اسْمٌ-Noun

Note: one of the most difficult parts of learning classical Arabic is Nahw (basically Grammar eg. using the proper pronouns etc, applies mainly to sentence construction, using the correct word and sentence ) and Sarf (knowing the correct system of creating new words, applies to word construction).

Note: There are four skills required to learn any language namely:

1) Listening with comprehension and 2) reading with comprehension (involves Data input)

 3) Speaking properly and 4) writing properly ( involves Data output)

A noun is the name of a person, place (China, Mosque), thing (yoyo, book, chair, car ), idea (Islam, education, hadith, sports, theory, science, drinking, tolerance, to eat, to cry, sleeping, i love eating, i love ice cream), adjective (descriptions like lovely, blue), adverb (all the Lee’s except Bruce and love eg nicely, quickly, lovingly) and more

Nouns are words that 1) start with ال or 2) end with dammatani or 3) the first part of a compound and will end with a single dammah and not have ال

Nouns have 4 properties: 1) Status (Raff, Nasb or Jarr) 2) Number (Singular, Dual or Plural) 3) Gender (Masculine or Feminine) 4) Type (Common/indefinite or Proper/Definite)

1) Status (There are three forms of status)

a) Raf (R) مَرْفُوْعٌ / رَفْعلٌ – Raf ending does many things including being the ‘doer’

b) Nasb (N) مَنْصُوْبٌ / نَصْبٌ – Nasb ending does many things including being the ‘done to (and other details of an action)’

c) Jarr (J) مَجْرُوْرٌ / جَرٌّ – Jarr ending for a noun following the word ‘of’

When analysing a noun, first look for combination endings, thereafter sound endings

PluralPair/DualSingularMasculine
مُسْلِمُوْنَمُسْلِمَانِمُسْلِمٌRaf
مُسْلِمِيْنَمُسْلِمَيْنِمُسْلِمًاNasb
مُسْلِمِيْنَمُسْلِمَيْنِمُسْلِمٍJarr
ending combinationsending combinationsending sounds 
PluralPair/DualSingularFeminine
مُسْلِمَآتٌمُسْلِمَتَانِمُسْلِمَةٌRaf
مُسْلِمَاتٍمُسْلِمَتَيْنِمُسْلِمَةًNasb
مُسْلِمَاتٍمُسْلِمَتَيْنِمُسْلِمَةٍJarr
ending combinationending combinationending sound
Broken pluralPair/DualSingularBroken plural
أَقْلَامٌقَلَمَانِقَلَمٌRaf
أَقْلَامًاقَلَمَيْنِقَلَمًاNasb
أَقْلَامٍقَلَمَيْنِقَلَمٍJarr
ending soundending combinationending sound

Light vs Heavy

The normal state of a noun is heavy, like the above chart.

A noun is made light by removing the double accent (tanween) from the singular and broken plurals and removing the extra ن at the end of the pair/dual and plurals.

Note: A noun with ال is not considered light

Below chart shows the nouns in light form

PluralPair/DualSingularMasculine
مُسْلِمُوْامُسْلِمَامُسْلِمُRaf
مُسْلِمِيْمُسْلِمَيْمُسْلِمَNasb
مُسْلِمِيْمُسْلِمَيْمُسْلِمِJarr
PluralPair/DualSingularFeminine
مُسْلِمَآتُمُسْلِمَتَامُسْلِمَةُRaf
مُسْلِمَاتِمُسْلِمَتَيْمُسْلِمَةَNasb
مُسْلِمَاتِمُسْلِمَتَيْمُسْلِمَةِJarr

There are only four reasons for a noun to be light:

a) When it is possessive (مُضَافٌ)

b) The مُضَافٌ of the one being called

c)

d)

Flexibility

There are three categories of flexibility (The way the noun shows it’s status):

a) Fully flexible – Most nouns are fully flexible i.e they are able to show their status by means of their endings eg. Raf (مُسْلِمٌ), nasb (مُسْلِمًا) or Jarr (مُسْلِمٍ)

and they can be heavy (مُسْلِمٌ) or light (مُسْلِمُ)

b) Non flexible (only have one form) – Some nouns are unable to show their status by means of their endings eg. Raf (مُوْسَى), nasb (مُوْسَى) or Jarr (مُوْسَى), thus they look the same in all statuses for example:

* words ending in alif like مُوْسَى and دُنْيَا and so on

* Singular and plural relative pronouns like الَّذِيْ and الَّذِيْنَ and الَّتِيْ and so on, note: the dual are partly flexible

* Singular and plural pointing words like أُوْلَآئِكَ and تِلْكَ and هَذَا and so on, note the dual are partly flexible

c) Partly flexible (cannot be heavy and cannot take a kasrah) – these nouns have two forms, one for Raff and one for nasb and Jarr for example:

*Proper names of places (except names spelled with 3 letters) , whether Arab or not

JarrNasbRaffPartly flexible
مَكَّةَمَكَّةَمَكَّةُArab place (partly flexible)
بَاكِسْتَانَبَاكِسْتَانَبَاكِسْتَانُNon-Arab place (partly flexible) 
عَدْنٍعَدْنًاعَدْنٌException (place with 3 letters fully flexible)

*Non-Arab proper names (except names spelled with 3 letters)

based on hadith there are four Arab Prophets namely مُحِمَّدٌ and صَالِحٌ and هُوْدٌ and شُعَيْبٌ, the rest are non-Arabs

JarrNasbRaffPartly flexible
إِبْرَاهِيْمَإِبْرَاهِيْمَإِبْرَاهِيْمُNon-Arab name (partly flexible)
مُحَمَّدٍمُحَمَّدًامُحَمَّدٌArab name (fully flexible)
نُوْحٍنُوْحًانُوْحٌException (Non-Arab name fully flexible)

2) Number

Numbers in Arabic consist of singular (Muslim chart), dual (Muslim chart) and  plural (Muslim chart)

* Plurals are of 5 kinds, namely:

a) Normal masculine plural (Muslim chart)

b) Normal feminine plural (Muslim chart)

c) Human broken plural – represent intelligent beings such as عُلَمَآءُ and رُسُلٌ and مَلَآئِكَةُ – treated as ‘she’ (Singular, Feminine) or what they really are ‘they’

(Broken plurals have sound endings, they can only be identified through vocabulary, otherwise they look singular)

d) Non-human broken plural – represent non intelligent beings such as كُتُبٌ and مَسَاجِدُ and كِلَابٌ – All non human plurals, broken or not, are treated as a ‘she’

(Broken plurals have sound endings, they can only be identified through vocabulary, otherwise they look singular)

e) Plural by meaning eg. people (نَاسٌ), generation (قَرْنٌ), nation (قَوْمٌ)

3) Gender

Masculine – Masculine is the default gender

Feminine – Real Feminine such as أُمٌّ and بَقَرَةٌ

Fake feminine such as:

* ة / ى / (in some cases) آء

* Non-human broken plurals

* Proper names of places

* Body parts in pairs

* Because the Arabs said so

4) Type (Common vs Proper)

Common – is the default type

Proper (7 kinds)

a) Words with ال

b) Proper nouns

c) The one being called

d) Pronouns

e) Pointer words

f) Relative pronouns

g) The word before, if the word after “of ” in a compound is definite (proper)

الْاِسْمُ إِمَّا مُعْرَبٌ وَإِمَّا مَبْنِيٌّ

 

Page

 

الأَسْمَآءُ

Nouns
2 of 114أَدَوَاتُ الشَّرْطِ الجَازِمَةُ
Nouns of condition
2 of 114الآلَةُUtilitarian nouns
2 of 114الإِسْتِفْهَامُNouns of questioning
3 to 9 of 114الجِنْسُGeneric or common nouns
10  to 11 of 114المُبَالَغَةُIntensive adjectives
11 of 114الشَّرْةُConditional nouns
12 to 13 of 114العَلَمُProper Nouns
13 to 13 of 114الأَسْمَآءُ الْخَمْسَةُThe Five Nouns
13 of 114الأَعْدَادُ التَّرْتِيْبِيَّةُOrdinal numbers
14 to 15 of 114التَّفْضِيْلُSuperlative Nouns
15 to 17 of 114الفَاعِلُActive participles
17 to 19 of 114المَفْعُوْلُPassive participles
19 to 22 of 114الجَمْعُ التَّكْثِيْرُBroken plural
22 to 24 of 114جَمْعُ الْمُؤَنَّثِ السَّالِمُThe Sound Feminine Plural
24 to 26 of 114الجَمْعُ المُذَكَّرُ السَّالِمُThe Sound Masculine Plural
26 of 114الشَّرْطُConditional nouns
26 of 114المُذَكَّرُMasculine nouns
26 to 34 of 114المَصْدَرُOriginal nouns of action
35 of 114الْمَمْنُوْعُ مِنَ الصَّرْفِDiptote
35 of 114المَعْرِفَةُDefinite nouns
35 of 114النَّكِرَةُIndefinite
الْمُثَنَّى 

 

 

مَبْنِيٌّ / Fixedمُعْرَبٌ / Decline
لَا يَتَخَيَّرُ آخِرُهُتَغَيَّرَ آخِرُهُ
عَلَامَةُ الْجَرِّعَلَامَةُ النَّصْبِعَلَامَةُ الرَّفْعِتَقْدِيْرِيٌّ / Estimatedعَلَامَةُ الْجَرِّعَلَامَةُ النَّصْبِعَلَامَةُ الرَّفْعِفَرْعِيَّةٌ / Secondaryأَصْلِيَّةٌ / Primary
مُقَدَّرَةٌمُقَدَّرَةٌمُقَدَّرَةٌالْمَقْصُوْرُالْكَسْرَةُجَمْعُ الْمُؤَنَّثِ السَّالِمُمَرْفُوْعٌ
مُقَدَّرَةٌمُقَدَّرَةٌالْمَنْقُوْصُالْفَتْحَةُالْمَمْنُوْعُ مِنَ الصَّرْفِمَنْصُوْبٌ
مُقَدَّرَةٌمُقَدَّرَةٌمُقَدَّرَةٌالْمُضَافُ إِلَى يَاءِ الْمُتَكَلِّمِالْيَاءُالْأَلِفُالْوَاوُالْأَسْمَاءُ الْخَمْسةُمَجْرُوْرٌ
الْيَاءُالْيَاءُالْوَاوُجَمْعُ الْمُذَكَّرِ السَّالِمُ
الْيَاءُالْيَاءُالْأَلِفُالْمُثَنَّىالتَّوَابِعُ

 

Nouns and adjectives

Noun
مَوْصُوْفٌDescribableصِفَةٌDescription