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Ḏāl
Arabic letter
Arabic letter
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Ḏāl ذال |
| letter | ذ |
| script | Arabic script |
| type | Abjad |
| language | Arabic language |
| phonemes | * (standard) |
| alphanumber | 9 |
| direction | Right-to-left |
| fam2 | 𐡃 |
| fam3 | 𐢅 |
| fam4 | د |
| fam1 | 𐤃 |
- , (dialectal)

ar (ذ, also transcribed as ar) is one of the six letters the Arabic alphabet added to the twenty-two inherited from the Phoenician alphabet (the others being ar, ar, ar, ar, ar). It is related to the Ancient North Arabian 𐪙, and South Arabian 𐩹.
In Modern Standard Arabic it represents . In name and shape, it is a variant of ar (د). Its numerical value is 700 (see abjad numerals). The Arabic letter ذ is named ذَالْ ar. It is written in several ways depending on its position in the word: The South Arabian alphabet retained a symbol for sem, [[Image:himjar dhal.PNG|class=skin-invert-image|14px]].
When representing this sound in transliteration of Arabic into Hebrew, it is written as .
This sound is found in English, as in the words "those" or "then". In English the sound is sometimes rendered "dh" when transliterated from foreign languages, but when it occurs in English words it is one of the pronunciations occurring for the digraph "th". Azerbaijan is spelled with ar in Arabic script: أذربيجان.
In early forms of the New Persian language and a in practice followed by its writers, who used the letter dhal (ذ) in lieu of dal (د), in the middle of a word when the dal is preceded and followed by a vowel, or when dal was in the final position and preceded by a vowel, the letter was referred to as a dotted dhal or dal-i mu'ajjam (دال معجم).
Pronunciations
Between and within contemporary varieties of Arabic, pronunciation of cognates with the letter ar differs:
- The Gulf, Iraqi, Tunisian dialects use the Classical and Modern Standard sound of .
- In Maghrebi Arabic, it is consistently pronounced as the voiced dental plosive .
- In Hejazi Arabic, it merges with or depending on the word or it is pronounced as .
- In the Mashriq (in the broad sense, including Egyptian, Sudanese and Levantine dialects), it becomes a sibilant voiced alveolar fricative . Furthermore, in words fully assimilated into a Mashriq dialect, the sound has merged with (د).
Regardless of these regional differences, the pattern of the speaker's variety of Arabic frequently intrudes into otherwise Modern Standard speech; this is widely accepted, and is the norm when speaking the mesolect known alternatively as lugha wusṭā ("middling/compromise language") or ʿAmmiyyat/Dārijat al-Muṯaqqafīn ("Educated/Cultured Colloquial") used in the informal speech of educated Arabs of different countries (cf. Arabic dialect#Formal and vernacular differences).
| Proto-Semitic | Old South | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arabian | Old North | ||||||||||
| Arabian | Modern South | ||||||||||
| Arabian 1 | Standard | ||||||||||
| Arabic | Aramaic | Modern | |||||||||
| Hebrew | Ge'ez | Phoenician | Akkadian | z | ḏ | ||||||
| 𐪘 | z | z | |||||||||
| 𐪙 | , later | *ḏ, z, | |||||||||
| later d | |||||||||||
| Notes |
Unicode
|0630|name1=Arabic Letter Dal
References
References
- al-Shdaifat, Younis. (2017). "An early Christian Arabic graffito mentioning ‘Yazīd the king’". Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy.
- "Pre-Islamic dotted dāl in a 7th c. Quran".
- The rule is described in an Arabic poem by [[Zahir-al-Din Faryabi]].
- (1862). "A Grammar of the Persian Language: To which is Added a Selection of Easy Extracts for Reading, Together with a Vocabulary, and Translations". W.H. Allen.
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