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Introduction In Arabic nominal sentences, two primary elements are present: the subject and the predicate. The subject is termed as 'اَلْمُبْتَدَأُ', while the predicate is referred to as 'اَلْخَبَرُ'…
Introduction In Arabic nominal sentences, two primary elements are present: the subject and the predicate. The subject is termed as 'اَلْمُبْتَدَأُ', while the predicate is referred to as 'اَلْخَبَرُ'…
Introduction Words that combine with a noun or pronoun to form a sentence are called prepositions. They have their own meaning and affect nouns and pronouns. Their effect on a noun is to change the fi…
Introduction The imperfect tense in Arabic expresses both the present and the future, referring to an action that is incomplete. The conjugation of the imperfect tense is done by adding prefixes and s…
Introduction In Arabic, the Past Continuous tense is formed by using the helping verb كَانَ (kana), which means "was" or "were, " followed by the imperfect tense of the main verb. This tense is used t…
Introduction The subjunctive اَلْمُضَارِعُ الْمَنْصُوبُ and the jussive الْمُضَارِعُ المَجْزُومُ modify the verb in the imperfect tense. When a particle such as أَنْ (that) precedes the imperfect verb…
Introduction In Arabic, the term for declension is الإِعْرَابُ, introduced earlier in Chapter 2. Based on الإِعْرَابُ, nouns are categorized into two groups: Indeclinable (الْمَبْنِي) and Declinable (…
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