^ abc⟨ذ⟩ represents /d/ as in ذيل /deːl/ & ذكر /dakar/ or /z/ as in ذكي /zaki/, but the classical phoneme /ð/ is still used depending on the speaker. check Hejazi Arabic phonology
^ ab⟨ظ⟩ represents /dˤ/ as in ظفر /dˤifir/ & ظل /dˤilː/ or /zˤ/ as in ظرف /zˤarf/, but the classical phoneme /ðˤ/ is still used depending on the speaker. check Hejazi Arabic phonology.
^the affricate /d͡ʒ/⟨ج⟩ is realised as a [ʒ] (English s in pleasure) by a number of speakers or in a number of words.
^[q] is an allophone of /ɡ/ ⟨ق⟩ as in اِسْتِقْلال which can pronounced [ɪstɪqlaːl] or [ɪstɪglaːl]. It occurs in a number of phrases and words due to the influence of Modern Standard Arabic.
^The marginal phoneme /ɫ/ only occurs in the word الله/aɫɫaːh/ ('god') and words derived from it, such as يلا/jaɫɫa/ "come on", they contrast in والله /waɫɫa/ ('i swear') vs. ولَّا /walla/ ('or').
^[ŋ] is an allophone of /n/ ⟨ن⟩ before velar stops ⟨ق ,ك⟩ /k, ɡ/ as in اَنْكَب[aŋkab] or مِنقَل[mɪŋɡal], and [ɱ] is an allophone before ⟨ف⟩ /f/ as in قُرُنْفُل[gʊrʊɱfʊl].[citation needed]
^ abc⟨ث⟩ represents /t/ as in ثوب /toːb/ & ثواب /tawaːb/ or /s/ as in ثابت /saːbit/, but the classical phoneme /θ/ is still used depending on the speaker. check Hejazi Arabic phonology
^the trill/r/⟨ر⟩ is realised as a tap[ɾ] by a number of speakers or in a number of words.
^The phonemes /p/ and /v/ are only found in loanwords and they can be substituted by /b/ and /f/ respectively depending on the speaker
^Word initial and medial /u/ is pronounced [ʊ]orlesslikely[o̞] as in حُب[ħʊb], but strictly pronounced [u] at the end of words as in قبو[gabu], and before /w/ as in هُوَّ[huwːa]. All are allophones of the phoneme /u/.
^Word initial and medial /i/ is pronounced [ɪ]orlesslikely[e̞] as in سِرّ[sɪr], but strictly pronounced [i] at the end of words as in مدري[madri], and before /j/ as in هِيَّ[hijːa]. All are allophones of the phoneme /i/.
^[ɑ] is an allophone for /aː/ and /a/ for a number of speakers in some words, such as ألمانيا [almɑːnja] ('Germany'), ماما [mɑːmɑ] ('mom'), بابا [bɑːbɑ] ('dad') and يابان [jaːbɑːn] ('Japan').