Arabic: An Essential Grammar

(backadmin) #1
is changed to fath
̇

ah or kasrah, in order to avoid having three consonants fol-

lowing each other, thus smoothing the pronunciation, e.g.

Note c: In certain idioms words such as those below with a suffixed personal

pronoun have the preposition ِبـ... bi..., e.g.


(See more about ِبـ.. bi... in chapter 37.)


Examples:

1
ىَلِإ ِةَرا يََّّ سلˆِب َبَهَذ

2
ِحَبْسَمـْل

3
َعَم

4
ٍقيِدَص

5
يِل

d
̄

ahaba bi-s-sayya ̄rati


ila ̄ l-masbah
̇

i ma


a s
̇

adı


  • qin l-ı

    • .
      1
      He went by car to
      2
      the swimming pool
      3
      with
      4
      a friend
      5
      of
      5
      mine.




(ِلي l-ı



  • is a combination of ِلـ... li... and ي..ِ. ...ı

    • , ‘mine’, see chapter 15.)




1
يِف ُريِف َّ سل َتاَم

2
ِةَمِصاَعْل

3
ُذْنُم

4
ٍرْهَش

ma ̄ta s-safı-ru fı- l-


a ̄s
̇

imati mund
̄

u sˇahrin.
4
One month
3
ago the ambassador
1
died in
2
the capital (city).

11.8 تىََّح h
̇

atta ̄ as a preposition

When تىََّح functions as a preposition with the meaning ‘until, till, up to,


as far as’, the following noun must be in the genitive, e.g.

َلَكَأ


1
ِسْأ َّ رل ى َّ تَح َةَكَم َّ سل

akala s-samakata h
̇

atta ̄ r-ra


si. (genitive)

He ate
1
the fish as far as (i.e. except) the head.

Note: Because of the many uses of تىََّحـ , the father of Arabic grammar, ِسي َب َو ْي ِه


Sı ̄bawayhi, made the following immortal statement:

ِم َن ْلـ ُم ِدي ِر َع ِن ْلـ َح ْر ِب


mina l-mudı


  • ri, from the director



ani l-h
̇

arbi, about the war

ِب َأ ْج َم ِع ِه ْم ِب َأ ْس ِر ِه ْم


bi-


ag ̆ma


i-him, all together bi-


asri-him, all together

نا ُس ِب َأ ْج َم ِع ِه ْمََّأل نا ُس ِب َأ ْس ِر ِه ْمََّأل

an-na ̄su bi-


ag ̆ma


i-him, all of the people


an-na ̄su bi-


asri-him, all of the

people

54

Conjunc-
tions,
preposi-
tions and

the particle


تىََّح h
̇

atta ̄
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