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  1. Tables of the possessive pronouns in standard and Egyptian Arabic, with notes on usage and examples.

  2. The Arabic languages has twelve other personal pronouns. They are considered possessive but do not stand alone. They have to be attached to a noun, verb, or particle: ﺔَُﻠِﺼﻤﺘُﻟاﱠ ﺮِﺋﺎَﻤﱠﻀﻟا You (said to a َك His ُﻩ 8 male) 3 You (said to a ِك Hers ﺎَه female) Me, Mine, My ﻲـــ 1 9 4

  3. Arabic possessive pronouns are called ضَمِيْرٌ مُتَّصِلٌ (plural: الضمائر المتصله) in Arabic and pronounced dameerun muttasil (Plural: Admaa irul muttasilah). They are my, your, his, her, our, their and used to indicate ownership of something.

  4. 14 sie 2024 · Possessive pronouns. The nouns الأَسْمَاء and verbs الأَفْعَال have three categories to classify them. 1st. person (speaker). 2nd. person (spoken to). 3rd. person (spoken about). In Arabic, the attached pronouns (possessive pronouns) are different than separate pronouns (subjective pronouns).

  5. We differentiate two categories of pronouns in Arabic: Detached pronouns / الضَمائِر المُنْفَصِلة. Attached pronouns / الضَمائِر المُتَّصِلة. Generally speaking, detached pronouns are assumed to be in the nominative case (even though they are indeclinable), whereas attached pronouns are rather in either ...

  6. 2 maj 2024 · How do you use possessive pronouns in Arabic? Possessive pronouns in Arabic are vital components of Arabic grammar that indicate ownership or possession. They serve a similar function to possessive pronouns in English, such as “my,” “your,” “his,” “her,” “its,” “our,” and “their.”

  7. We've been working on Arabic possessive pronouns this week, so here is a set of four work sheets to help practice writing them; and includes the vocab translation.

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