| Arabic Term | Malayalam Equivalent | English | Example | |-------------|----------------------|---------|---------| | Ism (اسم) | നാമം | Noun | كتاب (kitāb – book) | | Fi‘l (فعل) | ക്രിയ | Verb | كتب (kataba – wrote) | | Harf (حرف) | അവ്യയം | Particle | في (fī – in) |
| Case | Ending | Function | Malayalam analogue | |------|--------|----------|--------------------| | Nominative (رفع) | -u / -un | Subject | ആര്/എന്ത് (subject marker) | | Accusative (نصب) | -a / -an | Object | -എ (object marker in Malayalam) | | Genitive (جر) | -i / -in | After prepositions | -ന്റെ (possessive) | arabic grammar in malayalam pdf
Below is a comprehensive titled: "അറബി വ്യാകരണം: ഒരു മലയാളി പഠിതാവിനുള്ള സമഗ്ര പഠനസഹായി" (Arabic Grammar for Malayalam Learners: A Comprehensive Guide) 1. Introduction Arabic grammar (النحو العربي) is the backbone of understanding Quranic and modern Arabic. For Malayalam speakers, learning Arabic grammar becomes easier because both languages share certain syntactical features—like Subject-Object-Verb order in classical contexts, postpositions, and gendered nouns. However, differences exist in verb conjugations, case endings (i’rab), and dual forms unique to Arabic. | Arabic Term | Malayalam Equivalent | English