‘AIN
ع غ
Click the letter to hear its pronunciation.
Final | Medial | Initial | Detached | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Additional Examples | ﻊ | ﻌ | ﻋ | ع |
Sounds
‘AIN is a rare letter found mainly in words borrowed from Arabic, in which it represents a “glottal stop”. In Urdu its sound and function are essentially the same as ALIF’s. It is not, however, interchangeable with ALIF. You will need to learn which words are spelled with ‘AIN (ع) and which are spelled with ALIF (ا).
No Hindi equivalent.
‘AIN is usually transliterated with an apostrophe.
At the beginning of a word ‘AIN can carry any of the three short vowels:
Sound | Example (transliteration) | Example (Urdu) | Hindi Equivalent |
---|---|---|---|
“a” as in “about” | ‘arab | عرب | अरब |
“i” as in “inner” | ‘izzat | عزّت | इज़्ज़त |
“u” as in “put” | ‘urs | عرس | उर्स |
At the beginning of a word ‘AIN is silent when followed by another vowel letter:
Sound | Example (transliteration) | Example (Urdu) | Hindi Equivalent |
---|---|---|---|
silent | ‘ām | عام | आम |
silent | ‘aurat | عورت | औरत |
In the middle or end of any word, ‘AIN is a wild card: it can represent almost any vowel sound or the consonant “y”.
Example (transliteration) | Example (Urdu) | Hindi Equivalent |
---|---|---|
ba’ad | بعد | बाद |
sho’lay | شعلے | शोले |
shama’ | شمع | शमा |
shāyar | شاعر | शायर |
Connections
‘AIN can connect from both sides: Thus it has four forms: detached, initial, medial, and final.