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Tajweed

Tajweed is the set of rules governing the correct pronunciation of the Quran in Arabic. Its aim is to preserve the phonetic qualities of the Prophet Muhammad’s recitation and to prevent changes in meaning that can arise from mispronunciation. Tajweed covers both how letters should be articulated and how sounds should be lengthened, paused, or coordinated with neighboring letters.

Central to tajweed are makharij (points of articulation) and sifat (characteristics) of letters. These determine where

Key rules of recitation include categories such as idgham (merging with assimilation), ikhfa (concealed pronunciation with

Teaching Tajweed is traditionally done by qualified instructors in a teacher–student setting, at mosques, in madrasas,

in
the
vocal
tract
a
letter
is
produced
and
how
it
should
sound.
The
science
also
prescribes
when
and
how
vowels
are
lengthened
(madd),
how
to
pause
or
continue
in
recitation
(waqf
and
wasl),
and
how
letters
interact
across
word
boundaries.
partial
nasalization),
and
izhar
(clear
pronunciation).
Other
features
include
qalqalah
(a
small
echoing
effect
on
certain
consonants)
and
ghunnah
(nasalization)
in
prescribed
contexts.
Noon
sakinah
and
tanween
rules
regulate
nasalization
and
pronunciation
of
noon
and
tanween
before
specific
letters.
The
madd
(elongation)
rules
specify
the
length
of
vowel
prolongation
in
different
contexts.
and
in
modern
schools.
It
is
often
taught
alongside
memorization
of
the
Quran
and
is
considered
essential
for
accurate
recitation.
Modern
resources
include
textbooks,
audio
materials,
and
digital
courses
that
illustrate
the
rules
with
examples
and
practice.