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Heaviness and Lightness in the Elevated (Isti'la) Letters

tajweed Level: intermediate tafkheem-tarqeeq tj-070
خَلَقَ الْإِنسَانَ مِنْ عَلَقٍ
— العلق 2
Definition:
The seven elevated (Isti'la) letters (خ ص ض غ ط ق ظ) are always pronounced with heaviness (tafkheem) in every condition — whether voweled or with sukoon — regardless of which vowel they carry. This distinguishes them from the Raa, Laam, and the Majestic Name (Allah), which have conditional tafkheem/tarqeeq rules.

Rule of Permanent Heaviness:
Isti'la letters are heavy in all conditions:
  • With dhamma: "Qul" — heavily pronounced Qaaf.
  • With fatha: "Khalaqa" — heavily pronounced Khaa and Qaaf.
  • With kasra: "Ghishaawatun" — Ghain with kasra; heaviness is slightly reduced but still present.
  • With sukoon: "Akhtalafa" — sukoon Khaa remains heavy.

Degrees of Heaviness in Isti'la Letters:
  1. Highest: voweled with fatha or sukoon after fatha (Khalaqa, Taaloot).
  2. Middle: voweled with dhamma (Qul, Khudh).
  3. Lowest: voweled with kasra (Ghishaawa, Khitaamuhu).

Important Note:
The Raa, Laam, and the Name of Allah are not covered here — they have separate cards. This card addresses only the seven Isti'la letters.

Examples:
• "Khalaqa al-insaan" (Al-'Alaq: 2) — Khaa and Qaaf with fatha: highest degree of heaviness.
• "Wal-Toor" (Al-Toor: 1) — Taa with dhamma: strong heaviness.
• "Khitaamuhu miskun" (Al-Mutaffifeen: 26) — Khaa with kasra: lowest degree of heaviness.
Source: Matn Al-Jazariyya by Ibn Al-Jazari; Al-Tamheed by Ibn Al-Jazari; Hidayat Al-Qari by Al-Mursifi
Question: What are the degrees of heaviness for Isti'la letters from highest to lowest? Give an example for each.
Answer: Highest: with fatha or sukoon after fatha (Khalaqa). Middle: with dhamma (Qul). Lowest: with kasra (Khitaamuhu)
Printed from quran.zayenha.com — 6/3/2026