Alif
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Arabic alphabet | ||||||
ﺩ || ﺫ || ﺭ || ﺯ || ﺱ || ﺵ || ﺹ | ||||||
ﺽ || ﻁ || ﻅ || ﻉ || ﻍ || ﻑ || ﻕ | ||||||
ﻙ || ﻝ || ﻡ || ﻥ || هـ || ﻭ || ﻱ | ||||||
History · Transliteration Diacritics · hamza ء Numerals · Numeration |
Alif (Arabic: ﺍ , pronounced ʾalif) is the first letter of the Arabic alphabet.
Together with Hebrew Aleph, Greek Alpha and Latin A, it is descended from Phoenician ʾāleph, from Proto-Canaanite ʾalp "ox".
Historically, the Arabic letter was used to render either a long /aː/, or a glottal stop /ʔ/. This led to orthographical confusion, and to introduction of the additional letter hamzatu'l-qat` ﺀ. 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 إ أ 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 ʾalif madda is, as it were, a double alif, expressing both a glottal stop and a long vowel: ﺁ (final ﺂ) ʼā [ʔæː], for example in القرآن al-qurʼān
The ʾalif maqṣūra looks like a dotless yāʼ, ﻯ (final ﻰ). It may only appear at end of word. Although it looks different from a regular Alif, it's pronounced the same way (as long /aː/). Alif maqsura is transliterated as ā in DIN 31635 and ỳ in ISO 233.