ALIF


'Alif' (, pronounced ) is the first letter of the Arabic alphabet.
Together with Hebrew Aleph, Greek Alpha and Latin A, it is descended from Phoenician '', from Proto-Canaanite '' "ox".
Historically, the Arabic letter was used to render either a long , or a glottal stop . This led to orthographical confusion, and to introduction of the additional letter hamzatu l-qat` . Hamza is not considered a full ''harf'' in Arabic orthography: in most cases it appears on a carrier, either a ''waw'', a dotless ''yā', or an alif. The choice of carrier depends on complicated orthographic rules. Alif is generally the carrier where the only adjacent vowel is ''fatha''. It is the only possible carrier where hamza is the first phoneme of a word. Where alif acts as a carrier for hamza, hamza is added above the alif, or, for initial alif kasra, below it, indicating that the letter so modified does indeed signify a glottal stop, and not a long vowel.
A second type of hamza, ''hamzatu l-wasl'', occurs only as the initial phoneme of the definite article and in some related cases. It differs from ''hamzatu l-qat`'' in that it is elided after a preceding vowel. Again, alif is always the carrier.
The is, as it were, a double alif, expressing both a glottal stop and a long vowel: (final ) , for example in ''''
The looks like a dotless , (final ). It may only appear at end of word. Although it looks different from a regular Alif, represents the same sound (long ). Alif maqsura is transliterated as in DIN 31635 and in ISO 233.

Contents
See also

See also



Hamza

Al-

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves