Tajweed is the science of reciting the Holy Quran the way it was conveyed from the Prophet (peace be upon him), giving each letter its due. This guide introduces the core concepts of tajweed and how to study them, for beginners.
What Is Tajweed?
Literally meaning "to beautify," tajweed technically means reciting each letter from its articulation point, in accordance with its qualities, and with the required rules. The goal is to protect the tongue from error (lahn):
- Lahn jali (clear error): Errors that change a letter or a vowel and so alter the meaning — avoiding these is obligatory.
- Lahn khafi (hidden error): A short madd duration, a brief ghunnah, and similar errors that only those who know tajweed notice — avoiding these is also necessary.
— Surah Al-Muzzammil, 4Recite the Quran with tartil (measured, rule-bound recitation).
Makharij: The Articulation Points of the Letters
Every letter has a specific exit point in the mouth, throat, or lips. The articulation points fall into five main regions: the throat (halq), the tongue (lisan), the lips (shafatayn), the nasal cavity (khayshum), and the oral cavity (jawf — for the madd letters). Being able to distinguish similar letters (e.g. س / ص / ث, ت / ط, ذ / ز / ظ) is the first and most critical step of tajweed. This is why makharij must be corrected by listening to a teacher.
Madd (Elongation) Rules
Madd means "to lengthen." There are three madd letters: alif (ا), waw (و), and ya (ي) — when they agree with the preceding vowel, they cause elongation.
- Madd tabi'i (natural madd): A madd with no following cause (hamzah or sukun) — lengthened by one alif (two harakahs).
- Madd muttasil: When a hamzah follows the madd letter within the same word — lengthened 4–5 harakahs.
- Madd munfasil: When a hamzah follows the madd letter in a separate word — lengthened 4–5 harakahs (2 in some readings).
- Madd lazim: When an obligatory sukun follows the madd letter — lengthened four alifs (eight harakahs).
The Four States of Noon Sakin and Tanween
A noon sakin (نْ) or tanween (ـٌ ـٍ ـً) is recited in four ways depending on the letter that follows it:
- Izhar: If one of the throat letters (ء ه ع ح غ خ) follows, it is pronounced clearly.
- Idgham: If one of the letters ي ر م ل و ن (yarmaloon) follows, the noon merges into the next letter (some with ghunnah).
- Iqlab: If ب follows, the noon is turned into a meem and recited with ghunnah.
- Ikhfa: If one of the remaining 15 letters follows, the noon is hidden — between izhar and idgham — with a nasal (ghunnah) sound.
Where to Start
- Alphabet and vowel marks: Learn the shape, name, and pronunciation of the 29 letters with fathah/kasrah/dammah/sukun.
- Makhraj and sifat: Have a teacher correct your letters (tashih al-huruf).
- Madd rules: Start with the natural madd, then move to the other madd types.
- States of noon sakin/tanween and meem sakin.
- Rules of waqf (stopping) and ibtida (starting).
Don't move on without consolidating each stage on the previous surah.
Reciting the Quran with VAAZ
The VAAZ app presents all 114 surahs with the Arabic original, an English/Turkish translation, and a dedicated AmiriQuran typeface; it tracks your reading progress and lets you bookmark. To practice tajweed in context, start from the short surahs and build a regular reading habit — that is the fastest path to progress.