Arabic for beginners: Lesson 12B - Difference between the Alif and Hamza ( further discussions)
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- Опубликовано: 5 авг 2024
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This is the twelfth part of a series dedicated to teaching the Arabic Alphabet. This lesson explains the difference between the Alif and Hamza and will pave the way for further discussions about the two different types of Hamza. This course is for the total beginner who is unable to read or write the Arabic script and would like to become proficient in the Arabic language. All the fundamentals will be covered to allow the student to advance to the next stage towards mastering the Arabic language.
Lesson by Ustadh Nabeel Alkhalidy, a teacher at the Sibaway Institute.
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understandingthequranmiracle.b...
LOVE FROM LAHORE PAKISTAN
GOOD descriptions of difference
IN between allaif and hamza
*Ma Sha Allah. Very Good. Message from Online QURAN Centre*
Masha'Allah i understand it now mutch better! DjazaakAllaah oughairran!
Very good explanation
Tqvm for sharing such clear explanations in your videos. Plse continue doing so. It is a great help for beginners of Quranic Arabic language. May Allah swt reward u with khayr.
Baraak Allahu feeki. May Allah SWT reward you too.
@@LearnQuranicArabic Thank you. ⚘
very good
a u i 3 vowels, hamza is a consonant not a vowel. A glottal stop follwed by fataha dumma kisra is alif hamza. U can not release a hamza without a vowel a i u. When you do without a vowel likw end of word with sukoon you release air = /h/his a is front vowel ae (ipa or is it not?) Some say. Honestly i don,t understand why most teachers are not able to clearly put it as it is. Cutting air completly followed by /a/ would sound like back vowel and at times like ayn. Where is front vowel /ae/. Could u help?
How will you know if the ا is a و or a ي
I don't understand about base letter ... how does it become a ي or و
Me either
alifs do not appear in triconsonatal roots? i have never heard of this rule before. please explain. why cannot alifs appear in triconsonantal roots? why are the alifs that are found in the roots of words, merely representing other letters? where does this rule come from. can you link to any resources where this rule is explained in detail?
the issue is not if the alif can be used as a root letter ( it obviously can not), but whether when defining the alif , this also includes the hamza. there is a difference of opinion between classical scholars regarding this as i showed in the lesson.
I dont understand alif n hamzaa still
P
'
🇧🇷🤓
then
what is this Alif here?:
الله
Hamzatul wasl.
@@LearnQuranicArabic which means: just pronounce it as A?
I am amazed at all the examples and exceptions.
Thank you for your effort