• Letters with no initial and middle forms adopt either isolated or final form, because they cannot be joined with suffixing letter. (, , , , , , ) • The letter
hamzah may also appear in its
three-quarter form "" (
hamzah tiga suku), above
alif "أ", below
alif "إ" or housed (above
ya "ئ" or
wau "ؤ").
[e]
Spelling Modern Jawi spelling is based on the dictionary. Older texts may use different spellings for some words. Nonetheless, even different modern sources may use different spelling conventions; they may differ especially in the usage of the
matres lectionis ( , and ) and the , as well as in the spelling of vowels and consonant clusters in loanwords from
English. One source tends to use the following conventions; there are numerous exceptions to them nonetheless. •
Loanwords may be spelled differently. Particularly, loanwords from
Arabic often keep their original spellings. : The letters , , , , , , , , , , and are mostly used to spell Arabic loanwords, e.g., , , , , , , , , , . The letter is mostly used to spell English loanwords, e.g., . The letters , , , and are mostly used to spell loanwords from English, Arabic or Dutch, e.g., , , , , , , , and . : The letter , used to spell loanwords from English, may be spelled using different Jawi letters, depending on pronunciation, e.g., disjointed in or in . : The letter is also used to represent especially for words derived from
Classical Malay, e.g., ; and loanwords, e.g., . : Native Malay root morphemes with Rumi in the syllable coda are
glottal stops (pronounced ) and are written with , e.g., , , , , . Loanwords where the Rumi is derived from Western languages are spelled with : the initial and medial forms use the glyph , e.g., and ; the final form dominantly uses over , although the latter Arabic glyph is alternatively found often in some old writings and signages (e.g. variant spelling of as ). The final is also preserved in Arabic-derived aforementioned loans including special nouns like
Malik. : The letter was historically used to represent (Jawi: ) and such usage may still be found in archaic literature. This is because is a non-native consonant in Malay found only in loanwords thus was often approximated as a . • Though there are exceptions, vowels and diphthongs tend to be spelled this way: • When spelling vowels, there are many exceptions to the conventions stated above and below. Common exceptions include , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , and . • Some words spelled distinctly in Rumi may be
homographs in Jawi, e.g., and are both , and are both , and are both , and are both , and are both , and and are both . • Using or omitting when representing in closed syllables and in the last letter of a root morpheme: : When representing , is mostly omitted in
CVC-syllables. : However, it is usually not omitted in monosyllabic words that start with , e.g., , , . : It is also usually not omitted in root morphemes which first syllable is open and contains and which second syllable is closed and begins with , e.g., words with a /Ce.waC/ structure (where each C is a consonant) like , , , , , , , , , . : Final is generally kept to represent at the end of a word. : However, in native and
Sanskrit-derived Malay disyllabic root morphemes with the form /Ca.C*a/ [Ca.C*ə], where /C*/ is any of the following 12 consonants , , , , , , , , , , , (
mnemonic: ), final is not written, e.g., , , , (from Skt.
rasa), , , , (from Skt.
vācā), , , (from Skt.
rājan), (from Skt.
nāma), and . : Some native and Sanskrit-derived Malay trisyllabic root morphemes ending with , with three open syllables and which include the abovementioned 12 consonants, may also omit the final e.g. (from Skt.
naraka). • As the final letter of a word, root morpheme-final that is spelled with in Rumi may be represented by in Jawi. In the middle of a word, root morpheme-final that is spelled with in Rumi may be represented by in Jawi instead, e.g., → , → . • The may be used to spell some diphthongs. Sources differ as to whether and when it should be on the line , or placed above the previous mater lectionis, such as in with above , or even if it should be used at all in some words. : Furthermore, it may be used to represent a
hiatus, or a glottal stop , especially when (but not limited to) separating vowels at the boundary of a root morpheme and an affix, e.g., , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . ==Numerals==