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the changing form of arabic verbs and the plural of nouns,is it very complecated?
better answer in chinese ,if you can't,english is also ok
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i mean,for example,in english,plural or verb only need to add an s,but in arabic it seems not so simple,it changes a lot and ,what's more,it seems to follow more than ten forms of changing........Share:
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Arabic plural form is Easy as long as you are used to it
First we have something that is called : الْمُثَنَّى This means two of some thing for example :
كِتَابَان 两本书 / قَلَمَان 两支笔 / حَقِيبَتَان 两个箱子
This form is made by adding ان to the noun or ين
For example : الْحَقِيْبَتَان كَبِيْرَتَان 这两个箱子很大
اشْتَرَيْتُ كِتَابَيْنِ 我买两本书了 The first one we added ان and not ين because it is 主语,and the second example we added ين and not ان because it is 宾语
在这儿现在差刻三点钟所以我应该睡觉!
一会儿我继续
请加我的 Skype : hesham.salah6 我可以给你帮助.
First we have something that is called : الْمُثَنَّى This means two of some thing for example :
كِتَابَان 两本书 / قَلَمَان 两支笔 / حَقِيبَتَان 两个箱子
This form is made by adding ان to the noun or ين
For example : الْحَقِيْبَتَان كَبِيْرَتَان 这两个箱子很大
اشْتَرَيْتُ كِتَابَيْنِ 我买两本书了 The first one we added ان and not ين because it is 主语,and the second example we added ين and not ان because it is 宾语
在这儿现在差刻三点钟所以我应该睡觉!
一会儿我继续
请加我的 Skype : hesham.salah6 我可以给你帮助.
Hi, how are you?
there is nothing difficult or complecated
there is only three TENSES (past, present, future)
and the plural there is only three (regular (masculine),regular (feminine), irregular)
there is nothing difficult or complecated
there is only three TENSES (past, present, future)
and the plural there is only three (regular (masculine),regular (feminine), irregular)
I understand your pain. LOL, the funny thing is that Arabs will always tell you it's easy but they don't realize how complicated it is for a beginner! It took me some time to get a hang of Arabic plural forms. They can be very unpredictable. Basically, we have Female plural, Male plural, and Irregular plural.
The simplest one is plural for feminine, as you almost always just change the end of the word to "-aat". But not all feminine words take that form though.
There are many words that follow the same pattern when it comes to plurals. For instance:
madinah (a city) is "mudun" in plural
kitaab (a book) is "kutub"
GHurfah (a room) is "GHuruf"
Male and irregular plurals are really tricky. The best thing to do is just use them again and again until you memorize them clearly. Once you get a hang of it yourself, you will soon discover that there are more difficult grammar rules in Arabic that tends to complicate things with plurals - such as when we have case endings on the words (الإعراب).
Good luck!
The simplest one is plural for feminine, as you almost always just change the end of the word to "-aat". But not all feminine words take that form though.
There are many words that follow the same pattern when it comes to plurals. For instance:
madinah (a city) is "mudun" in plural
kitaab (a book) is "kutub"
GHurfah (a room) is "GHuruf"
Male and irregular plurals are really tricky. The best thing to do is just use them again and again until you memorize them clearly. Once you get a hang of it yourself, you will soon discover that there are more difficult grammar rules in Arabic that tends to complicate things with plurals - such as when we have case endings on the words (الإعراب).
Good luck!
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