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The Definite Article

The document discusses the definite article in Arabic. It states that in Arabic, as in English, nouns can be definite or indefinite. The definite article "ال" attaches to definite nouns. It is pronounced differently depending on the following letter - for example "al" for words starting with "l". Certain letters are called "moon letters" and cause the "l" sound to be dropped. Other letters are called "sun letters" where the first letter is pronounced twice with a shadda diacritic. Several examples of definite nouns with the article are provided.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
198 views

The Definite Article

The document discusses the definite article in Arabic. It states that in Arabic, as in English, nouns can be definite or indefinite. The definite article "ال" attaches to definite nouns. It is pronounced differently depending on the following letter - for example "al" for words starting with "l". Certain letters are called "moon letters" and cause the "l" sound to be dropped. Other letters are called "sun letters" where the first letter is pronounced twice with a shadda diacritic. Several examples of definite nouns with the article are provided.

Uploaded by

Kamel Zeineddin
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The Definite Article

In English we have definite nouns which are usually preceded by 'the' (i.e. the student, the tables) as well as indefinite nouns (i.e. a student, tables). Arabic also has definite and indefinite nouns. The arabic definite article joins with the word that it precedes.

the

the book
Nouns preceded by the definite article are definite as well as the names of cities, countries, regions, and people. Nouns without an article are usually indefinite.

a book

How to pronounce the definite article depends on the letter that comes after it. In the case of the word below, it is pronounced as it is written- 'al'.

the moon

moon

The letters that follow this pattern are know as moon letters() . When is attached to words that begin with certain letters, the l isn't pronounced at all. Instead the first letter of the word is either pronounced twice or stressed. This is the case in the example below. the sun sun

Notice the symbol that resembles a slanted w that is appears immediately after the first letter. This is a called a shadda. Whenever two identical consonants appear right next to each other, only one consonant is written, and the shadda is written after it, indicating that it is doubled. Remember that short vowels that come within a sentence are never written.

The letters that follow this pattern are know as sun letters () .

the sun the man the fire the magic the weather the night the date (fruit) the snow the hens the gold the giraffe the picture the frog the mud the back

sun

man

fire magic weather night date (fruit) snow hen gold giraffe picture frog

mud back

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