Imperative | Past | Present | Future | Verb Conjugation in ARABIC - Jordanian Levantine

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  • Опубликовано: 26 янв 2021
  • Episode 56 - Verb Conjugations in Arabic Levantine Jordanian Dialect for past tense, present tense, future and imperative. Those will be covered for You in male, You in female, and You in plural form. Six different verbs are going to be covered in this video including the verbs:
    Go
    Try
    Wash
    Write
    Put
    Bring
    #ammiya #verbconjugation #levantine

Комментарии • 26

  • @Joao-Cardoso
    @Joao-Cardoso 7 месяцев назад +2

    ولله انت كتير جيدة, انا مبصوط كتير اجد هدا القنا وحتى رجوعك رح اكون اتفرج كل الفديو القانا!

  • @gabrielperez3761
    @gabrielperez3761 5 месяцев назад

    Excelent review.Thank You

  • @marysaleh3881
    @marysaleh3881 9 месяцев назад

    Please please please 🙏🏼 come back,we need you.
    And we miss you a lot.

  • @Effy6398
    @Effy6398 Месяц назад

    Thanks for this! This is very helpful.

  • @Green-ld4gi
    @Green-ld4gi 3 года назад +2

    Love verbs !!!! Thank u

  •  3 года назад +2

    Teacher, on these new series, as a request, teach the verbs:
    TO START
    TO FINISH
    TO OPEN
    TO CLOSE
    TO TRAVEL
    TO TAKE
    TO GIVE

    • @OneDayataTimeArabic
      @OneDayataTimeArabic  3 года назад +2

      Excellent - I'll get another verb conjugation video similar to this one and add these. I'm working on formulating a passive voice one as well so will lump those verbs in as well :) I did this more like a one-off video for now to break up the series, but tomorrow I'm launching "Emotions" series, then i'll do a focused verb conjugation series with your verbs :) Thank you thank you!

  • @ivornworrell
    @ivornworrell 3 года назад +2

    Ahlan yaa ustaadha, your explanations are so clear in this video that I have no questions on it.May I ask though, which verbs in the Shami Dialect are used for "to practice" & "to improve"? For example, how do I say "Let's practice" & "My Arabic is improving" ? Shukran wa Allah yeselmek.

    • @OneDayataTimeArabic
      @OneDayataTimeArabic  3 года назад +2

      Thank you so much my friend I'm so glad to hear that! In Levantine dialect (or shami), here are the words we use:
      for "practice" - itdarrab - so "Let's practice" is "Yalla nitdarrab".
      For "improving", it's "Yit-hassan" - so "My Arabic is improving", it's "il 3arabi taba3i 3am bit-hassan", or "3am btit-hassan 3arabeeti".
      Hope this helps! Stay tuned for tomorrow as we're diving into "emotions". It's be a hard one tomorrow as we'll cover the words on "sadness" .. tough topic but necessary! Have a wonderful rest of your day my friend!

    • @ivornworrell
      @ivornworrell 3 года назад +1

      @@OneDayataTimeArabic ألف شكرا معلمة.

  • @abigailgonzalez4915
    @abigailgonzalez4915 3 года назад +1

    marhaba, thnk you for this video, I am ot sure if you have covered it but can you do these verbs with I, They, she, he

    • @OneDayataTimeArabic
      @OneDayataTimeArabic  3 года назад +1

      You bet! Check out this playlist for all my verbs videos so far . Hope this helps! ruclips.net/p/PLvI57iQVxFoRJ2wTSNUWXdPac-JERi0-6

  • @cengizabdulhaj1201
    @cengizabdulhaj1201 3 года назад

    Thank you! I guess passive voice should have been in the video too, but the video is awesome

    • @OneDayataTimeArabic
      @OneDayataTimeArabic  3 года назад

      thank you my friend - I'm sorry didn't include that yet but I'll go those 6 verbs out in passive voice in tomorrow's video. stay tuned. I couldn't fit all 5 forms in one screen otherwise it would have been overwhelming. This is the first time I include future and imperative - so step by step. Tomorrow's will be those 6 verbs again, but in the passive voice, as a verb or as a noune. So for example: The book is written: الكتاب كُتب، الكتاب مكتوب. Is that what you were looking for?

    • @cengizabdulhaj1201
      @cengizabdulhaj1201 3 года назад +1

      @@OneDayataTimeArabic Great! For as long as I know, in spoken ,,it was written'' is إنكتب'' (inkatab), isn't it? I mean the prefixe ,,-in'' is added to the root verb. But I don't know how to form the passive in present and future tense. If you could cover this, it would be more than clarifying:). I hope I'm not mistaken...

    • @OneDayataTimeArabic
      @OneDayataTimeArabic  3 года назад

      You're spot on. I get now what you're looking for. Since the content you're needing is a bit more involved, I won't be able to get it out tomorrow... I know you've been asking for this for a while so thanks for your patience! I'll keep getting more daily content and I Hope it's helping you, but I'll push another verb conjugations in the passive forms you're needing early next week. Stay tuned.

    • @cengizabdulhaj1201
      @cengizabdulhaj1201 3 года назад +1

      @@OneDayataTimeArabic Yes! No problem. Since the lesson is meant to be at its best, there's no problem postponing it. I am down!

  •  3 года назад +2

    Shukran ilik.
    Teacher, does this verb "jarrab (to try)" also mean TO TRY to do something?
    Can the verb "HuT (to put)" be used for "put on your glasses, put on your shoes, put on your shirt"?

    • @OneDayataTimeArabic
      @OneDayataTimeArabic  3 года назад +1

      Excellent questions! Let's see: your first question:
      "To Try" and "try" are both from the route word "Jarrab". So when we say: I tried: a-na jar-ra-bet. OR , I want to try: bid-di a-jar-reb. Hope this helps.
      The second question for "Put", this one is a bit more complex. So, put on for your glasses, shirt / shoos, if you're putting them ON you, then it's "ilbas". If you're putting them aside (on the shelf for example) then it's "hott". Thanks!

    •  3 года назад +1

      @@OneDayataTimeArabic I mean "I tried to write".
      Could I say "ana jarrabet ektob" (past+present)?
      Or "ana jarrabet katabet" (past+past)?

    • @OneDayataTimeArabic
      @OneDayataTimeArabic  3 года назад +1

      @ ohhh I get it, it’s the first one: Ana jarrabet aktob. Thanks for clarifying ❤️

  • @mapofg6095
    @mapofg6095 3 года назад +1

    Sabah al kheir ya madam. I have a question: in order to say "write" to a female in the imperative we Say "uktubi" but how can we Say to a female "write IT please". Is "uktubiHO" correct? Shukran

    • @OneDayataTimeArabic
      @OneDayataTimeArabic  3 года назад +1

      Excellent question my friend. You’re very close. Depends on the gender of “it”. Remember every noun and pronoun in Arabic has a gender.
      If the “it” is a male, then you would tell the girl “Oktobeeh”.
      If the gender of “it” is a female, you’d tell the girl “oktobeeha “
      Hope this helps! ❤️ and thank you for watching!!!

  • @abdullahvayalar
    @abdullahvayalar Месяц назад

    Your teching goes in high speed.. Difficult to follow.... Reduce speed