ʾIʿrab

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I‘rāb (إﻋﺮﺍﺏ IPA: [ʔiʕraːb]) is an Arabic term for the system of nominal and adjectival suffixes of Classical Arabic. These suffixes are written in fully vocalized Arabic texts, notably the Qur’ān or texts written for children or Arabic learners, and they are articulated when a text is formally read aloud, but they do not survive in any spoken dialect of Arabic. Even in Literary Arabic, these suffixes are often not pronounced in pausa (الوقف al-waqf); i.e. when the word occurs at the end of the sentence, in accordance with certain rules of Arabic pronunciation. (That is, the nunation suffix -n is always dropped at the end of a sentence or line of poetry; the vowel suffix may or may not be, depending on the requirements of metre.) Depending on the knowledge of i‘rāb, some Arabic speakers may omit case endings when reading out in Modern Standard Arabic, thus making it similar to spoken dialects. Many Arabic textbooks for foreigners teach Arabic without a heavy focus on i‘rāb, either omitting the endings altogether or only giving a small introduction. Arabic without case endings may require a different and strict word order, similar to spoken Arabic dialects.

Etymology

The term literally means 'making [the word] Arabic'. It is the stem IV masdar of ع-ر-ب, meaning to be fluent and i‘rab means to make a thing expressed, disclosed or eloquent. The term is cognate to the word Arab itself.

Grammatical cases

Case is not shown in standard orthography, with the exception of indefinite accusative nouns ending in any letter but tā’ marbūṭah (ة) or alif followed by hamzah (ء), where the -a(n) "sits" on the letter before an alif added at the end of the word (the alif shows up even in unvowelled texts). Cases, however, are marked in the Qur'an, children's books, and to remove ambiguous situations. If marked, it is shown at the end of the noun. Further information on the types of declensions is discussed in the following section, along with examples. Grammatical case endings are not pronounced in pausa and in less formal forms of Arabic. Note that in vocalised Arabic (where vowel points are written), the case endings may be written even if they are not pronounced. Some Arabic textbooks or children's books skip case endings in vocalised Arabic, thus allowing both types of pronunciation.

Nominative case (al-marfū‘ المرفوع)

  • Subjects of a verbal sentence.
  • Subjects and predicates of an equational (non-verbal) sentence, with some notable exceptions.
  • Certain adverbs retain the nominative marker.
  • The citation form of words is (if noted at all) in the nominative case.

For singular nouns and broken plurals, it is marked as a usually unwritten ضمة ḍammah (-u) for the definite or ḍammah + nunation (-un) for the indefinite. The dual and regular masculine plural are formed by adding ـان -an(i) and ـون -ūn(a) respectively (just ـا -ā and ـو -ū in the construct state). The regular feminine plural is formed by adding ـات -āt(u) in the definite and ـات -āt(un) in the indefinite (same spelling).

Accusative case (al-manṣūb المنصوب)

  • The subject of an equational (non-verbal) sentence, if it is initiated with إن inna, or one of her sisters. The particles are subordinating conjunctions which require that the subject of the subordinate (complement) clause be in the accusative case.
  • The predicate of كان / يكون kāna/yakūnu "be" and its sisters (there are 13 of these verbs[1]). Hence, البنت جميلة al-bintu jamīlatun 'the girl is beautiful' but البنت كانت جميلة al-bintu kānat jamīlatan 'the girl was beautiful' (note that "beautiful" is spelled the same way in both cases).
  • Both the subject and the predicate of ظن ẓanna and its sisters in an equational clause.
  • As the complement of verbs of "seeming".
  • The object of a transitive verb
  • Most adverbs.
  • Semi-prepositions.
  • Internal object/cognate accusative structure
  • The accusative of specification (al-tamyīz, التمييز).
  • The accusative of purpose (al-maf‘ūl li-ajlihi, المفعول لأجله).
  • The circumstantial accusative (al-ḥāl, الحال).
  • Objects of (kam, كم) 'how much/how many'.
  • Cardinal and ordinal numbers from 11, and 13-19
  • Counted nouns of numbers 11–99
  • Exclamation of astonishment. i.e.: mā ajmalahā!, !ما أجملها 'Oh, how beautiful she is!'
  • Vocative first term of construct. يا ماهر yā Māhir-i! "Oh, Maher!"
  • Nouns following exceptive particles in non-negative sentences.
  • The noun following the absolute, or categorical, negation لا "No".

For singular nouns and broken plurals, it is marked as a usually unwritten فتحة fatḥah (-a) for the definite or fatḥah + nunation (-an) for the indefinite. For the indefinite accusative, the fatḥah + nunation is added to an ا alif, e.g. ـًا, which is added to the ending of all nouns not ending with a alif followed by hamzah or a tā’ marbūṭah. Note that this is the only case (when alif is written), which affects the unvocalised written Arabic (e.g. بيتاً bayt-an). The dual and regular masculine plural are formed by adding ـين -ayn(i) and ـين -īn(a) respectively (spelled identically!) (ـي -ay and -ī in the construct state, again, spelled identically). The regular feminine plural is formed by adding ـات -āt(i) in the definite and -āt(in) in the indefinite (spelled identically). Some forms of indefinite accusative are mandatory even for spoken and pausal forms of Arabic, sometimes -an is changed to a simple -a in pausa or spoken Arabic.

Diptotes never take an alif ending in the written Arabic and are never pronounced with the ending "-an".

Genitive case (al-majrūr, المجرور)

  • Objects of prepositions.
  • The second, third, fourth, etc. term of an iḍāfah (إضافة genitive construction).
  • The object of a locative adverb.
  • Elative (comparative/superlative) adjectives behave similarly: أطول ولد "aṭwalu waladin" 'tallest boy'.

For singular nouns and broken plurals, it is marked as a usually unwritten كسرة kasrah (-i) for the definite or kasrah + nunation (-in) for the indefinite. The dual and regular masculine plural are formed by adding ـين -ayn(i) and -īn(a) respectively (spelled identically!) (ـي -ay and -ī in the construct state, again, spelled identically). The regular feminine plural is formed by adding ـات -āt(i) in the definite and -āt(in) in the indefinite (spelled identically in Arabic).

Note: diptotic nouns receive a fatḥah (-a) in the genitive and are never nunated.
Note: there is no dative case. Instead, the preposition لـ "li-" is used.

Types of declension

Fully declined nouns (triptote منصرف munṣarif)

The suffixes are -u, -a, -i for nominative, accusative, and genitive case, respectively, with the addition of a final /n/ (nunation, or tanwīn) to produce -un, -an, and -in when the word is unmarked for definiteness (that is, when it is not preceded by al-).

This system applies to most singular nouns in Arabic, including feminine nouns ending in ة -a/-at (tā’ marbūṭah) and ء hamzah but ا alif is not written after them in the accusative case. It also applies to many "broken plurals". The effect on words ending in -a/-at (tā’ marbūṭah) is that the t is pronounced in this case, thus رسالة risālah ("message") in pausal form, while in Classical Arabic, becomes risālatun, risālatan, and risālatin with case endings (all usually spelled رسالة when written without the vowel points).

The final /n/ is also dropped when the noun is in iḍāfah (construct state). Thus:


Nominative (مرفوع marfū‘ ; literally, "raised") :
baytun بَيتٌ : a house
al-baytu البَيتُ : the house
baytu l-rajuli بَيتُ الرَّجُلِ : the house of the man.

Accusative (منصوب manṣūb); literally, 'erected') :
baytan بَيتًا
al-bayta البَيتَ : the house
bayta l-rajuli بَيتَ الرَّجُلِ : the house of the man.

Genitive (مجرور majrūr; literally, 'dragged'):
baytin بَيتٍ : a house
al-bayti البَيتِ : the house
bayti l-rajuli بَيتِ الرَّجُلِ : the house of the man.

Diptotes (الممنوع من الصرف al-mamnū‘ min al-ṣarf)

A few singular nouns (including many proper names and names of places), and certain types of "broken plural", are known as diptotes (<Greek ptosis, 'case') (الممنوع من الصرف al-mamnū‘ min al-ṣarf, literally meaning 'those forbidden case endings') meaning that they only have two case endings.

When the noun is indefinite, the endings are -u for the nominative and -a for the genitive and accusative with no nunation. The genitive reverts to the normal -i when the diptotic noun becomes definite (preceded by al- or is in the construct state)).

Diptotes never take an alif in the accusative case in written Arabic.

Sound masculine plurals (الجمع المذكّر السالم al-jam‘ al-mudhakkar al-sālim)

In the case of sound masculine plurals (mostly denoting male human beings), the suffixes are respectively ون -ūna and ين -īna and ين -ayni. These stay the same whether ال al- precedes or not. The final a is usually dropped in speech. In less formal Arabic only -īna is used for all cases and the final "-a" is dropped in pausa and in less formal Arabic.

The ن "-na" is dropped when the noun is in iḍāfah (construct state). Thus:

Nominative:
والدون wālidūna: parents (more than two)
الوالدون al-wālidūna: the parents
والدو الرجال wālidū l-rijāli: the parents of the men

Accusative and genitive:
والدين wālidīna: parents
الوالدين al-wālidīna: the parents
والدي الرجال wālidī l-rijāli: the parents of the men

Note: ending ين -īna is spelled identically to ين -ayni (see above).

Sound feminine plurals (الجمع المؤنث السالم al-jam‘ al-mu’annath al-sālim)

In the case of sound feminine plurals, the suffixes are respectively ات -ātu(n), ات -āti(n) and ات -āti(n) (identical spelling). The n is only there when the noun is indefinite (not preceded by al-). Again the final vowel is dropped in speech and pausa, leaving only ات -āt, making all cases pronounced identically.

The final "n" is dropped when the noun is in iḍāfah (construct state).

Nominative:
مدرسات mudarrisātun: (female) teachers
المدرسات al-mudarrisātu: the teachers
مدرسات الأولاد mudarrisātu l-awlādi: the teachers of the children

Accusative and genitive:
مدرسات mudarrisātin: (female) teachers
المدرسات al-mudarrisāti: the teachers
مدرسات الأولاد mudarrisāti l-awlādi: the teachers of the children

Other Declensional Paradigms

5 The Dual - These nouns denote two of something. They decline very similarly to the sound masculine plurals because they are not marked for definiteness and look the same in both the accusative and genitive cases. For the nominative, the marking is "-āni" and for the accusative/genitive, "-ayni." An example is "parents," which is wālidāni and wālidayni respectively.

6 ism al-manqūṣ (Deficient Nouns Ending with yā’ ) - These nouns, like their close relative ism al-maqṣūr, behave differently due to the instability of a final vowel. When indefinite, these nouns take a final "-in" in the nominative/genitive, and "-iyan" in the accusative. When definite, they take a long "-ī" in the nominative/genitive, and "-iya" in the accusative. These nouns were reckoned by the grammarians to have originally taken the triptotic endings, but through morpho-phonotactic processes, the latter resulted. An example is "judge," which is qāḍin, qāḍiyan, versus al-qāḍī, and al-qāḍiya respectively. Also, a noun can be both ism al-manqūṣ and diptotal: for example, layālin, the word meanings 'nights', is a broken plural with a final unstable vowel. This word combines the two declensional paradigms and is layālin, layāliya, and al-layālī, and al-layāliya respectively.

7 Ism al-maqṣūr (deficient nouns ending with alif or alif maqṣūrah) - These nouns, like their close relative ism al-manqūṣ, behave differently due to the instability of a final vowel. These nouns are marked only for definiteness, as morpho-phonotactic processes have resulted in the complete loss of the case distinction. When indefinite, they take "-an," which rests on an alif maqṣūrah or occasionally alif. When definite, they are not marked, and they simply retain their long alif or alif maqṣūrah. An example is "hospital," which is mustashfan and al-mustashfá respectively. If a noun is both ism al-maqṣūr and diptotic, then it is completely invariable for case and belongs to declensional paradigm eight.

8 Invariable Nouns - Invariable nouns are usually those foreign names that end in alif or nouns that end in an additional alif or alif maqṣūrah (when that alif or alif maqṣūrah is not part of the root). Also, nouns that are both ism al-maqṣūr and diptotic fall into this category. Additionally, there are rare invariable nouns which have other endings, like any name ending with "-ayhi," like Sībawayhi (colloquially pronounced, for example, in Egypt: [sebæˈweː]. An example of a common invariable noun is fuṣḥá (al-fuṣḥá), meaning 'the most eloquent [Arabic]'. Another example is dunyā (al-dunyā), 'world'.

Sentence structure

A noun's case depends on the role that the noun plays in the sentence. There are multiple sentence structures in Arabic, each of which demands different case endings for the roles in the sentence. "Subject" does not always correspond to "nominative", nor does "object" always correspond to "accusative". Sentences in Arabic are divided into two branches, of which are the incomplete phrases (jumla inshaiya) and the complete phrases(jumla khabariya).Jumla inshaiya is composed of the descriptive phrase and possessive phrase, while the jumla khabariya is made up of the verbal sentence(jumla fi'lya khabariya) and the nominal sentence (jumla ismiya khabariya). The incomplete phrase cannot be a sentence in itself, and is usually used in the complete phrases.

Verbal Sentences (الجملة الفعلية al-jumlah al-fi‘līyah)

In a verbal sentence, there is verb–subject–object word order. This is the preferred word order of Classical Arabic.

In a verbal sentence, the subject takes nominative case and the object takes accusative case. Such a sentence ("This writer wrote the written") would be formed as follows (read from right to left):

Verbal Sentence
grammatical role Object Subject Verb
Arabic label مفعول به
maf‘ūl bihi
فاعل
fā‘il
فعل
fi‘l
case accusative nominative (verb)
example المكتوب
al-maktūb
(the written)
هذا الكاتبُ
hādhā al-kātibu
(this writer)
كتب
kataba
(wrote)

Nominal Sentences (الجملة الإسمية al-jumlah al-ismīyah)

In a nominal sentence, there is subject–verb–object word order.

Equations (no verb)

If the verb would be "is" (that is, the predicate merely attributes something to the subject—see Predicative (adjectival or nominal)), then there is no verb used. Both the subject and the predicate take nominative case when there is no overt verb. Such a sentence ("This writer is famous") is formed as follows (read from right to left):

Nominal Sentence without Verb
grammatical role Object (no verb) Subject
Arabic label خبر
khabar
(no verb) مبتدأ
mubtada’
case nominative (no verb) nominative
example مشهورٌ
mashhūrun
(famous)
(no verb) هذا الكاتبُ
hādhā al-kātibu
(this writer)

Overt Verb

If there is an overt verb, the subject takes nominative and the predicate takes accusative. Such a sentence ("This writer wrote the book") is formed as follows (read from right to left):

Nominal Sentence with Verb
grammatical role Object Verb Subject
Arabic label خبر
khabar
فعل
fi‘l
مبتدأ
mubtada’
case accusative (verb) nominative
example الكتابَ
al-kitāba
(the book)
كتب
kataba
(wrote)
هذا الكاتبُ
hādhā al-kātibu
(this writer)

Sisters of inna (أخوات إنّ akhawāt inna)

There is a class of words in Arabic called the "sisters of inna" (أخوات إنّ akhawāt inna) that are cognates/derivatives of أنّ ('that'). Among them are:

  • إنّ      inna (particle for emphasis, close to "it is the case that")
  • أنّ      anna ('that')
  • لكنّ      lākin(na) (but)
  • لأنّ      li-anna ('because')
  • كأنّ      ka-anna ('as if', 'as though')

If one of the sisters of إنّ begins a clause, then the subject takes accusative case instead of nominative.

Such a sentence using the particle إنّ ("Verily, this writer wrote the book") would be formed as follows (read from right to left):

Nominal Sentence with Verb with إنّ
grammatical role Object Verb Subject Sister of inna
Arabic label خبر
khabar
فعل
fi‘l
مبتدأ
mubtada’
أخت إنّ
ukht inna
case accusative (verb) accusative (sister of inna)
example الكتابَ
al-kitāba
(the book)
كتب
kataba
(wrote)
هذا الكاتبَ
hādhā al-kātiba
(this writer)
إنّ
inna
(verily)

Note that although there was an overt verb in the above example, a nominal sentence without an overt verb will also have its subject take accusative case because of the introduction of one of inna's sisters. (The predicate of an equation is unaffected and will remain in the nominative.)

Consider the following example ("Verily, this writer is famous"):

Nominal Sentence without Verb with إنّ
grammatical role Object (no verb) Subject Sister of ʼinna
Arabic label خبر
khabar
(no verb) مبتدأ
mubtada’
أخت إنّ
ukht inna
case nominative (no verb) accusative (sister of inna)
example مشهورٌ
mashhūrun
(famous)
(no verb) هذا الكاتبَ
hādhā al-kātiba
(this writer)
إنّ
inna
(verily)

With sisters of kāna (أخوات كان akhawāt kāna)

The verb kāna (كان) and its sisters form a class of 13 verbs that mark the time/duration of actions, states, and events.

Sentences that use these verbs are considered to be a type of nominal sentence according to Arabic grammar, not a type of verbal sentence. Although the word order may seem to be verb–subject–object when there is no other verb in the sentence, note that it is possible to have a sentence in which the order is subject–verb–object. Such a non-equation sentence clearly shows subject–verb–object word order.

Among the sisters of kāna are:

  • كان      kāna ('was')
  • ليس      laysa ('not')
  • ما زال      mā zāla ('still'; literally, 'has not ceased to be')
  • أصبح      aṣbaḥa ('to reach a state, become')
  • ظلّ      ẓalla ('to remain')

If one of the sisters of كان begins a clause, then the subject takes nominative case and the object takes accusative case. (Note that because of this, Arabic contrasts [The man]NOM is [a doctor]NOM in the present tense with [The man]NOM was [a doctor]ACC in the past tense.)

Such a sentence using the verb كان ("This writer was famous") would be formed as follows (read from right to left):

Nominal Sentence with كان
grammatical role Object (no verb) Subject Sister of kāna
Arabic label خبر
khabar
(no verb) اسم
ism
أخت كان
ukht kāna
case accusative (no verb) nominative (sister of kāna)
example مشهوراً
mashhūran
(famous)
(no verb) هذا الكاتبُ
hādhā al-kātibu
(this writer)
كان
kāna
(was)

In a sentence with an explicit verb, the sister of kāna marks aspect for the actual verb. A sentence like كان الكاتب يكتب الكتاب (was the.writer he.writes the.book, 'the writer was writing the book'), for instance, has both a main verb (يكتب) and a sister of kāna that indicates the non-completed aspect of the main verb.

Verbs

The imperfective tense of the verb also has suffixed vowels, which determine the mood of the verb, There are six moods in the Classical Arabic, Thus:

  • yaktubu, indicative (مرفوع marfū‘ ), means 'he writes' and "sayaktubu" means "he will write";
  • yaktuba, subjunctive (منصوب manṣūb), is used in phrases such as "so that he should write";
  • yaktub, jussive (مجزوم majzūm, literally meaning 'clipped off'), means 'let him write'. This can become yaktubi when required for euphony, e.g. when followed by two consonants.
  • "uktub", Imperative, means "write!";
  • "yaktuban", short energetic, its meaning is dependent upon the prefix that is attached to it, often means "he (should) write";
  • "yaktubanna", long energetic, its meaning is dependent upon the prefix that is attached to it, often means "he (must) write".

All the first three forms are spelled يكتب in unvocalised Arabic, and the final vowel is not pronounced in pausa and in informal Arabic, leaving just one pronunciation: yaktub.

Traditional Arab grammarians equated the indicative with the nominative of nouns, the subjunctive with the accusative, and the jussive with the genitive, as indicated by their names (the only pair that is not borne out in the name is the jussive-genitive pair, probably because the -i vowel is usually dropped). It is not known whether there is a genuine historical connection or whether the resemblance is mere coincidence, caused by the fact that these are the only three short vowels available.

See also

References

  1. Hasan, 1987, I:545
  • Brustad et al., A Textbook for Arabic: Part Two: Washington, DC 1997, ISBN 0-87840-350-7
  • Haywood and Nahmad, A new Arabic grammar: London 1965, ISBN 0-85331-585-X
  • Aryeh Levin, "The Fundamental Principles of the Arab Grammarians' Theory of ‘amal", in: Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 19 (1995), pp. 214–232.
  • John Mace, Arabic Grammar: A Reference Guide: Edinburgh 2002, ISBN 0-7486-1079-0
  • Ryding, Karin C., A Reference Grammar of Modern Standard Arabic
  • Jalajel, David Solomon, Expressing I'rab: The Presentation of Arabic Grammatical Analysis: Bellville: University of the Western Cape 2011, ISBN 978-1-868-08716-7

External links