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Let the student compare the first two lines below, noting the difference in recitation. Again,
ensure that the long vowel is elongated to 2 harakaat only.
Practice Table: All the sounds and rules covered so far have been put in the next exercise.
Make sure the long vowels are elongated to the correct length and the hiccup sounds are
pronounced correctly.
Repeat this exercise as many times as necessary to improve understanding and fluency.
O O
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U
U
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TANWEEN
An extra vowel (double vowel) is called tanween. It means adding an n ( )
sound on a vowel a, i or u.
Fatha with Tanween (Double Fatha)
Makes an un sound as in bun, sun, fun, run
Students may get confused with the ' that follows a letter (as above).
Make sure that the student understands that the ' is not pronounced and
does not elongate the sound.
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v
=
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v
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MADDAH
A long stroke or curve above a letter is called a Maddah.
It can be a light stroke (thin) or a dark stroke (thick) above the letter.
The word Maddah means to stretch/ lengthen or elongate.
A letter with a light maddah on top of it would indicate that the vowel must
be stretched to at least about 4 times its normal length.
A letter with a dark maddah on top of it would indicate that the vowel must
be stetched to at least 5-6 times its normal length.
For example :
Maaaaaa (v v long)
Maa (long)
Ma (short)
Meeeeee (v v long)
Mee (long)
Me (short)
Mu (short)
Moooooo (v v long)
Moo (long)
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SILENT LETTERS
The letters
The alif has no sign on it therefore it is not pronounced. The word would
read as bismi
elongate the waw to waa. The waw joins to the nun with sukun and would read as
wansur and not waansur.
The
at the examples below making sure you understand it before moving on. For
each example there is a table with 2 lines. The first line has words with the
silent letters and the second line shows you how to pronounce these words.
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2. The alif (with no sign on it) at the end of some words The alif is silent and is not pronounced.
3. An alif (with no sign on it) between two letters the first letter bearing
a long vowel and the second letter bearing a sukun
The alif is silent and is not pronounced. (It also does not lengthen the
long vowel of the first letter).
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Exercise: All the rules and sounds covered in the previous pages will be practiced in this
exercise. The words are all from the Holy Quran.
Please do not rush. Repeat this page as many times as necessary to obtain good fluency,
makharij and speed.
v
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TASHDEED
The sign
above the letter with a haraka (fatha, kasra, dhamma) is called Tashdeed.
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The lines below practice 2 letter words bearing Tashdeed and Haraka with the letter ba
The lines below have 2 letter words bearing Tashdeed and Haraka
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The lines below have 3 letter words bearing Tashdeed and Haraka
The lines below have 4 or more letter words bearing Tashdeed and Haraka
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The lines below practice words with letters bearing Tashdeed and Long Vowels
The lines below practice words with letters bearing Tashdeed and Maddah
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The lines below practice words with letters bearing Tashdeed and Silent Letters.
Remember, the letters alif, waw and ya with no haraka are not pronounced.
The letter with the haraka will join to the letter with the tashdeed.
The lines below practice a letter with Tashdeed followed by a letter with Sukun.
I U
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The following lines practice words that have a letter with Tashdeed followed by another
letter with Tashdeed. The same rules apply eg :
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The nun sukun is dropped and not pronounced. The word reads
___________________________________________________________________________
The nun sukun is dropped and not pronounced. The word reads
The nun sukun is dropped and not pronounced. The ya with no haraka is silent and also
not pronounced. The letter with the haraka da fatha jumps to join the mim with
tashdeed. So the word reads
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U
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HURUF UL MUQATTAAT
There are 114 suwer (chapters) in the Holy Quran. 29 of these start with Single Letters or
Muqattaat. They begin with a letter(s) instead of a word.
These letters are not pronounced phonetically but are read separately with their letter
name eg:
Ha-a-a Me-e-e-e-m
v
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The following two Rules are explained very simply so that the student is
aware of them.
A more concise explanation will be given in the next book.
NUN QUTNI - a small
Sometimes a small nun written under an alif is found between two words.
This is to link the two words and the nun is pronounced whilst the alif following it is silent.
The small nun is called Nun Qutni.
QALB - a small
Sometimes a small meem is found either in the same word or between two words.
When nun sukun or tanween is followed by the letter ba even if it is in the same word,
then the n sound is altered to a m sound.
Will be pronounced/read as
Will be written as
THE NEXT BOOK WILL COVER AN INDEPTH EXPLANATION AS PART OF TAJWEED RULES.
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STOPPING SIGNS
In the Quran there are some signs or punctuation marks called waqf or in plural wuqoof.
These are found in the middle or the end of ayaats and give us an indication of whether
stopping/pausing is permitted or not.
The most common wuqoof are :
:
Sometimes the following letters are placed on the O to indicate various rules of stopping
Better to Stop
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STOPPING ON WORDS
It is important to know how to stop at the end of the verse or in the middle when pausing
to take breath.
There are 5 different kinds of stopping or pausing:
1) When the word ends with a letter that has a fatha, kasra, dhamma, kasra tanween or
dhamma tanween, then the vowel is read as a sukun eg :
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2) When the word ends with a letter that has a fatha tanween followed by
or
harakaat) eg :
3) If the word ends with a Ta Marbuta (round Taa), it is changed to a Haa and the
vowel accompanying it is omitted. The Haa is pronounced with a sukun eg :
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4) If the word ends with a letter bearing a sukun, it stays the same and is pronounced
the same eg :
5) If the word ends with a letter bearing a long vowel, it stays the same and is
pronounced the same (the long vowel is elongated to 2 harakaat) eg :
Practice the following words from the Holy Quran applying the stop rules :
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Read the following ayaats from the Holy Quran applying all the relevant Stop
Rules mentioned in the previous pages.
v
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At this stage the student knows all the letters with makharij, harakaat, sukun, long
vowels, tanween, tashdeed, silent letters and other signs to facilitate proper
recitation.
You should point out that they have read ayaats from the Holy Quran in the last
few pages.
They should now be encouraged to start reciting the Holy Quran.
The next book will introduce the Rules of Tajweed.
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Q Read
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