Faa
Arabic /f/ — small bowl on the line, one dot above.
Sound
Faa is /f/, the same sound as English f: a voiceless labiodental fricative, made by pressing the lower lip lightly against the upper teeth. There is nothing tricky about it for an English speaker. There is no emphatic counterpart in standard Arabic — Faa has no S-, D-, T-, Z-style heavy partner.
Faa is also a common word-prefix in classical and modern Arabic — فَـ "and so / then," used to chain clauses. So the letter shows up everywhere as a connector, not just inside roots.
In some North African dialects faa appears in loanwords standing in for /v/ (since Arabic has no native /v/), and the letter is sometimes written with three dots above (ڤ) to mark the /v/ value, but this is a marginal extension.
Forms
Connecting behavior
Faa connects on both sides.
Easy to confuse with
Qaaf (ق). Faa and qaaf are close cousins but not twins. Two distinguishing features:
- Dot count. Faa has one dot above; qaaf has two dots above.
- Bowl depth. In isolated and final form, faa's bowl sits on the baseline; qaaf's bowl dips below the baseline. So even at distance or in tiny print, the lower silhouette tells you which is which.
Examples in common words
A note on handwriting
Faa is one of the easier letters to recognize in handwriting: a small bowl on a stem with a single dot above. The bowl is usually the last thing closed, and the dot is added at the end. In quick writing, the dot can drift toward the body of the letter, but the on-the-line silhouette and absence of a deep dip below distinguish it cleanly from qaaf.