The Arabic alphabet is the gateway to one of the world's most widely spoken languages. With over 420 million speakers across 25+ countries, Arabic is a language of commerce, diplomacy, literature, and faith. But before you can read a single word, you need to understand the script.

Good news: the Arabic alphabet is smaller than you think. It has only 28 letters, compared to English's 26. And unlike English, Arabic spelling is almost perfectly phonetic - once you know the letters, you can read any word.

---

How the Arabic Alphabet Works

Arabic is written right to left. This feels strange at first, but most learners adapt within a few days.

Arabic is cursive by default. Letters connect to each other within words. This means most letters have up to four forms depending on their position in a word: Description | -------------| Standing alone | At the start of a word | In the middle of a word | At the end of a word |

This sounds like a lot to memorize, but the forms are predictable. Once you learn the base shape of a letter, you can usually guess its connected forms.

---

The 28 Letters

Group 1: Familiar sounds

Name Similar to English | --------------------------| Ba "b" in "boy" | Ta "t" in "table" | Tha "th" in "think" | Nun "n" in "noon" | Ya "y" in "yes" or "ee" in "see" |

Group 2: The emphatic consonants

Arabic has consonants that don't exist in English. These are produced deeper in the throat or with the tongue pressed against the roof of the mouth:

Name ------ Sad Dad Ta Dha

These sounds give Arabic its distinctive character. Don't worry about perfecting them immediately.

Group 3: Throat sounds

Name ------ Ha Kha Ayn Ghayn

Group 4: Common consonants

Name ------ Jim Dal Dhal Ra Zay Sin Shin Fa Qaf Kaf Lam Mim Ha Waw
Position
----------
Isolated
Initial
Medial
Final
Letter
Sound
--------
-------
ب
b
ت
t
ث
th
ن
n
ي
y / ee
Letter
Sound
--------
-------
ص
Emphatic "s"
ض
Emphatic "d"
ط
Emphatic "t"
ظ
Emphatic "dh"
Letter
Sound
--------
-------
ح
Breathy "h", like fogging a mirror
خ
Like the "ch" in Scottish "loch"
ع
A deep throat contraction, unique to Arabic
غ
Like the French "r" in "Paris"
Letter
Sound
--------
-------
ج
"j" in "judge"
د
"d" in "door"
ذ
"th" in "this"
ر
Rolled "r"
ز
"z" in "zoo"
س
"s" in "sun"
ش
"sh" in "ship"
ف
"f" in "fan"
ق
Deep "k" from the back of the throat
ك
"k" in "king"
ل
"l" in "lamp"
م
"m" in "moon"
ه
"h" in "hat"
و
"w" in "water" or "oo" in "moon"

---

Vowels in Arabic

Arabic has only three vowels: a, i, and u. Each has a short and long form.

Short vowels are written as small marks above or below consonants. In everyday Arabic text (newspapers, books, signs), short vowels are usually not written. Readers infer them from context.

The Quran and children's books include all vowel marks, making them excellent reading practice material.

---

Practical Tips for Learning

Start with recognition, not writing. Spend your first week just identifying letters. Learn in groups, not alphabetically. Letters that look similar should be learned together. For example: ب, ت, ث, ن all share a base shape and differ only in dots. Practice with real words early. Once you know 5-10 letters, start reading simple words. Write by hand. The muscle memory of writing Arabic letters helps cement their forms.

---

How Long Does It Take?

Most dedicated learners can recognize all 28 letters within 2-3 weeks. Reading fluency typically develops over 2-3 months of consistent practice.

The Arabic alphabet is a finite challenge. Once you master it, you have it for life.

At Targumi, our native Arabic tutors can guide you through the alphabet and beyond, helping you build real reading and speaking skills from day one.