The five nouns / الأَسْماء الخَمْسة
The Arabic five nouns, are particular nouns that see their case vowels (fatḥa, ḍamma and kasra) become, respectively, letters ا and و and ي positioned…
The Arabic five nouns, are particular nouns that see their case vowels (fatḥa, ḍamma and kasra) become, respectively, letters ا and و and ي positioned…
To express the exclusivity and the exception in Arabic we resort to a few words all meaning ‘except (for), excepting, with the exception of, apart…
The concept of the double sentence When it comes to Arabic conditional sentences, both Arabic and English have a twofold structure known as the double…
There’s six different adjectival patterns in Arabic which are: We already spoke about the active and passive participles in the “augmented forms” part of the…
Regular ḥāl with a noun The word al-hal in Arabic (الحال) means ‘the circumstance, condition, or state’ in Arabic. Grammatically it refers to an adjective…
Ordinal numbers Unlike cardinal numbers, ordinal numbers in Arabic must conform to the gender and case of their head noun, they are inflected for all…
Kana and its sisters are verbs when placed as head constituents of a nominal sentence, put the information/predicative complement (الخَبَر) in the accusative case (مَنْصُوب);…
Amongst the irregular verbs in Arabic, some root words are classified as “healthy” (صَحِيح), and others are labeled as “weak” (مُعْتَلّ) litt. diseased. أَكَلَ to eat…
Inna and its sisters (إِنّ وَأَخَواتُها) are accusative particles that can only be followed by a noun, an attached pronouns (ضَمائِر مُتَّصِلة), a demonstrative or…
The negative copula لَيْسَ laysa in Arabic, meaning ‘not to be’, is used to turn a nominal sentence into the negative form. Uniquely, this verb…
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