Arabic Grammar - Exercises
Arabic Grammar - Exercises
Arabic Grammar - Exercises
Exercises
Cross-reference to
Arabic Grammar
for the Exercises
Essentials of
Arabic Grammar
Excerpts from
The Textbook
Abdallah Nacereddine.
A New Approach to
Teaching Arabic Grammar.
Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse, 2009.
Copyright 2010 Abdallah Nacereddine
www.a-nacereddine.com
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Contents (1) * ()
Subject
3. Perfect
4. Imperfect
5. Imperative
6. Subject
7. Direct object
8. Indirect object
9. Annexation
13
15
18
12. Subjonctive
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13. Jussive
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31
34
43
46
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Contents (2) * ()
19. Elative
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51
52
53
53
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25. Specificative
56
58
59
60
29. Diptote
61
65
66
67
33. Vocative
68
34. Exception
70
72
37. Abbreviated
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Contents (3) * ()
38. Defective
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39. Prolonged
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40. Spacification
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77
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79
80
81
83
86
88
89
91
93
94
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54. Time
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1. NOMINATIVE SEPARATE
PERSONAL PRONOUNS
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The following table gives the nominative separate personal
pronouns.
3rd person
2nd person
he
you (m.s.)
she
you (f.s.)
they (d.)
you (d.)
they (m.p.)
you (m.p.)
they (f.p.)
you (f.p.)
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1st person
I
we
2. AFFIXED
PERSONAL PRONOUNS
(
The following table gives the accusative, dative and genitive
affixed personal pronouns.
3rd person
m.s.
f.s.
d.
m.p.
f.p.
2nd person
m.s.
f.s.
d.
m.p.
f.p.
1st person
s. (1)
p.
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The affixed personal pronouns can be used as:
Pronoun
Possessive
Direct
object
Personal
pronoun
Indirect
object
1P. s.
p.
2P. m.s.
f.s.
d.
m.p.
f.p.
3P. m.s.
f.s.
d.
m.p.
f.p.
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3. THE PERFECT
(
The Perfect stem is obtained by cutting the last vowel of the third
singular masculine perfect, and the perfect is conjugated by adding to
this stem the following endings:
3rd person
m.s.
2nd person
1st person
m.s.
s.
p.
f.s.
f.s.
m.d
d.
f.d
m.p.
m.p.
f.p.
f.p.
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)(1
1P. s.
p.
2P. m.s.
f.s.
d.
m.p.
f.p.
3P. m.s.
f.s.
m.d.
f.d.
m.p.
f.p.
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4. THE IMPERFECT
(
Whereas in the perfect, the different persons are expressed by suffixes, the Imperfect has prefixes. It also has some suffixes to denote
number and gender as shown below:
3rd person
m.s.
f.s.
m.d
f.d
m.p.
f.p.
2nd person
m.s.
f.s.
d.
m.p.
f.p.
1st person
s.
p.
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)(1
)(2
1P. s.
p.
2P. m.s.
f.s.
d.
m.p.
f.p.
3P. m.s.
f.s.
m.d.
f.d.
m.p.
f.p.
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5. THE IMPERATIVE
(
The imperative is formed from the jussive (Chap. 62) but, since it
begins with two consonants, it takes a short prosthetic vowel. In the triliteral verb, the prosthetic "alif
"alif, when the second radical takes fath>a or
kasra, the vowrl is kasra, when it takes d>amma, it is d>amma, as the following
table shows:
2nd person
m.s.
(3)
(2)
(1)
f.s.
d.
m.p.
f.p.
(3) to write
(2) to sit
(1) to open
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( --
There are three cases in Arabic and these are indicated merely by
changing the vowelling of the final consonant (except in the dual and
sound masculine plural endings). They are:
a) The nominative case vowelled with d>amma
e.g.
a student.
the student.
a student.
the student.
is supported by
alif, thus
.)
with a student.
with the student.
the students book.
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e.g.
( --
The dual declines as follows:
a)
b)
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and
( --
The Sound Masculine Plural declines as follows, and takes
Note that when the sound masculine plural is annexated, both the
article
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( --
The Sound Feminine Plural declines as follows, and takes:
a)
d>amma only in the nominative case, and kasra in the oblique cases, i.e.
accusative, dative and genitive.
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9. ANNEXATION
(
A noun followed by another noun in annexation, in other words,
when a noun is annexated to another noun, or pronoun, it automatically
loses its tanwi\n or its
e.g.
according to whether it is definite or indefinite, unless it is, itself, annexated to another noun or pronoun. However, it always terminates in kasra,
i.e. it takes the genitive case, which is shown by kasra , e.g.
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9. ANNEXATION (2)
() (
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(
The Demonstrative pronouns are as follows:
Close
Distant
1) If the demonstrative qualifies a simple noun, it precedes it, and the noun takes the article, e.g.
this book.
But if the noun is defined by a following genitive or a pronominal suffix, the demonstrative is placed after these, e.g.
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this is a book.
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(
The Relative pronouns are as follows :
Masculine
sing.
dual, nom.
acc. et gen.
plur.
Feminine
or
1) When the relative pronoun refers to any part of the relative sentence which follows except the subject, it may be replaced by an attached pronoun.
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(lit.
2) The relative pronoun is always omitted when it refers to an indefinite noun. This is especially difficult for Europeans to appreciate, e.g.
soever, are also relative. However, they are treated as nouns, whereas
and
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la\ms are written, namely the dual and the feminine plural.
Note also that the plural form of the relatives is used only for persons. For animals and things, the feminine singular form is used.
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( -
The imperfect has three moods:
1)
Indicative
Jussive
Subjunctive
Endings: 1) 1st pers. sing. and plur.; 2nd pers. masc. sing.; 3rd pers.
masc. and fem.; 2) 2nd pers. fem. sing.; 3) dual; 4) masc. plur.; 5) fem.
plur.
Note the differences and the similarities between the jussive and
the subjunctive.
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( -
The Imperfect subjunctive is used after the following particles
(conjunctions):
1)
that, ( for )
2)
that not.
I want to learn this language.
3)
in order to,
4)
5)
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6)
7)
or
was not.
I drive slowly
prohibitive.
until that.
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6)
7)
or
was not.
I drive slowly
prohibitive.
until that.
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d)
if.
what, if anything.
what you sow is you what reap.
g) he who, if anyone, whoever.
he who does good finds good.
h) whatever, no matter how.
f)
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he wont understand.
when, whenever.
whenever you come, you find
i)
k)
l)
when, whenever.
m)
n)
o)
when, whenever.
where, wherever.
wherever.
wherever.
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p) where, wherever.
q) howsoever, no matter how.
howsoever you treat others, you are
treated likewise.
Note that the suku\n of the jussive becomes kasra before the article
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14. "INNA
NA AND ITS SISTERS
(
The second category of annulers which are assigned to the nominal
sentence consists of
Preceded by
or of
one of its sisters, and takes the accusative case by assimilation to a direct
object put before its subject; the predicate becomes the predicate of
to say,
, or
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14. "INNA
NA AND ITS SISTERS (2)
() (
4)
5)
6)
7)
because.
as if, as though, it is (was) as if.
would that, would God, if only...
perhaps - comparatively rare in modern Arabic.
After
The only circumstance in which anything is allowed to interpose between these particles and their accusative is when the accusative is an
indefinite noun, and the predicate is an prepositional phrase, or here,
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14. "INNA
NA AND ITS SISTERS (3)
() (
or
e.g.
The predicate is also put before the noun when the latter is suffixed
with a pronoun referring to the substantive contained in the prepositional
phrase, e.g.
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(
Preceded by
no longer occupies the first place in the sentence, becomes the noun of
, e.g.
to be.
2) to be or become in the morning.
3) to be or become in the forenoon.
4) to be or become in the daytime.
5) to be or become in the evening.
6) to be or become during the night, or spend the night.
7) to become.
1)
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All the preceding verbs can be conjugated. Note that the first five
verbs
to become.
8) not to be. This verb is conjugated in the perfect only, and
when used it has the meaning of the imperfect. Note that the predicate of
to strengthen the negation, can be preceded by the preposition
The verb
as long as.
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The predicate of
of one single expression, or complex, i.e. consisting of a verbal or nominal sentence, or of a preposition and its complement, e.g.
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(
Although it is easy to learn the Arabic numerals for dialectal use,
they are one of the most complex aspects of the written language. Even
the Arabs themselves often make mistakes. It is best to divide them into
groups, starting with the numbers one and two.
1) 1 and 2
a) (i) one
()
masculine, and
form of the active participle. It is usually used as an adjective placed after the noun with which it agrees in gender and case.
(ii) It is rarely used, since the indefinite singular noun in Arabic
means one or a, as in the French language. Hence, the word
, in
a certain emphasis
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2) 3 to 10
a) These numbers take the feminine form when the noun counted is
masculine in gender. They take the masculine form when the noun
counted is feminine, e.g.
three men;
three women.
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d) If the numbers 3 to 10 are placed in front of a noun, they naturally lose their tanwi\n.
e) When they are placed in front of a noun, they are declined and
take the same case, i.e. nominative, accusative, or dative-genitive, that
the noun would have taken in the sentence, if it had not been counted.
The noun itself is placed in the genitive plural, e.g.
a) Eleven and twelve, masculine,
feminine, agree in gender with the noun counted, e.g.
11 or 12 boys.
11 or 12 girls.
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15 boys; 15 girls.
c) The numerals 11 to 19 are not declined. They always carry a
fath>a, even when they take an article, with the exception of the unit of the
number 12, e.g.
4) 10
a) It should be noted that, when
their gender is reversed in relation to the noun counted. When they are
used in a compound number, i.e. 11 to 19, they agree in gender with the
noun counted, e.g.
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10 men; 15 men.
10 women; 15 women.
b) The of , without ta\' marbu\ta,
a takes suku\n, when
is used alone. In compound numbers, the takes a fath>a, e.g.
ten; fifteen.
c) The of , with ta\' marbu\ta, takes a fath>
ath>a, when is
used alone. It takes a suku\n when used in compound numbers, i.e. the
, e.g.
ten;
reverse of
fifteen.
5) 20 to 90.
a) The tens from 20 to 90 are used in both the masculine and feminine forms and are declined like nouns in the sound masculine plural, i.e.
with
b) As from 20, the numbers between the tens are formed by placing
the unit before the ten and joining them with the conjunction
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, e.g.
twenty three.
a) (i) , hundred, is often written , but the "alif is not pronounced. remains invariable, as do all the hundreds.
(ii) The numeral 100 is followed by a noun in the genitive singular,
e.g.
100 books;
100 years.
tanwi|n.
b) (i)
200, invariable.
a noun, e.g.
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200 books.
(iii) , like , is followed by a noun in the genitive singular
(see examples above).
c) (i) 300 to 900. The number
from 3 to 9 which precede it to form the hundreds from 300 to 900 take
the masculine form and are often joined into one word, e.g.
300,
7)
1,000
200.
a)
and
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b)
is a masculine noun.
or . It
follows the same rule applied to the numbers from 3 to 10, 11 to 19, 100
to 900, e.g.
three thousand.
thirteen thousand.
three hundred thousand.
c) When , is immediately followed by a noun, whether it is in
the singular, the dual or the plural, it loses its tanwi\n, and is followed by a
noun in the genitive singular, e.g.
3,000 books.
13,000 books.
300,000 books.
d) Remark. When it is immediately followed by a noun,
200 books.
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, like
8) 1,000,000
This number follows the same rule as for
1,000.
e.g.
9,537; or
b) Ascending order: the units are placed first, followed by the tens,
then the hundreds and the thousands, each linked by the conjunction
e.g.
However, this practice is not used in modern Arabic.
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(
the Ordinal numbers from 2nd to 10th derive,
more or less, from the corresponding cardinal numbers and follow the
pattern
Feminine
the first
the second (indef., )
the third
the fourth
the first
the second
the third
the fourth
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the fifth
the sixth
the seventh
the eighth
the ninth
the tenth
the fifth
the sixth
the seventh
the eighth
the ninth
the tenth
After 10th, the ordinal numbers are used like cardinals, except
when they are composed of the above-mentioned numbers, which take
the normal form in the two genders.
The two parts of the ordinal numbers from 11th to 19th are not declined. All the cases take a fath>a.
masculine
feminine
the eleventh
the twelfth
the thirteenth
the fourteenth
the eleventh
the twelfth
the thirteenth
the fourteenth
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The ordinal numbers from 20th to 90th are the same as the cardinal numbers, e.g.
the twentieth
twentieth
The ordinal numbers between the tens as from 20th are formed by
placing the units in front of the tens and joining the two elements with the
conjunction
e.g:
Masculine
Feminine
the 21st
the 22nd
the 23rd
the 21st
the 22nd
the 23rd
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and quality. There are seven types of adjectives which we have already
studied, or will study, each one in detail. They are:
1)
2)
3)
4)
assimilate adjective;
5)
intensive adjective;
6)
7)
active participle;
passive participle;
ordinal number;
relative adjective.
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a)
c)
b)
d)
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(
The Elative, or the Comparative and the Superlative, is formed by
eliminating all the additional letters, and by following the pattern
.
When the second and third radicals are identical, the form is
( for ).
The elative is always formed from the three radicals. It is formed
from words with more than three consonants and the words of the form
more, less,
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Consequently, it
agrees in gender and number with the noun to which it refers, e.g.
Singular
Masculine
Feminine
Dual
Plural
instead of
( for ) ,
pronoun, e.g.
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with an attached
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(
A verbal sentence is a sentence which starts with a verb followed
by its subject. The normal sentence order in Arabic is for the verb to
come first.
It is especially noted that when the verb in the third person
comes before the subject, it is always in the masculine or feminine
singular according to its subject. In other words, the verb preceding
its subject agrees with it in gender, but not in number.
Compare the two verbs, preceding and following the subject, in the
sentence below:
The teacher sits and writes (fem. and masc., sing., dual and plur.).
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(
The words
a father;
a brother;
a father-in-law, ap-
Acc.
Gen.
The word
or
Gen.
or
becomes either
Acc.
Nom.
or
or
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when?, e.g.
2)
or by air.
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(
State or condition or the
an accusative expressing a state or condition of the object in actual connection with those acts. In other words, it is an object expressing a transitory state, though it may also be permanent.
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or an affixed pronoun
refers.
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25. SPECIFICATION
I bought a pound,
one does not understand what you mean by a pound, which could
be a pound of tomatoes, sugar, or anything, unless you specify it, for
example, by saying:
, e.g.
preposition
or
or
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2) Specification after
, e.g.
3) Specification of number:
a) the genitive plural after the cardinal numbers from 3 to 10, e.g.
c) the genitive singular after the cardinal numbers 100 and 1000,
e.g.
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(
The Active participle is a noun formed to indicate that
which performs the action. It has two types:
1) It is of the form
lengthening "alif after the first radical, and giving a kasra to the second
radical, e.g.
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(
The Passive participle is a noun formed to indicate
the action of the verb which the subject experiences. There are two
types:
1) the pattern is
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which the action is carried out. It resembles the noun of time and place,
beginning with the mi\m
, and , e.g.
key, from to open.
lamp, from
broom, from
spoon, from
elevator, from
to beam.
to sweep.
to lick.
scissors, from
to go up.
to cut.
and
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29. DIPTOTES
(
Undefined substantives and adjectives are, in the singular number,
either triptotes or diptotes.
Triptotes are those which have three terminations to indicate the
different cases, viz in the nominative, in the accusative, and
in the dative and genitive.
Diptotes are those which have only two terminations, viz in
the nominative, and in the accusative, dative and genitive, and take
no tanwi\n.
The following types of noun are diptotes:
1) Broken plurals of the following forms:
offices, plur.
as
as
lamps, plur.
as letters, plur. of
as
stamps, plur.
of
of
of
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as ministers, plur.
as friends, plur.
of
of
first, plural of
others, plural of
things, plural of
5) The following feminine forms:
red; thirsty;
remembrance;
greatest.
6) The masculine singular elative, color and defect (physical or moral) nouns of the form
bigger;
blond;
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hunchback;
stupid, silly.
Ahmad;
Aisha;
Sulaiman;
Suad;
Paris.
Egypt;
whose feminine is
, e.g.
bers, e.g.
6 is the double of 3.
and
, e.g
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two by two,
three by three.
Baalbek;
or
Hadhramaut;
Bethlehem.
Note that diptotes are treated as triptotes when they are made definite by the article, by an affixed pronoun or by annexation, e.g.
Nom.
Acc.
Gen.
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(
the Complement of cause is a verbal noun in the
accusative mentioned after the verb to express aim or purpose. It is
the answer to the question why? e.g.
the child does not play with the dog, because he is afraid of him.
the student studies hard hoping to pass the exam.
people lie because they are ashamed to tell the truth.
one (man) works in order to earn ones (his) livelihood.
the people demonstrate in order to protest against the government.
the State grants a scholarship to students in order to encourage
them to study.
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(
the Absolute object is a verbal noun in the accusative repeated after the same verb in order to:
1) give stress, e.g.
he does work.
nent.
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mon is . It requires after it a noun not defined by the article, and which
is put sometimes in the nominative, sometimes in the accusative.
1) It is put in the nominative without tanwi\n :
a) If it is a proper name, e.g.
O Muh>ammad!
mmad O Fa\ti>mah!
ah
b) When the particular person or thing called is indefinite and directly addressed, e.g.
O boy! O Mister!
2) It is put in the accusative:
a) If it is followed by a genitive, e.g.
O Arabic teacher!
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34. EXCEPTION
is by
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(
la\ that denies the whole genus, in the same
way that introduces the subject of the nominal sentence in the accusative, is called the noun of . It is always indefinite with no tanwi\n. The
predicate may be omitted, when it has been sufficiently indicated, as
when one asks:
nobody, nothing.
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36. EXCLAMATION
(
The Arabic language possesses two forms for expressing
form
sative, i.e. the object that causes surprise, wonder or exclamation, e.g.
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( --
1) The Abbreviated is a noun ending with
"alif maqs>u\ra, "alif that can be abbreviated, which can be a regular "alif
as in a staff or an "alif maqs>u\ra as in
The "alif maqs>u\ra is
an echo.
on;
when;
to walk;
to see.
I write to him; b)
we see him.
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2)
judge;
lawyer; expensive.
a judge speaks.
I know a judge.
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When defined by the article or by annexation, the of the defective is written, but is not expressed in the nominative and genitive. It is
expressed only in the accusative, e.g
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40. SPECIFICATION OR
PARTICULARISATION
cusative preceded by a pronoun - generally of the first, rarely of the second person - referring to it, without any verb intervention. The specification or the particularisation is the noun which the pronoun represents and
to which the statement made refers. It is to be explained by an ellipsis of
I mean, or
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( -
The Noun of time and place expresses the
place where the action of the verb is accomplished, or the time or occasion of the action.
It is formed like the imperfect active of the first form of the verb, by
cal fath>a, if the imperfect has fatha or d>amma; and kasra, if the imperfect
has kasra, or if the verb has wa\w as a first radical. Such nouns are nearly always of the form
or
office, from
factory, from
place, from
to write.
school, from
house, from
, e.g.
or
to work.
to study.
to descend.
to place.
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appointment, from
West, from
to promise.
to set (sun).
For the derived forms, the passive participle takes the place of the
noun of time and place, e.g.
a hospital, from
to meet.
to seek a cure.
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action once. Or again, it is a noun that indicates the number of times the
action has taken place.
1) If derived from the simple triliteral verb, it has the form of
e.g.
termination
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(
the Noun of kind or the Noun of manner
is a noun that indicates the manner of doing what is expressed by the
verb. Or again, it indicates the manner in which the action takes place.
1) It is derived from the simple triliteral verb, and has the form of
, e.g.
a mother.
2) It is derived from the derived forms by adding the feminine termination
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(
the Connected adjective. The adjective may refer to
the substantive either directly (in which case it is a simple adjective), e.g.
he is a well-educated boy;
or indirectly, by virtue of a following word which is connected with it, e.g.
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The following noun must contain an affixed personal pronoun. Otherwise, the connected adjective becomes a simple adjective, as in:
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46. MAS>DAR
VERBAL NOUN OR INFINITIVE
(
Mas>dar
a means an origin, a source, the place from where
anything goes forth, where it originates, because most Arab grammarians derive the compound idea of the finite verb from the simple idea of
the substantive. We may compare with it the Greek infinitive used with
the article as a substantive.
This word designates an abstract declinable verbal noun, which, in
general, has no dual, nor plural, and which expresses an action or a
manner of being with no idea of time, number or person.
It is so termed because some grammarians consider it as the
source from which the verb derives. However, other grammarians consider the verb in the perfect, mainly the 3rd person masculine singular,
as being the etymological root, because it contains only the radical letters, e.g. he entered, he has entered, whereas the verbal noun not
infrequently has a letter or more of increase, e.g.
bal noun of
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46. MAS>DAR
VERBAL NOUN OR INFINITIVE (2)
() (
the student understands the lesson (lit. the teacher is pleased for the understanding of the student the lesson).
The verbal noun
to coordi-
nate.
There is also an in-between stage, in which the Mas>dar acts grammatically exactly as a noun, though the verbal force is not absent, e.g.
No admittance, no smoking, no spitting, no parking.
In other words, it is called a verbal noun, because it has a double
meaning both as a noun (substantive) and as a verb, e.g.
meaning at the same time : I like economics, economy and I like to economize, as means both economy and to
economize.
Instead of using a verbal noun, we have the alternative of
Contents
84
46. MAS>DAR
VERBAL NOUN OR INFINITIVE (3)
() (
using a verb conjugated in the same person, in the subjunctive, preceded by the subjunctive particle
, e.g.
Contents
85
(
1) If the leading substantive is definite and signifies something
single and indivisible,
means whole, as in
as in
Contents
86
Contents
87
Contents
88
(
1)
must always be
Contents
89
2)
bers from 3 to 10 which they represent. Generally, their gender is reversed; however, the masculine form
a few men;
a few women.
But
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90
(
one, someone, somebody.
1) masc. is used like ; but the latter is more commonly
used as an adjective, e.g.
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91
2) fem. is used like
except that it does not decline but remains the same in all the cases, e.g.
Contents
92
(
the same, may precede or follow the noun. Here we deal with
it only when it precedes the noun (See Chap. 114).
As regards gender, it is used invariably when annexated to a noun.
However, it declines as if it were the leading substantive. The following
noun may be singular or plural. But it must be definite, and put in the
genitive, e.g.
Nom.
///
Acc.
///
Gen.
///
The same student(s) masc. and fem.
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93
(
kat_irun and qali\lun are used:
1) as adverbs, invariably, e.g.
/ /
Acc.
/ /
Dat.
/ /
many/less students, masc. and fem.
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94
(
the Writing of
a father; a mother;
man.
always.
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95
(i) it is written on ya|', if one of the two vowels (the one hamza
has and the other preceding) is kasra, and the other is d>amma, fath>a or
suku\n, e.g.
a well;
a group;
to be asked.
a question;
responsible.
to ask;
a question.
water;
quiet;
slow.
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96
news;
prediction;
to be wrong.
a part;
a thing.
Note that if the preceding letter is a ya\' and hamza has tanwi\n, it
is written on ya\' and tanwi\n is written on "alif , e.g.
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97
( -
Cardinal numbers
Ordinal numbers
Time - Hours
1st
1 oclock
2nd
2 oclock
3rd
3 oclock
4th
5th
5 oclock
6th
6 oclock
7th
7 oclock
8th
8 oclock
10
9th
9 oclock
20
10th
10 oclock
11th
11 oclock
12th
12 oclock
4
5
6
30
40
100
1000
Contents
4 oclock
55. "ID_
D_A AND LA
and
particles.
1)
i.e. perfect, to mean the future. The second verb is used in the presentfuture, i.e. imperfect, e.g.
. With
However, when the verbs are used in the perfect, is prefixed to the
second verb, or to
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99
55. "ID_
D_A AND LAW (2)
(!) "#$% $& '$()* (++
to you.
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100
Arabic Grammar Exercises
Based on the Textbook:
Abdallah Nacereddine. A New Approach
to Teaching Arabic Grammar.
Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse, 2009.
P]
7
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
3
($)$*'
+,-./*' 01"234' (5
+,-%*' 01"234' (6
7)"*' (8
(9"3*' ( :
0;<' ( =
>?".4 ( @
AB C$D.*' ( E
9F0G' ( H
+I")J' ( K
L9"MJ' NO' ( 5P
C$Q$*' NO' ( 55
(9"3*' R-S ( 56
(9"3*' TUV ( 58
"WX'$YZF [\ ( 5:
P]
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
4
($)$*'
"WX'$YZF ["^ (5=
+_,Q<' `'a?<' (5@
+_b_X0%4' `'a?<' (5E
cD/4' +dB"e; (5H
>_3.%4' NO' (5K
>D.4' +dB"e; (6P
+f2g' h"2O<' (65
[";U4' i0j (66
["k*' i0j (68
C"l' (6:
U__2%4' (6=
>?".4' NO' (6@
C$D.*' NO' (6E
+4m' NO' (6H
P]
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
5
($)$*'
i0-4' n; ($/2*' (6K
Ao,V< C$D.*' (8P
p,e*' C$D.*' (85
AD; C$D.*' (86
q`"/*' (88
rsB t/u%f*' (8:
v/w,4 +_I"/4' r (8=
RwD%4' (8@
9$-d*' (8E
]$d/*' (8H
`Fa2*' (8K
]"-%Yr' (:P
["k*' NO' (:5
[";U4' NO' (:6
P]
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
6
($)$*'
L0*' NO' (:8
+x_W4' NO' (::
7bbf4' cD/4' (:=
a-*' Nky (:@
>^ Nky (:E
"%,^F z^ Nky (:H
{DB Nky (:K
qay\F ayZ Nky (=P
v.S Nky (=5
>_,|F 0_u^ Nky (=6
LU2W4' +B"%^ (=8
c|$4' (=:
+d,%}; ~_)'$;F '\ (==
(1
(2
)(
(3
(4
Grammar
Contents
(5
(6
(7
(8
Grammar
Contents
(1
(2
(3
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Grammar
Contents
3. The Perfect -
10
(5 .
(6
(7
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Grammar
Contents
11
4. The Imperfect -
(5
(6
(7
(8
Grammar
Contents
5. The Imperative -
12
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Grammar
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6. The Subject -
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9. the Annexation -
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Grammar
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)( .
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Grammar
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Grammar
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(1
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Grammar
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(1
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(4 .
Grammar
Contents
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(1
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Grammar
Contents
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Grammar
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(1
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Grammar
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28
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Grammar
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Grammar
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30
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Grammar
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Grammar
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Grammar
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33
(1
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?
Grammar
Contents
34
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Grammar
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35
(1
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Grammar
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36
(1
.
/
(2
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Grammar
Contents
37
(1
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Grammar
Contents
38
(1
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Grammar
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39
(1
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Grammar
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40
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Grammar
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41
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Grammar
Contents
42
(1
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(3
Grammar
Contents
43
36.The Exclamative -
(1
(2
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(4
Contents
Grammar
44
(1
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Grammar
Contents
45
(1
(2
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Grammar
Contents
46
(1
(2
.
.
(3
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Grammar
Contents
47
(1
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Grammar
Contents
48
(1
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(4
Grammar
Contents
49
(1
(2
(3 .
(4 .
Grammar
Contents
50
(1
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Grammar
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51
(1
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Grammar
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52
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Grammar
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53
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Grammar
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54
(1
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Grammar
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55
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Grammar
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56
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Grammar
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57
(1
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Grammar
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58
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Grammar
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59
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Grammar
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60
(1
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Grammar
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61
(1
(2
54. Time -
?
?
(3
(4
Grammar
Contents
62
(1
(2
(3
(4
Contents
Grammar