ڤ (
Letter. ق / ق / ق / ق • (qāf) The twenty-first letter of the Arabic alphabet. It is preceded by ف (f) and followed by ك (k).
ݐ (Unicode name: Arabic Letter Beh With Three Dots Horizontally Below) is an additional letter of the Arabic script, used in some African languages such as Fulfulde. It is equivalent to the Latin letter Ƴ ƴ.
Ve (based on name of the letter ف fāʾ) ڤ is a letter of the Arabic-based Kurdish, Comoro, Wakhi, and Karakhanid alphabets.
ڤ (vāʔ) is not considered a distinct letter, but a variant of ف (fāʔ) that is sometimes used to write foreign names and loanwords with the phoneme /v/. It can be written and pronounced as a ف (fāʔ) instead.
It is better not to pause. The reciter can stop or continue depending on his convenience. ◌ۛ - Named معانقة (mganqẗ) (hugging) signs, these three dots are usually paired and placed near each other. The reciter should stop at one of them, though which one is in their own discretion.
These dots are an integral part of a letter, since they distinguish between letters that represent different sounds. For example, the Arabic letters ب (b), ت (t) and ث (th) have the same basic shape, but have one dot below, two dots above and three dots above, respectively.
For example, the numeral "3" is used to represent the Arabic letter ⟨ع⟩ (ʿayn)—note the choice of a visually similar character, with the numeral resembling a mirrored version of the Arabic letter. Many users of mobile phones and computers use Arabish even though their system is capable of displaying Arabic script.
Ẓāʾ, or ḏ̣āʾ (ظ), is one of the six letters the Arabic alphabet added to the twenty-two inherited from the Phoenician alphabet (the others being ṯāʾ, ḫāʾ, ḏāl, ḍād, ġayn). In name and shape, it is a variant of ṭāʾ. Its numerical value is 900 (see Abjad numerals).
The particle fa (ف) is a connective particle that is usually translated as "and", "then" or "so". The particle is used as a prefix and connects words, phrases and clauses together using different types of syntactic relations.
Sounds in both English and Arabic
Most of the sounds in Arabic are also in English and vice versa. For example, the Arabic ba (ب) sounds exactly like the b in English, the Arabic zay (ز), sounds just like the z in English and the Arabic versions of k (ك), m (م), n (ن), f (ف), and j (ج) are all just the same.
The Arabic alphabet consists of 28 basic letters, which consists of strokes and dots. Ten of them have one dot, three have two dots, two have three dots. Dots can be above, below or in the middle of the letter as shown in Figure 1 . The shape of the letter is context sensitive, depending on its location within a word.
Early Arabic writing included no dots. The dots found today in Arabic writing were one of the first innovations that came after the spread of Arabic (after Islam). These dots make it clear what consonant is to be pronounced. Before the dots, people read the text without any dots.
ݜ (Unicode name: Arabic Letter Seen With Four Dots Above) is an additional letter of the Arabic script, derived from sīn (ﺱ) with the addition of four dots or two horizontal lines above the letter. It is not used in the Arabic alphabet itself, but is used in Shina to represent voiceless retroflex fricative, [ʂ].
What is an ellipsis? An ellipsis is a punctuation mark of three dots (. . .) that shows an omission of words, represents a pause, or suggests there's something left unsaid.
Bindis in Islam
As an amulet believed to protect against evil-eye, these dots are called tikro or tilk (singular), or tikra (plural).
6 = ط (Taa)
Using Arabizi, you can ask, “Ente 6albeh bel jam3a?” (انت طالب بالجامعة).
For e.g., the Arabic letter “ح” (Haa) can't be accurately represented with Latin characters and it is, therefore, represented by the number “7”.
Unlike English, Arabic letters are not written separated they are written in a cursive style and read from right to left. Many letters look similar but distinguished from one another by dots like the letters (ب,ت,ث ) or (ج,ح,خ), (د,ذ), (ر,ز), (ص,ض), (ط,ظ), ((ع,غ.