Table of Contents: Part 1 – Back to the Basics

Author’s Preface

Part 1: Back to the Basics

Chapter 1

A: The Equational Sentence

B: The Definite Article

C: Case

D: The Nominative Case

E: Question Words

F: Helping Vowels

G: Demonstrative Pronouns

H: Gender

I: Pausal Form

 Chapter 2:

A: The Genitive Case 

B: Prepositions

C: The Idaafa

 Chapter 3

A: The Noun-Adjective Phrase

B: The Pronoun of Separation

C: The Nisba Adjective

D: Possessive Pronouns

E: Verbs – Past Tense and the Accusative Case

Chapter 4

A: Sound Plurals

B: Verb-Subject Agreement

C: Masculine Sound Plurals in Idaafas

D: Broken Plurals

E: Plural Demonstrative Pronouns

F. The Words كل and بعض 

 Chapter 5

A: The Rules of Agreement in Arabic

B: The Dual of Nouns, Adjectives, Pronouns and Verbs

C: Direct Object Pronouns

D: Prepositions with Pronoun Suffixes

E: The Preposition ل “belonging to”

Comments

5 responses to “Table of Contents: Part 1 – Back to the Basics”

  1. Umm Najm Avatar
    Umm Najm

    As salamu alaykum wa rahmatullahi wa barakatuh
    I came across your website by searching about the participles. I have studied sarf under a teacher, but he could not continue with nouns, I found very beneficial explanation in it, also I didn’t want to read it from the beginning, I thought it was tedious start again, but I keep returning to it, so I finally decide to read it from the beginning to the end. Ma sha Allah I really like your book. May Allah reward you!

  2. Michelle Boston Avatar
    Michelle Boston

    Hi,
    I am trying to purchase this book. Why is it so expensive on amazon? Where else can I buy it?

    Thank you

  3. abdullah ibne abdul malik Avatar
    abdullah ibne abdul malik

    wa alaikumussalam wa rahmatullahi wa barakatuh…
    Amazing effort sister. May Allah Subhanu wa Ta’ala give you abundant reward…Jazakillahu khairan! please keep it up. These are silent revolution and service of Deen. We pray for your well being and all out success.

  4. Sandra Shinn Avatar
    Sandra Shinn

    REALLY useful, even for native speakers who have been intimidated for centuries by Arabic teachers who don’t really understand the language, making the beauty of its perfection much more complex than need be. I have fun just reading this site.

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