Tajweed Symbols Guide — Quranic Stop Signs Explained

Master the art of Quranic recitation with our comprehensive guide to Waqf and diacritics.

Tajweed Symbols Guide
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Waqf (Stop) Signs

Waqf signs indicate whether a reciter should stop, pause, or continue at a particular point in the Quran.

Symbol Arabic Name Meaning Instruction
م وقف لازم Compulsory Stop Must stop here — stopping is obligatory
لا لا وقف No Stop Do not stop here — continue reading
ج وقف جائز Permissible Stop Stopping is allowed but not required
قف قف Stop Stop is preferred here
ص وقف مرخص Permitted Stop Stopping permitted due to length of verse
ط وقف مطلق Absolute Stop Full stop — meaning is complete
ز وقف مجوز Allowed Stop Stopping is allowed with brief pause

Mu'anaqah — The Linked Stops

The mu'anaqah (معانقة) is a unique pair of stop signs that appear at two places in the same verse. They look like three dots arranged in a triangle (∴ and ∵). The rule is:

ذَٰلِكَ الْكِتَابُ لَا رَيْبَ ۛ فِيهِ ۛ هُدًى لِّلْمُتَّقِينَ

Hamza Variants

Hamza (the glottal stop) appears in several forms in Arabic, each with a specific usage rule:

Symbol Name Usage
ء همزة (Hamza) Standalone hamza — not attached to a letter
أ همزة فوق ألف Hamza above alef — pronounced with fatḥah or ḍammah
إ همزة تحت ألف Hamza below alef — pronounced with kasrah
ؤ همزة واو Hamza on waw — follows specific vowel rules
ئ همزة ياء Hamza on ya — used in certain grammatical positions
آ مد ألف Alef with madda — prolonged "aa" sound
ٱ همزة وصل Wasla — connecting hamza, silent when preceded by a vowel

Quranic Diacritics

Beyond standard harakat, the Quran uses several special diacritical marks unique to Quranic script:

💡 Tip: Our keyboard includes all these symbols in the Tajweed section. Expand the section and click any symbol to insert it at the cursor position in your text.

Maddah — The Prolongation Marks

Maddah signs tell the reciter to elongate a vowel sound for a specific number of counts (harakāt):

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