الفعل
Verb
Arabic Verbs
Learning the Arabic Verbs is very
important because its structure is used in every day conversation. The more you
master it the more you get closer to mastering the Arabic language. But first
we need to know what the role of Verbs is in the structure of the grammar in
Arabic.
Arabic verbs are words that convey action
(bring, read, walk, run), or a state of being (exist, stand). In most languages
a verb may agree with the person, gender, and/or number of some of its
arguments, such as its subject, or object.
Arabic to has only 2 times, the perfect and the
imperfect, but there is a difference, in the west we look at the points in time
in where a action takes place, the Arabs however look at the aspect of a verb
meaning they ask is the action finished or not (They don’t ask themselves when
did it finish or not). Of course a finished action corresponds with the past as
does a unfinished action with the present, but not necessarily so.
As you know, even if the tense of the sentence
changed, the structure of the sentence doesn't change. The form of the verb is
what changed. Arabic verbs have three forms which are past form, present form
and imperative form. Making the sentence in the past means using the past form
of the verb, and it goes like this. Also, the verb changes according to its
actor.
King of verb
Arabic verbs have three forms
Arabic verbs have three forms
1. past
form
2. present
form
3.
Imperative
form
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