Learn the Arabo Alphabet: Letters, Sounds, and How to Read

Principiante6 min28 caratteriCon audio
Arabic is written with 28 consonant letters, read right to left, in a flowing cursive where each letter has up to four positional shapes (isolated, initial, medial, final). It is an abjad, a writing system where short vowels are optional: consonants are always written, and vowels are marked only in sacred texts, poetry, children's books, and language-learning materials. The Arabic script is used today by over 420 million native speakers of Arabic plus, with additional letters, Persian, Urdu, Pashto, Uyghur, Sindhi, and several African languages. Most learners can read simple Arabic words within two to three weeks of daily practice; the positional-form system and the right-to-left direction both become automatic with reading exposure.
Letters
28
Direction
Right to left
Type
Abjad
Positional forms
Up to 4 per letter
In questa pagina
  1. 1. History and evolution
  2. 2. Where the shapes come from
  3. 3. How Arabic fits in written Arabo
  4. 4. Common pitfalls
  5. 5. How to learn Arabo
  6. 6. Frequently asked questions
Alphabet
Standard alphabetical order

History and evolution

The Arabic script evolved from the Nabataean alphabet in the 4th century CE, itself a descendant of Aramaic, which in turn descended from the Phoenician abjad. The earliest surviving Arabic inscription dates to 512 CE at Zabad in Syria. Two major script styles emerged in early Islam: Kufic, an angular monumental script used for early Qur'an manuscripts (7th to 10th centuries), and Naskh, a flowing cursive developed in the 10th century that became the standard for everyday writing and remains the basis for modern print fonts. Short-vowel diacritics (ḥarakāt) and the pointing system distinguishing similar letters (e.g., ب ت ث with one, two, and three dots) were introduced by the grammarian Abu al-Aswad al-Du'ali and the scribe al-Khalil ibn Ahmad al-Farahidi between the 7th and 8th centuries specifically to preserve accurate Qur'anic recitation. The expansion of Islam after the 7th century spread the Arabic script from Spain to Indonesia; it remains the second-most widely used writing system in the world by territory covered.

Where the shapes come from

Arabic descends through Nabataean from Aramaic, making it a distant cousin of Hebrew and Syriac. Letter names (alif, ba, ta, tha, jim, ha, kha, dal, dhal, ra, zay, sin, shin…) are cognate with Hebrew (aleph, bet, gimel, dalet, he, waw, zayin…) and ultimately with Phoenician. The standard alphabetical order (alif-ba-ta-tha) groups letters by shape family: ب ت ث share the same base shape with one, two, or three dots; ج ح خ share a curved hook. This is called the Hija'i order and differs from the older Abjad order, which matches Hebrew and was used for numerical values.

How Arabic fits in written Arabo

Arabic is written right to left, but numerals are written left to right inside an Arabic sentence (a quirk that takes getting used to). Letters connect in cursive: each letter takes its initial shape when followed by another letter, medial shape when both preceded and followed, final shape when only preceded, and isolated shape when standing alone. Six letters never connect to the letter that follows them (even though they connect to the one before): ا د ذ ر ز و. Short vowels (fatha, kasra, damma) are diacritical marks above or below consonants and are usually omitted in modern text; learners see them in textbooks but adult native readers typically read without them. The sun-and-moon letter distinction (ا ل assimilating in pronunciation with certain following consonants) is a pronunciation rule, not a spelling rule.

Common pitfalls

Six letters never connect forward
ا د ذ ر ز و connect to the letter before them but leave a break after. Beginners often try to connect these to the next letter and produce nonsense shapes. Memorize the six early.
Emphatic consonants are distinct phonemes
ت/ط, س/ص, د/ض, ظ/ذ look similar but are different sounds. The emphatic versions (ط ص ض ظ) involve raising the tongue root; English has no direct equivalent. Listen carefully to minimal pairs (تين, figs vs طين, mud).
Short vowels are usually invisible
ktb could be kataba (he wrote), kutiba (it was written), or kitāb (book). Context and morphology tell you which. Read voweled text in your first year; switch to unvoweled text as vocabulary grows.
Hamza is a consonant, not a punctuation mark
The hamza (ء) represents a glottal stop. It can sit on alif (أ), waw (ؤ), ya (ئ), or alone on the line. Its placement follows specific rules based on adjacent vowels; this is a standard source of spelling errors even for native speakers.

How to learn Arabo

  1. Learn the 28 isolated forms first. Once they are familiar, the positional variants become small shape changes rather than new characters to memorize.
  2. Group letters by shape family: the ba-family (ب ت ث ن ي), the jim-family (ج ح خ), the sad-family (ص ض), the ta-family (ط ظ), the ain-family (ع غ). Dots distinguish sisters in each family.
  3. Memorize the six non-connectors (ا د ذ ر ز و) early. Reading falters whenever a beginner tries to connect these forward.
  4. Practice reading right to left from day one. Force the habit; it becomes automatic within the first week.
  5. Use spaced repetition for initial letter recognition (Karpicke & Roediger, 2008). Then switch to reading voweled text (Fusha with ḥarakāt); drop the short vowel marks as recognition strengthens.
  6. Read Arabic street signs, brand names, and Al Jazeera headlines as soon as you can. In-context reading accelerates positional-form recognition faster than drill.

Frequently asked questions

Quante lettere ha l'alfabeto arabo?

L'alfabeto arabo ha 28 lettere, tutte consonanti. Le vocali si indicano con piccoli segni (diacritici) sopra o sotto le lettere, spesso omessi nel testo quotidiano. Ogni lettera ha fino a quattro forme diverse a seconda della posizione nella parola: isolata, iniziale, mediale e finale.

Come si pronunciano le lettere dell'alfabeto arabo?

L'arabo include suoni gutturali come ع (ayn) e enfatici come ص (saad), assenti in italiano. La maggior parte delle consonanti si combina con tre vocali brevi (a, i, u) marcate da diacritici. Inizia imparando i gruppi di lettere solari e lunari, poi pratica con audio da Forvo o ArabicPod101 per sviluppare una pronuncia accurata.

Come si impara l'alfabeto arabo?

Memorizza le 28 lettere in gruppi di quattro o cinque, praticando le forme isolata, iniziale, mediale e finale di ciascuna. Scrivi ogni lettera ripetutamente a mano, da destra a sinistra. App come Drops o la serie Madinah Arabic Reader consolidano il riconoscimento rapidamente. La maggior parte degli studenti identifica tutte le lettere in due o tre settimane con sessioni quotidiane di 15 minuti.

Qual è l'ordine dell'alfabeto arabo?

L'ordine moderno standard è: alif, baa, taa, thaa, jiim, haa, khaa, daal, dhaal, raa, zaay, siin, shiin, saad, daad, taa, dhaa, ayn, ghayn, faa, qaaf, kaaf, laam, miim, nuun, haa, waaw, yaa. Questa sequenza si chiama ordine "hijaa'i" ed è usata nei dizionari e nei libri di testo.

Esiste una canzone per imparare l'alfabeto arabo?

Sì, la canzone "Alif Baa Taa" è la più usata per imparare l'alfabeto arabo, simile alla canzone ABC italiana. Mette tutte le 28 lettere su una melodia orecchiabile in ordine hijaa'i. Cerca "Alif Baa Taa song" su YouTube per trovare decine di versioni rivolte a bambini e adulti principianti.

Come imparano i principianti l'alfabeto arabo?

I principianti devono prima imparare a riconoscere le forme delle lettere, poi praticare il collegamento in corsivo (l'arabo si scrive sempre in corsivo). Concentrati su gruppi di lettere visivamente simili, come baa, taa e thaa, che condividono la stessa forma base. Abbina esercizi di scrittura a mano con app di flashcard come Anki per sviluppare lettura e scrittura simultaneamente.

Come si impara a leggere l'arabo?

Padroneggia prima le 28 lettere e le loro forme posizionali, poi impara i tre diacritici vocalici brevi (fatha, kasra, damma). Pratica leggendo testi per bambini vocalizzati o script coranico dove tutti i diacritici sono mostrati. Una volta a tuo agio, passa a testi non vocalizzati come notizie o social media. La maggior parte degli studenti dedicati legge frasi semplici in quattro o sei settimane.

Quanto tempo ci vuole per imparare l'alfabeto arabo?

La maggior parte degli studenti memorizza tutte le 28 lettere arabe in una o tre settimane con 15-20 minuti di pratica quotidiana. Leggere parole collegate con fluidità, incluse le forme posizionali, richiede tipicamente altre due o quattro settimane. La pratica coerente della scrittura a mano accelera il riconoscimento perché rinforza come le lettere cambiano forma quando unite.

Altri sistemi di scrittura

Revisionato dal team eevi ·
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