Giving Commands: Making the Form I Verb Imperative (Levantine Arabic)

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  • Опубликовано: 25 июл 2024
  • Imperative verbs are used more in Arabic than in the English language. In this lesson, Fridrik Tiedemann teaches you how to make Form I Arabic verbs imperative.
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Комментарии • 28

  • @CGEJordan
    @CGEJordan  2 месяца назад

    ⬆⬆Support our content AND wear awesome t-shirts and hoodies. Check out our store above! ⬆⬆

  • @juliethrodriguez296
    @juliethrodriguez296 9 месяцев назад

    Great teacher!! Thanks for all this

  • @sammybyatt8390
    @sammybyatt8390 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks for your hard work. Just bought your book!

  • @adamabady9033
    @adamabady9033 4 года назад

    great teacher I am studying Arabic.

  • @shoukathali9724
    @shoukathali9724 4 года назад

    Please upload more verbs

  • @ProfGeneTogolot
    @ProfGeneTogolot Год назад

    I can't find the lesson where you said this but it was about commands and there was a guy with you and he came up with a sentence commanding a child to do his homework
    and you used the word forcing him to do so which since it was an impromptu choice I am sure you might have chosen another word like compelled or demanded, because forcing someone to do something brings up the image of slave labor. for probably te3n years I have been watching your and others Arabic lessons on RUclips, trying to learn the language as when I traveled to Europe a few times I tried to learn the languag3e of each place I visit3ed and learned French the best but could get by in Spanish and Italian but Arabic is much more of a challenge because the Romance languages have many words that are more similar to English than Arabic and I have no one to speak with as I did when traveling so I depend on videos like yours and others which I watch mostly on my TV now inst3e4 of this computer like I used to. I wish that in all of them people would not talk about which sounds are difficult for non Arabic speakers s mostly because I am watchin g now on the TV and watch the same lessons over and over to try to learn the vocabulary and some rules of grammar and it is hard to skip over the talking on the TV which I could do0 on the computer. But I am amazed at how man y great lessons there are for free on You tube not jus on language but on many subjects. I especially enjoy your lessons b3ecause you compare the Modern Standard Arabic to the Dialects so I thank y9ou f9or all of the hard work that you put in.

  • @suadbelbeisi5158
    @suadbelbeisi5158 7 лет назад

    Great job really thank you !
    I just would like to explain something here , I think that the words with two letters like حط مد شد رد ...etc when we want to make it as a command or at the Imperative in spoken Arabic, we do not add the Alif to it !
    With All respect!

    • @CGEJordan
      @CGEJordan  7 лет назад +4

      Yes. That is another variant of Form 1 and we will cover it in another lesson. We do not want to put to much information in one lesson and then lose the student by confusing him/her. Thanks for the comment!

    • @chikyangana
      @chikyangana 7 лет назад

      CGE Jordan Institute for Arabic Studies d

    • @M-T-Q-understandquran
      @M-T-Q-understandquran 6 лет назад +1

      i think the formation of all Quranic verbs can be taught with the help of ten verbs like hollow, defective, hamzated etc. in one table on rhyme pattern.

  • @M-T-Q-understandquran
    @M-T-Q-understandquran 6 лет назад

    give only one model of double lettered verb and follow the rhyme pattern such as Shadda to Shudda and Madda to Mudda etc.

  • @ivornworrell
    @ivornworrell 4 года назад

    Mar7aba estaz, to negate an imperative in the Armìa dialect, should I just add 'ma'? For example 'Ma uktub-Don't write'?

    • @CGEJordan
      @CGEJordan  4 года назад +1

      You can add "maa" or "laa", but must use the second person inflection of the present tense verb. Using your example: "maa tuktub." - Don't write.

    • @ivornworrell
      @ivornworrell 4 года назад

      @@CGEJordan
      Understood, but Maa tuktub can also mean "You don't write OR You are not writing" Am I correct? Shukran jazilan wa Allah m3ak.

    • @CGEJordan
      @CGEJordan  4 года назад

      @@ivornworrell maa tuktub is the command form. "You don't write" is formed in this way: "maa btuktub".
      BTW, all of these inflection charts with all the information you will ever need for inflecting every verb form is found in the book, The 101 Most Used Verbs in Spoken Arabic: Jordan & Palestine . You can find purchase information for it in the description section of our videos.

    • @ivornworrell
      @ivornworrell 4 года назад +1

      @@CGEJordan Thanks a million for the clarification.I recently bought your book but being a new student, I'm studying it slowly & indepth.Now that you mentioned it I turned to the inflection chapter starting on page 141 & the information is all there, thx.

    • @CGEJordan
      @CGEJordan  4 года назад +1

      ​@@ivornworrell Thanks for supporting the 101 project!

  • @damyHarbi
    @damyHarbi 8 лет назад

    Good video..!! I have a question, Sorry for that but always I have many doubts..:
    Can I add an objective pronoun? Is this example rigth?
    إِنساني - insaany - forget me
    إِضربواه - iDribu - Hit Him (Or maybe) إِضربوه???
    إِقتليني - iqtalyni - kill me (for girl)

    • @CGEJordan
      @CGEJordan  8 лет назад +1

      +7aamin Damy Yes, the object pronouns (suffix pronouns) are used a lot in Arabic. أُضربوه would be the correct way to write it and the meaning is "Hit (you all) her." So, that is the 2nd person plural command form of the verb.

  • @shoukathali9724
    @shoukathali9724 4 года назад

    Whats the feminin of (حط)?

    • @sabaal-hashami2196
      @sabaal-hashami2196 4 года назад

      shoukath ali
      حَطَّ ~~ حَطَّت or حَطَطْت
      حُطَّ or أُحْطُطْ ~~ حُطِّي or أُحْطُطِي

    • @muruj1
      @muruj1 2 года назад

      @@sabaal-hashami2196 الشدة معناة حرف ساكن اتى بعده حرف متحرك مو حرف متحرك بعدها حرف ساكن
      ruclips.net/video/Z9wC6RmNepk/видео.html

  • @aneeshgeorgeremani1438
    @aneeshgeorgeremani1438 4 года назад

    أنتَ احكِ! أنتَ لا تحكِ!
    أنتِ احکي! أنتِ لا تحکي!
    Is it right way...? Sir,..

    • @sabaal-hashami2196
      @sabaal-hashami2196 4 года назад +1

      Aneesh George Remani you don’t need to use the word (you=أنت) in the Arabic because the verb tells us who you are talking about so the word (احكي=you speak) alone is considered a complete sentence in the Arabic language

  • @unknownahmed3708
    @unknownahmed3708 5 лет назад

    Is this fushha?? Cuz I know only fusha arabic every one understand

    • @CGEJordan
      @CGEJordan  5 лет назад

      Yes, it is mostly the same, with some exceptions. But, it needs to be said that not everyone understands fusha (MSA) and, more importantly, very few Arabs can speak fusha fluently.

    • @unknownahmed3708
      @unknownahmed3708 5 лет назад

      CGE Jordan Institute for Arabic Studies so which Arabic should I learn ??