Arabic: An Essential Grammar

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9.4 Moon letters

The other fourteen letters are called moon letters, because the first letter,

قـ... /q/, of the Arabic word for ‘moon’, َق َم ٌر^ qamarun, represents the


class of non-assimilating letters:

9.5 When the definite article َأْلـ... /



al.../ is attached to a word

beginning with a moon letter, the la ̄m لـ... /l.../ of the article is not


assimilated and retains its pronunciation, e.g.

Note: The letters ج /g ̆/ and ي /y/ are counted as moon letters (non-assimilating),


although they are pronounced with the tongue touching the front part of the

mouth, e.g.

َأْلـ َج َب ُل^



al-g ̆abalu, the mountain

9.6 Hamzatu l-was
̇

li (or was
̇

lah)

Hamzatu l-was
̇

li, َه ْم َز ُة ْل َو ْص ِل , also called was
̇

lah, َو ْصَلة, means


‘joining hamzah’. It is a small sign written above the


alif (), which is

not pronounced and appears only at the beginning of a word.

The role of hamzatu l-was
̇

li (was
̇

lah) is to connect two words together

in one pronunciation without an intervening glottal stop (hamzatu

l-qat
̇


i). It may be compared to the French apostrophe in l’homme

(instead of le homme).

َشـ ْم ٌس شـ ْم ُسَّ َأل (not: َأْل َش ْمـ ُس


sˇamsun, a sun


asˇ-sˇamsu, the sun


al-sˇamsu)

َر ُج ٌل ر ُج ُلََّأل (not: َأْل َر ُجـ ُل


rag ̆ulun, a man


ar-rag ̆ulu, the man


al-rag ̆ulu)

أبجحخعغفقكمهـوي


ywhmkqf g ̇


h
̆

h
̇

g ̆ b




َق َم ٌر qamarun, a moon َأْل َق َم ُر^



al-qamaru, the moon

ِكـ َتا ٌب kita ̄bun, a book َأْل ِكـ َتا ُب^



al-kita ̄bu, the book

Sun and
moon
letters,

hamzatu


l-was
̇

li

(was
̇


lah)

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