Find English Teachers
Nasib
How to express the following sentences in Arabic?
There are books.
There are no books.
There is a happy man.
There isn't a happy man.
I know the words for books, man and happy but I need to learn to construct phrases like "There are/is ...".
Thank you for your help!
Mar 3, 2018 6:09 PM
Answers · 3
1
There is translated to "هناك", both literally and in phrases you mentioned over here.
One rule in Arabic that is not found in Latin-based languages is that; there is no "verb to be" to be used in sentences in the present form (when verb to be is the only verb in the English or Latin phrase) e.g.
The boy is good >> الولد جيد
I am fine >> أنا بخير
So:
1- There are books >> هناك كتب
(There are some books >> هناك بعض الكتب)
2- There are no books >> لا يوجد كتب (this is the more common phrase. For a more accurate translation it would be ليس هناك كتب)
3- There is a happy man >> ذلك رجل سعيد
#
Here is a happy man >> هذا رجل سعيد
That's an expression. If you mean that "a happy man" is actually over there then it will translates to يوجد رجل سعيد هناك
4- There isn't a happy man >> لا يوجد رجل سعيد ... or ليس هناك رجل سعيد (same as in example no.2)
March 4, 2018
Still haven’t found your answers?
Write down your questions and let the native speakers help you!
Nasib
Language Skills
English, French, German, Hindi, Italian, Korean, Punjabi, Spanish, Urdu
Learning Language
English, French, Hindi, Italian, Korean, Spanish, Urdu
Articles You May Also Like

The Power of Storytelling in Business Communication
46 likes · 12 Comments

Back-to-School English: 15 Must-Know Phrases for the Classroom
33 likes · 6 Comments

Ten Tourist towns in Portugal that nobody remembers
64 likes · 23 Comments
More articles