The final lesson: an exam review, the master skill of process of elimination, and a "what next" plan. This is about consolidating everything you have built over the previous lessons.
1What You'll Learn
- How to verify your grasp of the noun (ismIsmاِسْمA noun: a word naming a person, place, thing, or idea (and also adjectives and adverbs). It has meaning but is unattached to time, so it is not a verb (Fiʿl) or a particle (Harf). One of the three Arabic word types.Introduced on Day 1) fundamentals with a true/false self-check.
- The master skill of process of elimination: identifying an unknown word by ruling out what it cannot be.
- How to test any big word against the four categories: ism, past-tense verb, present-tense verb, and commandCommandأَمْرThe command (imperative) form, like iqraʾ (read!). It is built from the lightest 2nd-person present tense with the first tā removed, adding a helper alif (a floating hamza) when needed. It ends in the lightest (sukūn) form and always points outward, at "you."Introduced on Day 9.
- How to apply elimination to a real passage from the Qur'an (Sūrat alAlالْThe definite article "the" (الْ). Adding it makes a word proper and drops the tanwin off singulars (Al and tanwin cannot share one word). A Muḍāf can never carry Al.Introduced on Day 2-Mulk 67:1–4).
- A study plan for what to do next so the fundamentals stay solid and serve their real purpose.
2Exam Review Highlights
Part 1: True or False (the noun self-check)
The first section is a true/false drill on everything from the noun lessons. The questions, with the answer key worked out:
| # | Statement | Answer |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Every Ism has four properties. They are: status, number, gender and type. | True |
| 2 | The default state of an Ism is light and there are four reasons it could be heavy. | True |
| 3 | Non-Arab names are partly flexible. | True |
| 4 | Human broken plurals MUST be treated as singular and feminine. | False (you may treat them either way) |
| 5 | Non-human plurals are treated as singular and feminine. | True |
| 6 | قَوْمٌ (qawmun) is treated as plural masculine because it is an Ism Jamʿ. | True |
| 7 | The default gender of an Ism is feminine. | False (the default is masculine) |
| 8 | The word قَمَرٌ (qamarun, "moon") is feminine because the Arabs said so. | False (the moon is masculine by default, only the sun, شَمْس, is feminine by decree) |
| 9 | There are 8 reasons for an Ism to be proper. | False (there are 7) |
The muslimūn alif-spelling rule
When the -ūn sound (مُسْلِمُونَ muslimūn) goes into naṣbNasbنَصْبThe "done-to" status (object / detail). The word receiving the action or giving its detail (to whom, what, where, when, how), answered by the a/an sound. The state-word for it is Mansūb.Introduced on Day 1, you write مُسْلِمِينَ: but the commonNakiraنَكِرَةCommon (indefinite). The default type of any noun: a word is common unless it falls into one of the seven categories that make it proper.Introduced on Day 3 error is to write the un-form's naṣb with a stray alif. Compare the spellings مُسْلِمٌ / مُسْلِمًا / مُسْلِمٍ (muslimun / musliman / muslimin) and مُسْلِمُ as a muḍāfMuḍāfمُضَافThe first word of an Iḍāfah, the thing being possessed (the word before "of"). It must be light and carry no Al, and it takes its type (proper/common) from the Muḍāf Ilayhi.Introduced on Day 3.
An alif is added only to the -an tanwīnTanwīnتَنْوِينThe extra "-n" sound at the end of a noun (the un / an / in of "a"), which makes the word "heavy." Tanwin and the article Al cannot sit on the same word.Introduced on Day 1 ending (e.g. أَبًا abā, أَبَدًا abadan "ever / never"): not to -īn / -in. Exceptions like رَحْمَةً (raḥmatan, with tāʾ marbūṭa) take no alif.
You are spelling the naṣb form of a word that ends in the -an tanwīn. Do you add an alif, and would your answer change for the -īn ending?
Show answer
Yes, the -an tanwīn ending takes the extra alif (e.g. أَبًا, طِبَاقًا). The -īn / -in endings do not take an alif (e.g. مُسْلِمِينَ), and words ending in tāʾ marbūṭa like رَحْمَةً take no alif either.
The full muslim chart
| Status | Singular | Dual | Plural |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rafʿ (m) | مُسْلِمٌ muslimun | مُسْلِمَانِ muslimāni | مُسْلِمُونَ muslimūn |
| Naṣb/Jarr (m) | مُسْلِمًا / مُسْلِمٍ | مُسْلِمَيْنِ muslimayni | مُسْلِمِينَ muslimīn |
| Rafʿ (f) | مُسْلِمَةٌ muslimatun | مُسْلِمَتَانِ muslimatāni | مُسْلِمَاتٌ muslimātun |
| Naṣb/Jarr (f) | مُسْلِمَةً / مُسْلِمَةٍ | مُسْلِمَتَيْنِ | مُسْلِمَاتٍ muslimātin |
Default gender is masculine
The default gender of any ismIsmاِسْمA noun: a word naming a person, place, thing, or idea (and also adjectives and adverbs). It has meaning but is unattached to time, so it is not a verb (Fiʿl) or a particle (Harf). One of the three Arabic word types.Introduced on Day 1 is masculineMudhakkarمُذَكَّرMasculine. The default gender of any noun: a word is masculine until it shows a sign of being feminine.Introduced on Day 3. There is no list of words masculine "because the Arab said so", only a list of words feminineMuʾannathمُؤَنَّثFeminine. A noun is feminine either really (biologically female) or grammatically, for four reasons: certain endings (ة، اء، ى), the conventional-feminine words, paired body parts, and broken plurals.Introduced on Day 3 because the Arab said so. So the sun (شَمْس) is feminine by decree, but the moon (قَمَر) is masculine by default.
What is the default gender of an ism, and which of the two (the sun, شَمْس, or the moon, قَمَر) is feminine?
Show answer
The default gender of any ism is masculine. The sun (شَمْس) is feminine by decree (it sits on the memorized list), while the moon (قَمَر) stays masculine by default.
The four reasons an ism is "light"
The default state of an ism is lightLightA special form where the extra "n" sound has been dropped (muslimu instead of muslimun). A word goes light for exactly four reasons: it is partly flexible, it is the one being called (al-munādā), it follows the lā of absolute categorical negation (lā an-nāfiya lil-jins), or it is a Muḍāf.Introduced on Day 2; there are four reasons it becomes heavyHeavyThe normal, default form of a noun, which keeps the extra "n" sound (from tanwin like -un, or a combination like -āni / -ūna). After lā it signals a general negation.Introduced on Day 2 (takes tanwīn / is treated as properMaʿrifaمَعْرِفَةProper (definite). A noun is common until proven proper; there are seven categories that make it proper, including proper names, words with Al, all pronouns, pointers, the Ism Mawṣūl, the one being called, and a Muḍāf to a proper word.Introduced on Day 3-heavy). Restated as the four reasons a word is partly flexibleFlexibilityHow freely a noun can show its status. Fully flexible words show all three statuses; partly flexible words (places and non-Arab names) are always light and never take a Kasrah; non-flexible words look the same in every status.Introduced on Day 2 (cannot take full tanwīn):
- Non-Arab names / places (partly flexible, naṣb or jarrJarجَرّThe status of the word after "of" or after a preposition. Shown by the i/in sound. A word is Jar for one of two reasons: it is a Muḍāf Ilayhi, or it follows a Harf of Jar. The state-word for it is Majrūr.Introduced on Day 1 only).
- Arab names (partly flexible).
- When you call someone (the vocative).
- Absolute negation ("absolutely no …").
The seven (eight) reasons an ism is "proper"
An ism is proper (definite) for these reasons:
- al-AlالْThe definite article "the" (الْ). Adding it makes a word proper and drops the tanwin off singulars (Al and tanwin cannot share one word). A Muḍāf can never carry Al.Introduced on Day 2 words
- PronounsḌamīrضَمِيرA pronoun. Independent (detached) pronouns like huwa stand alone, are always Rafaʿ and proper. Attached pronouns like -hu cling to another word and are always Nasb or Jar.Introduced on Day 2
- Proper names
- PointersIsm al-Ishāraاِسْم الإِشَارَةA demonstrative pointer (this, that, these, those), like hādhā or dhālika. Pointers are proper. A pointer followed immediately by an Al-word forms a fragment with no "is."Introduced on Day 3 (demonstratives)
- The "cousinsIsm Mawṣūlاِسْم مَوْصُولA relative ("connecting") word like alladhī (the one who / that which). It is one of the seven kinds of proper noun and is inherently proper.Introduced on Day 3" (relative pronouns)
- The one being called (vocative)
- A muḍāf, only if its muḍāf ilayhiMuḍāf Ilayhiمُضَاف إِلَيْهThe second word of an Iḍāfah, the possessor (the word after "of"). It must be in Jar status.Introduced on Day 3 is proper
Broken-plural treatment
A non-human broken pluralJamʿ Taksīrجَمْع تَكْسِيرThe broken plural: a plural that "breaks" the spelling of its singular (like mouse to mice) and carries ending sounds, so it looks singular and must be known by vocabulary. Grammatically it is treated as a singular feminine ("she"); human broken plurals may instead take their real plural.Introduced on Day 3 is treated as singularMufradمُفْرَدSingular: a noun referring to just one item. Its status is shown by the ending sound (un / an / in or u / a / i).Introduced on Day 1 feminine: and can also be treated as what it actually is (pluralJamʿجَمْعPlural: a noun referring to three or more items. Arabic has five kinds of plural, including the sound masculine, sound feminine, and broken plurals.Introduced on Day 1). It is not "always singular feminine." Rivers (أَنْهَار), for instance: non-human broken plural → grammatically singular + feminine, even though the dictionary calls it plural. (And قَوْم, a nation, is generally masculine pluralJamʿ Mudhakkar Sālimجَمْع مُذَكَّر سَالِمThe sound masculine plural: identified by the -ūna (Rafaʿ) / -īna (Nasb-Jar) combinations. It is used for intelligent beings only and is inclusive (covers a mixed group of men and women).Introduced on Day 1 but can be treated like a singular-feminine human-style group, so "she denied" with قَوْمُ لُوطٍ as an outside doerFāʿilفَاعِلThe doer of the verb: the one performing the action, which is in Rafaʿ. In Arabic the doer is built inside the verb, but an outside Rafaʿ noun can supply it instead.Introduced on Day 7 is valid.)
3The Key Skill: Process of Elimination
The master skill: "I don't know what this is, but I know what it's NOT." You identify a word by ruling out what it cannot be.
Think of it like a detective with a lineup: you may not know the culprit on sight, but once you rule out the ones who could not have done it (not an ismIsmاِسْمA noun: a word naming a person, place, thing, or idea (and also adjectives and adverbs). It has meaning but is unattached to time, so it is not a verb (Fiʿl) or a particle (Harf). One of the three Arabic word types.Introduced on Day 1, not a past, not a present), the last one standing is your answer.
An unknown big word has no ism ending, no past-tense ending, and no present-tense prefix. By process of elimination, what must it be?
Show answer
A commandCommandأَمْرThe command (imperative) form, like iqraʾ (read!). It is built from the lightest 2nd-person present tense with the first tā removed, adding a helper alif (a floating hamza) when needed. It ends in the lightest (sukūn) form and always points outward, at "you."Introduced on Day 9. Once you have ruled out ism, past tensePast Tenseالفِعْل المَاضِيThe past-tense verb, formed by changing the END of the word. Its endings run across 14 pronouns (darasa = he studied, darasat = she studied, darasū = they studied).Introduced on Day 7, and present tensePresent Tenseالفِعْل المُضَارِعThe present-tense verb, which covers both present and future. It is formed by changing the BEGINNING (prefix) of the word: a-/u- (I), na- (we), ya- (he), ta- (you or she).Introduced on Day 8, the only category left is the command (which you confirm by its floating hamza, hamzat alAlالْThe definite article "the" (الْ). Adding it makes a word proper and drops the tanwin off singulars (Al and tanwin cannot share one word). A Muḍāf can never carry Al.Introduced on Day 2-waṣl, and its sukūnSukūnسُكُونThe mark showing a letter carries no vowel (it is silent/stopped). The "lightest" present-tense particles place a Sukūn on a verb’s final letter.Introduced on Day 2 ending).
You will read the Qur'an facing words whose meaning you don't know. The skill is to decide what a word IS by deciding what it is NOT. Every big Arabic word is one of four things:
- an ism,
- a past-tense verb,
- a present-tense verb, or
- a command.
(The ḥarfHarfحَرْفA particle: a word that has no meaning on its own until another word follows it (like in, on, to, of, and, but); it is not an Ism or a Fiʿl. One of the three Arabic word types.Introduced on Day 1 are easy and rarely the puzzle.) Test each candidate:
- Ism? Does it have an ism ending/combination (tanwīnTanwīnتَنْوِينThe extra "-n" sound at the end of a noun (the un / an / in of "a"), which makes the word "heavy." Tanwin and the article Al cannot sit on the same word.Introduced on Day 1, -āni, -ūna…)? If it ends like an ism, or works as a muḍāfMuḍāfمُضَافThe first word of an Iḍāfah, the thing being possessed (the word before "of"). It must be light and carry no Al, and it takes its type (proper/common) from the Muḍāf Ilayhi.Introduced on Day 3 or one of the five fragmentsFragmentA unit that is more than a word but less than a sentence. The five fragments (Iḍāfah, Jarr Majrūr, Harf of Nasb + its Ism, Mawṣūf-Ṣifah, and the demonstrative) cover about 70% of Arabic phrases.Introduced on Day 4, it's an ism. If not, eliminate it.
- Past tense? Does the ending match one of the past-tense slots (-a, -at, -ū, -tum…)? No match → not past.
- Present tense? Does it begin with one of the four prefixes (a-/u-, na-, ya-, ta-)? No prefix → not present. And a present tense should be normal (ending -u/-ūna) unless a particle gives a reason to be lightLightA special form where the extra "n" sound has been dropped (muslimu instead of muslimun). A word goes light for exactly four reasons: it is partly flexible, it is the one being called (al-munādā), it follows the lā of absolute categorical negation (lā an-nāfiya lil-jins), or it is a Muḍāf.Introduced on Day 2/lightest.
- Command? Does it begin with a floating hamza (hamzat al-waṣl, no hamza drawn above/below) and end in the lightest (sukūn) form?
Worked examples: the elimination quiz
Work through these short items, deciding for each whether it is ism, past, present, or command:
1. أَنْزَلَ الْكِتَابَ 2. اذْهَبْ إِلَى فِرْعَوْنَ
- أَنْزَلَ الْكِتَابَ (anzala l-kitāb). al-kitāb (الْكِتَابَ) has al- → ism, and its naṣbNasbنَصْبThe "done-to" status (object / detail). The word receiving the action or giving its detail (to whom, what, where, when, how), answered by the a/an sound. The state-word for it is Mansūb.Introduced on Day 1 (-a) statusIʿrābإِعْرَابStatus: the first and most important property of a noun. It is the grammatical case (Rafaʿ, Nasb, or Jar) shown by the word’s ending, telling you the word’s role in the sentence.Introduced on Day 1 is the detail of a verb; naṣb does two jobs (detail of a fiʿlFiʿlفِعْلA verb: a word with meaning that is attached to time (past, present, or future), so it is not an Ism or a Harf. An Arabic Fiʿl already carries its doer inside it, so a single verb is a complete sentence. One of the three Arabic word types.Introduced on Day 1, or after a ḥarf al-jarrḤarf al-Jarrحَرْف الجَرّA preposition (such as fī, min, bi, ʿalā). The noun right after it is put into Jar status, so the presence of a preposition is a sign that the next word is an Ism.Introduced on Day 1). Working backward, أَنْزَلَ (anzala) must be the verb: its -a ending matches the past-tense "he," with al-kitāb as its objectMafʿūl bihiمَفْعُول بِهThe object of the verb: the one the action is done to, which is in Nasb. A pronoun attached to a verb as its object is always Nasb (it answers "whom?").Introduced on Day 7: He sent down the Book.
- اذْهَبْ إِلَى فِرْعَوْنَ (idhhab ilā firʿawn). Take اذْهَبْ: no ism ending → not ism; no past-tense ending match → not past; no present-tense prefix → not present. By elimination it must be a command: go! It begins with a floating hamza (hamzat al-waṣl) and ends in sukūn, confirming it. Then إِلَى (ilā) is a ḥarf al-jarr, so فِرْعَوْنَ (firʿawn) takes jarrJarجَرّThe status of the word after "of" or after a preposition. Shown by the i/in sound. A word is Jar for one of two reasons: it is a Muḍāf Ilayhi, or it follows a Harf of Jar. The state-word for it is Majrūr.Introduced on Day 1, Go to Pharaoh!
- كَذَّبَتْ قَبْلَهُمْ قَوْمُ لُوطٍ (kadhdhabat qablahum qawmu lūṭ). كَذَّبَتْ ends in -at → past-tense "she." But "she" allows an outside doerFāʿilفَاعِلThe doer of the verb: the one performing the action, which is in Rafaʿ. In Arabic the doer is built inside the verb, but an outside Rafaʿ noun can supply it instead.Introduced on Day 7, and a non-human / nation word like قَوْمُ (qawm) can be treated as a singularMufradمُفْرَدSingular: a noun referring to just one item. Its status is shown by the ending sound (un / an / in or u / a / i).Introduced on Day 1-feminineMuʾannathمُؤَنَّثFeminine. A noun is feminine either really (biologically female) or grammatically, for four reasons: certain endings (ة، اء، ى), the conventional-feminine words, paired body parts, and broken plurals.Introduced on Day 3 group: قَوْمُ لُوطٍ (RafʿRafaʿرَفْعThe "doer" status (subject). The word that performs the action, answering "who or what did it?" Its singular ending is the u/un sound. The state-word for it is Marfūʿ.Introduced on Day 1 as a muḍāf, the people of Lūṭ) becomes the doer, the people of Lūṭ denied (before them). This is why "she denied" with قَوْمُ لُوطٍ as the doer is valid (cf. the broken-pluralJamʿجَمْعPlural: a noun referring to three or more items. Arabic has five kinds of plural, including the sound masculine, sound feminine, and broken plurals.Introduced on Day 1 rule above).
Worked examples: a verb-by-verb model and the Qur'an
- آمَنَ الرَّسُولُ (āmana r-rasūl). No ism ending and no muḍāf/fragment behavior → not ism; no command form → not command. The -a suggests a past-tense "he," and "he" allows an outside doer: r-rasūl (Rafʿ) becomes the doer, the Messenger believed. (If you mis-read it as present-tense "I," you could not then have an outside doer, so it must be past.)
- اقْرَأْ (iqraʾ): read! Built from تَقْرَأُ (taqraʾu) → make it lightest (تَقْرَأْ) → remove the ta- → iqraʾ, with a floating hamza (and بِسْمِ after it, the first command in the Qur'an).
Process of elimination on a real passage: Sūrat al-Mulk (67:1–4)
Apply the skill to the opening of Sūrat al-Mulk, isolating each word and deciding what it is. The āyāt, with key words identified:
- ...بِيَدِهِ الْمُلْكُ وَهُوَ عَلَىٰ كُلِّ شَيْءٍ قَدِيرٌ ﴿١﴾ (...biyadihi l-mulku wa-huwa ʿalā kulli shayʾin qadīr). الْمُلْكُ (al-mulk, Rafʿ) → ism (has al-); قَدِيرٌ (qadīr, with tanwīn) → ism, In His hand is the dominion, and He is over all things competent.
- الَّذِي خَلَقَ سَبْعَ سَمَاوَاتٍ طِبَاقًا (alladhī khalaqa sabʿa samāwātin ṭibāqan). الَّذِي (alladhī) → ism (a "cousin"/relative pronounIsm Mawṣūlاِسْم مَوْصُولA relative ("connecting") word like alladhī (the one who / that which). It is one of the seven kinds of proper noun and is inherently proper.Introduced on Day 3); خَلَقَ (khalaqa, -a) → past-tense verb; سَمَاوَاتٍ (samāwātin, -āt + tanwīn) → ism; طِبَاقًا (ṭibāqan, -an) → ism, He who created seven heavens in layers.
- لِيَبْلُوَكُمْ أَيُّكُمْ أَحْسَنُ عَمَلًا (...ayyukum aḥsanu ʿamalā). أَحْسَنُ (aḥsanu) → ism; عَمَلًا (ʿamalan, -an) → ism, ...which of you is best in deed.
- مَّا تَرَىٰ فِي خَلْقِ الرَّحْمَٰنِ مِن تَفَاوُتٍ (mā tarā fī khalqi r-raḥmāni min tafāwut). خَلْقِ (khalq, jarr after فِي) is a muḍāf, الرَّحْمَٰنِ (ar-raḥmān) its muḍāf ilayhiMuḍāf Ilayhiمُضَاف إِلَيْهThe second word of an Iḍāfah, the possessor (the word after "of"). It must be in Jar status.Introduced on Day 3 → both ism; تَفَاوُتٍ (tafāwutin, tanwīn after مِن) → ism, you see no inconsistency in the creation of the Most Merciful.
- فَارْجِعِ الْبَصَرَ هَلْ تَرَىٰ مِن فُطُورٍ ﴿٣﴾ (farjiʿi l-baṣara hal tarā min fuṭūr). فُطُورٍ (fuṭūrin, tanwīn after مِن) → ism, ...do you see any breaks?
- ثُمَّ ارْجِعِ الْبَصَرَ كَرَّتَيْنِ يَنْقَلِبْ إِلَيْكَ الْبَصَرُ خَاسِئًا وَهُوَ حَسِيرٌ ﴿٤﴾ (thumma rjiʿi l-baṣara karratayni yanqalib ilayka l-baṣaru khāsiʾan wa-huwa ḥasīr). يَنْقَلِبْ (yanqalib) begins with the prefix ya- → present-tense verb (here in the lightest form for a reason); الْبَصَرُ (al-baṣar, Rafʿ) → ism, the outside doer; خَاسِئًا (khāsiʾan, -an) → ism, the vision will return to you humbled while it is fatigued.
The motto "I don't know what this is, but I know what it's not" solves about 90% of any unknown word; you go to a teacher only for the last 10%. But it works only if your fundamentals, four properties, five fragments, past/present tenses, pronounsḌamīrضَمِيرA pronoun. Independent (detached) pronouns like huwa stand alone, are always Rafaʿ and proper. Attached pronouns like -hu cling to another word and are always Nasb or Jar.Introduced on Day 2, command/forbidding, are solid.
4What Next: The Study Plan
The next 10 days matter most
The foundation is laid and the cement is wet: the next 10 days are the most important. Reviewing now turns a fragile 20% into 70–80% and quickly to 100%; waiting two weeks or a month lets it go rusty. Revisit every exercise from the previous lessons, then test yourself with a final exam. The iron is hot now.
These ten days are like getting your feet wet at a cold beach: you have only gone in ankle-deep, and you are not hunting whales yet. That is perfectly fine, because wading in is exactly how everyone starts.
Racing ahead to advanced material before the foundation is solid is like running with a leaky bucket: the faster you sprint, the more of what you pour in spills out, and you arrive with almost nothing left.
The goal is not Arabic: the goal is the Qur'an
The goal is not Arabic, the goal is the Qur'an.
What is the real goal of these ten days of grammar: to speak Arabic fluently, to read Arabic literature, or something else?
Show answer
The real goal is the Qur'an, not Arabic for its own sake. Speaking Arabic or reading literature is a later, separate goal, so you grow your Arabic and your Qur'an study together in small alternating steps.
The aim is not to speak Arabic or read literature (that's a later goal). The only goal is the Qur'an. So alternate, in small steps:
- Build a little Arabic →
- study a little Qur'an →
- build a little more Arabic (≈5% more) →
- study more Qur'an, each cycle letting your heavier Arabic carry a heavier Qur'an load.
If Arabic races ahead while Qur'an study stays flat, you lose the motivation and the entire purpose. Keep an Arabic program and a Qur'an program moving hand in hand. And do not memorize vocabulary lists in tables, tables are forgotten after the quiz; immersion in tafsīr (listening to it many times over) builds lasting understanding far better.
A note on attitude: real learning is mostly self-driven. Do the heavyHeavyThe normal, default form of a noun, which keeps the extra "n" sound (from tanwin like -un, or a combination like -āni / -ūna). After lā it signals a general negation.Introduced on Day 2 lifting yourself, exhaust what you know, and go to a teacher only when truly stuck. Don't let "I learn better in person / when conditions are perfect" become an excuse not to learn at all.
5Recap
- Every big Arabic word is one of four things: an ismIsmاِسْمA noun: a word naming a person, place, thing, or idea (and also adjectives and adverbs). It has meaning but is unattached to time, so it is not a verb (Fiʿl) or a particle (Harf). One of the three Arabic word types.Introduced on Day 1, a past-tense verb, a present-tense verb, or a commandCommandأَمْرThe command (imperative) form, like iqraʾ (read!). It is built from the lightest 2nd-person present tense with the first tā removed, adding a helper alif (a floating hamza) when needed. It ends in the lightest (sukūn) form and always points outward, at "you."Introduced on Day 9: the ḥarfHarfحَرْفA particle: a word that has no meaning on its own until another word follows it (like in, on, to, of, and, but); it is not an Ism or a Fiʿl. One of the three Arabic word types.Introduced on Day 1 are easy and rarely the puzzle.
- The master skill is process of elimination: identify a word by ruling out what it cannot be, testing each candidate by its ending, prefix, or form.
- This single habit resolves roughly 90% of unknown words, but only when the fundamentals (four properties, five fragmentsFragmentA unit that is more than a word but less than a sentence. The five fragments (Iḍāfah, Jarr Majrūr, Harf of Nasb + its Ism, Mawṣūf-Ṣifah, and the demonstrative) cover about 70% of Arabic phrases.Introduced on Day 4, tenses, pronounsḌamīrضَمِيرA pronoun. Independent (detached) pronouns like huwa stand alone, are always Rafaʿ and proper. Attached pronouns like -hu cling to another word and are always Nasb or Jar.Introduced on Day 2, command/forbidding) are solid.
- A non-human broken pluralJamʿ Taksīrجَمْع تَكْسِيرThe broken plural: a plural that "breaks" the spelling of its singular (like mouse to mice) and carries ending sounds, so it looks singular and must be known by vocabulary. Grammatically it is treated as a singular feminine ("she"); human broken plurals may instead take their real plural.Introduced on Day 3 may be treated as singularMufradمُفْرَدSingular: a noun referring to just one item. Its status is shown by the ending sound (un / an / in or u / a / i).Introduced on Day 1 feminineMuʾannathمُؤَنَّثFeminine. A noun is feminine either really (biologically female) or grammatically, for four reasons: certain endings (ة، اء، ى), the conventional-feminine words, paired body parts, and broken plurals.Introduced on Day 3 or as the pluralJamʿجَمْعPlural: a noun referring to three or more items. Arabic has five kinds of plural, including the sound masculine, sound feminine, and broken plurals.Introduced on Day 1 it actually is; an alif is written only on the -an tanwīnTanwīnتَنْوِينThe extra "-n" sound at the end of a noun (the un / an / in of "a"), which makes the word "heavy." Tanwin and the article Al cannot sit on the same word.Introduced on Day 1 ending.
- The next stretch of study matters most while the foundation is still fresh, review every exercise and test yourself before it goes rusty.
- The goal is the Qur'an, not Arabic for its own sake: grow Arabic and Qur'an study together in small alternating steps, and learn through immersion in tafsīr rather than vocabulary tables.