Arabic Interrogative:
To form the interrogative
in Arabic you just need to place the word “hal” هل in the beginning of the sentence, easy!
Hal means do or does.
Does he have a house? = hal ladaihi bait? هل
لديه بيت؟
Do you smoke = hal tudakhen? هل
تدخن؟
There are other ways to make questions in
Arabic using interrogative pronouns, just add them to your sentence and unlike
English, in Arabic you don’t need to change the order of the sentence:
What = matha (th
pronounced as in that)
What do you want? Matha tureed? ماذا تريد؟
Who = man من
who are you? Man ant? من أنت؟
How = kaifa كيف How
are you? Kaifa haaluk? كيف
حالك؟
At what time = mataa متى at
what time are you coming? Mataa sata’tee? متى
ستأتي؟
Where = aina أين
Where are you going? Aina anta daaheb? أين أنت
ذاهب؟
From where = men aina من أين From where did you come? Men aina
atait? من أين
أتيت؟
Which = ayya أيّ
Which city? Ayya madina?
أيّ مدينة؟
When = mataa متى
When are you going to go to be? Mataa satanaam?
متى ستنام؟
How much/ many = kam كم How much is this book? Kam howa hatha el kitaab? كم هو
هذا الكتاب؟
Why = lematha (th pronounced as in that)
لماذا Why are you here? Lematha anta
huna? لماذا انت
هنا؟
Negation in Arabic:
Very simple and easy to form a negation in Arabic, just place “laaلا ” before the verb: for example:
I don’t like it = laa ohibbuha لا أحبها
Literally it means (No I like it).
I don’t want it = laa oreeduha
لا
أريدها,
coffee is a drink I don’t like = al qahwah mashroobun laa ohibuh القهوة مشروب لا
احبه
To say “I’m not, he is not, she is not, we’re
not….” In Arabic we use “laisa ليس”, which is a verb that you need to
conjugate:
Negation in Arabic
|
||
Singular
|
Dual
|
Plural
|
I’m not لست
أنا Ana lastu
You’re not (singular
masc) لستَ أنتَ Anta lasta
You’re not (singular
fem) لستِ أنتِ Anti lasti
he is not ليس هو Howa
laisa
she is notليست هي Hiya laisat
|
You’re not (dual male
or female)
أنتُما
لستما Antuma lastuma
They’re not (dual male
or female)
هُما
ليسا Humaa laisaa
|
We’re not نحن لسنا Nahnu
lasna
You’re not (plural
masculine) لستم أنتُم Antum
lastum
You’re not (plural
feminine) لستن أنتُن Antun lastun
They’re not (plural
masculine) ليسوا هُم Hum laisuu
They’re not (plural
feminine) لسن هُن Hunna lasna
|
I’m not alone = lastu wahdi لست وحدي (note that you don’t need to add the subject pronoun like (ana I), (anta
you), (howa He)… it can be understood by the conjugation of the verb laisa, and
remember that this is the case with most of verbs.
Arabic negation and the
interrogative are not hard to learn after all as you can see.
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