The Urdu language has ten vowels and ten nasalized vowels. Each vowel has four forms depending on its position: initial, middle, final and isolated. Like in its parent Arabic alphabet, Urdu vowels are represented using a combination of digraphs and diacritics.
Alif,
Waw,
Ye,
He and their variants are used to represent vowels.
Vowel chart Urdu does not have standalone vowel letters. Short vowels (
a,
i,
u,
o) are represented by optional diacritics (
zabar,
zer,
pesh,
ulta pesh) upon the preceding consonant or a placeholder consonant (
alif,
ain, or
hamzah) if the syllable begins with the vowel, and long vowels by consonants
alif,
ain,
ye, and ''wa'o
as matres lectionis, with disambiguating diacritics, some of which are optional (zabar
, zer
, pesh
, ulta pesh
), whereas some are not (madd
, hamzah''). Urdu does not have short vowels at the end of words. This is a table of Urdu vowels:
Alif Alif is the first letter of the Urdu alphabet, and it is used exclusively as a vowel. At the beginning of a word,
alif can be used to represent any of the short vowels:
ab,
ism,
Urdū. For long
ā at the beginning of words alif-mad is used:
āp, but a plain alif in the middle and at the end:
bhāgnā.
Wāʾo Wāʾo is used to render the vowels "ū", "o", "u" and "ō" ([uː], [oː], [ʊ] and [ɔː] respectively), and it is also used to render the
labiodental approximant, [ʋ]. Only when preceded by the consonant
k͟hē (), can
wāʾo render the "u" ([ʊ]) sound (such as in , "
k͟hud" -
myself), or not pronounced at all (such as in ''
, "k͟haab
" - dream
). This is known as the silent wāʾo
, and is only present in words loaned from Persian. When written with pesh
( / ), it is usually pronounced with "u" and "ū", for example "umeed
" ()
and "khushbū
" ()
. In the case of wāʾo
being written with an ulta pesh
( / ), it would be pronounced with an "o" and "ō", such as the likes of "mohtāj
" ()
and "jāgō
" ()''
Ye Ye is divided into two variants:
choṭī ye ("little ye") and
baṛī ye ("big ye").
Choṭī ye () is written in all forms exactly as in Persian. It is used for the long vowel "ī" and the consonant "y".
Baṛī ye () is used to render the vowels "e" and "ai" ( and respectively).
Baṛī ye is distinguishable in writing from
choṭī ye only when it comes at the end of a word/ligature. Additionally,
Baṛī ye is never used to begin a word/ligature, unlike
choṭī ye.
The 2 hes He is divided into two variants:
gol he ("round he") and
do-cašmi he ("two-eyed he").
Gol he () is written round and zigzagged, and can impart the "h" () sound anywhere in a word. Additionally, at the end of a word, it can be used to render the long "a" or the "e" vowels ( or ), which also alters its form slightly (on modern digital writing systems, this final form is achieved by writing two ''he's'' consecutively).
Do-cašmi he () is written as in Arabic Naskh style script (as a loop), in order to create the aspirate consonants and write Arabic words.
Ayn Ayn in its initial and final position is silent in pronunciation and is replaced by the sound of its preceding or succeeding vowel.
Nun Ghunnah Vowel nasalization is represented by
nun ghunna written after their non-nasalized versions, for example: '
when nasalized would become '. In middle form
nun ghunna is written just like
nun and is differentiated by a diacritic called or
ulta jazm which is a
superscript V symbol above the . Examples: == Diacritics ==