7.1 introduction to arabic words

9
Arabic with Husna Nahw Textbook © 2014 Bayyinah Institute Page 1 7.1 Unit 7.1: Introduction to Arabic Words HOMEWORK By the end of this lesson, I should be able to… x Recognize, define and give examples of ism’s, fi’l’s, and harf’s x Know the four properties of an ism x Know the status of an ism in an English sentence x Tell the status of an ism by ending sound or ending combination x Recite the Muslim Chart by heart 1 THREE KINDS OF WORDS IN ARABIC In all languages, we communicate using sentences. Sentences are composed of different kinds of words that come together to create a meaning. In the Arabic language, we have only 3 kinds of words. They are: 1) Ism ٌ ْ ِ ا: The name of a person, place, thing, idea, adjective, adverb and more. 2) Fi’l ٌ ْ ِ : A word that has a tense (past, present or future) 3) Harf ٌ فْ َ : A word that needs another word with it in order to make sense. 2 ISM STUDIES Isms are the first of the three kinds of words in Arabic that we will study. Recall that an ism is the name of a person, place, thing, idea, adjective, adverb or more.

Upload: drmuhsin

Post on 16-Feb-2016

252 views

Category:

Documents


4 download

DESCRIPTION

intro to arabic words

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 7.1 Introduction to Arabic Words

Arabic with Husna – Nahw Textbook

© 2014 Bayyinah Institute Page 1

7.1

Unit 7.1: Introduction to Arabic Words

HOMEWORK

By  the  end  of  this  lesson,  I  should  be  able  to…

x Recognize, define and give examples of ism’s,  fi’l’s,  and  harf’s

x Know the four properties of an ism

x Know the status of an ism in an English sentence

x Tell the status of an ism by ending sound or ending combination

x Recite the Muslim Chart by heart

1 – THREE KINDS OF WORDS IN ARABIC In all languages, we communicate using sentences. Sentences are composed of different kinds of words that come together to create a meaning. In the Arabic language, we have only 3 kinds of words. They are:

1) Ism اسم: The name of a person, place, thing, idea, adjective, adverb and more.

2) Fi’l

A word that has a tense (past, present or future) : فعل

3) Harf

رف A word that needs another word with it in order to make :ح

sense.

2 – ISM STUDIES Isms are the first of the three kinds of words in Arabic that we will study. Recall that an ism is the name of a person, place, thing, idea, adjective, adverb or more.

Page 2: 7.1 Introduction to Arabic Words

Arabic with Husna – Nahw Textbook

© 2014 Bayyinah Institute Page 2

2.1: The Properties of the Ism

We start our study of Arabic by studying the ism. Every ism has four properties:

status اب

س gender , عدد number ,إ

Every time you come .قسم and type جacross an ism you should be able to identify its four properties.

2.1.1 Properties of the Ism – Status (اب (إ

When studying the status of an ism we should first know: 1. The three forms of status 2. How to Tell Status 3. Light vs. Heavy 4. Flexibility

2.1.1.1 Properties of the Ism – Status – Three Forms of Status

There are three forms of status which can be identified in sentences that have an action. They are:

(SUBJECT) Doer of the act: فع

رفوع /  ر

م Raf (R)

(OBJECT) Detail of the act: صوب /نصبن

م Nasb (N)

(POSSESSIVE) Word  after  ‘of’:  

ر

جرور /ج

م Jarr (J)

Worked Examples:

A teacher entered the classroom. In  the  sentence  above,  the  action  is  “entered”.  The  doer  of  the  act  is  “teacher”  therefore  it  is  in the raf status. The  word  “classroom”  answers  the  question  “where  did  the  teacher  enter?”  Since  the  word  “classroom”  provides  more  information  about  the  action  “entered”  is  it  in  the  nasb status.

R N

Page 3: 7.1 Introduction to Arabic Words

Arabic with Husna – Nahw Textbook

© 2014 Bayyinah Institute Page 3

The teacher’s student woke up suddenly. In  English  sometimes  we  have  to  create  the  word  ‘of’.  The  phrase  “teacher’s  student”  can  be  written  as  “student  of the  teacher”.  Therefore  the  word  teacher  is  really  after-of even though the  word  ‘of’  is  hidden  here.

2.1.1.2 Properties of the Ism – Status – How to Tell

Now that we know the kinds of status, we need to know how to tell what status an ism is in. In English the status of a word depends on where the word is in the sentence. For example: Ahmed hit Zayd. The doer (Ahmed) comes first and the detail (Zayd) is second. If we change the order of the names and say Zayd hit Ahmed then now we have changed the statuses of Ahmed and Zayd. In Arabic, changing the order of the words does not change the status, rather the sounds at the end of the words tell us the status of the words. There are two basic ways to tell the status of an ism: ending combination or ending sound. Remember: When telling status look for ending combination FIRST and then look for ending sound.

J R N

Page 4: 7.1 Introduction to Arabic Words

Arabic with Husna – Nahw Textbook

© 2014 Bayyinah Institute Page 4

The following table is a summary of the ending sounds and ending combinations.

فع

:Raf’  Recognition ر

 ◌ (u) or  ◌ (un) ending sound for singular

    آ (aa) or آن (aani) ending combination for pair

or (oo) و

ending combination for plural (oona) ون

or (aatu) آت

ending combination for plural feminine (aatun) آت

:Nasb Recognition نصب

 ◌ (a) or  ◌ (an) ending sound for singular

ي ◌  (ay) or  ◌ ين (ayni) ending combination for pair

ي ◌  (ee) or  ◌ ين (eena) ending combination for plural

ending combination for plural feminine (aatin) آت or (aati) آت

ر

:Jarr Recognition ج

 ◌ (i) or  ◌ (in) ending sound for singular

ي ◌  (ay) or  ◌ ين (ayni) ending combination for pair

ي ◌  (ee) or  ◌ ين (eena) ending combination for plural

ending combination for plural feminine (aatin) آت or (aati) آت

Page 5: 7.1 Introduction to Arabic Words

Arabic with Husna – Nahw Textbook

© 2014 Bayyinah Institute Page 5

How to Tell Status Examples:

How do you say سلم ?in the following sentences م

1. A Muslim travelled across the sea

First  ask  yourself,  is  the  word  Muslim  a  doer,  detail  or  after  ‘of’?   In  this  sentence  the  word  “Muslim”  is  the  doer,  so  it  should  be  in  the  raf  status. Since this is one Muslim, we will  use  the  “un”  ending  sound:

سلم (doer,  raf  “un”  ending  sound) م

2. We met two Muslims on the way.

Is  the  underlined  phrase  “two  Muslims”  a  doer,  detail  or  after  ‘of’?  What  status  should  it  be?  Will  we  use  an  ending  sound  or  combination  for  “two  Muslims?”

3. The houses of Muslims are always clean.

4. The Muslim women went to the masjid.

Page 6: 7.1 Introduction to Arabic Words

Arabic with Husna – Nahw Textbook

© 2014 Bayyinah Institute Page 6

MASCULINE Plural ع Dual مثنى Singular مفرد

سلمونسلمان م

سلم م

م

Raf

سلمني م

سلمني

م سلما

Nasb م

سلمني م

سلمني

سلم م

Jarr م

FEMININE

سلماتسلمتان م

م

سلمة

م

Raf

سلمات م

سلمتني

سلمة م

Nasb م

سلمات م

سلمتني

سلمة م

Jarr م

BROKEN PLURAL الم

قلم قلمان أقRaf

الما

أق

قلمني Nasb قلما

الم

أق

Jarr قلم قلمني

Flexibility Forms How to Tell Light v. Heavy

Status

Page 7: 7.1 Introduction to Arabic Words

Arabic with Husna – Nahw Textbook

© 2014 Bayyinah Institute Page 7

REVIEW QUESTIONS FOR THE STUDENT

1. What are the three types of Arabic words? __________ __________ and _________

2. How many properties does the ism have and what are they? _______________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________

3. What are the three forms of status? __________ __________ and _________

4. Determine the status of the highlighted words in the following sentence (R=Raf’,  N=Nasb,  J=Jarr): My teacher likes shawarmas. ___ ______ _________

5. What is the status of the word

سلمني __________ ?م

Page 8: 7.1 Introduction to Arabic Words

Arabic with Husna – Nahw Textbook

© 2014 Bayyinah Institute Page 8

IN-CLASS

TEACHER-LED DISCUSSION POINTS 1. A word that has a tense (past, present, or future) is called a ___________.

2. What is a harf?

3. In a sentence, the subject or doer of the act is in which status?

4. The word after  ‘of’  is  in  which  status?

5. There are two ways to tell the status of an ism. By ending _____________

or ending _____________.

TEACHER-LED ACTIVITIES Identify  whether  the  words  in  the  table  below  are  isms,  fi’ls  or  harfs.

Table –

يف – In كتب - Books طاو

Dallas –

– Intense ل – For دالس

شديد

Makes – جعلالم – Peace ي

- Tall س

طويل

From – من Sent - ل

ز – Believers أن

ؤمنني

م

Determine the status and place an R, N or J over the highlighted words.

1. My teacher drinks chocolate milk regularly.

2. He doesn’t  like  vegetables  or  fruits.  

Page 9: 7.1 Introduction to Arabic Words

Arabic with Husna – Nahw Textbook

© 2014 Bayyinah Institute Page 9

3. He buys his chocolate milk happily.

4. My teacher also likes yummy shawarmas.

5. His students also like shawarmas.

6. He buys shawarmas for his class sometimes.

7. My teacher patiently explains hard concepts.

Give the status of the following words. Is it determined by sound or combo?

Word Status Word Status

تاب .1 الraf (ending sound) 2. الفيل

3.

العاديات .4 آيآت

والن .5

س

.6 ر

سلمون م

سجدين .7

.8 م

فأتني

9. ة

.10 فتي نارا