CASE ENDINGS/I'RAB OF ARABIC NOUNS. ARABIC GRAMMAR (LESSON 5)

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  • čas přidán 10. 12. 2020
  • In this lesson we are going to learn end cases or I'rab of Arabic nouns. The noun gets three casesin Arabic, dhammah, fathah and kasrah.
    In wich cases does the word get dhammah, fathah and kasrah.
    Nominative (مَرْفُوع) case of Arabic nouns.
    Accusative (مَنْصُوب) case of Arabic nouns.
    Genitive case (مَجْرُور) of Arabic nouns.
    #Arabic language, learn arabic, arabic for beginners in english, let's learn arabic, arabic grammar, arabic lessons, arabic classes, arabic tuitions, arabic dialogues, arabic conversations, arabic alphabet, learn arabic alphabet, arabic nahw and sarf, arabic morphologhy, arabic vocabulary, learn how to speak arabic, speak arabic, greeting in arabic.
    اللغة العربية الفصحى, اللغة العربية لغير الناطقين بها, قواعد اللغة العربية, النحو والصرف, تعلم اللغة العربية, الحوار في
    .اللغة العربية
    Arabic alphabet for beginners, learn how to read Arabic, Arabic dialogues, Arabic conversations, Arabic grammar rules, Arabic nahw and sarf, Arabic morphologhy, greetings in Arabic, how to speak arabic, Arabic for English speakers.
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Komentáře • 81

  • @al_.gharibah
    @al_.gharibah Před 23 dny

    Very Beneficial vedio,
    جزاك الله خير

  • @salmannaqvi3612
    @salmannaqvi3612 Před rokem +2

    So important, made so easy to understand, great work done!!! جزاكم الله خير الجزاء 👍👍

  • @fatimahasse207
    @fatimahasse207 Před 3 lety +12

    AssalamuAlaikum. Jazakallah. I find your lessons very well explained and orderly. May Allah grant you Jannat.

  • @star.kitty_
    @star.kitty_ Před 4 měsíci +2

    thank you so much. Tomorrow is my board exam and this helped me so much.

  • @HK7FTBL
    @HK7FTBL Před 2 lety +3

    The best explanation I found in this topic jazakallah

  • @bellaoz6226
    @bellaoz6226 Před 3 lety +8

    The best so far!!! Thanks. Keep going!!

    • @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG
      @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG  Před 3 lety

      Thank you so much

    • @moneyheist_-
      @moneyheist_- Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DGI have a question about the use of the fatha
      For example
      If I say,
      I like eating rice (with a fatha) and beans( with a fatha) as foods, instead of banana (without a fatha) and cake( with a fatha)
      In this case, will the presence of the fatha on those words, change the meaning of the sentence

  • @mdyousufali9186
    @mdyousufali9186 Před 3 lety +5

    This is very hard for me because I don't know Arabi. But your teaching system is very good. Zazakalla khairon.

  • @NG__________
    @NG__________ Před 3 lety +3

    The ultimate explanation ! Very good work ! 👌👍
    جزاك الله خير!

  • @Dimitra.Saltou
    @Dimitra.Saltou Před 9 měsíci +1

    Wow really really really thank you for this lesson!!! I was struggling to understand Arabic so many months, and eventually I discovered you!!! I couldn't find anywhere what are these "un" at the end of the words!!!! You are such a good teacher!!! Greetings from Greece ❤❤

  • @Maaajid2093
    @Maaajid2093 Před rokem +1

    ما شاء الله وتبارك الله. شكرا وجزاكم الله خيرا

  • @uzmasiddiqui3678
    @uzmasiddiqui3678 Před rokem +1

    Excellent explanation.
    Jazak Allah khairun kseera

  • @yahyasalah6120
    @yahyasalah6120 Před rokem

    Many thanks sir keep uploading very help full

  • @qaweemahmad3328
    @qaweemahmad3328 Před rokem +1

    Well done bro.

  • @jakubgrochowski3135
    @jakubgrochowski3135 Před 4 měsíci

    Ahlan wasahlan Marhaba Shokran jazeelan lak please continue Your Great Job Ustad This course is very useful, helpful and very well prepared

  • @CirduulMedia
    @CirduulMedia Před rokem +1

    Thank you شكرًا

  • @gorgeousprincessbabylove

    Alhamdulilah herrabil allahmeen shukran.

  • @elhachimivariety384
    @elhachimivariety384 Před 7 měsíci

    Assalam o alaokom I'm teacher of Arabic language you're doing well may Allah bless you

  • @saniyamalik8045
    @saniyamalik8045 Před 10 měsíci

    Jazakallah ❤

  • @tomilan6001
    @tomilan6001 Před 2 lety

    best organized explanation of irab thanks

  • @um_ayesha_
    @um_ayesha_ Před 22 dny

    جزاك الله خيرا
    6/7/24

  • @hearty1240
    @hearty1240 Před rokem +3

    MashaAllah, all the lessons are categorized systematically. I've started with the grammar playlist and now at this topic.
    May Allah grant you barakah from teaching others. I'm a student and not quite in a position to contribute much to your channel right now (hope I will be able soon), all I can do is sincerely make du'a that your riqz will continously flow.

  • @afetahmuktar2875
    @afetahmuktar2875 Před 3 lety +1

    Oustade, please put your arbic lesson in one folder for late watching

  • @abdullatifkheir1458
    @abdullatifkheir1458 Před 3 lety +2

    Your lessons are so good , but Try to give some difinitions in arabic and then translate them into english .
    Thank you for lessons

    • @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG
      @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG  Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you much. Giving Arabic definition will take extra time and will make videos longer. People want to learn with short videos. My lessons are basicly for English speaking people.

  • @MM-rb6lu
    @MM-rb6lu Před rokem +2

    Excellent presentation. Best Quran translations are M Asad (Leopold Weiss), Ali Qarai, Hammad Zaki, Asi, Maududi. Unfortunately Muhsin Khan, Pikhtall are not accurate.

  • @nis4860
    @nis4860 Před 2 lety +1

    Finally I can understand this lesson😭

  • @tanveerakhtar1507
    @tanveerakhtar1507 Před 2 lety +1

    Keep it up

  • @shabanmaulana8594
    @shabanmaulana8594 Před 2 lety +1

    This is problem I have, my grammar is very bad in Arabic, but I'm trying very had to understand the language, inshah Allah.

  • @alexcarter2542
    @alexcarter2542 Před měsícem

    Professor, I would like to thank you for making this video. This is without a doubt, the best (and most comprehensive) explanation of الإعراب anywhere on CZcams. I wish I had this video a long, long time ago. Maybe then I wouldn't be so confused in Arabic still after 10 years of studying it.
    Please make more videos like this. I have lots of questions. I really want to know when verbs can end with النصب. I see it in books all the time and I don't understand it. For example, I saw a sentence: "أبْحَرَتِ السفينة." And I don't understand why is the verb mansoob because the فاعل is 3rd person feminine, so I thought the verb should have sukoon and be مجزوم.
    Can you help me professor?
    Thank you for your hard work and jezzak Allah khairan

    • @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG
      @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG  Před měsícem

      Thank you so much for your support. You mean the verb is مَجْرُورٌ in :ابْحَرَتِ السفينة. the letter takes kasrah instead of sukoon here? It should normally be sukoon, but to read with the following noun easily kasrah is given instead of sukoon, so it's still originally sukoon, not kasrah. The kasrah is only given to read sentence smoothly.

    • @alexcarter2542
      @alexcarter2542 Před měsícem

      @@ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG ahhhhhhhhhhhh, okay. Professor, are there other situations like this? Where they change the إعراب to a different حركة to make the pronunciation easier?? What is this called in Arabic? I want to read about it online to know the rules. This is one of my big problems in Arabic: I don't know when should the rules break for "ease of pronunciation." Please help me find more information about this on the internet, Professor.

    • @alexcarter2542
      @alexcarter2542 Před měsícem

      @@ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG Professor, can you please tell me what this rule is called in Arabic, when we change the اعراب to make the pronunciation easier? Can you tell me what is this rule called, or tell me what can I search on the internet to learn more about this?
      Thank you professor

  • @anadaaiibiiimaanii8093
    @anadaaiibiiimaanii8093 Před rokem +1

    Mashallah the lesson is good but would you add more

  • @ulysse6825
    @ulysse6825 Před měsícem

    3:00 why does Fatimah and Ahmed take a dammah but Ali takes dammah tanween?

  • @meljindanish227
    @meljindanish227 Před rokem +1

    sir in the nominative case explanation, you said nouns end in dammah, but the predicate far is an adjective right , then how can it be noun? and y is it taking dammah

  • @khurshedalam5726
    @khurshedalam5726 Před 2 lety

    Good

  • @Islamiclecturesclips
    @Islamiclecturesclips Před 2 lety

    Assalamualaikum brother, MashaAllah well presented, easy to understand. Alhamdulillah JazakAllahu Khayran.
    Doubt: what does it mean by "And her sisters"

    • @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG
      @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG  Před 2 lety

      wa alaikum salaam, shukran.

    • @abudujana4633
      @abudujana4633 Před 10 měsíci +1

      There are group of words which are in some way related with كَان and they all combined are known as “كَان and her sisters”

  • @scissor7471
    @scissor7471 Před 9 měsíci

    Assalamu alaikkum sir, if the predicate is in nominative case then where will accusative case will go??

    • @scissor7471
      @scissor7471 Před 9 měsíci

      Please explain it jazak allah

    • @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG
      @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG  Před 9 měsíci

      Wa alaikum salaam, when كان comes in the beginning, then predicate becomes accusative case. Example: كان الطالبُ مريضًا

  • @OmerA282
    @OmerA282 Před 11 měsíci

    I have a question:
    Why did you put ُ in احمدُ but in عليٌ you put ٌ ? They're both don't have the ال

    • @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG
      @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG  Před 11 měsíci +1

      In Arabic most proper nouns do not take tanween ٌ and they don't take kasrah as well. There are few names take them. Such as عليٌّ- محمدٌ

    • @OmerA282
      @OmerA282 Před 11 měsíci

      @@ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG oh ok thanks!!!

  • @adityaadit2004
    @adityaadit2004 Před 2 lety

    what does it mean by 'her sister' in arabic? i don't understand

    • @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG
      @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG  Před 2 lety

      أُخْتُهَا

    • @adityaadit2004
      @adityaadit2004 Před 2 lety

      @@ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG no sir, i mean what does it mwan by "kaana and her sisters" or "thumma and her sisters" in arabic? Can you explain?

    • @julie-pierbergeron1017
      @julie-pierbergeron1017 Před rokem +1

      @@adityaadit2004 I think by "sisters" he simply means the other forms of kaana (كان) - as kannat (كانت), the feminine form, for example. :)

    • @mmmmohmm
      @mmmmohmm Před rokem

      Kaan كان and its sister are a group of 12 verbs in Arabic that are used to determine the time of the doing.. so Kaan is like the verb be (he is / was) .. we call the other verbs Kaan's sisters to make sure we remember they are one group that have the same rules in grammar, so verb Saar صار is one from Kaan's sisters, means he became, and Laisa ليس is a verb of denying the claimed event or condition.. while verb Ma-zaala ما زال means he is still.. they are Kaan and its sister, just a group of verbs that have a specific condition in Arabic grammar

  • @tolearnarabic
    @tolearnarabic Před 7 měsíci

    فاطمةُ or فاطمةٌ ؟

  • @mon0theist_tv
    @mon0theist_tv Před 3 lety

    Why is تحت not considered a preposition/حروف الجر ?

    • @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG
      @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG  Před 3 lety +1

      It's considered as adverb of place in Arabic, while in English it's considered as preposition

    • @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG
      @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG  Před 3 lety +1

      حروف الجر
      is not prepositions excatly. They are the particles actually that cause kasrah in the following word. But تحت is not حرف(particle). It's adverb.

    • @mon0theist_tv
      @mon0theist_tv Před 3 lety +1

      @@ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG جزاك الله خير

    • @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG
      @ARABICLANGUAGEACADEMY-DG  Před 3 lety

      آمين، بارك الله فيك

  • @abhseeker
    @abhseeker Před rokem

    There are some mistakes in your understanding