Grammar of The Arab 025203 MBP
Grammar of The Arab 025203 MBP
Grammar of The Arab 025203 MBP
ARABIC LANGUAGE:
INTENDED MORE ESPECIALLY
DUNCAN FOBBKS,
LAM
LLD.,
LONDON
,
H. ALI/ffiN
&
Co.,
13/WATEBLOO PLACE,
HK&TP0BD
J*Y
WTWHIK
PEEPACE.
drt, at tho
on Arabic
,
or
to this
lo
ftananar.-oou.posod
Gorman
** Mt
p,cnt
Tho road w
may, thon no
language*.
-^ *
ouostto
ta
of a
^ that
J)lai nor
oMy jn ^
lm(
to tho
Mero
null'
tho subject to bo
more
alllity.
As' I lay a,
oWm
to
of tho
subjoot throughout, it is bnt
namo tho souroo, ton, whioh
I haro dm
te
TO.
I-
comprising tho
n U
foUo.
Sy^om
of Ittflotion
181S. pp.
^abo, 2nd od. 2 vol..
_fau
Ca.0.
8.
that I
my
nm
that
**.
VI
i'KEFAt'ft,
Do
Sacy's
is
for the
the*
it
ttiihjrat*
is
ThiB drawback in Do
Saey
meamm* oomponwttwl
in a great
is
however,
1>y
tho
nothing that
is
new*
tions to Bosenmiillert
Grammar,
4to. Lipsiw,
Be
of arrangement
press
stffl,
and bosidcs
with
faults of
y
my
obliga-
1818, which
Saoy's
first
Do Saoy on
in
<tKtfon.
the
it
tho only
work of the
my
In
pupils
when commencing
compiling
the
following
Grammar,
hara^
upon
ness, as that
used by Rosenmiiller
my
that
is
important in
In the disposal of
entirely from
my
my
Do
8acy
Mr
<xmdeffimti0n of
predecessors,
may he
by a glance
niEFACE.
at
Table of
my
natiu'o,
iit
C 0ntentB.
f
1 holcl
methodical arrangement
cult of attainment
all
Vii
is
Nor
memory.
IB
is
to discuss
ment, at
Ae
tho following
instructing
students
work
of
intended for
in
tlie
In tho
first
may
MB
not bo deemed
Grammar
elementary
as are
Btticly
and IX,
and
altogether.
lati^ji4Uo
lootionH, 4to.
self-
then,
place,
use of
tlio
with copious
tlto
Boc.ondly, lot
ultca*
hnn,
Grammar, including of
in Hinullor typo,
wo may
call
it
road
thut,
the whole of
and marked
ThiH
vocnJniltiricH ?
two
fnir
otc.
not encroach
and
it
vc*rjr
let
him
abovo mentioned,
olomontaay oourwo, or
;
this
it
after
roiwling-ljooks
full-
Jj/tKh^go^ in
the
PREFACE.
VU1
To
First,
knowledge of
to acquire a moderate
Hebrew
for
To yotmg mon
Secondly,
whom
pre-
the above
Thirdly and
lastly,
To
those
all
who
intend to rait
is
re-
genemlly
spoken.
differs
undergone a proeesi of
IE
faet,
the
Modem
is to that of
Thueydides,
An
dialect of the
cue,
Modern Tongua
first place,
Froytagii (Gfoorgii
WiQwlmi)
PREFACE*
IX
desumttini, etc,;
accedit Index
Halls Sax-
vols. 4to.
used to
Is
sell
abridged
This
edition, of this
work
-Freytagii
may
Calcutta,
royal 8vo
Kur aE
alb^1840*
al>ovo
Bo Saoy
1810*
by Ibn
Aral>
viz.
Shah
no date
-Oalila ot
TO,
1842.
4to. Lipsiso ?
wo may add
peruse
Ikhwanu-s-Safa,
Ooncordantia Oorani^
Gustavus Miigelj
To the
may
find convenient
1828*
History of Tlmur,
1817.
By
Bimna en
Aridbo,
by
4to* PaxiB 3
aad
is
To
theso? again,
iimluablo on aeooimt
tin
Oommentaire, foL
we may add
sereral raluable
4to* 1811.
Hadlkatu4-
dfetiit*
PREFACE.
guided Arabian
Poets, Oratory
or.
Book
and HislorianH.
of the Thousand
Thin
The
work,
first
literally into
W.
II.
Mac*
Edited by Sir
Itoyul 4 to,
Is
Fifty Nights
English by
II.
Torrens.
8vo.
London, 1838,
Haudschrift
aiis
Ton ML
Tunin, hcrming.
Ala<>,
12 voln,
Hulrichi,
by
Ms
Arabian library
1880,
add
to
To complete
his
Do
if posBible,
by IL
1881.
by Iba MaHk
don's Arabic
?
Mi,at
Otammar^
To
through
be safely
this second
loft
Aiilyu,
b ^my id
8m
aai
thenceforth to
Ms own gmdmo*
following workij
?k~10t* Di^ortatio do
PREFACE,
guao
Lingua
of the
XI
Affinitate et Convcxdeiitm
1769
"by
Arabic,
etc.
tibis
cum
till
If
then produced
by Albert
cum
Tudicibufl.
works on
first-rate
and they ought long ago to have been translated into our
own
vernacular,
if,
had mot
As a
moAd
the Arabic
Grammar
by
recently published
my
friend
To the general
itself as
civilization,,
between the
less brilliant
of the Reformation in
so well expressed
I3L
brilliant oera of
dawn
scholar, the
by an
modern Europe,
Ms
on Arabic Syntax,
1848, says,-
entitled,
very words*
by
Mm
of a
Mr,
work
"In whatever
point of view
wo
regard the
PREFACE.
Xll
Ages contributed
followers,
religion
and at the
whether
it
Muhammadans
of the learned
as to
mass of the
my
my
deep obligi&ftas
College, Herts
may be
Haileybury
Mu-
to
me by
is
this
work
58,
BUETON CEISOBNT,
v,
1863,
FOBBES,
OF
SECTION
r.
Of
******
Of thjj^tmds of the
Letters.
JC'AfU'H
......,,,..
411
*,***,
1415
Of tho TaEwin
or Nunation
o x
AJsi- Jasnn, or
i?
01 tto Symbol
Of
the
Ampuiatiou
Symbol TasHld-^dJd^lcJI
wX>*Ma
Of
tho Letters of
.
i*
.
J
Prolongation'-^ &^j>.
1
s^
$**.
i OX
J&
X* X
or K4J&
*Vi/X
UJz>
4?C<*'
J^oriL^
,*,*..
.../...,...
..*
*.**,,
Of thoITiimerioalTaliiooftheliottea*
.#.*,,
*,
10
-21
2122
2S**SS
..,...,,.
1510
2324
24
50
20- 2ft
sn^ao
XIV
CONTENTS.
Of the Accent
................
PtsS<*S
Of the
Paiise
ujwjll
........
.....
SECTION
3031
3132
3234
II.
Of
tfa
O sts
Artich^&JijX^\
..... ..,,*,
..... .......
.....
Nouns
3757
.......***.
4143
3637
.P^-O/-
Sufatwfwe
*Jtl
Of
tfo
On
Of Gender
On
c^
ij^\
Of Numbers
Of the
Of
Nouns
....
.,..........,.*
Nouns
^xt"^O
4546
......>.....
5157
^ Ox
......
........
*
.,.,.*,....,,
.,**,.,,..,.
...... ,,,....*
Numbers
Distribuiivo
Numbers
Eolative Numerals
.....
<V
Of
fto Atfwtfot
......
..,.,*,
Periodic Numerals.
Numeral Adverbs
tf
&?))
45
4650
0ftfaffm&ak^$^\*\***\.
The Cardinal Numbers
43^
*,,,..,*
the Declension of
3841
5764
5850
6061
61
61
62
,.,..
02
63
0864
....... ,**,**
405
CONTENTS,
J&V
"PAGES
Of
tJie
Pronoun
13
j+*aA\*
65
..*,..........
.....,,.,.,.
Personal Pronouns*
Demonstrative Pronouns
..
Belative Pronouns .
Interrogative Pronouns
*....
..............
Eeciprocal Pronouns
C5 -68
68
-69
707!
7172
73
72- 73
SECTION III
WHICH TREATS OP THE
Of Radical and
Of
,****,
Servile Letters
Active Toiee
VERB,
*,..*.
,***,,,**
Passi^5foico
Of the
Preterite
Of the Aorist
7r>
-7U
70-*
77
77~78
79~88
>
7476
...,,,.,..,,
...*.*...*,*
n
Of the Imperative'
7080
8085
8i5*80
*......,..,,,.,
NOUE .,,*.,,,,.
Of the
Participles
Of the
Infinitive or Verbal
Triliteral
Tort
8687
87 -8S
88~9!
-.....,.,,.,
Primitivo
On
Quadriliteral Torbs
{ix^ox
Of
*Jt
**,,.,
/ x
also called
91~97
Qg^jQ],
yFOx-
uicUUt
,*,
"doubloa."
101108
XVI
CONTENTS.
SECTION
IV.
YEBBS, ETC.
PAOES
General Bules on
tlie
j,andu5
Alif
..,,*,*
............
Bules peculiar to t^ Fa
Waw
Eules peculiar to ^
\ ,
and
Yd
in
common
OftLoEamzatod Vcrb-^j^fi
Of tho Simile Verb*
Of Concave Yorbs
118121
122124
,.,,*,..*
.,**#,*
,.,..
126
127
128130
ISO
13S
13$
184
**
Terb^K
/
Of tho Defective
114-^115
.,..*.
114
Of the Defective
113
124127
^s
^U1
113
115118
The Substiitiv
110
..*...,....,
110118
..,...,...
135^141
*.*...*,.,.*
.,,*
...........
*.,,.,,*,
185
1881 39
1$0
140
141142
142145
146
XVI
CONTENTS,
PAGES
Of Verbs of Admiration
or Surprise^
14614
14
147
14
and Irregular
14!
SECTION
Propositions
149
PARTICLES.
....,...
,....*
^SM c-J*^
Inteijoctions
SECTION
15\
V.
155
16C
168
IT'S
VI.
N"oTin of
Noun
U KJ1
UT
of Instrament
III
Noun
of Unity
^Jl
JToun of Specification
Intensity
-*
of Abundance
&!LiJl
of Singularity
180
182183
18318^1
.....
18S
184
184
185
^31 ^1
x
Noun
^^
x-PO**0 -
x/xo-*o
Noun
PC
%jd\
xx
Noun of
'
<s
0xO-O
^UjJl
xt.*o^ o
-Ifj^yi
135
XV111
CONTENTS.
M
Noun
of Capacity
Tho Diminutive
*J
*Uj!|
.......
..... ...
......
from
.....
Broken Plurals-^*^
t^T .....
Noun-yL2^
Substantives
t,
ft*~a p
u\
0-3 <*of
Formation of the
186
**j8!
Adjectives derived
186
o s
<*>>
SECTION
186
188
188
189
*89
200
>
.......
201202
VII.
ARTICLE,
ArrangomeEt of
tlio
.,.,..,..,.,
"Words in a Sentence
Syntm
of fh& Article
SynUx
of
Of the
Genitive Ca*o
Cardinal
Numbers
.........
.......
,
205
205
206
2gfc-208
,.**..,*
*..,..*,
20B
254
208200
...
209210
210212
,*,**,****
212214
,,,",.....,.
214222
Substantives in Apposition
Of the
Adjectives
..,,.
.....
Sutstmtim and
.....
203
...... ...,.
........
.
**.
....*.
222-227
227228
228240
240241
Of
.,..,,,.,.
241247
CONTENTS,
PAGES
..........
Government of Foiins
Syntax of
the
......
Pronouns
Personal Pronouns
***.,,
,
Demonstrative Pronouns
...*.,.
SECTION
247
264
254
271
254
261
261262
262-
-269
269- 271
VIII.
A3TO PABTICIES.
.,.,..,
....,*,..
272278
278
287
287
290
*.,.
Infixdtivo
Conco*
a Verb with
GoYcrnment of Verbs
Of Abstract
its
......,
290294
.***.
204302
Wominatiyo
.....,
or Snbstantiye Verbs
***,
.,
.....,,
30^
,$^
306
308
308
309
309- 311
311320
SEOT10H IX
"WHICH TEEATS OP THE PBOSODY,
O /
Of
xu *
322326
COMWTS.
XK
PAGES
Of Imperfect Feet
? ?
Of
tie Metres
jjssd\
Classification of the
Of
?<S
(pi.
Batffe or the
Extended
Of the Metre
TDiaflf, or the
Of the Metre
Sar!
the
Of
the Biff&rmt
d&Uih
Rhyme
Of the Kifah
the
iw
Ka!dah
Of the Bubi't
^^
Poetio Licence
328329
..,.,,
*.....
334
334-^.335
335
335336
336337
337338
338342
* **"
330
339340
340
B41
341-342
,.,,.,,
342343
'
333^,334
336
.......,.,.,
^i3Ji
325
326337
*.*
ifju^l
Of the Muzdawj
Conclusion
l&nti of Poems
V
Of
or the Proximate
oy
324-
,......
Of
Of
Nimble
or the Eapid
...,*,,
..,.....
or the Perfect
Of
333
or the Exuberant
long
...,..,.
of^es?).
Metres
Of the Metre
<*
S43-
344
EBRATA.
pu.r
UNI
17
2-3
21
f>
29
1.3
30
39
11
42
19
Jot'
"on,"
>; "of
rt'ttrf
"of the
frtzrf
vowel.'*
nw
"thus,"
"
"
for
begin/* read
begin with."
for "as,"
>' C^Jj'J
read
"an
>r U^^
SO
"niuVi "
vowel,"
/or
JliLO
<
old
rm^
man,"
^^aJi
"old men,"
i^jL)
v
50
13
ybr "quicwcnt,"
55
11
for
wad
"inert."
road "jwuticloK."
**partIciploH,"
57
u thoir
17 ^br^'in other," rea$
oilier/*
58
25
(H
19
"
for "positive," read
comparative."
G<ft
**
J^^
or."
word "both,"
21
80
OG
19
for "Grammar,"
102
24
jfor
129
17
165
14
,/br
/;>
mtf "AoSfwt."
wad " Ortunmawi."
"Indefinite/* r^/ "Aorist."
"future/'
"*
"
)j|
215
19
284
24
for "conjunction
raw?
<*
particle tj
ARABIC GRAMMAR.
SECTION
the Letters
Of
1.
THE
Arabs, like
I.
in
Writing.
The
hence their books tegin at what we should call the end.
Arabic Alphabet* consists of twenty-eight letters, all of
which are considered as consonants. Most of these assume
different forms
four), according
letters,
the
first
first
last,
and
on the
last will
left,
character
be learned
Column
I.
Arabic character ;
between
letter or letters
contains the
II.
Observe,
also,
names of the
the same ia
form of the
letters,
* The
Alphabet here* described is used, generally speaking, By all those nations who
have adopted the religion of Muhammad ; riz-, the people inhabiting the North-west,
the North, and the East of Africa, the Turks, the Arabs, tho Persians, the Afgpns, and
the
'
j>f
India and
THE ALPHABET.
II.
in,
V.
IV.
VI.
roRM.
DETACHED
FOEM.
Final
Mod ImU
Final.
iul,
;
U
L-S
\3
ts
tha
|WVW
th
fim
u.
dal
Mi
J*
de
tl
dh
cX
J
j
nn
sh
u6
ImfutL
THE ALPHABET.
THE ABABIC ALPHABET
Continued.
),
The
familiarise himself.
firt
is
culled F<tthti(--)
),
),
at oiwe
whieh when
uXU
tlnis,
und indicating
()
2nd, Kanra
fftfafc.
taidc r a
Idler
plueed
%
^ biki 3rd. Dauuwt
which when placed over a letter indicates the* ]>r<js<'n<?o
f
short w HH in tho word u*^ Jcntub.
*lih, *./^;w. (
),
a,
short
UH in
)?
of*
whciii
pkeoil
ovc^r
the*
nliort
3,
Perliupn the
First, to
best
mode
//-arr.
word
tranfifoir,
in
(jxliil)it(*d
is,
foniw of
words, UH
full
Column V,
in ilic
fonnution of
Luslly, to endeavour Io
VL
l(tU<jj*H,
Th(*H<?
the words
wordn are
Tlioy
tho leading
show
Icsttor,
whether
initial,
nm!m!$ or Jinal.
At
by
the
time, as
Of
4,
the
The following
of
ih0
twolvcj letters
n^itm
very
litllo
notice
by the
in
that of oiir
/,
as in "zeal;"
$,
uJ
;"
/, as in
w, as in
?/ ?
as in
* h,
jar ;"
"sin;"
r,
as in
sh, as in
river ;"
"shin;
J?
"kin;" J /, as in "land;" *
"hand." To these we may add
^ when
the sound of
as in
in
L!//^ ? as in
"fin;"
"man;"
s,
These
our y in "yard."
last,
initial,
which we
5.
"We
shall
now endeavour
own language
it is
only do so approximately,
guages,
site
among our
sounds.
of students
by us
by having
"We can
as illustrations
the e#r~-we
may
say,
by a good ear;
-,
?
43
?
At
The remark
is needless.
3U^
letter
c,
^.
tlie
h in
words
tlio
honour^
Jierl,
and
Unu
In
whon we
fact,
Blight
where
tlio
It IB
/tour.
of
rejnmmiB Hut
mencomout of utterance
<tlif,
and ub tlmro
movement of the
elonoly
uch words
Greek, in
llio
apostrophe
more
still
IB
and
t3io
movcnumt
c,
words
4-^1
a5 ?
L^\
ib^
and
c->\ nb^
5,
iwd
may bo
or
Phially, tlio
weak
juat the
in the nyllablcsB
Rtim<*
tlio
^/i/fltm tente,
It
prcBcnt stage of
Ms
iiBeless
t^jl &&,
tliuft,
some and
to
The very
prjlx
Iho
best Arabic
5.
"
f ka
Bfiiilitut
Ks***
n^raj
irn'&'al
denotes
J)5) as
at tlio
thin etiiiibur-
Ommmnr
(Be
symbol.
iu4 jJ
mark
an tho lips
bw{) oj M/,
considered as
us in iho
i*
tlio
iu
urn of
our
tlio
^//I
"
ancl
vowel.
II,
and
cL>
or of * m&, +
t>&,
\,
mi,
ha,
and
is
c 'ain is
between the
lips
so the
maKh-
and their true sounds can be acquired only from the rnouth of an Arab.
7.
c^
t.
Tlte
sound of
or with the
It corresponds
"petto"
c*j th is
8.
"
The Turks,
described.
it
4, like
our th in
Persians,
_ h
9.
is
somewhat
tk,
Boman
character
by k
10.
by M*
In an Arabic
promiaciatur nti
% Gwcorum* sa
foti
w velnti Germaniouin oh
TO-
smcms
OF Tire
calem a subsoquens."
author adds,
explicit, tlic
d lias a
softer
corresponds to the
languages except
utl chrr
relation
we
i,o
aliall
tLut
c^
had
if w<j
etc.,
it in
like
CL^
it
z*
^rr/A,
According
by
Eoman
14*
rofij)ccliv(ly,
wliih
th<s
A
it
mund
ilut
by
W^
upp<r ginnn.
uitrl
////
of
wight hstw
Ibun our
tip of
j?.
th
it in
ni>r<%Kcnt
?.
IB
character "by
<}
ctlut-
r/A,
retained*
Btill
Unman
In the
/,
European
fiir/t
tlio
of most
/7
It
<l.
Boft th in llio
has to
/A
been as well
qwin, nd
English.
uniformly rtijnx^ont
a ouriouH
Ji is
rfuliieieully
HOIIO
! / /
or the
ig[,
like d,
not
enm
Sanskrit
tlio
WTO
however,
thw,
or "ihino."
If
ad amiiBsmi congruit
12. J dh is
raetc^r
"
so prseparans, clicet
spuondum
11. A
AB
OF THE
like*
a hard
by
uso for
15,
it d.
cj and
Eoman
tlio
j,
The
and
fe
&
or vory nearly
character
etc*
it like 1 &.
by
and ^
BO,
Wo
Hom<what
roproflont
tlii^in
like
in the
Tlio consonant
has
UM
miru*
wktion
to
a spiritus
is
lenis
that
or
has to
weak
that
aspirate
is,
the
like the
we may
if
alif.
At
the same
sound of
'ain will
).
we know.
as
of a competent teacher,
may treat
the
it is
this letter
so far as
lenis (
its
as
he does the
true sound
by
\,
until
the ear,
it is
the
same
as the
it
among
by
the Jews
the
Hebrew ain
itself
nyf
is
not that of
*
$&
'
'
i
Arabs.
"
sagen"
in the
Ctenaa word
to
be the
letter
ID
jk
18.
"
when
r of the French
We
grass&j'e."
shall represent
in
it
by j$.
19,
be represented by
This letter
n.
1st
cumstances.
that
consonant,
IB
or
C/
words
letter
it
followed
by
c? ^,
ia,
c^ e^
7
1,
2nd.
When
ontrcz,"
Greek;
o, 3 j,
^5
or
^,
followed
^j
it
and "reudre."
3rd-
it
KoimdiHl
of
by any
<>? ^> ^
naturally bocontcB m, as
is
worcl^
written *<tmlur ;
Wluui
the
'antHtr,
cir-
or a guttural
by a vowel
followtul
CJUHC^
tlio
*-*
o^
"
When
exactly aw in EngliBlu
fifteen letters,
in tlio
the
by
in Lntin and
in
pro-
^^*
"amlM^r,"
imiiml of u^-w
nounced UB if
toW a from tho liouso," they Bay mm-Mli*
4tlu
When
the letter
followed
is
by any
of
tlio
coukwo
four liquid*
r,
us in Lntin
?,
notmced mirrMi /
BO
5J
**
er?
my
lonl,"
mm^mkti
in
pro
*M cr*^
^"
,c
in ^ fi IB followed
&0I/4 ote, Lastly, wlum a word ending
or ^ /A tlio wound of f hn ^ n
by a word beginning with ^ w
is scarcely perceptible, Init tlic s and g? aro doubled, tiiun
4/^5
so
crJ nin-wtitidly
ll^
"from
^ M~y&^c(t(Idma
howowr, ^ w
in tho
my
father,"
becomes
middle of a word
in
folk wed
by
tin*
11
sonants ^
20.
i*
or
The
#.
letter * A, at the
and
it,
'i
which case
what
is
is
frequently
we
called a servile
gender of
la,
sounded
it is
is
or
in
It is then
t.
end of a word,
as in the
in
is
many
Its purport,
I be-
alif is a long
equally well
mode
or it
may be
of combining the
J and
*>
the Primitive or
Of
22.
The
simple notation.
tetijatfyt,
it
and
belongs.
in the word
the
jjj,
Short Vowels
first
is
Its
"
first
briefly noticed in
2,
is
to
which
we h$v
two syllables or
Dr.
we
SS^S
c^l^Jl,
writen thus,
sound
as
root,
Lmm&den aud
calam or
M0% are
several eminent
in saying thai
(in the Ara&fe
ta$A$e
especially) our
12
01?
is
it
term
as
"
fai/ia
we may
unmarked
and
"
open,"
is^
is
calendar.
tinder the
is
called
/rwm
^f
consonant to which
It
erf
a in "ealaimw" or
and
limn
IB
((
^ and
written
Bound
IB
^j.
the words
e in
(~)
Tin
belongs
in tho wordn
5*
The second
23,
tlio
to
thcivforo,
Roman clwwtors,
OcouHioiially
"lxd" and
5)
work
in
understood to
and ^fin,""!!!
tlioroforc^ in
(lie,
t'ourwo
nonnd of
iu
"MU"
lave*, tljo
worcln writfeu
Oriental
all
in the,
character,
24,
Tho
ASU 9 whicli
third is called
written over
its
consonant*
"
Ite
bull" and
sotmd
busli/
tlnw (-^)
in
in
which
in Arabic
43^.
jsotrnd
SomolimcH in the
modem
Arabia
the*
lim a
jXi "labour*" IB
for
in-
OF TANWIN OB NOTATION,
We shall,
stead of shughL
represent the
13
Eoman
which, in
u^
have
character, is understood to
all
that of
perfume/', or such as
our u in
Of Tanwm
Nunation
or
of a word,
which process
is
grammar
mark the
serves to
The
n.
is,
tanwin, which
inflexions of a noun,
syllable thus
becoming u%
in,
The
the sound of
he
which does
final syllable.
liiL. hi/cmatan ; or
(in
As a
case
when
the
only
The
word
is
words
the
by
or an y as in the
vowel
not iequired
is
letter
as
if,
2^ $hai~an,
pfonounced), as j
In words ending in
when
denotes the
general rule the termination
the Genitive, Dative, or Ablative ; and !^
the Accusative.
c-^b
^,
surmotinted
or
by
1,
alif of prolongation,
Of thi0, however, we
27, a$
shsil
^SU
hate more
i$e$i,
\^i
*ukla, etc,
OF THE JAZM,
14
a.
to be a nasal
nJ
This
is
by
26,
When
Koman
final
(Bee
19),
character
we
shall represent
n*
the
Of
when
same modifications
In the
similar circumstances.
nun
said
IB
The tonnlH
the nUnation
lias precisely
and
Grammars
In some Arabic
+-
Symbol
Jftsm^
or
it is
primitive vowels,
said to bo
i^
Arabian gratnnuuiaus
moving or moveabk by that vowel.
consider a Byllablo as a step or mow in the formation of u
word or sentence
a word
letter of
Is
but
consonant
^L
I*JSH
is
"
mldn^
jam, which
"
amputation,"
signifies
consonant to shew
a*
when
is
fluid
iu
(-
be
to
called
placed over
"
&at&6tumt
you wrote,"
**
you have written," the letters k&fm(( t& ara moveablc by jfatfa ;
the letter b& is sSMn or inert; tlion tho following tit m movoablo
or
by damma, and
a
lottor
mlm
is inert.
is
In most Arable
called
t/wmmi: now,
wo
oaanot; howofer^
my
that
Grammar
is
is tjuiescenf in
in
hi
tlie
It
of
tfao
lite
word
the siuno
virordi
mt
;
though
OF THE TASHBID.
we may say
that
it is inert.
work a
this
by a vowel
sounded at
The student
when we
15
be inert when
letter is said to
we mean
call it quiescent,
that
it is
not
it is
not
all.
O-GJOX
Of
When
27.
which
word
Symbol Tashdid
the
a letter
is
doubled, the
mark
where the
c^I-a> shid-datj
mode
jjjuuLsJU
*j
d,
called tashdid,
Thus, in the
it.
first
*>
of writing, as,
mark
letter followed
there
is
on the dal
tashd'id
is
<j>li
is
pronounced madad,
In certain instances the symbol tashdld is employed for the sake
a.
of euphony,
when an
c^JjU
is
s s
shew that
it
o x
u^iJ
c->
following
when
it is
what
final
article
inert is subject,
(See I 25).
is
marked with
*"
different letter
in
is
by a
is
initial letter
of the definite
of the substantive
we come
Ms
final
wmA
applies
n&n
is
We
have
the
n&natum
changed
into that
to
10
which
^y
follows, as
It is needless to
mim~mm
is
for
win-man
; 11
<wXtr*O
the Letters
Of
The
28.
of ProUngatim-$j&\ uJ^p-
letters 1,^,
a letter moYcable
when
we may
ciple,
also
and
JW
preceded by
alif tog< .tlior form a
k
which
in "haul,"
longation in the
may
J\j
to prolong
inert in
consider
tho
second
as
inert
^ahi n
in
the
W(\
When
29,
is
ptecc^iKl
by a connouuut
by tho vowc l (fammd, tho dtmmtt and ^ johtctt toour o<? in "tool;" which In Arabic
gether form a sound o like
#
might be written J^? or, which is tho mmiw tiling, like our
rnoveable
w in
"
rule/ which
tlie
If the latter j
tho j be preceded
and tho
no
sound as a consonant, as ia
In English, tho ^ is a lottor of pro-
many
"gown,"
etc.
in
it also
When
preceded by a consonant
moveable by kasra, the kasra and the <_$ unite, and form a
30.
the letter
"
or,
ee in
which
inert is
is
letter
is
the
letter
as in the
is
a diphthong in the
be written
a,
The
of
letter
it
but which, in
reality,
preceded by damma^ no
retains its usual sound as
^
^
word
written j$*
"
size,"
wise,"
is
"
in
to call a vowel,
When
a diphthong.
a consonant,
own
<f
"When the
^&*.
the
is
^^
In English
in the words
muyassar.
prolongation
^J>
],
and
are occasionally
^,
subject will be
more
Suffice it for
damma
1,
\ 9
when
This
to treat
us to say at
fatfya
is
placed
^; when
and
j>
kasra
when we come
sess their
in
This sound
is
inert is
the faffia
in the
like our
is j&ot
tdiis
vowels and
dissimilar.
When
be
he^Qff^&>^
or
a fc$terog<?aeou
>/
vowel pr@cf$H
1
"
*r
JJ
lattun,
j*^
'
Mw may
remain
silent,
a^
OF THK LETTERS
18
^j
rama
and.
PttOf,ON*.\TlON.
Ol*
in which hvo
AJL* sal&t;
lust
word? the
and
what
preceding paragraphs,
eight in number,
and
3.
ii.
throe short
/w?/
HIIORT,
**i.
l.OM**
fc4 f^f
fail
foot
Jin
in tho six
tho voual
thai.
viz., 1.
have Htatfd
we*
fmi
f*k
JU
s.
>
>/
////
line
comtnoti oo-CTirroiHio,
Bout thoso of
(1) oojilainH
tli<i
Houndn <f
wonln
Kn^Iish
tngfif
tuiifonnly
Hy,s(ii!i
for
of
c*uc*li
wwk
yfr/y
The
<h<* nwp(K'liv<*
///
///
r<*|in\si*!iliiig
uliiw<l
to
Arabic, wcmls in
Wo
Jiavo now,
\n!
tnis< t
words.
In
monemg
a word,
an
tli
orclcr to
havo merely
it
whc*ii
Idler uJ
rc^rri^cmt
tlici
in
effected.
vowels an
withdraw
though not
in
Thk
a/ymranM.
liaro
which
in, i!Al!
in
flie
aw audible
eom*
initial or
Iiow
<*xplin**(l
flify fulluw
omir
will at once
to annihilate or
fully
it
prcciwly what
tJ
we
from
Minuet^ ami
wo
do
in
i
The Arabian
w word w m/l/M^ em
oti thi
tt
we
a vowel
is,
letter
commencing a word or
We
as a very
initial
weak
syllable,
hence
preceding paragraph as
or very nearly
so,
we
initial,
not
in its place,
which
away
being nothing,
be considered as next
1.
if
its
to the ear.
1.
tliat
vowel,
vowel.
the
an
call
19
/,
to nothing^
SHORT.
2.
LONG.
im
in
obt
all
eel
an
in
ut
al
ll
DIPHTHONG.
661
aisle
owl
Ul
ail
aul
3,
#
33.
If,
instead of
we
1.
wo
substitute the
thus
shall
SHORT.
1.
an
in
2.
ut
&l
with what
w&
LONG*
when
il
3,
*ai
*<&l
in Arabic a
word 6r
letter
we hare
or
to start with.
syllable begins
word or
have the
DIPHTHONG.
Tteot^hout
syllable
this
Boman
must
work, when
character, the
20
corresponding place of
sjnntus fails
the
flic
lat.
ing lights,
In
consider thorn
such
Gwk
a^
wor<la na
to
erjuivalotit
honour/'
to
and the
and
st.rictet fttteution, a^
Pruotioally Hpiakiii|/
ihuy
hiidttf,
rontributo in
all
He*
flic
may
thorn as
4
to the
n*fjuiHifi
'
and
//^/
?///# 7^
vaiw* na
{^niflld,*r
Hum,
tltiw follow-
Kn^liVh words
flw vovvols
hang
In other
JJiiilly,
(h<
Ho may
Lastly,
or
in
/*
fllwftngulsh
tnt<1.
tV, r(<.
loiter
tlu*
oic*.
fix
"hour/' "herb,"
jb
or
ujin.stroplH* or
to
splfitws lenh
/W
Ja
abtfl,
ait
A*J /WV/
Y?///W t
J^b
be indicated by
will
n*<jinn
nwt
i*ut*.h
of several vocal
i.
down
rules laid
as the language
with the
we
Muhammadan
rellgioi^
ovr
higher classes,
it
it
forum
it
ri4%^///\
Iwliu,
prmdjiifl braucli
If
Aururum/
othir
atid
and
The
ilwy
f:ciinbifiiijiriu
l%,
rtili*s
givi% in
iiiiticniH
mnUkf
prevail at
iu
^iliimlmi of tbo
\\\*\
tiircnigh
r.ouiifflim
u ccm^itl^mMc tlMHgrc^niont
should eoiwciu^iitly
those
(Uiinibtm in
n*jri^iiH
l
Scholiasts
nlong
**
many
(iiiiigi,*ii
can bo no wonder
Yammi
(lum\^mA
that an Arab of
tlini the
UBCJIHI
licit
IB
irununciutifn of the
gi'iuntil
or
barbfiroui
its
(jnir
which Imvo
iiuil
by old A minim
it
is
diffitr
not
lit
to fonii
nmny
and
ft
from
one
OF MADBA.
21
same time,
the
many
It
must he
same
confessed, at
making
trifles
serious,
it
is
Of
the tii/mbol
Madda
two
5, as
at the
alifs
in
i>\\
alif^
desire.
i"
beginning of a
o^
eminent
and according
to
some
M.
^
Either theory
is
plausible,
The
no great importance.
and
mad^
howerer,as
word ;
it
\\f>-
and
Uw
-/
for
fs
tfe|$%
v4^
iWli
'
of
p^e^Sirily
occurs both
&0fc
,$s
in the
otherwise
wjwe
V *o^
'
fo#
lUJt
*U~ for
22
OP HAM&V.
a.
is
and
i#rw,
mystery,
/bdi "mst
single
:"
if
* *"
word
represented by the
is
final
""^
"
**
JL*M
for
and the
"
I
am
a inMial of
iirttt,
Arabian
Among
\, 1,
uo
arc
for
wliicili
J^V
yauianu.
^^1
km:M
/y/W
to bi) u radical
wo
it
and
<//^r
1,
an
^1
it
i,
11*)
wo
jjjj
an
^
Whim
for
lira
put for
i,
>^i
it is
*U
for
4^, an
f
t*Mi,
^
"'*
^^^
written over j or
supplies tho
',
or m5<^
$}wia 9 *^ sua 9 uwt<wl of
^^ji
movoable
*"*
*
uhrayH
flnin
it filiown
the caul of u
in
and
\,
a.
and
>*
Ut
wliieli
X-
ma
At
id!!
attcjiulrt
place of
-V**
Jjs!
of.
employed,
letter, a&
nocoud,
and
flu*
ft,*
hm^
Peace be
first
*M
grumimiriatiH
vowc^l-poinls
for
generally tak<n, iw
whoro the
"
initials are
35,
if three,
*"
tuls,
upon him;"
iw
and the
firwl letter;
or
by
}t
l)r,
In
Mi
23
OF WASLA,
S^s
the
Of
Symbol Wasla
JO
J*y or
36.
'
Ly
only inscribed
is
at the
we may
say,
is
not sounded,
sound of the
The wasla,
In other respects it
t^x
is
With
"the"
1.
the article Jl
always used in
46),
(see
verb of the second and third class. 4. In the following ten nouns,
"
"
"
"
a man ;
\j*\ imra,
'^\ imr&t, a woman ; ^\ iln or Jjl ibnam,
"
"a son;" LJ\ i&nat, " a daughter ;" ^^
ithn&n, two "(masculine);
X
X
O
^U
"buttocks;"
^^\
when beginning a
aimun,
^1X
"
ism,
name;"
cuJl!
"an oath;"
in all
which
ist,
cases, unless
is
not pronounced, the subsequent letter being always inert, and united:
in pronunciation to the vowel with
XO-^3
,PX
& x
woman;"
x
^
*-</-<>
^ ej;Wl
being sometimes
t6
e->*x>* J$&ddatha4fy$ritfou*
HaminEm
related."
"extend thou."
precedes
^
If afty word,
such letter
XXX
oj^
is
whose
*^</^J
The
a*
iStoO
fer'a^t
naturally inert,
mother whipped,"
final letter is
tt
affixed
x*XX?
^l/t^-o^
(^rabati-l'+ummu,
"the
THK LKTriMrs
(JLASSIFTOATION OF
terminations
and
\j
take
damma*
The
4i
premonition
from/*
of the letters
takes fatfia*
The
<f
9\^
imm
^A
outli."
\\\\
Olmsifimiion of t/w
87. Arabian grairmiariaiin
following
licacln
or classon, vix.- L
^; four
\,
puhlkh)
j, vK,
\\
itrra-ngcs
^ ^
^;
l*rmiuiciitlfan.~~$\\ Iit'
four
*;
oight
denials
2.
ooni(lorc(l an
?^/^ being
t,
^,
^,
liaving no HOUIK!
accompanying
Hltori
vowdn
/;w
or rolusL
3,
Affinity.
hut
what,
ctit'hnr
All otluw
loltow
Soriu*
itnt
they
utt(nding
jr<
ntyled
/wtwttfablt,
aw fonmul hy tho
O^UIM, as ^
but particularly
^ ^ w }|i mv ^ m
with
j with cj,
Rubstitutocl
^
othorK
^m&.
^ C C
?
Thoy
J?
0/^Bmm an*
The
^U?j^ tP^U
aro twoutjMmit in
)
W^^J^'g;
ft li
^J ^, C/, J,
f
*wr
or primitive faring of
ii'ii!ii1wr f
<x*
The
tln-y UPC
25
and various
from the
The
roots.
',
serviles^
for
excepting t and j
5.
CL>.
Association.
are compatible,
same radical
servile letters,
ployed as radicals
Some
inflections resulting
C> t?
->
(though
is
^);
with uJ and *
<-->
viz.,
^ with
^ with
^ ^
;
a.
The infirm
letters
and
fe
an infirmity or imperfection.
except when,
by
their
original sounds
already described,
initial.
This, however,
we
shall
more
most grammarians
progress would be altogether
out of place.
#.
The
viz., \,
servile letters
c^,
(jw, f,
&i
39
m&
k$
20
lw
"they
literally
is
and of
preterite
We
fatten."
nrny
hw
observe, In
tlio
neither
aoript;
in
it
merely
adclod (o
simply a supplementary iKfer
or S
is
to indicate such
rule
is
mere
In fact the
S in
equivalent (n
and
words
and
MM! of words
lint
c^
{ctn<iral
into \\iiich
it
frequently changed,
The
<?.
<JLf,
derivatives.
peroTid
granmmrifiiiB as
the
the
wj, uJ
wkoned hy
of tho
pliinil
^minli'd in
for
^
any word;
any
as
letter,
when acting
iow "in
where the
con^ituf** |iri of
may
an H<rvilo, tln*y
^ <*^^
silver;"
These observations
incnt*"
if)
whon they
may
111*1*
iwt
be joined with
in
C53y^ "aefonling
ho of HOIUO
flu*
in
thy
niate-
WHiiuwripta,
as also in fixing
Arabic woards
sources*
\M^m
Hint
Of
the
Various*
AwJhw
XPI,
Int,
wo
about
tlio
wMoh
cian,
to
which M o uro
ut
roact of
C(*titurio9
from the
niill inoro
Tho Kuflc
It in evidently dorivod
after*
tig
Ifan/dwriiiMyx*
aceoia*
Ilicini""
2nd. In
Muhammad,
27
the Kufic
At
form in which
we now have
maintained
its
it.
1281, in 'which
still
all
it
Hakim
long
and in the
possession, the
In
Dlwani Katibi
the various
we may
^^ NasJdn
Of
say that
(of
written.
Owing
to its
hand
a.
less used,
such as the
99
much
*P
ijAj
fine
"We occa-
the
same purpose
men
as capitals
in illuminated manuscripts.
amongst
The
Tu($ir<l
another ornamental
is
add the
jx*
Mactferibi
or Mauritanic, which
is
To
these
we may
used by the
28
of North-western Africa,
band
differs
the Klfic
in
many
who
and unadaptod
is
Lastly, Urn
others.
used in correspondence.
Wdlm&to
&Lb
It is quite
irregular,
for printing;
properly written.
This
thin
subject, see
the Appendix
to
works Hjimnu'na of
ilia
various
in
generally appliwl to
fins
inirwc: or running
find
to
Inil
the Arabs
he COIUCB
to
on
clocyphor ordinary letters
Vdw
Of ih
39.
"Wo jaay
IICTC
mention
tliat
of the
tlm tw(*n<y-<*ight ltitrH of
computation*
tlui
Nummeal
I^uttiw, how<*vr,
the
SamaritaB,
identical
of the
via*, to
tmli
letter;
to
far
thdtr
'JTlio
ib! lowing
being,
JlicBiilcslnii,
alphabets extend,
is
amngemont
tlm
word**, to norvu OH
III
Wliere
fill
III
denotes one,
c_>
two,
a.
they have
instead of
29
f>
u^^i
"
j^\
their
^^>
instead of
"
About or soon
In
after the
^4^; u^lf
>
all
other respects
time of
Muhammad
scale of numeration,
which in time they imported into
The
ten
Europe,
figures or cyphers
are written from left to
right and applied exactly like our own;
thus
r,
r,
P,
c,
i,
v,
A,
r,
\\,
ir,
r.
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13.
is
IAI r
b.
The dssH
is
Hijra in
sum
of
all
amount
Jn
to the
year of the
disadvantage, that
its
V, X, L, 0, D, and
; whereas
every one of the letters in
Arabic counts for something.
A curious coincidence of this kind
is to be found in a line from
Ovid, written more than fifteen centuries
viz., I,
which
it to
applied, vte,-*
OF THE ACCENT.
30
"FILI
"Tho
amount
put to
to
treason
and
Mud
with which
The
40.
"
on the
**
fa tin T,
I),
JM,
uwnl.
if }>oth
on<
if
Co Hun
the
By
a long nylkblo
wu
of prolongation,
letter
If
iho
otlicmvise
aeconi,
tiic^
,,
language)
long
if
long,
wlii^h,
it,
<>utaiiw
or
inort,
iaken
tukim
syllable
the
In worcla
a<*<'<iit.
phntiH 1^
or
to
nlu^rt
anfcvpontilt
I,
Ambus
nhort or Imfli
bcs
coiu-
ihu lnf^'4 of
in
/.
for
[].,
in
<o th<
Philip
alwvo
of Kjsaiu wan
I-
in 1ho
tlu*
L, mid X amount
wn apply
but
aeijutdnled
HyllublcH,
flnst
f hurley
ihoso.
of
where 0,
Baine a
In words of two
is
am
his Bfeni
IIJH la
Idfw
immorical
which Prince
much the
accent
the,
rebellion,
rexl oration
are
in
year
mmos."
patrlos, InqVlrfi In
by the comimiwl of
deatli ;
plotting
tlio
15C8,
momoration of the
the
DIcM
ante
It will
line
Ys
(ho
it
rfiort
firnt
fe
inert.
a.
show;
lioiico
last eyllablo
as
of a
OB the
in tho
tt
Ambte
(41)
grfii^rally iint in a
we
it
wowi
a siring of
laat ay liable/*
first
in
Moul
a0Bcrtion
fillip
on the
rfioep, tall
The
Miitill
iw that
!*
tiio
too
have oftmi
for
JicMinl it
fullowlag
mr
4I
my
falls
xwiplo,
rail hy
llio
OF THE PAUSE.
The pause
LjifiJ,
last syllable,
Pause.
the
Of
41.
31
makes
manner of reading
in the
alterations necessary to
occurs, the
-^ffM
*~'
>-ox
Ju
tt
^slsr
nouncing in the
first
"al Hamid."
^
<3
^ f
If,
/'X
~*^
??
.&**
^"'-^
XX-*
iTO/-
xc-o
be noticed.
some
to me,
juj
Cx-
pro-
and in the
"
7>
Zaid,
and
33
is
and
as in
*-r-
by
is
preserved, thus
particles, terminate in
is
inert, in
x ^<>x
Cx'^t'X
for
^;
however,
L^l
we
for
shall treat
^?0^
more
bpjtb?
.^^
^; ^ for.^; ^1
OxPCv^
X-CO/
9<*
?(Jp
for
ft*
C-
for
^Vx*
^j-&&; ^j^y,
^V^
^t
Of
this,
42,
Marks
or symbols coirroapOEdiiig to
our
full
stops,
KXKKCISK IX RKAOLW*
found in any
manuscript,
u
nfhor
ICirnin
In
and
low
the
books, wliero they
excepting
Sj
etc.,
are seldom to bo
by marks
arc expressed
Hunilur fo
.*.
**
prefixed, as Ja3
Ua3
didielu" c L*^
^*
lit
Iy
publications*
employed
hi
nty
I**ivimt
will
IIH
Ik curvo
Is
bo utlopfod
mul
IIjtuliiHtiinl
ri*fn\4ot!li*d
paruso wlwit
be Been from fb
wo have
howovor,
tlio
text,
said
on the
Article!
tlie
by
mul
unt*
fko
in the
Following extract
hiiu?ttr.
*itud<*iil
in
to
H<jforo
rcnjausted to
4(5,
43,
?
Illustration of
MTO
may
trying to docyplier
linns
will
full stop
by ti t*iar fliun,
and
admiration
by UIWP wit
symbols of interrogation
which
h^iuiHlich/
tlin
European languages, as
certain
"
/<,
sucli as 1 adrantagofHiBly
He.
by Iiaving
*t
**
"pooiry/ ci^u
words
5
Cv
;;
ait
om mode of puwottuitiou
letters.
Lu]<man, tfi
oxoreio lit rtitiliiig und UH an
It will
at tko
tlio
alno of th'
Arabia charnatrr
tliao
ox<*mt>lify
^inn
lit
we
Homan
of the
EXERCISE
Iff
33
HEADING
O O-*O
>>
Al-insdnu wa-l-Khinzlru.
*ala
li-labaniha ;
wa
li-yabl* a-*l~jam%a*
y
ala~l~b&hlmati ;
yu'amdu daiman, wa
la
'anzan
wa
Fa-l-kabshu
wa amma-l-
yahda*
asharra-l-wuhnshi ! Iima-dha4-kabsh
ktitun? la yadribani,
la~ku~l~Mii%,zlru,
wa
wa
la,
ll
tastafyirru.
li-sufi/d,
n>& la labana.
wa-l-anzu
Ana
'inda
a she-goat, and a hog ; and he was proceeding towards the city with a
view
EXERCISE TH BEADTNf*.
34
They gi vo no annoyance
Tlio pi^
know
that the
milk; but
I,
lamb
is
The
wool, and
tht
its
sent to
ai<l
o him,
"
1
On my
arrival
tho
More
io
he
nindy fl>
furfhor.
arc
and with
profit,
pmmdrf
work
liotii
with
Iiim
SECTION
II.
AND
ISToun
<?
the
l,
uJ/>~ Ifarf*
its
OX
nature
the/*
They
ticiples,
with ours
Infinitives*
and
consider the
Verb
mode generally
We
mtur
we come
to the
to rank as the
children,
OF TKK ARTICLE.
30
who
of savages,
are
entirely of iiotins
eluo than in
all
alwimlliy of flawing
5i
Instance of
glaring in tho
worshipped or adored"!
"
11
(tod,
As
if
of iwture, consists
<it)u
ft
mm
The
of tho terms.
littles
mnnw from
v*rl>
most
tho
numo
of <Jod
di<i
not
oxist
<f
to
The raits
45.
worship."
of Speech in
nine in nuinbor,
tho Pronoun,
Adjective,
tliu
Oonjunction, and
tion, tlie
Article
tho
viz.,
liable to
Wrb,
tin*
however,
article
written in
form*
J lion
ite own
with J, tho
alteration,
J
in
of
initial
and tho
own
J^
j^
to
j,
***-bo light,"
llwwi
in
bo
the*
noun
with
it
in
ji,
If
initial
Greek,
it
^tnw*^
of iho
in
cu, cj, j
tho article*
Definite
pn*fix*rl liappoiis
Of
#
omittod,
is
But
altered Its
tills
nut,
thc^
or wimbor.
vias. f
not
although the
ia
proiHHincied
tho
Ailvt-rh, th<*
th<?
solar lottcw,
begin 'any ono of tho
is
Siilmlmitivv,
cm account of
any
KtigHfth, arc
lli
which,
in
i!u
Articles
4 "tlic,"
j^
Amhic, an
iniirkiHl
OF THE SUBSTANTIVE.
The
a.
of the article
same
.jJl
of c5lii
etc.,
ought
and in order
is
is
;"
the particle
definite,
37
prefixed to
to
have the
to avoid the
article
"to or
ejaculation,
the
which,
&*d\
^\*
S
<dl
ff
ai!
for
<dll
by
when
article
tashd&d, as
JJJ
as in the following
Li4lahi~l-hamdu wa-l-wiinnatu,
But,
whe&
for JJi!
"To God
"
li-l-kamari,
to
the
moon."
b.
In the modern
dialecljf
of
sound before
al~nUr,
The
j^\
"the
all letters,
of the article
"the sun."
solar and as
many
stance that
as
"
etc.
Of
the
(^tenders
There are
They have
38
Numbers
three
olju&l,
Plural ju**U
tlic
and
^^1,
cJU
throe tksen
viz.,
the
9 X*0x-
'***
particles
O
J>
There
u-*^aJU
two
IIOUIIH
many
(<
liavo
tliat
rininalioim in
only
thn nln-
Tho Dual,
Oblique.
wo
liow< vc^r ?
arc,
cascBj or rather
giilar?
as
tj,
O,,*
an in (Jroofc,
neo w1u*n
sliall
Tocativo caso
wo
is
come* fo
invariably a Diptoto,
I)*H<!mi<au
flic*
{ho Noitiinativi^ or
JIB
Iho
The
tin
tho
Aecusative.
ttnd
48*
The
consiwt of
and a
nulical
lhno
still
wowln of
Io((<*rK;
(lu*
fcnv
t1ic*rc^
Tlio greater
Iott*rM.
or AdjootivoH.
but none of
mode adopted
for tho
Arabic language
tli(5
development
in
The
all
c?f
Iho
trilitfinl
itucl
highly ingenious
HO
it liy
roots of
plulonophio*
to tho
of certain
somcwhoro
(o
lottoify
produce certain
\\m
/wn^
bouriiig
cincl
ill
fur that
39
letters.
The
These
are, as
stated,
1,
technical
c^
(or
word
*),
^^"
and ^,
^5 ^
\J^J
literally,
letters
thus em-
we have
all
already
contained in the
35
they fatten.
The
serviles
end), the
^ and ^,
beginning
the ^
is
&
p,
root
us
take
the
let
verbal
example,
JJ, which
signifies
"
alone,
accepting;" we thence, by means of the servile
Then the various
deduce the forms JLsl Jjli* JU and *L3
& O^O /
& s*
^700
&
POx ^ -"X
forms J-j-^y, Jj***> (j^M? Ss^J^'j JV-^^? an(i J^^? e:s>
hibit a few of the other serviles in their mode of application,
1
<js
of
which more
a.
"$
4T
hereafter.
It is evident, then, as
Arabic word of
ff
&^*>
j^, and
a general
rule, that if
we
at once
& XO
come
We
J-c respectively.
tested
letters,
"
(as
gold in the
fire),
is
is
of the form
POX
just as that of
it
observe,
thus,
c*
8eptfQfo
Now, out
uJ*
We
&e,
off
however,
we
infer
Jj^
gefc
how-
may be employed
Cf
tried/*
&f**
word
at
to the root
must
"
every
strip
<->
or
we
*s
over
Jf*
-^
^*^ e
difficulties
practice,
of this sort
40
Nol'IS'S.
ol-
tiilltenil
exdinkd
flic
servile
49 With a view
denote
of so
tlie
to precwion, 1 adopt
flic*
Inm
fnnti to
many
of
indopondnit
consonants,
flu*
nliort
vowols
by
tho application of
m&WHrw
primitive
y&m JJ
according as
ilio
lmrf,
of
For
uiulcrgo
\volw
<*x?unj>l(*j
tho
clilli'roii
may
vowc'lH,
of wich /wv//.
IH HUHcopii1>lo
wo apply
//v//
The
tin*
IIIIH
tin*
for tho
comfort
i!ho
with
/$0
moaroroa
on the
first
vowel;
with rktmna on
or,
It
tiinyllablc
;
alno
lastly, it
may
ho any of the
J^, JJ,
J-o, with
may ho J*^ jJ
We
may
al
jij,
the
f
?
or jli ?
wiinit
timo
jli
clo
and
^J
nns lurr>
not occur in
flie
as
of
tho language.
50,
41
OF GENDER.
view
to
notwithstanding retain
when
my
as
it
is
etc.
be found in
student must not suppose that J*j or any other root in the
detail.
Some
all
roots furnish us
we
are
by the Grammarians
measttres assigned
and
of the verb
different
TVTTTO>,
moods
and
tenses,
etc.,
whilst
it
is
perfectly
Of
61.
are, as
we taw& atoedy
stated,
*tf
&e
42
OF
names of the
letter**
alplialx*!,
hy
vix.,
Hhoulclcax"
aro to be
u
1;
flnily
tho
and
4>ji*
hand/
NumoM
Nouns
womon
of
in
doublo
2wHy~Tlm
"the
Jla3?
This
wlueli
a mother,"
*\
l{
Grammar,
sola repoBeal"
an
hotly,
"Mary,"
lemma
Nam OH
14
woman who
adjectives
(signification or formination*
Thcw
distinguished either
"
and some
of a certain form.
wo may
of the
momlww
of the
^1U ''(he
<^y<^
of <*un<ri'H,
towns,
Such nouns
52,
the following
tira
heads:
*l
"
cxcoptcHl,
Those ending
in
oxoopt5^jl^
To
neither
many
tliCBO
by
may
Horvilo,
IIH
old man."
like
"firnt;"
adopted by
a*
^,
and pronounced
7/5,
in
Ml
i',
under
aiB
lli^
J/l
Those ending
*!*!*#
"
1st
4^r
inagniliceiicc,"
few
#*
tmmhmlkm
foniinmo hy
!,
Jji'
tb^lf
3rdly
^^
as
^prido,"
In
/tt/M
"lon^wt;"
fata,
thin toniiinutiaii
is
comparatives and
bo added somo
eighty
signification
nor by termination,
U
o
#<
that
sneli a
^fife/^
a bucket,"
ftia
feminine
JC,
43
o
1
"a
Jo "a shoe/'
staff/
Jjtf
<J*v*w&
practice
cup/'
and observation.
(See
"the wind,"
which are
th.e rest
Da
Sacy,
Tome
i.,
be learnt by
to
p. 347.)
There
"a
which
5 is
intensive
"
learned;" &U-*
which
S,
s,
<U*A*
54.
axe of the
such
as
&
"
habituated to laugh;"
x-
<ulc
"very
relating from
^ & ^ ss
memory."
.sr^-P
.TXXO
as
avfl
emphatic or
^TX-X
jrx-^--
though ending in
both genders.
5, are of
common gender
"
a veil or any-
&
thing that covers nakedness;" JUL "state, condition;"
a
a
knife" (Gaelic sdan)\
"awing;" J-j-J "a path;" ^^C
/
"Si
7C.
r-
4^
"night ;"
Of
the
"
salt?" eto -
( See
De
J^jjT
"a bow;"
8ac7? P- 349
or
changing
of letters
by the
addition,
4i
addition of
"a
queen,"
** **
before
Jtf ./#&,
**
"ayuuitg womun,"as
Some
this form.
**
St*
i',
**
i^.
"great,"
^ to
"
a man,"
**
&U
king,"
J-
as
S,
5V
when
iuljoctivoH,
in
end
&>
as
[^
from
changed to
J^
J^i aimih,
in
"
whilst some oliaugo
ail
<
one/
has
a,
first
jj J^
"intoxicated;"
mate
into
in
^1^.1
"
^UOA
the*
wrvil*
fomhibo
like
l
?
Homo
is
as
othor
^^
^JL,
"another;"
u
irrlttited,"
5f^
kit
iho
initial
^, ^1
^ m
tho
prononuK****!
In
ndi<l."
"longMt*"
"longer,*'
ITdtt,
fc
t<i>l<
liow<*V4*r,
<iiikwcnt and
final,
^Svliito" or
"
*#*\j
i'j
my
without
"rasli,"
"
as
alteration,
^^
slain" (which,
"sho that
is
jp*
"patlimt/
when used
slain"};
with
in tlie
ftuUtanlivoly,
many
divisible
ullusrH
into
odorifcnma/
jUai^
fi
in
i!iiiiiii
wriltifu
of tho
fo3pm,
tia
part**
r
t)
t
oi
As
**
partis,
as *u43
pi(
co
cif
gold/
to
oithor gc^Mlor!
wliciti
*'
by
the*
fominijw* ts
f<
C/jjisI
b.
On
oiaa is
wanting
to
you."
*'
IB
I*%
OF NUMBERS.
Arabe
"
M. De
of
45
Sacy's account at
first
The
volume.
limits
to translate
De
full length.
Of Numbers.
In Arabic the nouns
56.
liave three
numbers
we have
(as
already stated), viz., the Singular, the Dual, and the Plural.
The Dual is invariably a diptote, i.e., consisting of two cases,
and
generally formed
is
singular,
and adding
oblique cases
"
of, to,
When
a.
tlrasjlj
or in
dual to
"
two
two
the singular
cities."
and J&-
for the
a house," dual
houses.'
noun ends in
if
the latter
(or
city;"
some
(t
If
'asan,
1
"a
^Sfatan
staff;"
remains, as
unless,
a youth
^ye*
jm,un,
when under
j, as iTjj rid&,un,
them,) are
final,
"
;
u \Zfatayani,
*aan>ani,
"&
"two
"
two youths;"
staffs"
(or
it
hcm%&
*,
ft
,j
jm
tu^pte;&e
a garment;"
staves).
changed to j as *Tpu
part;" yfc
the form of
"
and
\jp~
^ two
garments,"
changed in the
"yellow;" ^\^/^
it
is
^tujj^i madmat&nt,
officiating for
houses,'
Where ^ and ^,
vowel-points, as
U tjl3 "two
as
c->,
of the
u l~
"
place of j
changed to
46
57.
and ^j~
"
^U;
^J
fathers/'
"of,
IB
for
^-u
thus
"a
flit
nomina-
a falhor,"
j^jJJJ
JJJ^
by fathers;" J^U
^>;
"glad,"
&
I
or
to,
by m
plural is formed
'SissiHting,"
^.
prophet,"
TJio
final
and cp\
for
"of,
"meiherfl," cptoUjJ
lor the
*oi^
;"
cheerful
iwmiinativo,
**u jmrfher,"
ciitdJJj
by mothers
or
to,
lL^ "a
so
"a
*Clj
pro-
phetess," cbtjlJ*
a* If
thrown
^Plf;
torn
itfkes
is
in
inwt
cliangod to <famm<i,
futfca
it
algo
lifter
^^
//^
flfoppcHl,
(that
is,
simple, or augmented
only
J^s>-
Jummn "a
9
first
or change
by
(*')
to th
woaian's name/*
radical takes
a#w
juclge/^
foriiiing
middle
vorb,*)
w!iit!iar
rtuli<*ul
cjf^I^
saucers
/wm/^tf
ff
UIOHO, however,
or
tlie
ja
It
Of iM Imffut&r
or
and
ft
"
c^liiaf
it is
**
Perfict f<iuino
tmporfki
S, wltoBc
X^mr
14^
oxomplifiod in th
adopttul
Mcvc^rul
words
of
forming
or,
artificial^
a plural
triliteral root
may be formed
by means of two
"orders;" so
"
additional
)US;
so O^rJ
"a
a man,"
"
>JLft
sage,"
is
<Uii^L "disposition,"
triliteral root
may be formed on
4th
jto^.
another plural,
the measure
^JJ ;
d(jU
plural
mountains;"
)&>-
Another broken
*C&. "sages;"
so J^l
"a
plural,
*O
of
thus,
poet," plural
"poets."
^Jj\3
or
)USl,
"
sciences."
frequent occurrence,
"a
triliteral root,
3^y "men;"
of the measure
mountain," plural
of frequent occurrence,
plural
"l&C.
dispositions."
thus
From the
thus, tJ-^f
1st
of
2nd From a
chattels."
47
hereafter^
plurals,
when we
^J.
^
which
come
to
shall
be fully de-
our Section
on the
a.
De Sacy enumerates
aereral of these,
In the meanwhile
we
ll(
lrftt
of rare ^ectednce.
4
broken plurals with examples of such singulars ss usually produce
them*
48
HO, KLTTJUt,,
PLtRA
milk
<uL= a
_>lsi"
'/
HO.
14
pail,
a fragment,
a necklace,
a frying pan,
jjj
17
MJ
J3U&
jUi
Jj>-j
man,
* x
18
a hoy,
f^UU
x^
*>
u a roof,
ii-~j a house,
Ji
.jjj
country,
SO
10
^U* a pod,
'aKadrf
21
'
**a^
ii
22
18
> wounded,
23
a deort,
13
frioml,
for]
an ape,
Jt
>-j
the face^
84
J. It
may bo observed hew, at the same time, that some nouns ban
various forms of
plural,-sometimes a regular plural, and besides thai
one or moro of tho broken
tiras
^
^
^
^ ^'
Tcevand
;
from
an d
tho eyo,"
;
"a
slave,"
SC
JJJf
&
from
forms;
from
,
ft
jii
.
"the
^,5
^'
and
ftlgo
from
-j
^^
Uj and
a &ult
soul," are
boy," plu,
from
^,UL
JU5
J-jl^ perfect,
10
7
Jjjji
1C
rod,
5 JUi
" <"
*'
..
A Jib
C s
..
a book,
ftom
,
8ea/
t;
student
all
is
l&U "a
admit Jwljb
Ju$
^jJ^ub
The
ij^fc.
S Ju
witness/' Jcfc^,
,49
4.*JJ
etc.
<waj
form
^^^>
is susceptible
is
jU~j
makes onlyjj^
its
formed, as from
is
"
and J^l
an
affair,"
by
"
^4y
"a command/'
"When
practice.
j^c
The two
j^Ucl
first
first
meanings
of the singular respectively, and the third only to the two last.
The
<3j
>^r
fifteenth
are
forms,
to
contradistinction
called
the
"
of paucity,"
plurals
in,
%*>"
j^
"plurals of multitude."
is its
only one,
it is
employed indiscriminately
like
c.
With regard
many
after the
?
fatfya
"
second letter
$
happens to be the
*****
the plural, as
<bj^
preceded by
1 ,
j and
"
a dunghill," J-!j*
"
w-^
femMnes,
(thefirtfc foirdiig
$ter/*
When
drbpped in forming
"WMi
in the plural,
7
50
"a
^t3cJ?
candle/' Jj^llf
but
L-^JV^
some words,
as
^ISaU
same
at the
XX
O?
.-
end, as jLJjl
^
!
^n d
'>
*^^
ox
"
^ and
xox
tlio
heel/'
taking S at the
\f
"a
uJUL*!
xx
**
shoemaker/'
xx*
*V^"
"*
<LJM
"
tlySy?
xv
xx
*, x-
GJJ!
t^w^j
"
^tlL
^ (on account
'*
IwLU
comprehended under
them
in the
JUfel,
2nd
rf.
4<
xx
x
r,
cJSUl and
bishop/'
few
*'
Some
form
this
plural jlJlb]
Nouns
^^j
consisting of live or
maybe
more
letters
and
(i*
J^s
Jind plural
not being numbered as such) follow tho same mode, throwing away
at the
same time
u^-4^ "a
pomegranate," ^J\A^;
T
an ^
)]/
<Jjl/
of bread," "cruinl>/
Ji^i "a
spider/' civile.;
-
^^
P CIUI
"a
piece
w ^f for^
ing a diphthong after/af//#, both the last letter and the penult remain,
"
j being changed to 4^ on account of tho preceding /iasra f
^j&g a
crocodile/'
cepting
/%
^\^
when
^
"
servile
along with
'
*'i
a leader/'
e.
"a mother/*
as
fi
.<4jX
XX
or u*-*^ as
"**
rj^
"loosed/*
the moufch/'
Sgf\
A
**'' *^
4T*'**
*.
woman/
xx
^^
c^l^if ; JU
If/
"*,,
tflij,,
J&
;
""*
"water/ Slpt
&
j**
gwlil for J^ljl, the final 4^ being c*at off on account of the
use
made
of this word*
//
man/
Of
51
Woum*
the Declension of
The dual
is
we need
only to direct
Under
1*
57.
Thoy
all
aro, u
may
Gen.
Ace.
jJlJ
of a father,
Ij
iSlJ a father,
As an example
"
!j
two
reffularly, as described
bo seen,
thus
ityj
trip tote* in
"a
fathers,
father,"
y^tj
of two fathers,
two
ij^
fathers.
of a regular feminine
the
fathers,
of fathers*
fathew*
noun wo subjoin
a mother*"
Nom.i'jJlj a mothoi**
Gen.
JjJ^ofamotLei
two mothers*
mothers*
l^lj
.^
of two mothers*
liiC of mothers,
X"^
'
Acc
$l&\ 9
a no other.
two mothow.
Jilj
mothers*
(which are
generally employed as
52
or "assistant;"
"
assisted/
J^ax*
feminities
by
etc.,
^-1*
3rd.
etc,
Nouns ending
in
'a
man
"a mannikiu"
To
these
specific
"
or
iiislgulficaut
we might add
heads
.several
and must bo
left
little
in
^ouns of
tills
class,
"a
urr which
carpenter;"
arc
"a man
generally
of Bagdad,"
hypochondriac;"
man;"
plural
]tf
as
plural
tl^j
^Ju>.j,
etc,
reduced under
cmiirely to practice!,
OLA$B
61.
4th, Diminutive
etc,
^j^jtdwb,
"a
giren to melancholy/
Fcrans of the
J3n<l,
mariner/' Jlac
*^jlop
into
ftf
S^U,
plaral
All such
Mnation
S^
as
man's name.
also a
II
like the
preceding, are
triptotet
singular and
i^
IHTAI,*
a mosque,
of, to,
two
mosques.
or in
of mosques,
a mosque,
mosqties*
62.
Nouns
botli in the
singular
N*i
G*
A.
two houses,
|
etc.
ahouse.
house*
of two houses*
two
Iiou0c0*
cy^
houses,
of
Of Classes
a.
II.
and
III.
we may say
53
in general that
they include
specific rules.
CLASS
I.
any
alone.
IV.
SINGULAR*
Nom
& Aec.
Gen.
j^
y]^-1
J^U
JjX4
x
J^Nom.
J.
Gen.
">
\^
1^*^. Acc,
CLASS
V,
64,
adjectives (comparatives
in the singular
and plural;
SlNOULAIt,
'j>\
DtJAL,
^cUt Nom,
&
Ace.
j
a,
a.
both
less."
Norn.
Gen.
diptotea
& Ace,
paratives
65.
Whoa the
r
?,l',
and superlatives,
?'
alS
last letter of
preceded
a noun
^ &%*>
is
^ preceded fcy/rt&o,
and
^^
short
dfa
OF THE DECLENSION OF
Thus
P^
of
and
^j
in
J$
clasfl,
In
i^luj
"a
mill," for
or tiiptoto&
X s
tlio
*^l*^ "donorte,"
for
selves,
iu tho genitive
"a
when
tLl
vk,
fatht^r-in-Iaw/'
"a
jjJJ
Noim ^^s
**poHs<'ss(l of,"
J
^J
tho
JUiii
faUior of
JkM
mouth of 1
affixed
a brother,"
"tho mouth,"
ottdowcd with
..
hroilior,
liis
of
hi**
Ills
brother*
brothor
thy
*u^J j J
thcan-
bl tho father of
^A U
Ace,
tltci
noun or an
^,1
x j ,j1 of
it
**u thing," 1* or
^1
^A
the fatluT of
Jaj ^!
class
in the nominative
father,"
"
declined an follown
Qeiu
lant
and jJ "having,"
Aec.
posHOSsivo pronoun,
Oeii.
tlui
CO,
Nom.
judge'
nominativo, and
of
jW^
'
arc
cc
of tho same
^U,
in th<
^J!/
for
Cj which
J^.j, ^i/J,
mid accusative
goautlvo
mitten
staff," IB
and i^U**
rilit<?ral
now**," for
"good
or diptotes.
ar<s
^J^ "a
tlio
^.
\%
of thy
fiitl
tlij
coiri|iagilorL
tiling*
of thy ttiiag*
thy
When
a.
first
my
55
person there
father,"
is
no change of
When
etc.
^j]
cl^J
your mouth."
9
my
^f "of
father,"
by an affixed pronoun, it
"
"
of
your mouth," dXJ
li is followed
"
"
case, as
^UT
you not
Ul
enter,
UUl "Why do
'jjLZj
lion,
"
thou endowed
i.e.
with strength."
The accusative
b.
is
j?As&tc.es6t<
participles
go
before, as ^\ "indeed,"
^4
"as
if,"
*jA>
Jl^J^l "indeed a
king
is
If I "but,"
^ *s
"would
man
"certainly," J\ "that/'
to
will stand
God,"
;"JjtXj
man
its case,
"
as
perhaps;"
tl^Uit
"but the
as *&rj
j\<&\ <** \^ "certainly there
The word
in the house."
"in
certain
when
it").
gives
it,
in
when
general,
the
"
limited
definite,
by the
either
article
as
"a
noun proper, or as an
it
governs.
67*
The vocative
is
expressed
% ^Uu
"0
followed
whew
l,
"Q
'Uttxman
??
!
j^.t
by a genitive, where
OF THE DECLENSION OF
56
m employed
accusative
"
NOTOfcJ.
<dl7
JUB t
servant of God."
a,
rapidity*
is
it
n filiation
the
that
is
is
sometimes cut
is
off,
lj
my
"
my
Lord
"
Some
^~U
Marvun
On
O mj
toz&**
"
friend!"
$
J^
^ "0
MansClr!"
\Z
for
"0
tf
>
etc,
when placed
at the
appears as
final
When
pronoun
life
the
as
UlS
name
or a/^ as
-LaS
X-
\i
"help,
\J
or 4^1c for
^1^*
^Clx
3 ^
lj
\&$
\^ji, Ijwl,
as (jwlS
ft^
Salaclinl"
l^jf
prefixed
the
always comes
^
1
)1,
\j
men
"
t
to the genitive, as
and somotiinos
>1
is
added
for
my father P
friend!"
ui-Jl is howevae
mother/*
03*
tkat letter
when
followed
by
a nouu in
tlio
drop
genitive ease? or by
"two fawn%
OF THE NUMERALS.
57
"
"
feet
When
a.
the
\Jy*\^*
a noun
is
rendered definite
which appears
nttnation,
afc
the Musulmans of
by
the end
feet,"
"
Gen.
father;"
tty$\
"
jj$
"the mother;"
&$\
"
4$
"
Sty$\
the
the mother."
"
!
Commander
J^*^
the
d$\
is
the father;" so
"
of the mother
"
"
The
of
article
f ^-L.^^O
Ice.
3.
opSl;
Nona,
triptotes, as
liptotes, into
so
is affected
he above circumstances,
a ~^~, as
black;"
in the
same manner
It is also rejected
by
all
as
when under
and
may
Gen. ^*-31;
The nUnation
nvaridble,
o^Sl "the
/5if4^L
A otner cases
the plurals of the 2nd and
l
th classes of nouns.
Of
69,
the
Numerals
$&A\
sort
of middle rank
consequently this
lem, as
we
.hers adjectives.
ich as
f
Our
Several of
substantives,
them
the Syntax,
The following
axe
t,
MASCULINE,
MAttCTJLINE,
5
or
(&**>
8
9
lUAMj
10
a.
Prom
tlireo to
of the feminine
gender,
here
anarks
the
llio
inaBoiilino.
usual sign
All
these
numbers
'
^t
ami accusative,
numbers
arc
first case,
it
employed
and case
if
****
^>-j
we might say
*$&
"
and
*F(X
in the
jCu
genitive,
From
"
men/
men/
literally,
When ^UJ
three of men,"
eight/' loses
.J ill
tlio
num*ber ten,
the maiOEline
isJAi ? and in the feminine
smaller aumber being always put first, tkis~
its
to the
in the nomina-
or
*'
is for
and
three
a trio of
tive
Minaticm, as
they arc placed after the thing numbered, and agree with
in gender
genitive
From
Enm-
wMeh id
JJ&J, tte
59
MASC.
16
11
17
IV
SjjfL^ j_-**
xx O x
18
xx
xxO X X
19
XX O X
i^Ac J_uJ
13
i>* ^US
X XOX
14
15
are,
200.
80.
50.
20.
1000.
90.
60.
30.
2000.
100.
70.
40.
71. Tlie
Ulf
a.
numbers
the smallest
c4/^j *^J
as
5.
iU
The numbers
^bU
100;
500; it.
.<#
iU
c.
*llj-
for
first,
accusative
declined,
^/fc^jtSall.
^U cJ
600; it,
*
1^
*>-
300;
700;
JU
^U
^Q
* ' :r
jLc.
put
thus
400;
&U ^U^
VjUi 800;
or
#
'
900.
thousand.
Ox
is
200;
The numbers
2,000;
U11
S en
number
from twenty
between the two
xinits
\2i\
300,000, etc.
^T
Ub]
on.
up
100,000;
are, iSl
ulall
so
1,000
on up
^Ulf
to
ten
to ninety7nine thousand.
ui{
l^L, 800,000;
After
uJJ ^UiJj
60
tlio
The
ordinal
numbers up
exception of the
and iLlj
first)
to ton inclusive,
the measure
^ll
have (with
the llth to
from
cor-
noun of the
Nom.
first
elasB,
unaltered;
yu
thus,
eJW!; Gen, Jli shp(; Aeo. J&& JLj&i;
and the same ^ rule is observed with regard to the
fominino;
and BO
on.
I'KM.
llth
U 18ft
J}
yii
2nd
cLltf
3rd
I4tli
>
XXXX
XX O X XX
1st
4th
1 fftll
U-
Sth
16th
jC
eth
XT
7th
lS
38iU
8th
10th
9th
SOth
10th
^
t?
DISTRIBUTIVE NUMBERS.
The
73.
pressed
by
are formed
twentieth,
and
61
all
are ex-
by
MASC.
or ,.,.-&
or
<.i
21st.
FRACTIONAL NUMBERS.
7,4.
<ll "a
third," JjfJ
sixth," jLJi
fi
JA^
"a
"a
seventh,"
a tenth."
number;
^5
"an
"a
eighth,"
fraction
tfjjt,
thus,
J.U
fourth,"
Beyond the
a kind of periphrasis
by
fifth,"
JJJ "a
recourse
-rV
"a
\*j>
Ac
fJ
SJ
iTj^l
"a
ninth,"
is
half,"
had
to
u
fteeeliterally,
Distributive
either
by twice
"
the
ordinal
one by one,"
repeating
number, as \*^.\j tl^j
or (from one to
tori)
by words
of the meastare
by repetition
by one,"
so
These
gj
or
JJJ^
5lL^
may
or
jU* ar
O^X
be^ttsed singly
"
2^J !k^X
^ four
by four,"
one
All such
OF PEIUOJHC
(52
IUSLATIVE NUMERALS.
thus ^513
to ten;
>*
ft
"
"
^^
containing four/
"
ten
to
those present no
^1
In
must be
?)
relating to
^uh
liie
relative adIt
difficulty.
"two," a dual
would be ^1
it
could have
otic,
^^\
Prom
of
for yj;
of
eleven to nine-
from one
to niao;
Him
XO
^p
is
ft
,*
**"
^JU
*V X
or
FEEIODIC KTTMEEALB,
77*
of the measure
or without
m
?
motttte, oto,)/
?
etc)/
When
j*j.
article,
so l&fl or
j^l "every
are
with.
eight (day%
must
NUMERAL ADVERBS.
63
years,"
a.
"
are
triple," etc.,
U&&\
S3&
"
JyU
expressed thus,
"
triple,"
c-Jl^i
single,"
"
2$
quadruple,"
Cc^li*
"
double/'
etc.
NUMERAL ADYEBBS.
"Words
78.
"thrice,"
"time"
etc.,
or
"twice" by
79.
dates
before
our
to
corresponding
^^
"
;
is
"once,"
case preceded
expressed
thrice"
"twice,"
by a word denoting
by cpf^
by
SjZ
by the
or
S^lj
or
<*jM, etc.
hundreds,
and the
units;
but
thousands
if
may
come
first,
Thus
mode
is
in expressing in
which they
from right to
left
so that
04
when
for
an,
THE
from right
lie
example,
to
we have just
JH-Xw
Of
of figures
stated.
OX
ike A$ectiv&-Jti^\
At present we
Section on Syntax.
fixing
The comparative
1
iiBJU*.
^ "than,"
to exprosfl the
Elnawiiliig
"good,"
'j#L\
bettor,"
tlie
punitive
and
tolcofl
in general
tlioti
art greater
Ikal is-Jl
"
by
IB
pro-
used
^%
^g^\
formed from
"
thiWc^O^T^
tiftorit;
is
"
^^j
arid
TIio particle
^e? howtvor,
is better
some
others
stances;
f^f
c-jycM
added in place of
(masCt),
quioBocmt after
<$
"
greater
(fern.).
The
in
particle
"
!>
greater
does not
^ ^^
Without
82.
^ the form
when
by a genitive
as (jwQl ^/^^ "the best of
also where the substantive
'jj\
followed
?
w^"
men."
It
65
becomes superlative
as S&\ ^<\*^>
precedes the adjective,
It has likewise a superlative sense
--
Sa'di
when
most wise. 35
is
placed absolutely
-&~
^^\
&J
s<?*
*?
'?
^j&$\ &>
"
Of the
they are the most excellent among human beings."
comparative and superlative we shall treat more fully in our
Section on Syntax.
^.o^
Of
the
Pronomj~^\.
PERSONAL PRONOUNS.
83. These consist of
Affixed.
The
two
"I."
(No Dual).
"you
two."
Plur. Masc.
"they both,"
a.
We may here
its first
by
Fern.
*ff\,
"he," Fern.
Plur. Masc.
jii,
^&
"we."
^j\ "you."
"she."
Fem,*^
Dual comm.
"they."
its
Jr
may
and the
"We
00
but they have no difference of case, with the exception of Hie duals
the Demonstratives and Relatives, which follow the
we
duals, as
the
common
84,
Wo
shall
The
sec.
immediately
first
mode
is
person
of
of
oilier
naturally of
now como
which
occur
when another
When joined
affixed to
relative^
immediately
mme*
U "of
"
of
mo"
l4
or
JM>."
(No Dual),
or "ufl."
Muse,
"
CX
"
of lain
"of them
liore
Fern.
or
is
added;
affixes also
thiw,
JI5
"
P3im Mane,
Item.
'j;
all
lliufi,
of Imr
'f
Dual
*J "of
"
or
Dual
her."
Kcm.
to illnatntto tho
iiscj
A "of them
of the
affixed
n
;
luin ;"
remains
"
both/' etc.
Tho other
Pern
d,c.
you
3rd Pow. Bing.
"Wo
1st
ez.
after.
UJ&
dative,
to
rinr.
uceuHailve
ftoinow
4->l^*
a book;
<c^ "my
book,"
n house
"
sj\3
his hoiwo,"
Wo
must
also
words
to
Is affixed;
aad
also to
The
b.
affixes #,
torn when
when following
The pronoun
or "it."
kasra preceding
ending with
"
it,
when another
my
vocative
my
^bl
fathers/'
from
"in
as, <tj
of
any word
to
iJli^L "sins,"
as,
"
l^
staff/
After kasra ^s
archer."
"
case
hamza
"
as, <TJ
when annexed
it,
"my
archer," ^*\j
the
first
^5 (officiating for
<f
friends;"
of
omitted in
frequently
of the
without vowels;
^,
"
precedes
of the * into
^~ of prolongation;
the
j, or
1,
damma
torn immediately
another
his master/' or
him"
U&, +&
67
as,
CJj
my
lord
is
"
!
^
*)
precedes
affix
as,
my
^ is
^U*-!
,J, only
(<
sometimes used
as,
assist
^^j^\
me,"
for
Not only the nunation vowels, as we have already stated, but also
the <j in the duals and in the perfect masculine plurals, are dropped
"
two books/' ^c^
when followed by the affixed pronouns as,
c.
^^
CJ
latter into
as, <Ujs
aunt,"
In the 3rd
2nd
"
$y&J&
in
you
^ quiescent
him/'
assisted
after fai^a,
"
ausj
s-
as,
singular to distinguish
<(
#l^$
you
assisted/'
final
S
is
Mm."
he threw
^**
is
it
15J*J
changed to
^&
"a
as,
bt>y,"
x&
Jt
Sr x
"
as,
^ either remains, or
In particles
his boy/'
preceding fatfaa
When
sometimes added
to the
;
In bpoks where no
thus,
,/
for
d/,
68
d*
The
affix
in place of u?r~,
^J
j^xH
"that
^^
I ;"
for
^^
&(/Q
such as
^1,
J,l,
^,
^^
The
etc,;
the
affixed pronouns,
cst,
as
^J
in
as,
latter,
when
the
to
this phrase
^ ^ J dj^
fable,
miser,
is prefixed,
from our
"
is
^^sllf Ui
fi
non
Utof
wretched have
neither
ti*
Two
person
is
affixes
third
may
as,
*U\kc1
or can suffice
"
the*
first
the
"*
he gave
it to
thee against
mo
them/"
lie
^Li5u
"will
',&,
or
it will,
or may,
thorn."
j\ These pronouns
may
alno be put
scparatcily after verbs to denote
"he
C/U^ cly?
in tho
beat
same
you;" or they
in
may
prefixed to them
as
the following
pasBitgo from the JjCur&n:
uj-^uJ cJbjj 4\-oJ cJt] "Thoo wo adore, ami thco wo call to our
In like manner the other affixes, as,
aid/'
"me;" Ubl "us;"
^W
"theo"
(fern,);
Ulb] "you
"
you"(finOj
"
*Cl
lf
"Lim;
i/
tlusm" (inaso.)
^blw
U^
two;"
Ub! "horj"
x
"thorn"
^bj "you"
(mase.);
UWv "thorn"
*
^bj
(two); IjKl
(fern.).
09
is
at hand,
follows
expressed
"this"
(hie),
and
is
declined as
PLURAL.
or
J/\
Masc.
1J
tf
15
"
Pern.
is
SINGXILAR.
Masc.
/
is
is
d/
as d53lJ or C$3 J
Pern.
clJ3b*
or cU3j ?
the
by
or a perpendicular fatfya
PLURAL.
thus
DUAL,
SINGULAR.
jj&
Masc,
Pern.
tii
<<:
this ?
thou ?? or
??
is
"
you
?>
though
contempt or detestation^ as
it is
Ui
tibtou."
article (
initial
of the
It is declined us follows
4C) a).
compounded
of tho article
being omitted
pronoun marked hy
Is
0,-
..rtJJt
Masc,
'till
Fern.
Mug
obflorvod,
we
oas<w
for
i(
^T ^
W)m<tim(
or,
"(the land,
Tho rrotiotmB
ever/' and
and
w^Idom
j, which, OH
^i,
tm<jd,
^!
^3Jb
"whom
it
^jj!
wiw,"
word intervening,
whioh he wtinborn."
with
is
to the
we
particles
and
pronomiH ann(xod
in whioli," for
otc^) in
ar<%
aflixcni
"from which,"
consider to bo inseparable
Tho oblique
not sorviloa.
87.
have already
letters
for
as
as In tho prcvorb
^^
^T cl^^T
^/LiTT
"
Ho who
71
"
do that
a.
^ employed
his nature."
For
but nothing must then be added after this word.
"
Some one is come," or I
example, should a person say to another,
if the other should simply ask "Who?" or
have seen
and cases
'
somebody;"
"
Whom ?"
the proper
word
in Arabic is
etc.
INTEEEOGATIVE PROKOUNS.
88.
Ji feminine Tl
etc.,
is
who?
JJ
which? 3J
what? ?? "of
as
ing the substantive in the genitive,
<^&
L/\
"what book?"
all
When it is employed
alone, without a substantive, it receives
* J
*
*s
s&s
&<-
<l>y
as triptotes.
"whoever;"
The
It
uW>
plural
^1,
joined with
"whosoever;"
CiJ
and U, as
"whatever;"
^$
"whatso-
OF THE UEUIJ'HOCAL
muse.
^\
^\
fern.
etc.
RECIPKOOAL I'KOXOITXS.
89.
expressed by the
aifixen, UB
despotic influence
of
follower**.
of
tlio
Orusjides by tlio
Old man of Iho Mouniain," had over Ms
When this cbic^ftain had become po\v(Tiul and-
ihn
tho
to
terrible
pleased
myself;"
namo
2101111
surroumlinf? princes,
lu
drew
at
last
the
Ixiforc
him some
of
hi
called
pcopl(4
The wordB
a*
In
tlio
Lowland Scotch
dialect
of the Ariglo*Saxon 1
"
tlie
sel
o't/* f*^,
the self of
liave
it/'
self,"
rect, for
the
amendment of which
successfully to substitute
73
"
(5,
to
express anything
rrational
/
? f
<~>~a
_xxLll
'
f>
tyj\*
in the Syntax,
ully detailed
tie
Of
The theme
SKX
root,'*
ju
f'trA
in
named
all
fin*
it,
tlio
ollior
infloxioitn
li is
li^ttcTO
on
tin?
from them
?'#
tlio
/r;/^,
hold
root; then
tlio
tlio
of
UK
9L Tho
clcirivativo
vctlw
arc^
Ju^
Antliif.
vf*rh t
The
"
radicals
n
;
to
(Irammftr, when
perplex
It
to bo
l.hoiii
by
tlio
learner
tlio rarious
In tlu
root.
wapect
differ
purport of the
<l
writ'w on
priiniiivo v<rl>al
48.
fc
\*
fc
onianato from
in
jj^j
an^ (idled
(*oin|)ris(*d
wlili inoftt
ciwfomary
with along
1omg* formed
roof,
are dmioininadHl
fattoii"),
the
l>y tlio
**
"the
ilir siinp1os( ?
consisting
IMTSOHH
and
of
TIT,
Pivtcrito touso, as of
from
tlio
primitiye
to tsomprdhend
formations.
oith<r Trllifontl
or Quftdrilitflcul ;
the
OF THE VE&B.
first
75
3^ "he
divided into
consonants,
as
quiet.
he turned
3 '
"
jjJ
peculiarity of ^* (for
called a
radical
is
three
of
are also
They
Perfect,
The only
77
^y=^
made;'
strong
"he was
7 '
Js
j^) which
is
also
and
for their
as
JU
3^ "h
went,"
said?" etc.,
j,
"
he
Section.
IE
a.
triliterals
the
the second
.*
^*
the
^.
letter is called
first
'ain,
and the
verb
third
have
the
the
li
fa
of the root,
*$ lam,
already
because the
stated,
literal roots,
9
second ain
the
the
JUs
the
first letter is
ts
quadri-
named fa,
the
the third lam the fast, and the fourth lam the second*
Feminine.
three
the
usually
In
.-ux
92,
the
is
second the
first.
The
titc
common
All this
under
03*
04
3
arrange, their
moods
and
from tho
tciiBCS differently
below
etc*
Iinporativo
paradigm given
4th,
the
Partifnplo
and
tho
r>tli
?
Infinitive,
oiiacB of
heinp;
thoflu
deiiominutiouH
frequently
parlioular
io
lined
tlm Vn^cTitn in
the
more
04*
Wo
now proceed
to exhibit
Initli
punuligm of u Perfect
uctivoand paKIve adopting as
u
dld n or "uotixl."
it
"h made/
AOTIVK V
iBt rait
Tho PEETKEITE
Ul
**
he did" or "made,"
I'l'K.
MAM
*"
Jii
3rd
2nd
1st
2nd Part
Tho AOKIHT
l
tf
^\
tf
ho
make,"
mak("
or
or
"
will or
FEM.
FEM.
SINGULAE.
MASC.
3rd
2nd
1st
"
The IMPERATIVE
make"
^$\
3rd Part
"
or
do thou/ 3
etc.
2nd
TIio PARTICIPLE ^uUlf " tlie
4th Part
maker
J?
or
he who
makes."
PLUllAL.
FEM.
i
or
cj%U
5th Part
V
J*j
KM.
8ING1ILAJR.
MASC,
PEM.
MASC.
The LSTIHITIVE
DUAL.
MASC.
J*i, or
fa
U;
VEEBAL
or
the act of
making"
or
"doing."
PASSIVE VOICE
95.
Preterite,
the Aorist,
and the
Participle.
parts,
It
viz.,
the
wants the
prefixed, as
^3
him be
"let
assisted."
The
having always
always hat
Samna
for their
vowel,
^\
and
or
that of
tlic
Til
PASSIVE VOIfK.
10
second radical
always fatha^ as
is
may be
scon
-The PEKTEHITE,
1st Part
ir -\L.
1
MAM
M,
3rd
2nd
1st
2nd rail
TIu* AOUIHT,
Ord
***
<f
2nd
1st
Srd
Tlu
'V
00*
Such
IB
student
is
memory
Ixjforo
^pur
particularly requested
ho procccdn a
separated^
The
The second
diffora.in
iirnt
ntc
may
to
fc
Hirnplc^" "which
commit
lkrflu
write out
in
lu\ b'rolco
g&
procwly
life<v
D^
tin
i(
V'M.,
carefully
In order
r,
tlio
au
to
to do
exercise
andjy
"lie
hi ovory respect*
kmm^
not
yi*%
thus jjfat
not jjyJ
etc.,
as will
OF THE PRETERITE.
79
In
g*
jj>,
Observations on the
Tenses,
THE PBETEBITE
more or
less perfect
and that
cither expressed or
understood;
state,
a good reason
is
why
before
coming
to
The
the verb.
may be * either
transitive, as 1U "he knew.'
^
transitive, as ty "he was glad," ^j^ "he was sad."
Jcasra
or in-
'
verbs as take
are always of
"
ugly," ^Li.
a.
There
for the
is
damma
Such
an intransitive or
"
he was
he was handsome."
this difference in
damma^
viz.,
the former
constant or hatural
X,)V
cause
of the
^3
first
"
thus ^jZ~
*>
he was deformed
"
"
naturally*
In
all
80
OF THE
b.
for the
"ho
^jJ
"
it
was cultivated
When
"
"
or
built;"
inhabited."
flic
the three
all
to he
happens
cj
and the appended termination begins with c^% the two wimilar
naturally coalesce by
x
JB
IB
cu
It
docs not
c^w
and
own form
it
*3
3,
The
Baino
t, or
^j
which havo an
fe,
tashdld with
!Jrd
tlio
of
If thn
ilia
when
In I)e Hacy'rf
Jinl
fh<
Urn
third
tt
Int.
^\
**
(jnuniauiro Aralw/'
in
either
to tlw* letter
third radical bo
(<Tininulion of
person sinmilar
^
radical
Round
affinity in
d.
In
applies
ulJ mnkra
rule
waimw* when
In like
<*fc.
^ O X
c^iJ
unites
allot
letters
<*
uLj
written
ttt&Jidld,
inert
il
coalesces by
pwoti
<\IH.
wu
are, at
thk stage
of the
work, treated with fifty or sixty pagcm Hvo, on the various idiomatic
uses of
the
altojffithcr
Praterite
prcpoftloroiw
as
thd
subjoct
THK
Such a
ovidonily
discussion
belongs
to
10
the
It*
ACJEffiT.
and frequently
to
our future.
It
fonnod,
as
may
tlus
name
cy
or
bo
to
^,
a* terminations
OF THE AORIST.
The
in
the
of
the
have
serviles
prefixed
2nd and
1st,
3rd
quadriliterals,
Aorist
fatha,
excepting
derivative
formations
verb,
hut
"
excepting I*J
"he
the
trilateral
the
constantly
of
in
81
it
kasra
if
it
damma,
is
it
changed
fatha,
despaired/' Jl*J
it
dried/
kJ
3'
and (j
"he appeared;
which may he
with fatfra or Jcasra and even sometimes
pronounced either
ox
f ^^^
ox
fst"'
y fus
?
p /ox
"he
despaired/
"
/>
with damma^
But
if
as *x>
**^>
or
**ej
so J*ojb
J^ij
or
the
d^
"he
wrote/' L^^iu
barked,"
^
jiL"
XX*
by the
XOX
out a guttural
fused,"
"
frequently changed,
^U
'^J>j
The
serviles
1,
"he
leant upon,"
last radical
U3
sometimes dropped.
^,
or
The
^7, and
it is
^"1
when
"he
re-
followed
Aorist, however,
when preceded by
tion,
a.
to
heads of
nemorial couplet
11
OF THE AOK1ST.
"
(on the
medial of the
may be freely rendered 1 Fatlm
lw*m (as ihe medial of tlio aorW); 2, /< a^
preterite) may give
4, /itfsrn
1)0 botli /<//////*
may
may give (kim^a; 3. Tlioy may
which
give*
fatha
8.
&*M
struck."
ull(1
oxampW;
I'UIT.
IM'tV.
"
&
damma,;" us
"He
w*y
!'**'>
'Ml'.
'
AOIHST.
I'Hia.
lie assisted."
I
"
IJc^
Uii
oponccL"
t*
$\\
r/^i
"lloknow."
s
"
IIo coimtod."
j
"Ho
was generous."
^i
a pant
sigjiilloutiou,
mdiciul
gonmlly
infoyww,
Init
(juiw
Tho
tliiB
apocope are
r-?i
no1/ ui
(WTywhcre^
i>rlu*UH which
occa5
iu>t y<t, 1
the
"no, not/
and
'^1
RtNOULA.tt*
r^.
J
/o*'
fe*
J*^ J
/""
4
'
ep f
jeti f
OF THE AOKIST.
To the above
a.
and
UK
"whoever;"
t^rl
may
particles
UK
"all that,"
83
UuL,
JZ
and
its
"
:
^\
"
if;
compounds
^,
and
"however;"
'
"as
' s
x-
^^ and
poetry
when
131
"
"
;
x-^
in
sense (as
sentence.
to this rule
alone
only the
if
j-^a3
"
is
general rule;
thus,
"whatever you
do")
first
future, it follows
'is
<^*a\
((
I will
did,
did
'*
%^\ ui^^^
or %-**\ L^^CX?
will do."
is
responsive;
when
thus,
"
assist
S^ul C 5i/^
100. Antithesis,
cuts off the final
damma
me,
by
M3
^
in the
ft*
"
to,
because;"
until."
Also
t^J
31,
^^^
$,
iJ,
lest not, so as
when
^JllT cJ^LJ ^
14,
not
SLfl
assist
byno
that, in
u
;" ^\
or;"^
assist
a preyou;"
3'
it
JLSUJT
as
implies "and at the same time,
"
do not eat fish, and at the same
S
J$
X
are ^1
Q^^t^U^ u
^ These
ox
^\
Wr
.,
or Ut
j,
OF THE AORIST.
X f
on! ?J
etc,:
**/
^j ^
he
-will
by no means
tf
10L Paragoge
manner
following,
>JX AMPLE,
IW4L*
BlMGtlJUft,
jJ^W
Jto
The
^^^J
to
tlio
where the
X/W
common;
i*Jt*0*J iJ^
Jfe
particle w-^S
added
ancl
>
as
single
X ?***
<*
^/w ^W
^ merely
is
would
to Clod lie
would
assist/
of the
last
OP THE IMPEKATIVE.
EXAMPLE.
SINGULAR
MA8C
3
2
1
mode may be
After this
tf
x/Ox x
8
assist;" uj^^'
inflected
Ox /Ox
cc
and ^^atf
$ x
JC
^s
and
liJ "
''
x
St
t>x
let
'
Mm
'C5-O--'
ceded by an oath as
^/^j <d!l^ "by G-od he will assist;"
"
or
&}
then by God we will kill."
?
y&
102.
The Aorist
preceded
by the negative
^
him who
withal, as \L
jj%\&
ox-
$ x
"When these
at all," together
which
^ '^ji
however, takes
is
when
with the
"for
we
will not
negative particles J, UJ ? or
before.
(JL;
laments, nor be
This effect of
a future signification
"not
ili^l, and
particles tli^,
pity
is restricted to
rules do not
operate, or
when
the
indefinite is preceded by
it beaomes a
,
present tense :
Ox X O XX O^X^X-O,? X
X t/xCX Ox
"
btj^ t^33
he who ^hall do that
l;b <uLaj uJuJ Uife
& X
<**
Jw
we
by
fire/'
OF THE IMPEBATlVE,
103*
is
80
tlie
This mood
is
tlie
*o
and written
a sentence
formed by prefixing
called
when another word precedes.
!
WJicu beginning
"know thou;"
it
<d!f of union
cL.I|
/)**</$/*
is
1
last
as
takes tjamma^
also
radicals
^\
being
or
uro
"aaslnt
Tho
inert
dropped when cJ
the*
thou;" tho
initial
in
alff
wo have
used, as
ftfafed,
sometimes
In tho formation
jm .fixcd
fc
and
first
1,
^j
^,
The Imperative
and
"being
which
35
itself
thc^
The second
primitive verb
Tho
(ill
in
person
sometimes
Jl*i or
jQ;
NOUN OF AOBNCY.
tniitml v<rb
in the
active voice
IB
form Jytt*,
Tlu^n
^
partioitlctrly
***
J^i and
and in
tlio
passive of the
are
4
^J/j
whirh ure
hotli active
and
It has
been objected
"God
is
in
the following
would seem,
It
all
as
87
-ox
s
\AJ
^jjU^
instance,
^a*
f&^a ^
<di
seeing (sees)
time.
expresses present
The
105.
inasmuch
by
a peculiar idiom,
with
its
own
in construction
to the expression,
striking/' ie.,
"he
Mr. Richardson,,
"
a.
thus
is
struck
joined sometimes
"he
struck
him
Mm severely,"
in las Arabic
and
"
all
nonsense
and 3rd,
1st, it is
it is
ungrammatical
other languages,"
man
In Greek, German,
just as it is in Arabic*
5.
The
Infinitives
and reducible
Grammarians make
rule,
paradigm
to
no
OF
<j.
The
TifJ'J
DERIVATIVE FORMATIONS.
similar manner,
the general
by
rules,
IIH
hi
the?
otlnsr InllecJicmH*
They
arc, however,
dictionary
is
guide.
atro
or
and tho
Imn
Iwolvo
cliBlinot
triliteral
formalioim of
The
lagfc
vorl)
wo havo jut
which
)>oar
Homo
dorired'
detailed
affinity
ho mado,"
is still re-
89,
107.
inflected precisely
It will
paradigms have
s ss
to J*3
tense, as those
x
x-Ox
J*i and
9 s<*?
J*i> etc.
grammar unnecessarily
paradigms, to give the
it
word in each
in the foregoing
on
to the learner,
with, a great
first
number
word alone
of exercise, to
by way
of whole length
fill
up the other
persons,
to
Of the
are
and 5th
lowing formations
;hat letter in
which take
use.
The
servile
3rd, 6th,
and the
fol-
may be
observed in
able of
^all
cj, as Js^j
formal
We
have subjoined a
PRIMITIVE FORM.
tSttS.
IMP.
I'AHT.
MUUST.
PKBT,
DERIVATIVE FORMATIONS,
II,
m.
lv
iv.
J*lj
ta.
i-
Jxbb,,
V. V!
JsU?
J,^\
ui
Jl
VT
vii.
y>
VIII.
**
D
JIM
ix. I
X.
II.
General Significations
of
the
to
the Primitive.
Derivative
now to
91
Verb
with reference
Verb which
They have
all
Grammarians
is in
reality
Upon
but,
here
made
will not be
curious investigator,
The
stage
of his studies.
found
it
brief remajta
is
only
'"by
we should
still
find
many
exceptions,
wMeh
my $$m wb
different
is
meanings
which can
to
be fowd.
Some
92
met with
roots are to be
none in
most
all,
The
101),
teuso of
tltc
their vowel
fathufw
consists, as
primary verb,
when
general rulo,
lust of
tlie
and
first
verb
Is
we have
**
letter
IK).
The,
derivative
first
lrauttitiv<* 7
in
the preceding
(lie
lirsi
was
to
wri<e/
csr
voxcd.'
lew
vorbrt
of thin
object,
tlnift,
fromyi"
"
which
^Ignlfidi
comofi
4^Ai5
tlie
firnt
formation
in transi5
he maddened/ or "he
fommtion are derived from
prod wo whaiovcr
formed
pecmllurity of
-L
flic
"ho
noun
made
formation
thifl
infidolily,"
comcn the
infinitive
*
"iieciisliig
is
Oj^" lying,"
aw
t.
*"
the lie"
a,
"lie
is
FJU!," u ji-
ciimo
#
d^
thtw,
Anchor
primitive root
root
broad, or baked."
three
fc
"lie
^tmiRlit wrlling."
ho was
"he
thus, <Uc
wntHtd
f*4iiiHecl
either
roat."
If tlu
is
and
asa
Itn
tallies
fornuition
fn\st
lie
formation
and
Ct
always
has/%
trunsitivo or active
lie
"before stated
which have
IB
are in several
frequently, however,
one
or only distinguished
as a species of intensives
as
"he separated"
its
"
or
J^
and*
"
by being understood
he broke,"
Jl^
jj
and
jy
dispersed/' etc.
111.
and
93
table.
It is
"
4^
thus, {juja*
Jj!
tl^
Paul;"
"
or
corresponded
with'
(another person).
a,
signification
of the
verb; as
if
HL,x
^\
^^O
tlsXil
s x
L^
x"
]\
Ox /
'
''
"
c^-^
Now
to
whom we
write
J\
^1
thus,
c<Uff uJj&
"he
sat
form
as
for its
* *o
^ILLJI
this
112.
"
yJ^T
So with
one
and
-^
cLlll;
wrote
to the
king,"
down
x x
sat down
^U-xO*"he
x
^o xO
llfcifhe first
'
x/"
would be
The
alif,
and
as in the table.
it
has always
Like the
first
04
OI
it
formation,
tivo
cl^
thus,
made another
"ho
*!&
wa.s
?J
or
gwit," comes
eauwiLs of
1 111
fo tlio
&ftt//tt()
sul)iui,xsivo
taught
,!
tli
n
;
formal iou
linst
soimo of
s
iUf
"lio
run
llto
was
gouorally of
IH
thus,
tjiughl," or
*b
a
lic
pussivo or
know;"
Icniniod"
lic^
Bo,' from
lli^lie
4C
n
n or u
c^o! ^nuuincTs,'
iiionil^
poliio ]iiora(itn^ comes the
H
infinitivo of t!io first iormafiun w^^jV
foaohhig nuumors"
u
1
<
formation w^JU
liionoo
unrl
clia{iHoiiiont;"
<o lu
HubmiHin#
format ion
TIu* fifth
<lio
of
infinitives
tho fourth
faii;iit tiiu
ft
cloiiofoH
gf*nc*nillj
*'
^Llf
thus,
<u
Ur*
;itnig*
ourh
DjUu
otlu r;"
i
u
i!ghtiug
eta
togi*ili<T,'*
So
w^fUj
"" '
fc
aHHocuttiou
nc-i]>ro(5ity, t'o-jwrtiuTHhip, or
'/,**"'
Lastly,
il
may
1 '
u^Hy
lw
played
u
<l<*nol<
prc^tomimjj," the
u
lio
or?
fignc>cl
^
at
wi
<mitH
Tho
tfc
J^W
prittcitclirtg
igtiorunoo."
motj which
is
o/
Jf>-
to the
it
whatever
may have
95
This formation
Originally been.
is
it
always of a passive signification; hence, strictly speaking,
in the passive form; thus, J12 "he broke;"
is never used
'^i\
LJLu\
j&\
changed,"
"being
signification.
11G.
(sometimes
j or k) between the
may be
as
triliteral,
prefixes
first
and
^,
cj
inserts
of the
Generally speaking,
jpl
j>y
pieces;" cl^J
"ho beat;"
hence the
etc-);
agitation,
"he
JJa%\
infinitive iJ\)&*\
"perplexity."
together."
a.
by
"
<3
whenever the
in the root
first letter
o, j, or j
is
"
he was repelled,"
written ^jl
is
comes J >
"*" ^
or ,^^31
(f
it
changed into
is
was dyed/'
for
Jo t , or
,
when the
first
]*
radical
and
is
]S> ,
3&\
^>
j>\, where
is
supplied
the J be-,
A
first letter
of fto
changed into t
-"
it
was ptinted/'
for
it is
first
by tmhdld.
as
^x
j4^l
joined to the
cx>, Jt or
or
cu
the
is
<J,
is
was recorded"^,
"When the
,1^" a
L^l ^W
changed into
it
forJ&Jrt
also
cy
is
Lastly,
9t5
"
The
for uLCsyl,
s
sJ\
for
*
eiglith
used
for
expressing deformity, us
<
,"
"
or
^\
ho was
^1^1
he had a distorted face ;" Xp\ "it was crooked."
primitlvo;
thus,
pardon*"
This
formation
3)omd<
ri*))
"
ruti vo V(rl>H,
<
such as
vrah
I"
^wr//>,
bail
my
ho
"he
pardoned;" y&cD
agrees
nearly
with
the
begged
Latin
For u
full account
Oj
may commit
Dr. Lnmsden's
1 10. "The*,
but Heldom,
**
***/***
^Ut
ho adhorcui firmly"
hcmon^ figurntivoly,
n
taking.
(to the
"ho rtwmotwly
prosecuted
Ms
under-
120.
"
the verb^aJ
after
he assisted."
we
now lead
It cannot
in
only to bear
g,
letters
to
model
any mistake,
^ ^ and j, have
and J respectively.
PASSIVE VOICE.
PEBTEBITE,
PAETICIPLE,
Six'?
FORMATION*
I.
I
ft
II.
III.
LfJ^t*^
IV.
V.
Mtd
'VI.
VII.
0^0-
IX.
XL
XII.
student
/he
VIII, and
sive
Voice*
may
observe that
we have in
no Pas-
98
On
Qna/lrllltenil
Verls.
the
first
itself
primitive
-with
They
formation jSalJ;
derivative ^klu
Tho primitive
tMrdJkls'L
cals, us
first
^j^A
fonnution
in
formed as follows
tire
primitive
ho turned, or ivvolvwi;"
fc
<TviI<*,
the
tlio
an
radi-
font doriyod
Tj>^jj
"it vas
"
;
turned;" and the H0<'ond and third by (wo, us lx p.1 it was
U
n "Inn
!M> was horror-stnusk
tmnultuotiH ;" iJSol
hair stood
,
-*
y,
on end"
Mm
ilia
Th<To
will bo
Hiilyaii
no occasion
than junt
priuciploH,
by
tho,
addition
tho
JPOKM.
tliere-
to present
dcriyative
oa
described*
to
the same
already
ME
OF
QUADRIIOTERAL VEEB*
99
DERIVATIVE FORMATIONS.
PARTICIPLE
INFINITIVE
IMPERATIVE,
t-x
AOKIST.
PEET,
FORMATION,
XXOxx
/-x
I.
II.
>*St
Passive
III.
Voice.
PRIMITIVE FORM.
PAETICIPLE,
AOKIHT,
/x
w?
PRETEEITE,
DERIVATIVE FORMATIONS,
I.
II.
III.
t>.
sties
5nd,
and
122. In concluding
Terfy
must
offer
my
a few observations on
those poi&fe in
arded the term Future Tense from the paradigm, and instead
bereof?
hav
tiled the
word Aorist
as the
more appropriate
00
and
haw
lastly,
dLHmisscd from
hi
jugation, which,
my work
Hlittll
a,
that these,
innovations of inin<
poriiHiiig tho
of
in
is
if
ato in
IIH
GoluiH,
rt *
HH(\
"ho WHS
iJ
IV,
miluto<l/*
"
II
"
lie*
'*
lit*
roiy,
aeffjitini
**ln
**
conj,
or plurJ
(diiii!
"liti {oiicbfd
of
Mwa/*
Owy
H{>/'
Now
wifii!
imifli* jiciicw
if
to
eiiiitpilft
froylng^H edition
II* <*tnj,
**
h*
WUH
on
of
luatte secure
frl^iidHltip
with
lu^mutH* u
Hiwlim,"
unotlier,"
a MuHlim-"
nuult*
X
w
"h
T.
VI,
or
itdii
an Arable
^
4J
lcxicoE
nrtwJ<!
eoriiiracti?!
(sn-oallod) conjugations
with hbf imnti or lips th<* **awt bliiek staiiu in the temple
"
X* **mj. lift wiinnitie4 luinw,*!!* to tlt jow<*r of another;"
its
inmh* |H'JUP or
or r<*(M'ivod;"
to
that
ho ^ulmufttnl or tl*vMl;*'
<jcmj.
CQj
foii^fruflfil a
"
lit*
lit*
edition
ecmvmeml
fool
SttlwlrihV V<i<ubulary
**
(Fuk
JU*M
coniiiBion in
H Frcyta^H
from
sHjjhfly uliriflgocl
tape
I^ot
lo
sorl tut!< M %s
u niiioiuil iinprovf^nout.
u of the red
flii'in
trrntniflli'S,^
uflorly
loud
will
lexicons, stidi
ran jr<>v' to
cti<%
(jcilin,^
objcdlon
lu*st AraJiln
pnthim
the
"kfi
made
he
J~j
tion,
made
saluted."
II.
x^i
IV.
JuuJ
f.
III,
etc.
x x
"he
submitted
V.
etc.
accepted,"
f.
'
obeyed/'
JUj
(dual or plur.)
XXX" O
'
peace
"they mutually made XX
X
C.
IX.
etc.
touched,"
or
xx x x
"he
power of another/'
or
friendship."
^J[X "he
f.
>
"he
etc.
VII.
C,
Ja^xJ,
f.
he
>
*U
f.
"
JL
f.
xxt.,-
peace/*
etc.
"he
secure/'
101
the
what
Freytag and others call the Second Conjugation, I call the First
Formation
Roman Numerals
from Freytag's
hare
my numeral which
versd, if
if
to
my
you think
it
if
conjugation,
c.
In short,
rest.
cum
complain of
is,
quarto volumes-
my
con-
at least in
that
"
cca.
Now
what
am
at hand.
Of
n
the
123.
Surd Verb
<(
and
for
S*
doubled."
"
f>
he extended/' axe
called Surds.
"
he
In
hare
fled,"
all
the
IOH
OF THIS SUltB
VJBiti;.
several)
the irregulars.
nic
and
IB
really eupho-
tlic
the penult
has /#;#,
the
for
latter,
fleet
is tlioii
tlio
last
In
conjugation of the
letter
preceding
in
In
^^^
tense
in
the
all
in-
jam
ho
lovod/'
fn
to
are,
become** L^>>
it
given
thoHo verhn
all
tho third
pwHou of
*"
r<
tho niiigulur
thou
liant
nMMuHn
loved."
of the
aorist
contracted into
to tho
firnf.;
u^x!*
If tim
sorM
follows a
J?
particlo precluding
tho
jfer//f,
rmlicttl
litttt
or an uporope,
having
jfi,:w,
In vorlw of
Ing^Wj Jw for^yb.
4fefii4ki
toHo
bc'nrn
j,
&*
<*ont
tfiiifi,
<hi,MMn
*
iijt(*iid of
or oven %uJ
the*
motion lakes
Xv//*m.
may
^^xr*
place,
be given
last;
no
lnffiin<H rc*gii]arly
if
which
(lie
Htuno vowol
f**s
may nko
*t
with tlj
given
to
tlie
^/
contraction
J^;
Ste
regular form.
Aeeording
to the
rule of the
the rule
why
reason
by a
always followed
is
letter bearing
\/\,
and
\^i\
but the
is,
jazm.
103
Alif of
by which
it is
F1.M.
8INOULAJI
DUAL,
*KK
COlttM.
MASC.
j or
c.
Surd Verbs follow in the passive voice the same rules as in the
active;
is
thus,y
forj^l,
tJi.-'.P
letter
in the third
in the aorist
it
is
^h
for
to
being given
derivative formations of
jazm;
^fi
it.
but
The
fatfia
tions in those
^b
"
jJ
he
y "lie fled."
Active
Voice.
PEETEEITE.
PEM.
S
\f
MAHC,
S S
FBESOfr.
"$n*
3rd
& &
s *
k-i
2nd
f*
1st
104
Till:
int
VKiili,
AoltJS'I.
MNM L.UU
l*i\f,
3rd
2nd
1st
IMPKUATIVK.
2nd
INnNITlVK,
(L
Tliij
foIlnwH
"
tint *aiiu*
niflieiil
ihtmttM
Uiou hu^l
liiivi*
of
jii'^tiiiti
nili*
ihir*
<,laK,
willi
with
thontj
of
/w,w
cir
Iftiiplif^t/*
j\tthn or IwMtt tm
h<
J^^
And
i*fi*.
fh
Jjj
li^
will
fli't*/*
Ilif
H.S
{fiiill,
iritsiilmflttitofl
(jturflnM*
11
ifoiw
not
f>rjr?j^
or
if
points,
<(iiii*Jn*il/*
J^M^; uuLu^
for
"
If
iikf^Vi^//^
n
fho vowel
M
tun!
flus
lo
"
us
nganl
pn
ftncl
Jwi^
rf 4 i|i*<|
thimtiWi wlieii th
J*
will
liif*o f
for
or
(afcc placo,
c!
J*
yai^
he
J*J
as OAJ J
|*onult fttkifn
/Vwtif
i'UKTKIUTK.
*
l!
or
'*
xieiid/*
as
,^0
lli n'mSniffioii
fur/i^ ///n
"
iiy fli<iijioeope-iiartlcles(see
he whoht
*
li f
3rd
Ijw*
f*
1st
105
AOE1ST.
DUAL,
PLUEA.L.
FEM.
MAHC,
PEK*
SINGKTLAR.
MASC.
MASC*
r.
3rd
2nd
1st
PARTICIPLE.
Tho Imperative^
124*
,
regularly ? thougli it
the initial
is
vowel (see
125,
may
"be
o"bserYcd ?
take another
fore like
have to theirs
letter,
for Siifi^
f
C"X
lias
wMch
inflected
tions,
is
36, a*)
The
it
In
xOx
lor 43X4AJ
*u^
for
1^
for *
THE
0*'
VKKB.
HfJKf)
PKKT, OF UT FORM.'
3rd
2nd
1st
And
Ilnl
on
in
Tiif Mii
iiil
HO
of
may
if
lnpi* r^murkf^i,
In?
for einiiifile;
from
flj^ v**rb
AOH1ST.
'"^
for
th
nr
n
'ojti(cuU;d
j^
w*
Terl^wi
radical flonbled
fast,
tliis class
liiin^
11IKTKIUTE.
.
<*
JI^LJ*
Ii'llcr
Tho
tbHi*
i*|)araf oly^
pirfi*ff tnliferal
an
X*
ji^
12U*
llif
t<M/uff*/<
Twmwr
wwio
tin*
*f
tti^ ttt*h<ltd
iw c->
juziiiatisil
(th
AfMUHT,
*^
or
cither
j^! c
uorint
oniriietf!cl
they
AA
ot*
taking
<
107
IMPERATIVE.
or
a.
or
122
In further illustration of
formations
the derived
observe that in
primitive,
the
to
of the verb
derivative
the contraction
may
"he
Jj
"We
fled,"
formations in Table
be preserved in the
may
also
I,,
as in the
aorist,
and in the
imperative,
particle preceding,
to
jazm;
thus,
FQBMATION.
ili
for
II.
'j\
for
III.
for
V.
for
VI.
,jy
.xsl
VII.
for
O,
:,;
XL
b^ The derivative formations to which
in which the
tas&cfoct natixrdlly
by
belongs, or
108
A.OKIHT.
FORMATION*
I.
IV.
VIII.
X.
XII.
TorbB
tashflid in tlioso
c(
tliou
Ll*
Is
wort Hilont,"
Jj
jji,
with
c->
oluiractoriHticfl
tion^
arc
of
tlio
through/
etc.,
0*
also
<loul>Io
urJb)
uL,LC
these,
th<*y
Oth,
Tho penult of
lmsm which
f
a vowel.
nor
eoalesoe
radical
'words
with
it
tashifid,
beginning
the
initial
forma-
IrngiilurH;
/*
i^-Jot,
*
it
was dug
'at
und^^,
it
pc^rftuct
wan
XXxO
n<*gociuted,"
vorlw,
drops in
ihn
<hcri takes
a
#
those letters
ly
letter lias
for
4th,
considered
for
*Svo
^5 wh<i
{f
lifj
i^j
neither
Init
or
coalesces in tlie
as c^fc)li
an
t, or
or
ponwmH
cj or cu
tCBpoctivoly
CD
eiicling in
takes
109
SECTION
Of
the
IV.
etc.
remain
and
when used
another,
I,
as radicate,
grammarians, but what they derive from the vowel of the pre-
ceding letter.
rules
to
of those
for
For the
satisfaction, therefore,
De
translated
Sacy, etc.
and
it is
every
way
deserving
a.
paragraph
is
the
trm
"
one,
meaning
not sounded
I stated
"
;
and
it
on the subject in
shews at the
26, a.
plied to
an inert
letter as well
m to one wt
is
In
ap-
I'KllMlTATiON
llulw
MI
The
letters
dentil ute of
(|
rctl
IH),
freiieli
(o
ly
iiro;
^U for^y
n
J*
wo
aw MJ*-
Tho
#.
to
a day/*
tor
an
'-
lt
hiticw
j for
for
an a long
//
The lettom
fsr
him
BtitJici/
If
wifli
liowwer (nee |
j*^i
*Sfi)
IB
j*J
not
^j
to
for
as
said time or
JU^t
f*
nftwfotfw.
Ihu pr <Mling
i
they bu
Hiibj(ict<*d
to
this case,
/fr^; asin^
tire
pronounced
**
;
i'^ji
an
UHsault."
li him dmid,"
1H him ^o,"
ill
**
i
al.M
if," like
inert liny
itoi
^ whon <|iii<^<n!
"
for
u well;
u
c'enaiii.
Fiiineljiijf'rt reiiiiiin
EB
-,
he threw
and
tlioyare
u h<st(%rogeneous
an *Wtj
$/
When
for
**
j?k?m, in
^u
3U r t
(lie
^j
u ni^lii;" but
JJ
preceded by
flunked io
u
is
of a
r*nd<Tcd homogeneous
c*as<^
form a (liphtiioag
4|
if
HIM!
JIK
reiidcmig
^'*
an
^-,
J,
reciprocally sub-
ncbungc<l.
in thtit
thus,
^* 7
//
**
L!
if iu<rt; tlK*y
4<
are often
Ike
vowls, pn^eedcMl by
to
LKITKKS.
ihey are
rt?,),
plaee
g?
ieh
i^U
##r/ ^5
word;
and
I,
INFIittI
Mr?
Letters
120.
TOE
01*
lor ulili.;;
Tho
for^n
Ihw
*2/ "let
/r/// of union,
i**
f
thou ;"
*M*J
for
*^U
4#
to
IM JMfar
AKf*
m
by
into^
wh<?u
by ^;^
into
whon movable
HI
"
ceded by a vowel or jazmated letter; thus, d?^ for cl?U
pastures
??
O*^ f
3^
"his or
changed into j
is
"
<D
studies;"
letter alif, if
preceded
thus,yo
if
by kasra,
of
by damma,
f ?x>
for
"a body
for i'U
*/'
4^;
a. Alif, in
damma,
ho was asked."
u
as
aU
75
saying;
for J*"l*
??
waters.
its
"
men/'
is
if
preceded by
changed into
if
*
it
by fatJia,
by
kasra, into
lt^ "he
for
sinned or
erred."
131.
is
Ham&a
or
when
alif^
changeable into
\,
or
middle of a word,
inert, in the
inert,
J^
^f
inert, acting
servile letters, is
into
as
^,
Jiamza altogether
4.
if
^^iU
-Lk^
hamza should
or ,e, the
hamxa
itiay
for
^-.k^
and
be preceded
by an
be suppressed, and
*'
<
132,
The
letfcte
at the
112
when movable
into
as
??
or *\SM.
1:25
is
jasm,
yJt
thus,
xxO-O
0x0 ,O
and
^\
\,
j,
or
^j,
xt,-o
(js<-t~a
for
for
\jJ\
its
:&
need
The
is
be, into j or
^^1
thus,
sometimes dropped
which
is
"
^ ^
or
^o-
for
J^T
by another
merciful
"
iLs
for i^llS
"
^U
he believed.'
position of fh^fatJia^
madda
thus,
XXc->,
uJ
cJ5
& s
"
is
still
for
^>~j
X
J, J and j which
?
nothing in the
considered to be tho initial
alter
may be
the resurrection."
if
by the
like the
mother
]&
??
:
7
prefixed, as
and not
_2 or
#*
"^
w"J
!;.
Some
particles,
-Six
1XS
for
"lost that;'
by
atif-hamsta, if
the second bo
(Lat. aw? or
^ww
?) is
its
dropped, or a kamza
is
vowel,
jM
for
*vj^*
f r
^-{;^
^/becomes
^,
only retained
as
.jjl
for
U^
suppressed and
waw
of
into
a.
hamza
The
preceded
Waw*
the letter $
to
thus,
letter
"clothes,"
'
^^
for
f>
os
pL of
ww^
J^$
thus,
1
at the
it
fol-
for
x^
x*
*JB*\)
be movable by damma,
for
^^1
^\^
beginning of a
may be changed
J^ for
by kasra,
"
when
changed into
is
there be two
first
Finally, if
^y
hamza
its
Lj^
^*
changed into
is
J^\^ pL of
or
for 1J\U
>
letter
first,
Rules peculiar
The
is
damma
>
^U
X
^^
135.
or the second
^;
placed
is
113
sometimes changed
is
garments/'
When
to
as
in the middle of a
by
and
fatlia,
**
"*
^j
136.
The
letter j
when
final,
if
re-
there happens
inert if
be any, on the preceding fat^ is changed to
be the third letter of the word, or t6 g? if it be the fourth,
1
15
VEHMUTAT10X
114
eta
\j
for
^gjSJ
^ "he
The
INP11O1 LKTTEHtiL
as
THE
will be assaulted
damnw,
"perishing;' bat
ceding
letter,
When ^
in
aud^
final Is
tliw*
if
Is
The
letter
a When in
firsfc
*
fi*i.
***** o
for
5^^
<2y^
the
for
first
^WM
i
i*
, *
is
tMs rale
But
.*.
^Jl and
tew
it is
changed
pre-
"buckets,"
^Sjl
to
.ij
as,
^J from
d),
in
'
fi*nowod
lir4
/tttiuztt,,
by
certain persilent
1;
as
not
iiinrf, if tint
ih
end of
at tlm
H'viI<*
in
//ve/^5,
the
first
movable
first is
doubled by toMl^the
not.
pm-tiTving tho
figure)
of
jj
thus,
<*'*'
It
may
bo observed
that
^b
for
^b
^lt
If
contoactioa,
not obsemci
is
The
totter
in
111^
and proowied by
a
^j
Do
Y5*
in
Sacy, this
4/ in the
a tltrow/
^UJ
for
to
The
for
to
as
for
y**^ff
338-
>
In iliw fam*
J^y
sometime dropped
S;*y for
when
and
cluuigwl into
Is often
^ Sj or
tho second
^j
Jj\
ilic itnal
ilia miclille
by damma*} and
nor
quioftceut, as
an,
37
gven*"
damma
wlu^i
(s<so
whcnj
aj
staff;"
"
takes neither
137*
"a
^W
for
^aL*
it is
lli for
a nflnation,
dropped;
preceded by
??
;
"a
tojj
"
shot,"
ii
darting ;
of rare oocttrwawe.
of a word, followed
another
115
"
as JLjJ for
a governor,"
JL-SJ
"
two
all
The
139.
yas unite
by
first
In
tashdld.
letter
fatha, it
Jj\
Jl
it is
jj
"the
"of a youth;"
"a
"of the
changed
to
as
first
^\
*'
for
"^
**
^1
"the
for "&$
If another
youth,"
as $oj& for
J^llfc
any,
"
"
gifts
"a
first;"
youth;"
^ precedes,
(excepting a few
proper names),
140.
The
letter
final,
*\j
for
l^j
and
*'
14L The
Tcasra,
.jj\
letter
remaining
for ^IAJ\
s
venes; as
itself
for
The
^ final,
"hands;" and
&
dropped
^VJ
J^i
peculiar to
142.
"
it is
letters j
and
whan
inter*
Waw
^r
and Ya
p#ecd0d
t>y
^
raerfc^
are
11G
l'EttMrT\TIOX OF
tircly
which
it
forms a diphthong),
for
fh<
Ul^
fc
If,
l<jf<(rs
to ih(
is
it
.
wlii^h
The
^U
inovulih*, [r'(rd(Ml
h<*
fiii^J
two
fiuino
been dropped'
IIUH
ibr^U
^Jli
Htoocl ;"
for
or
and
In
however,
^ ^
<v
Tim
^^"thou^wfltbe
assailants
or /v^vv/,
ifiwunti
a.
<>r,
;JU fw^JjU
assaulted;"
u
promling
Jhtlm precedes
if '/x/w/w or
tern, throwing
in place of tho vovrel of the
foregoing letter* as
them back,
^j
if
wl
\v<nt:
Unm,
A\! for
first lias
4 VJ
no vowol, clmnpfo
'Mays:"
tor
143. Tin*
t,
to
^^
^,
Wlum,
*'
ldtr
are cdiangccl to
^%
both coaltwiinpf hy
and
//(////;;//,;
liity
vowol^
tliuu,
X* b
letter
tlict
in
hun,
marked by
by a
]>n*(ic*d< (l
^b^ "a
tui
in
^,
nuppowd
and
5 x,J
for
^U
servile
cloak;"
j<>
^ arc said
{IB
iwrt \M^\\ or
taMul
to
immediate,
inter-
always coutaitw a
latent jazm-}
nnnio as
not 00
^U
sky/
Hiich vowc*l
ii
1<*ff,i?r
fur
final, \vh<'i
fbn^oiu^
&/;
u
hcitvcm,"
be ptxwlfd by
t<islultd\
u caufcry/'
in tlio
'2
forth/'
inocfin^ in
Iclf^rrf
"assailants^
or
fin
vCi, *jl*
riot
affixed pro-
*ti, ^5^
not
shot
c.
that
"
/I*
of
him;" Uc,
Where
it
water
its
*]}&
a letter
"
not
is
^j
tl
"
he threw or
^T,
he assaulted him."
b^yL
when
language of grammar,
where, in the
117
it is
said
denotes
it
has none
final after
it
it
fa$&
in that case
When
144.
the ^ and
in the middle of a
a vowel also,
oj^
will lengthen,"
thus,
Jjk>
for
^ changes into
it
J^k>
In
set forth."
forJ*IJ "lie will
case, if
word bear a
if
this
ter#
cJUr
thus,
"
for
<~1>1&
for
cl4&
he will dread."
a. If after alif ipert,
damma
dropped, and
Damma, when
c^!^, and
<*
for
uLJo
*>
<j
damma,
as
is
caJlk
for
is
taken by
alif,
instead of
^?
u^U?
so
letter
or fatfya, as
moved
Wlxeii
by ha$r^ the
the.o^
tef& is ued
uL^ for
*>
reg,
#,
When and
preceded
HAMMTED
OF THE
118
XX
"a
for
jj\j
YBBB*
speaker/*
for
clined," etc,
llammled Verb~~jj*.
the
Of
hamza
as a radical
>
xxTL
tlio
* *
simply
dropping
in sonie INTHOIIS^
f
oili(*rs,
agn*(ul)l} fo
ruliu
paradigm of (ho
hwlmg
[i^rscuis
when the
first radical
fimm^
<"*
The
Proterito,
to
Jtawtra
for
ractoristical
lias
/// is
clHtiigti!
to
will find
<*
fixed;
"
J^tj
Jjfl
as
"he
the
^\
regular*
damm>
the
"
hope ihou,"
did cat;"
kamsa> hut
jyU
*'
as
*"',
or
regularly; Aorist
l>y
hut
In like inaioier in
the* 'Fri'i^rHo, J1 in
(tonjugatf*d
or radical
regular;
131); Participle,
&\\;
J\
"
not only
commanded/* throw away
*
f
you
Aorit,
*.
When
0*
thus,
l*
preceding
that will be
all
in
IWwnms as follows;
foiijtigatcnl regularly;
'
I'^/rt*.-
in Iho
it
/ 1,^
in
,M
^ for
/fauwtfwl Vorbs;
the /tr^W
IrnpcraiivOjj&jl% fbryil
^ * (nc^ording
*
d)wn
and
also
^1
"he
the
oh**
*'
'
(X^, JS",
s
j*
<*P';*
and^jl;
u3
ancl^U;
pre**
tho linjieratlvt
tie
b.
5*>
or y*j (for
Jb and ju);
Part.
Jly
the
119
y V*
or^jj
(for^JIU and^SlU);
J^* or
(for^jlb
Infin.
J\ or^l
Jt<).
andylb);
Part.
(for
*/lj**
(for
and
Jt-*
(for
fjy*
11
Aorist
andyli);
& St
S<J
account of
damma, kasra,
In
iylU).
The
,tions.
It is
formation
followed
Thus,
litive verb,
alif inert,
jl may
Tlxose verbs
J^J
may
is the passive
be written in the
whose middle or
interrogating/' for
Second
^U
J*AJ
hamza, preceded
;
thus,
from
formation
fifth
final radical is
as
is
J^
c<
he was
'
**
j?
*.
;"
that the
voice of
be changed into j
when hamza
their root,
find
must be observed
it
by
to
the other
all
"benefiting/' for.ljU.
When &m@a
or
changed into
radical,
it
is
preferred
to
according to the vowel "belonging
it,
or im-
120
mediately preceding
l
!
for
Jwjj
/wwm
which
mom
"
lug
17\
written 'fC
uiW
JQ
aorist
the,
munnT
radical
are
miwl the
in
sometimes,
ihon qukwonf. as
u
;
3^4 J^
;
^k
JL
ho
of
asked,"
tliou," for
ti/ifs
Jlj.
Is
it
the
in
Bearing
fdif
is
fawun bmwg
anon,
3C <3m
for
the preterite
passive voices
Verb* having
r/,.
in
tints,
Jw*J;
cl>Cai in the,
it;
^)b;
to the pre-
formations
diffieuliy in <ho d<rivutivcs
of a jmrnitivo whose
XS/
rninllal
lotitu*
in
"lio consoliduteil/
l,t.
derivative fonuaLiotiH
ar<*
and
ninth
an
II.
III.
<>
f,i-
4^Al;i,^...
JttL
VII.
AJW*AMJ
IX.
*
-a
148*
0?
When
into
in
or
then
last radical^ it in
acoorcling
to tho
retained
preceding
130, etc.)
person
thus,
he recovered from
121
illness,"
also the
singular
person
preterite
masculine and
"
and
are u^JL&
fern.,
e^V.
and
2nd
o
t,
L^-JcJb
%s
"I
and the
?-,
aorist
S P
^s?
" '
The
difficulty
tf
as
U-ls>-
^UW
or
1^,
present EO
xo ^
^Ut
-'O
thus from
{-
^UW
in the aorist
-
X<>
stated,
new
comes in
x-
jtyutu
X
and in
by contraction ^^
we have already
and
and
\'^ss^^\
the imperative
'
^OxOX
SxOxO
a.
%*& '
sometimes conjugated
like
letter, are, as
concave verbs,
radical.
This is paras coming from ^ or
*
"
he asked," which is often written
ticularly observable in the verb
in
which alif
is inert,
JU
J Ul, aorist
^JC$ or
<[}lj
020
"*
The imperative is
JJS for
hamza by
th,e last
radical is
<
or L*,
is,
wliera both
vowel
which
JL1
also
Verbs, of
with verbs
122
Of
the Simile
Verb.
classes^
radical,
named
is
"by
the Arabians
and
it differs
it
j or
3^j
implying re-
and in the
when
infinitive,
ju
Lhiil
When ^
jazmakd
was rich,
*iU
59
damma^ agreeable
"he
as /juJ
it is
to
"to love,"
for ajty.
changed to ^ (when
"lie
as JIJl
138);
liko j*av
and
In every other
3
;
??
richccl,
as <lxh
for
"he
JIcj
promised,
for &3j\
over
its
f*f\
"he was
character-
on-
-f>
J>
J?
for
&.
^*
Otf
is
123
and S J from
J^I,
X
*.'*
When
the aorist
Jisrl
jjjj
is
of Jj,
^
which
for
is
make
IkJ"
gjy"lie
"
"
J ou imperative
1
he sowed or planted,"
he gave;"
jL2J
coo, ul^^,
j-^J, *-AJ, v,
x
is
"it
fell
or occurred;"
t^iv>.
x-
as
andjJ.
j.5j
The
<?.
for
,,
it
fiigt
was dry,
-j
\/J^l
1>
"^^
^/M^>
makes
Verbs having
radical,
?,
Ss
9 '"bs
9j***i tj^zf*
is
s<$>
till
s?
**
^j^^j^^,
it is
quiescent after
damma
is
merely
J~?jtf,
to be observed.
fixst radical is
^
or
^ tare
instead of
tMs in com-
all
&s>~*\
"^
as
substituted for
thus,
5.
"
is
he loved."
JJ.U
for
is
so likewise
is
"
5,
-^
d? "which then
y
unites
formation
by taskdidynth the
hnc@
from
"
first
servile
he promised,"
OF CONCAVE
124
conien
tlxe
like
a.
^^j
Sometimes tho
'
'"
pluy< xl
^^
Part.
Jlil
j-ali
cu
into
In
in the
^Or
Tnfin,
Imper,
f
oU$.
Aoiistj^IT
for
J*ii
for
;
'
wo have
dic(,"
mwiiu unchanged
and
for
3Q
Infin,
lic^
Vrrt*
S^i
seventh formation
for a*5
J
'
*xcj
Aorist,
,*
VBBBft.
j^i5
for
jdol
and adapt
down
fliUH
viz*:
A^jjl
iS\
PrH,
two
h(t
'
**
JucjJ
lor *xtly
Aorif>
lufiru
Aowwi,
J^\
^U for^xrf
*^xilj
for
For jUw'J
follows,
*"*
iix)*^j
Juiper, ixcjj
for
M*iy\
Intjx'r.
''*
**
*it
Im conjugated as
may
just Hp<*rifiod
^
Part, jwu^*
v**rbtt
laid
Part
Infin. j
Verbs,
Concave,
151* Budi
v<
rbs an Imvo j or
by Arabian ^mmmurtuiiB
(fulled
tor tlwdr
^J^\
iu this,
irregularity ccMiHintH <ihwjfly
as also in tho
tliOHo
iiiidcilci
JJrd,
Lc n ^Cououve."
Iliul
Ilie
l)tt(*oiuo
I<tt(*r.
ones
the
an
iSJil
'*
seen
to?"
is,
to
may be
^ %&
of thoir <jlmniclorifttics
inert ? orre-
r
i
Their
radical are
fith,
nwli<ial
middle
letters in
said
3*
OF CONCAVE VEBBS.
"
with cLI*j
(concave verb),
of the
next
class,
number
their
is
I did."
125
therefore essential
it is
to
a.
the letters^
and
PLURAL,
BUAL.
MA8C.
FEM.
thus, instead of
SINGULAR,
MASC.
SS S
"iSS
FBM.
V SSS
MASC.
S
1-
they write
JU
andJJC,
etc., as
may
5.
ing hack the vowel on the preceding letter (see paradigm next page)
but
if
the concave j to
radical,
said/
and those in
The
152.
and
and ^H above,
in the concave
those persons
first
damma, and
jy
^ to kasra
damma
student
will
carefully*
so that in
or kasra on the
JU
are
changed in
^ always kasm*
for
jX^
"he went,"
are conjugate*! at
it is
of
frequent
do
well
As
occurrence in the
to
study
their
Ml
verbs of this
language, the
peculiarities
very
12G
OF CONCAVE VERBS.
WAW.
8INQULA.E,
MASC,
x
1.
MA8C.
JK
UJJ
3
2
tM>.
.,U\i
JUi
OF CONCAVE VERBS.
127
t/
YA.
Voice.
Preterite.
DUAL,
PLtJEAL,
MASC.
f
SIHOULA.B.
MA1C
*'EM.
FEW.
c x x
Ij^U
MASC.
x x
1
\j^>
^>
Aori&t*
wwuU
-x
Imperative*
X
I
J-M-0
Participle.
Infiniiiw
^-**s
Passive Votc&
Preterite,
t^ y
^^ uj
OF CONCAVE VERBS.
General Remarks on
153.
preterite
fatha, it
fore quiescent
J?
is
penult
in place of jasm
^ are changed to
and ^ are dropped
and,
when
the servile
fat/ia;
the last
and
be-
If the
if
damma,
\ .
terite,
tlio
tlie aorist
damma
aorist into
if that
and
j
Verls.
to Jkasra before
quiescent
becomes in
Icasra, it
remains so
it
if
changed in the
is
and
Concave
the
in
tlio
The j and
are
likewise thrown out
if
an
every where,
apocope takes place ;
"
as
ho says not"
wo
(for
fear not/'
J^j
etc.;
"
jj)
tlio
J^j
last
jj
radical,
as
may
??
;
be
y^
letter
bearing jazm*
a.
The concave
being also omitted in every person (see paradigms,, pp. 126 and 187).
"
But they return when the paragogical
^ takes place ; as ^ly say
"fear thou."
*hou;"
"go tliou;"
i.
Tho
inert aKf,
^l^
ought
to
letters
or roxoAVE VKRB&
movable all/
Actmza or
changed to J;
is
Is
substituted for
which (by
It,
and that
thus,
129
for
130, etc*)
^ll; so^SUfor
o.
for
Verbs having j
XX
when the
aorist,
X
x
which
is
the
in
-*
of JlS, which
the aorist
for
J^l
but
aorist
of tliUL
second
radical,
if
the
for
as
is
torn
"
***
in
"
J^w
the aorist,
/a^a
for
JL&
vowol
t^pk?:,
for their
because they
*^
^
as
aorist of
'
these take
which
(Jj^,
take
for its
Verbs ha^dng
is
J&, which
^ XC/X
aorist J*i>
wUi,
cl^lte
for
is
then lost
thus,
for
^j-J is
3y
1st
in the pas-
3^
and
preterite
and
radical is
i.
In the
$$l
ehang^
aaadjl^*
to
mart
Th^ra
(moi
is
or
no .'AtS^ace in tie
^rfewose
second
pauaiiNw
p^ipte,
t
i
JV
* +*
of JlL,
aorist
u!?lr
as
as
takes fatfya,
and Jjk?
in the
J>y
J*i or Jju
kmra
generally
*
aorist
which
-x
J^S;
^*-
preterite,
xx^-***.
for
is
damma
thoir
gW^'^f
130
OF CONCAVE YEEBS,
remoyed
to the
ftrsfc,
the original
j
but in concave
^ damma
is
thrown out
is
also
changed to
torn
as
J,*^
many
poets,
of concave
is
"guarded;" but
especially those
tlie
measured/*
J<^&*
same by
taslwttd,
"sewn
lb^li*
comes in the
c^
incorporate
cbU
first
he
is
dead," or
"maiod"
(in choas),
j6trt
L^^
etc*
sons c^v^j
as
"
"
together
!,1L^
a.s
lIL*.
In concave
/*
Is
is
^,5
followed
^)
"
by ^
he carefully preserved,"
made
is
^ being jaBmalod,
Tims from
^U
^;
(for
in the
first
pomm
person
by
those
who
156.
Wo
from Concave
ttootx*
from concave
are irregular.
roots,
is
it
OF CONCAVE VEBBS.
^.
131
It will therefore
quite suffice to give as a
paradigm of
paradigms
first
word of each
Active
INFINITIVE,
IMPERA.TIVE.
Voice,
PBErmim
AOBIST.
POEMATION.
III.
VI.
3L^
Jfil
Jlxiu
VII.
HGeul
i)
J
Tho learner
a,
caves
ittj
and
^ are conjugated
alike;
participles
of the 0th and 7th formations are exactly the same with the passives,
the difference in sense being only discoverable from the tenor of the
subject,
In the
infinitives of the
letter,
to att~ inert;
which ofeerwise
and the
sertile final
and
j^Ucu&-j1)
is
being for
dropped,
$\js\
being substituted in
and St^&^U
Tie middle
may
its
room,
il$ and
be observed in the
132
OE CONCAVE VERBS.
to
(i.e.
have vowels)
the concave
j
Passive Voice.
xx xx
-tf
xo
Also
157"*
Some verbs
^AJ^
Aor,J^y
Imp,
etc., etc.
tlius ?
u
5^&
he was one-eyed ; J?
*jf\\
^*
m tho primitive
a
lie
***
htuatod;"
*i
and
Juil,
ou^Jl,
la
llie
derivative forma-
J^t,
few verbs
as
J> "ho
THE STOSTANTIYE
OJ?
rested/' which
lias
xx03
and
^J\
formation
"ho
is
'
.X
"he answered/
on account of the
it is
"he
damma
must bo kept
thus from
distinct;
thus from
changed
jvjs)
is
^$ which
^,
J2)
(for
into
by tasMld with
"he
(for
jl
JxU and
radical is j, that
is
it,
how-
to be observed,
second formation
whose second
of concave verbs,
makes *j^
<
In the 9th
and <L>fo>\
<^J(L\
3^
fifth,
J*J>
was
as 4-^ladJ and
have
(the sky)
etc.
The other
of the
It
|%U
The concave
heard/'
approved/'
a.
lias
"
so
SS<?
S <*
cloudy," "which
I S3
"VERB.
stood/
we
"he
sold,"
we
We
158,
"ho was;"
is
conjugated
as
3^
(for
3/) "^e
(f r
^/)
3
said/
by
radical
97,
c.
an ambiguity,
is
stood;
"
as
1^ Jptj J^ ^
(mm)
*, veritas et vita,
and the life." The use and applicaway, and the truth,
in the Syntax,
verb will bo further explained
1 (am) the
tion of this
ego
134
Voice,
Preterite.
PLURAL.
FEM.
DUAL.
MASC.
SINGULA1L,
MASC
PEM.
PEM.
MASC
PEttSON.
3
2
V/
.
'.SIS'
Passive
Voice,
Preterite.
Aorist.
PS?
*3
'
s 9
i"
Participle*
*f
'!'
Of
135
Verb-
f/ia
K>0.
last
They
iujST
or
for the
"lie threw."
and Homeihnos
Itn
lottor, fiOjRotimes it
vowel
to the
last
The
sometimes
it is
disappears altogether^
letter.
preceding
The
*Actiw
Voice.
BIKOULAE,
r.
MAW,
2
1
2
1
OF THK
nBFKmVE
The Defective
VEHB.
^Active
Voice.
JPrderitt.
DUAL.
BINGTJLAJU
MASC.
Aw
int.
Til
1(50,
and
J*j
Uoth
Is
changed
to inert
with
for
tion.
l>ul
vowol diwappoar, and Ijje and ^j are conand ^J|, according to the rule of pernmat^ji
iti
When
when
il
hna firnm^ }
4/J
as
is
not changed,
^J "he
consented,"
OP THE DEFECTIVE
for 'y?j
u^^
or as
(^^^aj for
VEE.B.
c->^^j
^x^j
Again
radical letter
d^
remains; thus,
and
tiJi
so
l^;
and
iii
are
"
t*
remains
away d
silent.
fatty*, it
is
damma
as
j^u
fatfa,
j
is
"
is
it
remains regular,
??
he travels by night ;
but if tern, it is changed to
u
as
J^ he will approve;" where ^ substituted for
V
quiescent,
and
is inflected as follows
MARC,
X Ox Ox
S
2
1
a. In the plural
masc,
is made of the
j and
which remotes sll
plural; as
ad ia
^ whto
fern.
/&. a
the
of
Jp|n*fft
^JSf
singular aad
to be the
pltiml, wlutt
permit rowels, at
^
,
162,
,
,.,,.
last
is
dropped, and
Is
fimihuuc plural, as
PLUUAt.
MAM
i'iH,
WW.
MAHC.
we?"
US;*''
100) go lxforo,
/////; us
0i
(whon the
^J;
^^
forWdn
il),
j^l,
etc,,
an
^-^
radicals take
etc,
108.
Tho
when
the parugogicui
dropped
tffii crwyS
^*
is
nun
hikcm place
llw* lant
nulical,
KM.
^ ie
^ II
!*!"$i
In the
/CMM
final
throwing
u8
jU
for
after
tli
^jU
^j\\l
kwra cannot
but
then rotunu*;
in
tlio
<Meat!0
put
if tlio
grjWI
an
tlie
oorisl
lj
for
letter, is
mutiatiou ii
ft>r
for lil*
final
;
it rejects ify
nfimition on tho
;
which
Kingitlfir
cluuigoil to
Is
but
in
us
also
formed from
aoriHl juigmutcd,
after
is
Klk itt
ww
aiicl
grjWI*
Ij;
by
The
for
and
and
dropped;
the
article,
role holds
yt;
and
as
final
however, regular
is,
139
the rejected
as
CjU and
The
The
The
^Vj.
&.
165.
and
and
f\j
accusative
infinitive is
always regular.
are
same
Defective j.
SlNGtTLAE,
3
^
c:
etc.
^^fj
etc.
1
Aorist.
3
xOxO*
etc.
etc.
,.j]*j
1
PwrUcigle.
etc*
^.
to
is
is
^JJB
wad
instead of
^ qtuesoeat^ like
put for
t^Ji by
160,
the
^ame
W^ ,iuw
Iia
the
jJJ J^#
;
ObjfK
^J^i
amd
/W/^
for
fi^resMd rtjle^^
tijfejoi*
a .iw^^a, of ^
yerb
jfefectiv^
fa$$rfy sncli
as
^J
(for
340
OF THE DEEECTTVE
Active
"VERB.
Voice.
Preterite.
PEM.
SINGULAK,
DUAL.
PLUBA.L,
MASC.
FEM.
MASC.
WMk*0
."OxOx
Aorist.
XX OX
XX OX
X OX
OX
O x Ox
Ox ox
O X OX
X OX
O x Ox
Ox Ox
Aorist Antithetic.
xx Ox
wtf
x"
OX
Apocopate.
x ox
x ox
X X LX
OX
Jf
OX OX
OX
T*^.
XV Ox
OX OX
\M*wCP
if*:/'
*Aori$t Pedagogic.
IM
XO X OX
X OX
**
XX OX
xOxOx
Imperative.
OXO
OX
Participle*
Infinitive
^^j
iJJ
X X OX
t8
X X OX
t35
x Ox
-55
xx ox
107.
The
in tht?
muina in the
ftrnt
is
substituted for
same
which,
re-
with /tf$; a
141
^s^ijf^t
t,*,.*
*A-iJf*S
,1*
s/*U
quite othero&ys, as
I'ASSIVK.
I.
*>*
II.
III.
I?,
11.
IX.
I.
II.
Ill,
IT.
VII.
IX,
in.
112
Of
HIM
'*
)i
43"
tlic*
claH,sc H
1*
T!u
w^p)
JU;
rudical
Itrwt
twM**}
1>y
of thn
!iain^ut(*<l t
lib*
yi
Mtm
infirm
doubly
int{M*rf<<ct.
ijapi*rfr
Hiinpli
riicliiiil^
ho rdunti'dj
tin*
and an*
u
(for
mode
sai<l fo In*
The*
wMck
any two of
lmv<*
position of fiioHc
of
&r
follow tho
They
it*
VT]W
Btieli
anor<lint?
info
diviiiil
ami
iiatu^iird
two
inert,
wwnd
flu*,
in*r(
us ^
**
wliii!i
and with
IN
with n
<MiiijuKuttM!
!*>
r^jM*r-f
flit*
Ilkt*
st^ond)
iw
**
iJ.
Tim
IjiHt
lf
i>-
(for
L>)
*L
(fbr
tho
of th
of JC
Ur* and
3.
aiicl ixfe
ififl*'i?tiiijw
J\*
uiid
m ^J\
"
c*f
lu
thitH,
*u>*
The
tlm Imi
1
*l
'*
J\
^tj
tAI4TlCIII3LII*
In*
the*
or THI; i>oni.Y
143
VF.KB.
/*
Tlu
I.
Immzatwl, the
niiilillw
liiat
inert; as
tiro*!,"
I*
which follows
A Hit U*H
JL
and
JtJ
^U
he re*
thua,
AOHtftY,
<
'I
109.
^j "ho
on awount of
dn^pptnly
and
itn
it
often an the j is
tho Aorist
frequent
the*
hmnmt^d
&lif is
as follow
Aoriitt:
UXJAL,
Utt/
/jJi
when
fotrnd In tho
or with tho
It in
^tgogienl
also formed
as
ete*
a.
out
:ircl
is
everywhere thrown
an
INFIX mvi;
IMPEIl.
mET
A.OEIST.
J,
lt
or
SMi'
or
*u
ft.
^^
r*
^
/?.
Wh?u
Intmz*
IB
iw in
may
also
3-
throw away
manner of ^1,
making
kamzaw
cither 1x4
&'
not jftsmatwl
pntlorlto
in
Ijt
*^
r#*
fhf*
this species
miprativo with
jf
tl
lint
It
tlie
paragogical
is
^f
in iho
participlf* pussivc it is
^yi, although j
takes
Ja^r/i
170.
The
oIuKH of flui
BouHe
culled Tnvolutw,
Iwtd
u worn
llttctcd liki!
ltfiof
jc|
M>
and
i*A|1f
Tlwt ImjMjrnliw
In tk0
/^
(ajMtftking of
^j,
tlio
XMI'iiUAttVfi,
a liorso): the
"being in-
first
^;
as
it
145
The Involute Conjunct has the middle and final radior 4^; as ^jj* "he roasted;"
"he was strong
or powerful;"
J^
"he
lived;"
^L
two that of
The
IMPERATIVE.
PAKTICIPLE,
Infiaitiye
mode of
^j and
the other
as
INFINITIVE.
a.
following the
final
li
is
AORIST.
and
PBETEEITE.
for
55
tS^ stands
the penult and last radicals the same, and becoming a surd or doubled
and
is
the adj^ctiTe
infinitiye,
.^ is
throwing away
tjas?
[^
its
or
its
rejects
>-
or
The
^ in the
is changed to quiescent
and ^5.
alif, ac-
vowel,
first
as
radical
sometimes the
both
^jxl*
^, makes
*the
Derivative verbs
only
letter
IMPBBATIVK.
as,
AOUIST,
o xt* s
19
146
Of
172,
two
divided into
classes*
Class
of such as have
first consists
first radical,
^
j
the
first
and
of
;
which
is inflected
likey^ and
g^A the
,
other as
as 3
INPIN1TIVE.
PARTICIPLE.
IMPERATIVE.
PEETEEITB,
or
There
first,
O/
radicals^
the Negative
Verb,
J? though conjugated
It is apparently
or
"
exists
?7
;
1J
"
is
?>
P1UBAL,
F1.M.
x
.
PEM.
MAflC.
9 ox
</
,jAUJ
fl-UJ*]
c-
MASC.
x ox
x ox
LJ
UJ
a.
SometimeB
cL)S is
employed instead of
u^
Inflection.
negative particle
augmented by the
147
CE1STSUEE.
tlie
letter c->.
174.
"$
nominate
^x
-"^-o
bad."
feminine nouns.
as
of L^C*-
They
is
good/' and
of love."
\fc>,
and
inflection.
cL^o
\*>
in the plural,
signifies
for
^li
compounded
u
worthy
that is excellent," or
JJu "it
as a species of interjections
and
They
may be
and censure,"
or "verbs of praise
it is
also
be added
*H
"itis
last,
Of
u^s?^
"
\
^Jl*5\
verbs of admiration,"
in
first
^\ U
case.
is
U, and
to
followed by
anWusative
148
O
03?
CjP
J*ii, followed
by^
as
c^ prefixed;
As an
the Verb,
we
recommend
lie
is
J*djl
or
t?
J-d-M
jjjj
"how
excellent is
very excellent."
fully
176.
(?
la/j
Zaid!" or "Zaid
more
appropriate
Appendix
to our
two Sections on
we
till
all to
memory.
Table
I.,
page 149,
Verbs, which
we have
already explained
90 to
107.
The
upper line (No, l) shews the Eegular Verb 3%. No. 2 shows
the inflection of a Surd Verb. Nos. 3, 4 and 5 exhibit the
three species of Hamzated Verbs.
Lastly,
Table
III.,
and the Participle Passive, which is inserted here bocause there is more room than we could have in either of the
tive,
next two tables which exhibit the Preterite and Aorist Pas-
of tho others.
4)
GO*' j
CO
5.
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n-
151
SECTION
V.
f>
j?
Of
<*'
U^\
(plural of
Intorjootioiw,
we
stated,
The PrqwHitioiiH,
usually observed in European grammars,
Adverbs, and Con] unctions are eaeli divided into two dhiHHefy
the Ins(%paruble and
directly
prefixed,
tlie
and
Separable
tlio
other,
tho
f!i't
being always
though not joinod, in-
variably precocling
tlu*
tin*
language^; Ihc
vaiiotiB
wayn;
but
nioro
dictionary, for
loamod
to
analyse and
to
It will
too
to
OF pREPOsmoxs,
the observations
upon
155
thorn,
may make
to offer,
memory.
a.
Most of
ilic
Particles, as
we
shall
immediately
hence
preposition or an
may
it
often
just as in Latin
word ante
tlio
is either
,*<*.
Of
178*
and^
all of
eiine
Tho Preposition
cbj
of the
c-j
in Badr."
It also denotes
gether with*/'
mj*&> jpL
"withy"
"
verbs of
"
or of "taking*
as
away;"
witti tfe0
1
t*&
l^K^"
it
OxCu-O
OxO*o x
^j*S
O^S MiO
t-
i^y3b
y^J U y*M\
Art
"
bringing,"
"ho came
*j4b
u^J
tite
witit fee
h@ W6nt
light"
It
"
retributioBj" equiva-
??
;
"
"in the
subjoined to
signification of
When
awiy
to
pen,'
J,
noun
uLiift
Jju
c/
m a<^V
S0j
c^
life,
as follows:
and an eye
for
wi
OF PJREP08ITIONS.
M
f
*-:i
<yo;
^ cl%>-^ <^1^
"may God
Ai
on account of thy
rclqwc from
u
of
particle,
nflcii
!K
ft
wearing
an
i!^
It is sometimes
a siMM-i.-s of
cxph'tivts; as
Mam!"
destroy tneo
St U "God
JjU.
^ X
does not
KS
mane
ihn
to
J-"V
lo !'
indicating iho
man!"
"iM-lie.hl u
ijj
s>
uluittf
f)
tiling
17!^
utuny
v*rlM; us
Tim
IVqwisittotw
to
14
liy
IH
<{(! ! n
:tn
cb ami
used
n<mr a
<'ip1oytl, (wlu^n
We nmy
pre
as
idiomatically
percei?cd the
man
(wlio was)
^U "by
an
IE
like
0od! ??
manner
u |>roposition) as
<diTj
c<
jiluiig
wttli,'*
M
wfioji,
in
fe
atotion;
u toujuiidin
l<*noHiig **aud*"
*Srtl!i," or
r
it,
cJ
^4
C^JHVHH Hwiwing;
Ilii!
iw-y **by
flif iarti<*li
*o
I puHs<*d
J^.^ c^^i
*?
of
ol>jc<;i
**
a fVw |i}rars
tloil
"Bcliold !"
Lastly,
\vith
JU JJj
wit in m-glceting;"
in
in
iificl
UJi
***
flii!
io
that
^yJ
inclieittliig
a Himultanoaus cvont
it
"tlia
flic
accusative; as
with tho
is
<^
tin?
Amir
Pwpomtion
iiiir
Ji/
"like*," or
(ho army.*'
"
***," and
cor-
the
157
OF PBBPOSITI0NS*
as
genitive;
'
"
affixed,
though
me/
like
"
thns? Ul
like
<^l
me;'
like
De
The word
etc.
It is prefixed also to
'*"'
"
thee
man."
like a
J>^
*
composed of
\&
C/ and
of the demonstra-
**
noun, and
if
governed by a pre-
of such a year."
s**
ss
\*$ &**
Of
Ss
^^ \&
C/,
O s
in such a
and the
this particle,
^^
relative pro-
a
?
month
signifying
ia the same
<>
or J.
My
reasons are
1st,
that it -uiiiformly governs the genitive case like the two last particles
Snd, that
it is
preposition
invariably
etc,,
p* 468),
Gaelic
Lastly,
it is
it
Stewart in his
a preposition.
181.
tlie
^U
j^t
it foeara
praise be to
the vowel
Go4"
/^^;
(<
to
as
158
OF PBEPOSmONS.
etc. 3
person singular; as
"to me."
It also
s
<^s
'
"for,"
signifies
<"
first
s"&
my
because/
two eyes."
Ms
with a mixture
C3
of
as
surprise;
"by God!"
<di
prefixed to a verb,
it
*<* '
"
in order that," or
" ssi*
u^^\& "he
<**
When
him be
by way
sought something
when
a conjunction,
sometimes means
P'?^'
As
as
it
"
%w3x
forms
us
let
It is elegantly pre-
assisted."
which
is
affirmed of
any person
or thing), especially
when
somewhat
Alexander
(is)
fixed with
fatM
is
affirmed)
powerful/' or
it
"
as
.xxo^o
xv
,6
which
t3
^*&*]*
/jJO
-"v
the powerful."
^J
(
"for
When
pre-
Sometimes
It is
the particle
s>
Mf\
as d50j
'
^
'
-^
^s&
In conditional prepositions
"if;" or 5J "if not;" as
it
X<Y,
?$
article,
the
&\ %
^
Here
"verily that
is
* 'V-
^ ^,<
j^
is for
j^eSL
*
ck^T ^Lr J
o^
jl
159
OF PREPOSITIONS.
to
182. It
is,
Grammars
that
and
initial
"from/' "out
the particles
of
letters
They
and
of," etc.;
are merely
denoting
letter of the
^lc
^ ^B. In manner tt
U ^ and think would
like
for
is for
it
by the
it
however, *
to persuade us,
and
19); as
into 1 (see
as
is
the prefix,
which would
prefixed,
in-
employed instead of
Gtfxk
t>^
article J\
is
^^ "from
>
when
followed
3
instead
of
183.
We
govern
order.
184.
The
*V
31
"accession" or
t-x^***
S>
"
'
^'"
^V
44^
*
Ualj
thej
OP PREPOSITIONS.
ICO
thus,
except Zaid."
beyond," or
"
Se>-
and
ex-
all slain
Tliese
"
denote
ti&,
"^tey were
j44^ bM
tSc
aj
"
being
"
UUl,
or
mgue
as ;" thus,
ad, or our phrase "as far
time
"
it
as JIJL&JI
until;"
signifies
^^
jJlx^
When
dawn."
to
<^o
j^
it is
as
applied
^$UJ
"I
Had
the particle
eyen
fish,
of
fish
up
its
J^
head."
it
and answers
subjunctive mood.
-3S
is
equiyalent
xx x
IB
^o
/ xoS
\*
c^l
"
to,
or as far as ?
its
It
it
head*"
affects it
W>^ J^
"
tA^
march
When
with
by the
takest them,"
187.
The
preposition
Ju
"
"on,"
or time;
periority as regards space
*& J^
*"
<<iB
" or Ui:a
tlie
colorBe of
^**
w denotes su-
oxx
as *A&
Ms
upon him;"
"
time or
OXt*X
"
above,
XX X X
^j^
sometimes signifies
to custom*"
"
It is idiomaticaEy
employed
It
"according
to express
"debt"
161
OF PREPOSITIONS.
"
or
duty ;" as
"I owe
i.e.
dinars,"
"
you ought
to
to
signify j*.
ellipsis for
jjj
"
.!&
^
uj5h
jL>j>
**
"'
upon me a thousand
literally,
In
do this."
Oxx
^ ^-^
clCU
is
used
a.
/xOx
x-x
Le expressive of deht is
L5
also
common
very
in the
Gaelic lan-
"
guage
harvest,"
The
188.
preposition
"
"
sense of
without ;" as
"
or
^^W
as
^j&T
from,"
men."
separation
signifies
"distance" or "transition;" as
is
in
thus,
"
J^
ail
It also denotes
oJj
"
cbU
God
yerily
^\
"
passing
by
"
he died leaving
The
preposition
X^o
u^\ ,A
time or place; as
^ Ox
JUli
the
money
(is) in
to
the
X"
purse."
x Ox
,5V xv
arithmetic; as <L**-
sometime^ answers
~tft
<#^^
"
Uli
^u^i
^j
xt
^y
15^5
three multiplied
the preposition
"
by
five,"
It
'
he departed with
fifty
tbo$&aa4 (men)."
The
prepositions
21
162
to
OF PREPOSITIONS.
De Sacy
than prepositions*
The
191.
commencement of an
or
3^
or
still
"
?^9
? ?&%'"
k^
3j^
to
"
since;" as follows:
him
o ?
genitive;
since Friday.
3'
ft,?
is
Ox
xx
as
<"
<tej^
denote the
xoyo-o
d^J
d^
prepositions
U^A
tjub
^Otfx
O ^
U "I
3^ <j^uK
to
him
as
jW
x
j^x
^^,^1
x
xxx
as
dxuj>-
&
OxO
(^AJ
$,
Amir
departed from
Sometimes
tho palace.*'
when
IMC
T
^L j/-
"
xo
^ ^
S^-,
denotes
it is
S-SJXJ^PXC-S.
gp L^-S*
*
xt/S-x
man
jjluJSl
xo
is
made up
of a soul and
j*
6li3x
"than"
to express the
"a garden
te>-
(consisting) of
word
In
81).
negation,
expressed
?
by tho
XX
J^j ^
rr*
L^^T
x Srx
its
^ governing
preposition
^*
"
no
man
proper case,
cai
'
^e
to
me;"
is idiomatically
the genitive
fP<*<*
^c
"^'*
d\
*#
as
0>x
^'^
<*
Tho
rest
of
the
prepositions -are
expressed
case,
by
the
163
OP ADVERBS.
The
"
"after;"
"
"
around
round,"
"
below ;"lj-,
"beneath," "under,"
under
3jP-
"
u^oLt
^, or
after
^k
"beneath,"
"
^J
3*
"besides,
SL "in
pos-
session
of,"
chez}]
^ ^
to place);
or
^jj
"with;"
"beyond," "behind;
7'
"
"except;''
c^r
"between," "among;"
"
as
^o ^*
The Adverbs
194.
that
in
it
would be a
any Grammar.
ticiple,
and
thus, 5leU*>
"little;"
;''
Every
infinitive in the
"within;"
.
\s>-j^
language
right hand";"
"without;"
\Slft
"*
**"
2U
L^j "eagerly;"
"on
the
may be employed
accusative
"together with;"
them
verbially
night
case absolutely;
\^
"miich;" LlS
"one day;"
iLJ "on
"by chance;"
*
left
haad;"
G^L "willingly;"
ad-
l*j/>
U^ "with
"by
the
"quickly;"
aversion^"
164
OF ADYEEBS.
"eternally,"
nomis of
or
These are
etc.
action, "which,
all
substantives, adjectives,
become adverbs.
a.
According
to
De Sacy
"
am
ing
God water
7
Ci^
These are
praised/
"I
this
;"
"by
"
"
by watering," meaning
his praise,"
expressions for
elliptical
"may
i,e.
c\W usJil j
*
Ix
<SGx
f-Q^
"may God
<L>
Pf
<*IH
*,s1t
"I
fas&s\
praise
s s
Cjo
"may you
perish!"
1^ J Ca^
"you
^X
welcome,"
"all
at
is
him
may
he be
XX
are
<?
,x
<#
*<$>
*#
^ U>- 3 "no
See De Sacy's
rendered "une
51
1, p.
is
195.
The
following
common
list
adverbs
104).
It is
whoso Grammar
abridgment of
1
5
this is
Do
Saey's
an inseparable
the Latin an ?
num ?
or
is
Be
Sacy, and
a very
tisefal
assuredly/'
"
is
he
verily."
deacl
?"
Rosen-
165
OP ADVEBBS.
*
from
"
p"
we
had said
stronger than if he
adverbs
junctive
jl
"seeing that,"
time."
V\
UUl
are
con-
it
expresses the
also
signifies
J1
or <lfi* *\
trt*l
it
also,
of Sindbad, ^(L*!
had
say, "will
"well done!"
or fa
*J*\
events
provided that."
"behold."
we
assent.
\A\,
or rather
the present,
"
if
is
occurrence of two
simultaneous
"then,"
more emphatic
usually
limited to
is
Again,
j*3.
UJ1,
dl,
expresses the
ISo
you go?"
say to a person
if
if
precedes be not interrogative; thus,
is
it
\&&
u^U
UJt
C^-j
snd
<dJU
SjS
Jj-
not,"
"there
is
nisi,
"si non,"
"except."
except in God."
*
*
05 (from
and
"
not ")
"
is it not ?
'*
160
OF ADVERBS.
When
\.
as
"not;"
God.
?J
<dl
this
JLJ
!H
followed
particle is
"there
expresses negation
as J3 isi
may be
by
"assuredly,"
511
<d*S
^^ ^
"
j
verily,"
thus,
my
reward
is
J1
Zf\
J^U cLoU
It
or
"
<diT
as
<5j!
"only;"
"since,"
so."
j^l
"
and I know
"even
"indeed,"
it still
a trial to you."
Ci3l
signifies
is
u
l
it
Jl
"
i.e.
I expect
assuredly
my
reward
else,"
It is nearly equivalent
to
fa
<&%
^bl and
j.
^y
"
"
when,"
"where?"
t,*
3^
whensoever."
"
whence
??
"whither?"
^J J1
^*^ ^
"wheresoever?"
^,
^1
"well
>us* ^
l^J or \t>tb
to
167
ADVERBS.
It is used before a
our interjection 0.
by the
article
JJ&TlJJ or
as,
noun that
used as a preposition
and appears
clinable,
ye people
phrase
preposition
hereafter."
ceases to be inde-
it
I"
as
xw
or in the
The
1^1 is
or in letters,
main
^"
by the
genitive, if preceded
defined
"
^uT Q\ U
"
*J " after," afterwards," "behind;" **
is
author or writer
subject, after the
praises of God,
^"
?
is
afterwards," ''thereafter,"
"y et ;"
"
signifies
it
JJ
"yes,"
"
3'
"
certainly,
it is
"
so,"
in reality."
This par-
ticle is
and then
it
what may be
asserted in
such proposition.
"JZ
"between;"
"
separation,"
lj
this is
* "difference/'
"whilst," "meanwhile;"
it
"
uL^
whilst,"
"
below,'
"
"
u
under,"
during
"
dxiring this."
1G8
as
f
OF ADVERBS.
(*
<*U
o X
^^sc
"by
night"
C"* ^
u^-^sr
;"
>
U/x-
(literally
9
"
little
lower."
in this
place."
Jf" here/
"
"
t$ and LLJj
then," afterwards
generally viewed as a
;"
conjunction.
-
^ and^
u
yes,"
"of a verily."
"
may it
it
not
Tbe.
??
"becomes an adverb
its
ap-
we have already
<xll
use as a preposition.
Jil^ or
"
??
far be it from thee !
forbid
<i3 lili
described
^1J.
it is so-"
assuredly
God
"
certainly ?
<di
"
lil>-
may
or ii
l/~
"
C^p- "where/
a
hallo
3
?>
"
come
wheresoever
"
whither;"
UiX
a
!
??
;
como hither P
O^i-
"
wheresoever;"
whence;"
it
is
also
written C-4^*
d^^
The
uLJJ,
cslvj,
"perhaps,"
^g^ifies
c!43)
"many," "much,"
It takes idiomatically
"often,"
an affixed pronoun;
as
J*
men;
CJ5^
and
169
OF ADVEItBS.
^,
ili^, jp,
J-j,
fclii.
and
SI,
SL&
is also
"
J^
and
J^;
or poetice
by chance."
perhaps,"
J*S
"
all,"
as
L5
^J^,
^z
ail(^
is
This
or
"change"
thus, Jl
$tf?Ox-
L& "only,"
and
"difference;"
^LJ^
jf^j
is
it
is
used
also
and
"not otherwise;"
etc.
"above.'
This word
less," etc.
is liable
preceding,
remarks as those
>
d*j
It is equivalent to
?S*Ox
Lai, ^\ Li?,
jy and
is
signifying
"except," "besides."
adverbially;
"from
perhaps you."
the noun
JI1
^ ^
"
is
Jl
principally."
used,
"
Jc.
above
"over," "above;"
above ;"
"
"
1*1*) X
to."
in front of one's
eyes,"
0^
to the
same
(q*v.}>
L3 "before," "right
diminutive of
^o
"
little
before."
22
OF ADVERBS,
170
"
jj,
jo3
jjS,
"certainly/
sometimes."
This word
IB
OX^lXwXO^^^
y, y,
kS, kS,
"
time/*
i.e.
J^
of,
or
at
laS,
If a future time
TOJ!
is
spoken
must be used.
'
(comp. of
^
*^
tj>>*
"
UK
"
or
^ and
U).
^
"
how
u/ and J1 .)
"
wherefore
"
as often as/
"
how often
soever."
how much ?
"
u/and
"
"
how V n
"
U12
any how."
It is a negation
not"
at all," "is
"
3$
necessarily;"
y>8
"
undoubtedly."
J "no," "not;"
to
the
aorist ?
to
It
applied absolutely.
wMoh
UJ,
It
and
then
2,
gives
"why?
the
Is
prefixed
souse
7*
(comp,
of
of
the
OF ADVBKBS.
J and U.)
prep.
denotes
it
conjunction
(from
JJ
"when,"
As a
posteaquam.
"
"
no,"
ji
"
or
ij>
it shall
and
if,"
&U ^1
present."
"I
asj^ <J
man."
U,
know
as
not."
Ci. eLJio
explained
its
pronominal application.
as long as I
"when?"
U J^
p, 'fi
as often as,"
t
fa
or
used, in confirming
statement
bravo!"
be
thus,
alive."
"whenever."
"
together with,"
or
U^i
remain
U "I
^M
"
particles
hammad were
free
"
3 "I
$j\.
and ^1 ,
"unless."
Ujf
and
not be that."
It is a comp. of
a future signification.
restricts it to
literally
not."
along with."
as long as."
"
"
"
very well,"
yes,"
aifirmative
"well done!"
even so
It is
whether the
said,
also
denotes
nomina-
or
negative.
It
OF ADVEUBS.
172
when
the accusative
?J
well done
It is properly
^ and L^OJ.
li
an
"
and approbation,
bravo !"
interjection (q.v.).
&Lj.
thus,
and before
not so restricted.
it is
admiration
particle denoting
^a
"
article prefixed,
l&l^ "she
alone."
Adverbs of admiration
"behold!" "souse
!"
"
or reproach.
catch!"
^
o
the signification of
pronoun of the second person, has
"
take."
The
affixed
JumsM*, as *\,
p^ ^^5
Cy\i,
frli,
ullfe
(fern.);
into
"take thou"
?>
tako,
you two/'
<Iil
etc.
(See
Eosenmuller.)
iifli
maso.
HOC hero!
55
"bdholdl"
"there he
equivalent to our expressions,
is 3
??
and
eccola.
is;" or the Italian eccofo and
"
whether ?" An interrogative adverb, an
k and L
"
x
whether
x
and _d
and
&
??
**
&/<<"
JJA
or
9'
**
is it
^ yx
^^
not ?
??
,,
there she
num ?
,*
"come on!"
//
approaoli!"
From
this adverb
as
dAii, uJ3&>
"
there,
in
at a distance; ^l
speaking of things
hero,"^ in^speaking
"from this place;"
of things at hand,
& ^
173
OF CONJUNCTIONS.
Uy& and
"
\jyJ
\&>
see there
Iji,
cLolk
come hither
you
This particle
l.
strictly speaking,
is,
an
interjection used
to
\j
{fj\
same import.
indifferently to
what
remote or near
is
They
(&]
are
\j
and
applied
is
This
is
it is
"
written thus,
5U1
that
nisi,
"that,"
may
it
not."
s
*\
an interrogative
in the second
member
$
tion beginning
this, or
with
an
particle
num
? necne ?
It is
used
\;
thus,
Jt
OS
X'
/ 0/2
*MAa> c^lsl
not?"
standing.^
174
OP CONJUNCTIONS.
a
U).
"
followed
"
either Zaid or
5
that/
<^> u*
*
as
*st
u-^i
by
&j
Amru
"
?
%J
know
(I
& ^;*U
and
there came to
not which,).
k^
that
(comp. of
^;i
"1 wonder
"but"
"if,"
or ;" thus,
either,"
me
&J
is
^^
used when
is
to
it
as it is one of
"if indeed/'
"
if at
and by contraction
J\t
any time."
This conjunction comes before
^U
when
that subject
is
placed
It is
done with
Li.
This
speaking
it
may also be
-etc*
is
and
for the
same reason
"
fti,
signifying
and indeed."
Generally
??
and;
but
it
aenteneeSj as
Holy
jjj
SJl
is
Soripturop,
mry
often the
cae
175
OF CONJUNCTIONS.
in tliat instance
perative and
it
^"or," "or
"
LyJ? ^{/^
*$ "as
if,"
"even
J$.
// "in order that;" S'
with the negative adverb
as
S, it
not"
^3 and ^f "but."
is
"
j
It
"if,"
occasionally
not?"
Cjlff
although;"
The
especially in the
signifies,
affixed pronouns
U uJ^
c^Jil^
"
were
may
W, "sinon."
"
Kur,an,
be joined to
also
why
it;
as
it
His
IB also
to our conaiective
closely akin to
"a#d;" sometimes
to
means "but."
It is
The general
them seems
it
be as follows
to connect words; as
\^r
\j>
distinction
the conjunction J
"by
is
between
employed
It is
If a
fafele
tli
used, as
may be
OF
170
INTBttJECTIONfcJ.
9s,*
s ss
ox
,J
AJJ
"
A negro on
And
(fa)
L^^CJ'
And
And
and (wa) he
self
tL5Cwxa3
he
(fa)
said,
came by a
(fa) there
^ -
ljj&
^1
JU
it
certain
such a one
said to him?
the
XS
!
may become
man of sense>
peradventure I
Ms
with snow
whito.
to
began
L
JUi ?
^1V
X^Ox
Ox
OO^
OO^x
yonr body
may
blacken
its
(own)
blackness*"
Interjections.
197.
our words
4^i\,
and
A an
ujlj clit,
t-Jl
tliij
and
U1
all
such as out
pressive of aversion or disgust
"foh!" "fie!"
"away!"
ft,
a*,
also *T ?
and
$.
ah I"
"
alas !"
This exclamation
may be
followed
by
177
OF INTERJECTIONS.
nominative case
tlie
*1
When two
Sfljj'S
or,
SSj
\j,
it
or
may
\j
take
,
or
^JL
added to the
is
last;
as
*ll>J
*lc.
Ij
slave of Zaid!"
"
^Jjj
as
aj
"
alas !"
x ox
This
is
"
Jjj
"
woe
to
^, d^,
"
\7
him !"
to
woe
rj^
woe !"
me !"
quick!"
or conjoined, clSljj
or
cL^
woe
u
ooipe
to thee !"
on!" "this
way!"
corresponds to our interjection
lj
dressing.
It is
lj
is
Wazir
!"
employed
Zaid !"
67.)
"
S E
On
198.
more
In this Section
extensive*'
u
i\fl
and
thai which
is
Participles.
is
S O f\
noun (jpx^j
derivative
^ "a
"floflh;"
f
primitive noun,
or verb, such as
a horses"
its
Snbstantives
comprehending
sigiiificailon
Adjectives, Tnfiuitives,
whether noun
I.
llw
2ul4~ "solid/'
N V
lion;"
is
that which
is
or
more of the
190.
We
^L
Jix-sU
"a
viz. ? \,
CJ
is
uwl
(or
The
u? J3 and
^5,
all
at the
Immm
a horse. 55
^w, ^
J),
a key/' from
little
end of a word
"he
neglected."
and represented by
of prolongation; as in
preeodexl by an aMf
57
c<
"Ixo was great
{}r
flwuidour," from
^j
The
c^
servile
and
is
at the
employed
179
s 9s
byi);
J^k>
thus,
confessed," etc.
The
It
letter <j^
is
*-
took pity."
^ ^
"he
"
The
"
u/JiJU
"
extracting," and
it
the same as
is
beginning of a word; as
Mameluke," from
is
extractor,"
a slave,"
J\ which
or *
s S S
^ykw* "an
forth."
LjCLi
"
he possessed;"
or * as in the verbal
"he
from ^x
word, as in
letter j is
^$
cut short;"
it
noun and
participle
The
as
letter
The
^5
^
fet
&
"the sun;"
employed
from j^J
at the
"
it
beginning of a word
gushed out."
^JU
as
"
c^y
it
is
a fountain,"
180
Of
200.
those,
of
Agency
Infinitive.
3,
viz.:
classes,
The Noun
2,
The 'Noun
Noun
of
Time and
of Unity.
Intensity
any further
tho triliteral
Noun
7.
Of the
Place.
Noun
5.
of Specification.
we need
three classes
first
of Instrument,
Noun
8.
Adivo and
is
Puwsivo,
6.
of
notice.
the Participles,
4.
of
of
abundantly obvious
201.
by
verb,
which
it
(Jumna
bour
place? of
cj/ ^*
1
is
final
i';
tore
triliteral
unchanged
changed
3
labour/
"
in the
into failm
from
jl&d
noun
thus,
"he
of time
and
3xvt>
place,
the time
labours" or "will
la-
^ mc)
or "will beat;"
we may
and
^UjH *^U
that tense.
if
action,
^\LA\
an
of burial,"
lj*& "place
fjlL*
"a
"a deep
B."
place/'
"a
cavern;"
"a tower;"
hence,
181
participle passive.
a.
damma
elbow rests
;"
O /
"
&js^
viz.,
"the
j^sz*
mosque
(^
Li^*
"
^,W^
"the place of
^A*
J^J-*
'
habitation;"
"
"
"a
jik* "the
"the place of
the
setting,"
"the west;" ^jyU "the place on the head where the hair divides;"
s
"
"
"
the place of breathul^i^ the place where a plant grows ; jjku
'
""
"the
&
^^
ing,"
<;"
nostril;'
<-
Of these
sacrificed."
and
C^*
may
and^rcu may,
*
b.
Nouns
^^^>
tor^
jlk*,
is
j^,
as the vowel of
s o/
vowel of the
SOX
r~
initial
thus^u or^u
>,
"
first
radical
is
is
A^J; so from
^^
"he
^fy* "place
radical,
is
151),
formed
and by carry-
NOtN OF
182
iisg
is
(aorist
ptfi),
change;
"ho
JC
its
thus,
**.
for
If the
undergoes a
it
vowel,
second
to the
"the place
j,^
Nouns of
iiixw
u
as
i~;
J^*
"acoTDotury
1
*'.,
<.
Nouns of
"
1',
as tU)^t
toi'(itl*(r,
i'^A,*
,,
v'j
and place
Uin<j
they
differ in
from
place of revolution;'
isL
formed
returning;" BO from
of prayer/*
ilorlvcul
etc,
from
"an
name
luLt,
IB
"luj returned/'
uly^
^^
"place
"
tlio
JL^
IwknMwnlr-^tSl
w/'
"hornet,"
or time of
are
arc-
of the forms
Ll,
U\*^, or
(lifFnrtviLOti,
^>-
00
+*\.
i-hat
^^
"
opened;'
"the
^^l*
oratory/
by
of an action
Tluy
formed
aorist of
^Jcl< JMIMJVC
Nouns oxi>iwsiw
witli tluB
aorist passive,
porfomiaiico
f[uadrilitoral roots, or
AV>?w/
202.
damma
from cX^Ji
rivers;"
'
"ft revolved,"
^r/^
1
IB
"
lima from
passive;
',<' o
the cast;"
i'U^.
place of pasturing.'
instead
;"
time,
"ahahuico," from
a kcy??? from
"ho woighod
t^
??
;
183
NOUN OP UNITY.
^ "he
'
?(j
J^
"he
extracted
etc.
a.
1
' '
fi^f
<Lbuw
as
Jjku "a
sieve/' from.
J^kr
sifted;"
beaten/' from
is
S>
"he
j<x*
jj*5
"an
"he
has
b.
Some nouns
*Uaj
as
"
means
the instrument or
pearls;"
LU^.
**
"a
o^
needle;"
of
"a
on the measure
"
adorning/'
awl."
saddler's
a string of
There are
by Dr. Lumsden,
p. 311.
oJ^-O
Noun
of Unity
'
the
always of
infinitive;
is
as
single beating."
literals
and
is
"one
as 1>-\^J\
extraction/
to
and aisy-^j
"one revolution."
derivative formation,
whose
the,
infinitive
itself
infinitives already
end in
numeral Sx^V5
by the
S s <s
s
l^>^ IA&.J "one solitary
accompanied
**
The same
or INTENSITY,
jx'otrjsr
as
assume
for a termination;
i'
as
i'l^lj
solitary
third formation of I is
^lil,
"he
stood up."
$/ Specification--*
*J\
"ho
excels in writing
??
.u
^~y>;
form
so
It
xO
dlLti
UteralH
and in the
it
differs
in
ite
nature
adjective or Bubstnntivo.
person
who
may be
means "an
^Uu^ "very
it
out-
used either as an
adjective
a substantive
it
is
equivalent
serves
to indicate a
or condition is expressed
hut
it
As an
As
just
It is
^j&.
noun of agency
"very liberal"
quaclri-
&
of the measure
in
From
"he
of the
is
and in
*-
liar."
say
and-out
invariably
"ono who
asserted
when we
J^u
derivatives formations
of
it
is
by the
"
*z*
a baker," from
^L
*'*
"ho baked;"
jy
oarpontor;" tC<L
a tailor/'
ole.
in like
manncr
j\esr
185
NOUN OF SINGULARITY.
NOUNS DERIVED FROM SUBSTANTIVES
206.
Noun
tive
classes, viz., 1.
of Singularity,
Noun
3.
Noun
They may
of Abundance.
of Capacity.
Diminu-
4.
Nouns.
Nouns
+J\
G ^^^
Sssiss
in signification.
ixx
such as
lions,"
i'juA*
lion;" *bJU
&U* "a
J^ax^
"a
field
^1
"a
place
famed
for
o/ Singularity
^^ ^
*J\
"a wolf;"
"
victory."
such portions;
thus from
ff
-"
^J
"
which
consists of several
"straw,"
is
,
gold," comes
formed
x
a
*u
"a
<? -*>
<La>j
a grain or
<uUi "one
manner
single pigeon."
to the
noun
necessarily on th<3
same measure,
24
186
Noun of
209* 1 call
"
tills
**a.
species
Noun
of Capacity," from
want
of u better term,
"a
in which things arc contained or collected; thus,
u
"a needle case," from
milk;"
milk-pail," from CJh**
JJ^
jU
Syt
J
"a
It will
noodle."
of the
is
&
measure a the
They both
202,
by having
lirst
diiih*
fatwu an
flu*
Noun of Instrument,
Noun of Time and Place
fonn of the
from the
vowel of tbe
initial servile
and
*,
7 /w DimiuutiM JNoun
From
210.
putting
fjfffiwm
diphthong
a
^-
noun bo
tho fonn
tluw,
a oort)iou,"
BO
If Iho pritnitiv<?
"
is
formed,
by
a man,"
D4l;
^ '*<S
^1.
x
^j
or
trilitonii
"<*,*
jLaJI
>
or
from
u
small mountain."
4^*
"
ll
If tho primitive
1^
??
Hoorpion," from
trilitcral is of
A'
"
is
of
4/^
tho feminine
Li thuB
diminutivo is of tho form
gcuidor,
a
a little sun" or "a mock sun;"
"Iho Rini," iilJ,
*'
u
a
a small tract of land,"
earth" or
land," l^jl
tluj
frmn V^rb^l
211
both of
Jiools*
of
primary verb, and
its
derivative formations,
187
lowing:!.
"
^1^-
as ulJl*
from ^1&-.
fair,"
"
from cLJt*.
difficult/
3.
J*jj
asj^i
fol-
,US; as
2.
"cold," fromJ^sL.
$y).
i>^>y^
.flrofx-
J^;
4.
as jyic
as
)tJ;
</
^-
Ix^*
x>x
8.
fs^'
^Jill
,x
^*
as '^il
""
as
J^3;
U
from
crooked/
,ff
?^?
as
1)^5
jt
6.
fromyt.
forgiving/
"sacred," from
^V^l
qa?
brave
^.
5?
from
Adjectives
as
^L\
to denote
also
"red/ fromJI^l.
employed
the comparative and superlative degrees, as we have already
stated in
81 and
82.
9.
^Sil and ^fe; as ^U>jJ "re"
"
^b^c
a,
is
^llc
careless/'
from
^Jil.
10.
naked/ from
Many
measures
verbal adjectives, or as
^*j
and
^j-*
an active or a passive
some
call
them
participles, of the
may
signification.
212.
have either
viz.,
thus?
j^
a.*
We
stated,
intensive verbal
profession,
etc.
As an
it
sometimes
suppresses
or,
the
188
Ss"Gs
increment adds
this
still
According to De Sacy
Adjectives derived
Substantives,
from
we may
terms
general
Eelative
call
nunation or
etc., "by
rejecting the
thus,
"of
final
"race/
of
expressive
Adjectives,
or relating to
"man,"
"
{j^\
Shiraz;"
"earthly," from
a. If the substantive
ends in
"earth."
ji
or
human," from
is
formed
Sf
by
SJ-QS
&*
so
triliteral
the
ff
is
>
'
"s
^^>
If the primitive
"natural."
same
"
X-
<*>
is
**
If the
jSrst
vowels,
it is
thus from
jM
"a
'
camel/'
is
formed
"Jjl
If the
first
radical should
ihofatfya
may
*' the
J^e
grape,"
^^
189
i.
and <LL
the
change the kasra of the second radical into fatlia and reject
"
ai1 island," comes
thus from
that follows
J^Jsr
x'jj*?
"
if
insular;"
"
formed from
"be
"
"
truth
it
and thence
S"
,*&>*
" X
"
"
Sr
name
of
an Arab
tribe/'
^^
comes
& x
"
names
word ;
a Kuraishite
"
r"
man
or
Some
fromjjjf
words
employed.
irregular
some
Finally,
manner
c<
"
s*
t*
and
^^^r
^9
formed in a very
is
formed
JkjVj
known
in mediaeval
Europe as Bhosis.
From ^la^k
"
the
name of a
i ^"
province in Persia,"
"
are
LJ^
is
^W^
"
man
so
from
f
&
of Herat."
We wry
190
58 and
Arabic Grammar, IE
59.
to fulfil
the subject
gross,
The
understand.
1$
to
chiefly
De Sacy
of
and Lumsrton.
*
*t
X-> ?
**
&xi and
i*i
measure
SxO
J*i\
thus,
',XO#
*,*{>
pi^;
groat,"
Ijy*
(for
present/*
4?)
210. 27#
.3ju
and
u
*!**
as
as
J^
xLji
be formed
(for
1.
^J).
from singular
and whoso
triliteral root
defective
having
pillar,"
pi olc
book"
t)l.
"
2.
^ throne," pi
^1
thus,
**
"*
U a leaf of a
$"
S
measures
the
of
From nouns
?
L^r**
4^ iP
L^ u a shlp
book/ pi
if
formed
is
also
Lk " a
Plurals of
A ^x
pi.
"very
a town or village,"
ajyi
tho board,"
MmwBt
J
x
j8if(jwc?
may
*^Ox
'*
Is
pi ^Jar;
*<S,
s*s?
tS?
5^Ox
it
^c "a
a
occurrence,
though of rare AX/
this Bpecias,
J)
IB
")</
pi.
21 5.
??
pi
<^^
"the
a leopard,"
pl.^
]From verbal
"a monitor," pL
3.
lion," pi.
"patient,"
"a
ju>\
191
^3J
is
applicable to masculine
A-xOx
,*.
<*>'
pi.
(mase.
/*<-
of the measure
1*3
S
*
as SL*
^
,x-0
a coin,' pL uJX^ ;
Tx
tfxO
"
a
maxim," pL
<u^
temple or church," pL
"
'
<Js
5 o/
5-0
.svox
>>v
i^0^>
fft;
**
'
'
'
It
Is,.
">
SV^x-
JUr;
x
tain," pl.
ls^
the neck," pi
**
they
be
JTx-
fern.
not
x
^y
of
passive
5-
pl.
"
noble,"
44;^
signification;
r^
It applies
L*i, provided
thus,
uJ^,
4*
It applies
t-jy*l,
"^
to
such
192
xox
adjectives,
measures
the
have
as
Sss^s
fern.
^4*3,
ijJUi
or
S,
pL
&1U
fern-
^lUi 5
IljJ;
JoCL>.
5.
^^^
and-
(J*a<+~
it
Finally,
and
^u^
thus,
"loan (from
starvation)," pi.
**"
it
measure 4>U;
tlic
"penitent,"
applies to
if
verbal adjectives of
<uu^
thus, y>-b*
"a mer-
to a camel), pi
chant," pi/sr; JfcU 'thirsty" (applied only
$&$
2%0
220,
*t
Measure,
^"
"i
O?
t*
]3^
xx
applies to substantives of
',
Jjsi
of tuo
rarely, to adjectives
5^j?SC
sea," pl*jy%
"
pL dp^; Ll "a
"a
lftl
"witnosBj"
^^
molar tooth/ pi
lion,"
pi
from
Irregulars; thus
pL
"the
IjS
as^^ "the
<^ a an army,"
r and
we may add
these
"weeping,"
"kneeling," pi
O x
^;
5^, To
Ljftj
iff
measure J^U
'*^^i>O^
7
tt
u^r4
and sometimes,
X
>S
though
jQ.
^j
pi,
and
a few
(for
tr for
221, 2%$ Seventh und Kiyhth Measures, J*3 and JUi apply
?
(fern,)
deprived
provided tlioy be not * *
,
J^U and
***
.*'
)>
iicU,
thus,
"
a writer," pi.
Mid
u--J^
judge," pi *&,&>-;
* **
* " x
'
^
^
"
for
L-JU
a
;
wmbatant,"
pi
ilji
(for
t/jU)
jU
^U- "a
r
tf *
cljb^
,^
**
**
^4^
pL ul^i;
"
'" "a fomalo camel that
*
4**
j"
pi
Jfi*
According
to
masculine
belongs exoluaively to
&<"
Do
is
<
'
turned
*
'
mum,
iUi
in
198
adjectives as
beings,
fect," pi.
112;
"
A few
somewhat irregular;
are
"
J^
per-
standing erect/
^SU
as
pi.
lyS; jb (forjjb)
or
more
"
follow the rules of permutation
SS"
5V x
A*-J
for
<^b
pl.
thus, ^Jb
they
strictly speaking,
one
who
sells,"
when
to verbal adjectives
of the measure
"a
warrior," pl.
"a Kadi
J&
|>);
(for
defective root
and
thus,
or judge,"
'*
/
*"'\
pl. *LaJ (for <U*o3j.
i
fi
224.
is
s 0?
L,S
^;
an
225. 2%^ Twelfth Measure, lie
S O*
A Ox
5 xx
"
a bull," pL
aa
branch,"
|j^f Jl
IJ
a boy,"
j(Ji
aa
pl.
^1^
J^;
brother," pl.
thus,
Uc;
^y
S^M
a gazelle or antelope,
a slave," pi
?xo
J? (for ji*)
Kli;
applies to substantives of
a
pl.
xx
5'
pl.
a
(
KM
J2(l
5 Ox
and sometimes to
measures J*i,
tlio
c*
J,
and
o x
or
is
_j
^5
thus,
Jji (for
pi.
i^f
**
"a
"the
J^y
^
(for Jill);
pi.
<HB>-^
jI=H
hill," pi.
,S
jb "a
"
U*
bucket,"
S "a
J^-J;
foot," pi.
ox
staff," pi.
bolt (of a
S R,*
"
door)
"the face,"
jlsj-
'jbi);
>
.&
""
J,
It
pL JiSU
is
feminine sub-
also applicable to
and
of -which
6 ^
the penult
1,
or
"the arm/' pi
^jj
It IB further applicable^
nu^asures
several
to
proscription^
thxts,
^^U
pi
oath,"
^;
^^*-
"*
^AJ "an
sjtii;
by
an inert
is
^
01.
from those
different
roots;
PS
5.^.
"the cyo,"
"alum,"
"
'J\
pi.
<f
*"
&
j>
^J(- ^
pi.
Jb
"the day,"
a UOUHC,"
xi
llurlcmth Maestire, JUil,
pi.
pi.
J^.
is
applicable,
^\;
227. 27
and of
"
ruin," pi.
thus, )*.
tliS;
pi.
tinlcss its
J?1
"a
jlCi
date," pi.
pi.
tbuH,
Cl;
when
8,
JJ "an
pjj
"
its
2-
C>V-
"a
elephant," pi.
the shoulder,"
pi.
day,"
pi.
It is applied,
Ifc
J$
(for
though
J;
be
_,,
when
<JU
letter
^,
medial consonant
middle
cl^
To
moasuros, though
is
all
1.
<<t]l0
yc
"
is
aPPlicaWo to
is
a long vowel
JC
"
a sword,"
cL^' "time,"
rarely, to
tho
pi.
measure
S*
3
pure/
thus^lt
-*
pi.
of the measure J*
195
>
*.
"
nificatlon; as cJ^-i
"noble/
pi.
,
228*
nouns of four
"a
as jH3
letters,
and always
jx
pL
i o
or
j,
or defective root
XX
thus
,'*
(for rfU^U); S
"a
*\^\
*
_^
o.*
To
1.
inert ;
is an
5V
ah-
LSI
"
(for
x
pi.
Jj^cl;
nouns
2.
iii,U
so pronounced,
6x OS
^);5> j^"apillar,"pL
c$
is
"God," which
"ail
S"x
^x^S
applicable,
breviation of *^
is
if
a priest or
Tmam
"
?
5x0?
of the measures
"
J^l^
5"
&' x
a signet-ring, ?? pL
*$y^*
jfU.
x x
It is also applicable
'
St
to substantives
x
**-x
and lcU
pL
x-
^rx
thus,
^xxjjxx
^1^ <Lr>,U
"
^^x'xx
pi.
is
upplicablo to sub-
j ? or
vowel
is
one of the
letters
of prolongation, YUS.,
^,
inortj,
190
y
f>
Tlio
SSloJ.
x
SO x
**
S>
"
"
4^^
a species of poem," pi
ff
aamo measure,
x x
"but
5> /
S^
-"
pL u-Jls-S
ajjjs*
"an
old
""
wonder or rarity," pi
woman,"
pi.
*"
j?
x"
x-
^SsP-.
x
x?
xx
5x/
5 o
ff
& o
pi ^C>.
"
tU
a crown,"
1>1.
a youth,"
"a
slave,"
or antelope,"
to
Jjl?qe*
pL
a fish,"
is also
as
Jft
*X ''i
(for jd.1)
pl^llrfj
L.1
wall," pi.
ylk^
(for
iy9
a handmaid,"
5 xx
db "a
^liLoj
ciiko,"
a
region,,"
pi ^UlJ.
moaswe
^^
pi.
<<a
y unS
W W>
'b
!^
^^
aft
i*
"a
JUi
applies to substantives
and Jyjj; UB
uJJL.
a province/' pi
"a
^^
roof," pi.
A
*x*VF
;
<-irfj
when used
siil)stantivoly ?
a horseman," pi ^uji.
is
applied to adjectives
and
to a
or defective root,
&
and
j^ll
A-XX-P
"a
man/
poor
"a poet/
5
pi. *]/i
" X ^^
*-xx^
a prince/ 3 pi
which admit of
4?
*^
x
j^U
a suc-
*uL^..
"
S-
*|^.
cessor/
^^
pi.
x
jti
197
defective
kind of plural.
this
measure
of the
whose root
thus,
pL
"
a friend/'
*-*>**+-
for ^ll^f);
*s
"a
one "beloved/'
nouns of
&
Jcli,
"
wounds/
x
x?j>C.^
^3,
5"xO$
S x
"
when they
X O X
wounded,"
pi.
xox
perishing/'
pi.
L5
this
measure
^x
,,^/r;
^
J[
also to
rarely,
are expressive of
pain,"
XO X
Jrf^
The same
Jlfc.
**
?^
C3L
applies to adjectives
3,
"injuries in
"
a friend/'
sincere," pi.
thus, j^ju>
(contracted
"
pi. *U>.\
*u2; 5^
5"
*.&
It occasionally applies to
*Ujl.
to those
is
<?
^"^
)*?*>
plural applies
,&
as
X
uJ3U
also
to
^ X OX
C-X
thus,
pL jj^;
236,
^V^
2%
angry/ pi
Twenty-third Measure^
**
to substantives
This
^US.
<*.xtx
applicable
singular^
is
xOx
198
FOEMATIOH OF THE
BBOKEJST PLUEALS.
X0
"
"a
thus, ^s-*
plain," or
xx
"a
desert," pi.
"
grjai
"pregnant,"
to the
"a
^3^ xx
pi.
^.to
**"*"
pi.
first place,
1*3
^xo "
cyUr*
X
y* c"''
J?
237*
and
x ^
same
^JUJ,
class of substantives
*-,- <*
in
applies,
and adjectives
s s^
a virgin," pi
^jos.
y^Ox
xOX
"
as
^is
the
2nd.
J?
ftl
To
pi.
L^K^.
In
JL^;
^lyC
take
damma
instead of faiha
/
The
right.
X
or
j3
t
adjective
x X
^JS"
thus,
^,iU
sin/
x<_
JL
in the plural
pi
i^
x x
Uk^
may
4^1C and
may have
Twenty-fifth Measure,
X X/
"
^t
xoy
XX
^JU^-
coming
intoxicated/
a slave,"
warrior,"
pi
239,
37A?
5^
jH/JUj,
is
applicable to
and JcU
j^
ass," pi.
thus,
jU "a
ft
J7>t/
*/
,#0x
thus,
Jju
i?xo/ /
5-xO^^
a husband/
47
pi.
ilyo
*
Ic
a paternal
'
unclo," pi.
applicable to a
stone/
&
thus,
*?
?x
pi J>1^
L^-^U "a companion./'
to "be met with.
;
Is
*>
and J^U
190
pi.
.x
^^
iU=^
also
x-
,5
pL jil
ring,"
pj "a
pL j
pulley,"
"
^Jjlt
one
who
seeks/ pL
242.
We
now
classes
of measures, which,
when
added to the preceding twenty-eight? furnish in all thirtyone species of broken plurals as formerly stated,
58 ? a.
243.
XX
The
riliteral
first
all
radical;
of
5"
i*
The other
"a
frog/
pi.
pL^Us.
formed from
counting),
by
^xat^v*^
jjU; Ju^
prefixing
c^,' or ^
"experience,"
living/' "victuals,"
pi.
thus
^pl
/xx|j?x^
c^l^r;
pi
r
aa before not
xx
Memwe^ JJUi
JLi^
a finger," pL
^
moans of
FORMATION
200
01?
and jlc$.
"a
\Lj (forjG<j) 3
"
pi.
"
JjjUS
Ip5
a buffalo/'
(s*#&r
pi.
disciple," pi.
HJj
a preceptor,"
L$ and
pi.
more
especially
%U; ^J "an
"a
or" Circassian,"
"
is
suppress'^
s'
l^ii'
a pMlosopher,"
U~>\
"
a bishop,"
1^-;
pi-
1,^;
^^
recommended
My object
pi.
"Georgian
;
"aSclavonian,^pl.S
the learner is
pi.
""^
ujSU
Mauritanian,"
pi.
/ ot?
and
whether substan-
to foreign words,
Sacy.
by
11^"; uJ^i-i
De
'^
*>
a.
"
"
applies
**
S^U;
more
This measure belongs also to nouns of four or
letters of
and
^ll.>
P oor >" PL I
Measure^\^^^\^\^
of prolongation,
thus, "jU
tionJ^-;
it
s'Vc.i
<+
pi.
S^
pi.
"a
"
pl*^j^'
picture/'
This
dinar/' denarius,
pi.
this portion of
Arabic
Grammar
Lnmsdon and
201
An
broken plurals of
which
triliterals ?
$ bs
"a
<_*!
plural;" thus,
dog,"
90^
formed the
from
Sj
pi. j{&>\
(for
from j\^
pi.
a finger nail,"
comes the
a
of the
pi.
'$
pL j^U
It
IB
*-
the pl.^Jiy
(for i^xft),
<x>j
ffs *
a bracelet/'
s>
and from
the pi of the
fromyte
'
'<;-$.
?<->".
c-J^i,
pi.
st
&
called
is
"
and
pL 5^1,
*
may be
observed
jy
lection of letters;" so
De
from
L^J
"
t>l5^
"
t^j
a house," pi.
a cluster of houses."
when
and thence
According
to
number
is
the
b.
"
Sometimes a dual
is
pi.
thus,
?%
ff
J^>\
x
and thence
is
fit
signifies
58
5,
that
202
PLXTRAIi.
custom*
x-oS
xcj?
>
5*
J^
viz.,
& 9?
Sss
Jj*i,
iUj
Ss
*?
yo
J**'?
<Llx3?
?-?
of paucity/
58
to in
viz.,
2,
We
from three to
noticed in
The
irregularly.
number
things, ranging
a.
of persons or
fact
that
is
several
of these
irregular plurals
.fji
If "a mother,"
has for
pi.
its
43l
The word
plural
?$t from fJ
"
^<
il!i\
ii
f"Ci
"water/'
9
woman/
pi,
has for
"the mouth,"
its
plural J
UJ
if
S^i*3
<t
all
or
of which
"
come from a
different root,
human
<*
U*
from
i
^ xo
man"
and
"
^yj
jy
203
SECTION
VII.
letters,
wo have
treated of the
Wo
most important part of our work the construction of sentences,, or in other words ? the rules for speak-
now come
to the
It is
(common
is
"Wo have
all
along
to all languages)
may
from
onto
not have
On
tongue.
this account^
we
more
a,~
fully
agent;
"Fire
Mm
to
comprehend
some of the rules which wo are about to state*
is
hot;"
Fire consumes
wood"
In the
first
Urns,
sentence*
Jiw
204
is
ANALYSIS OP SENTENCES.
that which
is
wood/ fire
wood is the
is
is
the attribute, or
hot
"
is
is
serves
Fire consumes
complement.
"ships are
must
It
sailing."
shortest sentence
is
and HO more.
and
will*
it
good man
"
viz,,
An
naturally excites
unmerited outrage
1
some emotions of
resentment even in hearts that have the least esteem for virtue."
"
In this sentence the verb is
naturally excites ;" what precedes the
verb,
/;.
is
the nominative
is
a general
parts, yet it is riot easy to find
it, is
the complement,
term that
will accurately
When
may
attribute
by
is
expressed by means of
"
and complement
as
"
object
is
as
may
When
is
Lastly,
when
expressed by
nominative, verb,
<?,
sentence
"
verb, and
the verb
compound
the
are
more simple
thus,
the
mind with
entertaining views
it
fills
fills
with complacency,
it
and administers
it
205
and,
when
it is
mixed
It
it."
all
it, is
the nominative.
The
two clauses make but one simple sentence, for they amount
"
Knowledge, mixed with complacency, adds lustre
merely to this
to such as are possessed of it."
last
249.
The leading
As
in our
a general rule
own and
other
its
language,
Words
the
in a Sentence,
248, a) that a
WEten*
con-*
abfc
^ays of arranging
pi
S?J
Amru, ?>
206
said to
Ms
35
son.
<1>^1
J).
^Ht
God
the beginning
oljJo
>"
""*
viz. 5
x x
t3
*jj8
.^j ^ ^Q
41
cu^UJi
the
created
JlJ
>"
jU.
^ x c*O
<t>1xJt
Lnkman
^ a ln
"
^Qi
^/ x
*^r
*jj
When
Baghdad."
tiS rtO
<uJ*
first;
as IjllT
JLJ1
"
*
o^o
<:
U^
Languages abounding
to
any of the
may
in Latin be expressed,
JJ
Pompeium
Caesar;"
Csar.
is
l?
vicit ;
"
Osesar vanquished
Csesar vicit
Pompeium,"
or
Csesar vicit," or
Pompeium
Tho Arabic
"Anns an
first
is
more
restricted in its
arrangement ; and
infer,
toiseach chruthaich
one another,
m THE ARTICLE,
c-
The
be purely accidental.
SYNTAX
251,
it
for
for
however, that
it
Osesar
Pompeium
"Pompcdum vicit
example, the
is
"
lastly,
"
modes of arrange-
six
207
its
Greek.
o,
"
c^Wi
ham
prefixed to
S<^0
a
(J[wj&!
It is
The
TTIO-TO^
a proper
is
"
(*$}i\
article is
thus,
sects;
Abra-
always
*^'
o^Jl
the
"the Christians;"
the Persians."
^^\
thus,
J}^\
Jews;"
A/3Xo9
f)
adjective (if
adjective,
by
the article;
% afya.
of the
restricted
is
TO
r/,
^ j^
'
the cameL"
to
The
a.
article is
mistaken
trouble
"
;
thus,
sb
we
employed
"the prophet,"
"t-Sjl
^o
me, and
f (^^^MO^
^y
XCX'O/'
in my
x-^O
j*H
<-**
other languages,
in
is
see JJUll
9 tsSbs
^here
By
my reason has
when
for
^lic
The
per antonomasiam,
o Trpfajry}?,
for
as
artfcle is also
in the
MnhanoPDaad ;
*
'
i/,
)ook/
Finally, iio
smxsU
Is
wfl
mm
it
4-jlyi
J^aagr;
208
SYNTAX OF SUBSTANTIVES,
not by slothfulness;"
regions, etc.
it is
as <u.(Jl
"
"Irak;" fllM
also
"wisdom;"
Syria/' or
"
Li^\
government ;'
Damascus."
SYNTAX OF SUBSTANTIVES.
Of
252,
the
The nominative
Nominative Case.
case
Is
"be-
"To God
y^
^ -0
<*
J*jl\ ^LB j
God? ) to
cj\jHll ^J
Mm
(is)
the earth ;
is
9S
9*, *"
aiM
Ps
(is)
*
"God,
in the heavens
(or, as to
and upon
"*
so,
^^ ^j M
Le.
??
among you/'
$>?
whatever
Oj* S<*
For ex-
follows.
"As
is called
among
??
yon.
This
by no means rare
In our modern Anglo-Saxon, both English and Scotch, as in
the following couplet from the exquisite ballad of "Auld
1
|jo^Ji;
is
EobinGray:"
"
My Mart
it
a.
We
is
seldom
tased
might occasion an
r>
"*
/w X
ambiguity; thus,
"
boulxtifixl;
verb
IB entirely
250,
In
many
instances
209
SYNTAX OF SUBSTANTIVES,
it is
thus we
or
make
optional to
say J*\
may
j^i* HlJ
"
<dS!
or
"
<d!!^1
Muhammad
Of
(is)
God
(is)
Jo^sr"
our prophet."
Genitive Case.
the
which we
may
is
by the
stricted
is
which
first,
translate
"
state of
The
regimen."
Ox
75
CJ-o
governed;" as
is
<u:>-
called ^"
^\X uJl**J! sor
x
"the
f
t/&~"
effect of
is
x 7 Cv
<d!l
word
case,
always put in the genitive
^0
first
an adjective ; as
lj
fre-
abundance
of sleep/' i.e.
much sleep;" c^Will Jj^k "length of ex"
ie. "long experience."
Such is uniformly the
periences5
construction of the
our words
to
governed
^UT J^
a.
Like
)
feminine
men?"
is
"
"
"the
a
all ?
totality/
"
all
which answers
tho word
according as
#^
J^ "everything;"
men. ??
"
denoting
what ?
]^1 il "what
"
every" or
-&s"
I>1
noun
"
"
which ?
woman ?
>?
3js
n
(jwlS
^t "what or which
wordjlc signifying
jJLt^Js
"incroate;'*
difference/ hence
Ife^
its
i'laaj^
^Tij^
them came/'
27-
"ne\Jl4"
SYNTAX OF SUBSTANTIVES.
210
TIio
of
stato
as
<LJJj
things
j*cL
an adjective the
is
latter is
*"
"*
u^UUM Jj^i
"
violent in
'
chastising/' instead of
c^UU
Of
Wo
Case.
254*
"be
ike Accusative
stated
The
eaBO,
accusative cu&o
used adverbially IE instances where the Latin would employ tho ablative, or tlio accusative with a preposition ;
a
ho perished of hunger/' mortuus est
thus, lij>~ cjU
a
fame] SjjDU
Uljfl
\yty*
do ye
days,"
per cerium
diemm
ticiple
with
accusative
the
fast
An
spatium*
adjective or par-
termination
frequently
cor-
<&9
tjws^
xf^^p
OJ?
c^Ul y^al
as
a
Ccujt?
^?J^
wudicndum*
l struck
him
gerund in dmi\
pnr
with
m to;
rfisnoct to his
reason of/
"by
^OX/xO^X
??
thus
Uii
ad
et simple^ expresses
accu-
"with respect
The
J^\.
M^
mind, or disposition,"
Isaac
a
".<?.
he
SYNTAX OF SUBSTANTIVES,
well disposed;"
Is
<?s<^
-$>s
xx Tx
x-
-3.
The
a.
6rod
a31 ^
LS^
to)
is
9?^"$.
great (as
to hardness."
Is
^ese
tr
or
dJ1
??
power
Lias
l^Sj
211
& x o y
xoti3-o
>-
^ -o
t,
JS"
jxL 3
*x
"}
d\
uJUjs^
in
variety of food;"
Is a
/ 99
there
forth]
"
^^
IJ^ll
where
??(^i
& x o
<difl
Uksr
SlfcS
^1^
u
[They
^5
they
may
jbil
XJ^lJJ.
as above ; the
Is
equivalent to
it
admonition
^^
is
<3utoU
equivalent to
N.B.
So
various."
turn
is
sllrat or cliaptor 5
Kur an
?
and the
Arabic
"
45*
expressed
by
although/* "even
if/'
Is
x x
UU- ^K U
-05^3
*U1
^ xx*
*U3
&
vSxx
x-
xO"-0
J^ UU jU
the conjunction
by
oSx
^ J^U
y
wash away dishonour from me, even if the decree of God should
draw upon me whatever it may draw;" where Qlp- (when It first
x
""
x-
c/x
xxx
L^>-
l^uS ^l^
USl^
xys? &\j&
JU
him on
xx
U^
^^
<^C
to
it,
o x
whatever
"whoso
it
may
c.
Is
SYNTAX OP SUBSTANTIVES.
212
^^\
g^
this is
where we
;"
&
see
l&5>-
Si~o
<dll
in the accusative.
xx
*$ s
tv~a
aL*j LJUbJ
So
^ ?^
l^
<dll
the following
c x
"
and
if
there
sisters)
-O
^^Uy ^ u ^
c_*3 3
^3
we have
'<*&
this is
^ ^a^S
an ordinance
& -O
xx
#* x-
xx
5"x
in Apposition,
255,
way
in
subjoined to another by
"
19
jj
(
s 9 s
xxiv.
35
* P
L^JJ KjU*
xx-
oil
when
xOX
9 s
S^
j^ d^
(the lamp)
is
The Bame
*'
*"
,*-
^"^
confimatkm"
or
it."
corroboration
them the
XX
^^\
first
having subjoined
So
\*
of
it
ail(l
poison."
/
1 1
"
is)
\jpl}
The same
"
*U
be
to
apposition/
ease,
is
??
"the eye ?? or
affixed
by way
"
essence,"
pronoun appropriate
SYNTAX OF SUBSTANTIVES.
213
for
both dual and plural being JJuT and ^^-t, as may be seen in
u
the following examples: Ii5j 5Jj *If
Zaid himself came;"
* -t"' d T
* '
*' VT
? '*"
'
^_ rr
T
i
i
Ji
i""* V x
5
<wj \joj cuo'j
I saw Zaid himself; 77 1$^
v^cjj ci> l>(
**
pronouns
which may
thyself,"
also
for
example,
be expressed
"5,
**??
w-OJ
a.
**
or "universality,"
jl*>- denoting "totality,"
in general;" as <*&
"
the
tribe
((
*$!
the whole
H,
"people
literally,
so
all
<LJil
l$l
"I saw
"I passed by
army came."
as also <ut&
it ;"
*j&\ c^-ol;
*J b ei/fpi
X X
XX
*\J=>~
the whole of
army came,
came;"
(jL*s!\
J and
the
cp^ li-
the whole
women;" 4x*U
(jfc-jJt
*t>-
fem.
UK
:
or
UiK
in-
'Amru came;" U^J^ J^c^ |^c. L^O]^ "I saw both 'Amru and
\^^\ ^^j
Fatima." When the
words
XX
"
thus,
^ CXX-
cj^
5.
To
the
f x o ^
214
a>-,
*Ji>-
fern.
^y^>-!
may
bo sub-
9s
j&9
^f^\
thus,
<&35US
*$&
&?"*
(<
and
all the
is
or feminine*
c.
or
may
be accompanied
by one
all
viz*:
as above
jjufj,
^La>f ?
and
^e);
fern.
^JL,
^\
^*2>U
and
ami
f
;
xo
XC2
^\
*a*\
The
and
j-^,
^S, Sometimes these three words
same time in addition to Ji4-i in, the order ob-
verbatim.
^of
last three
j?
x o* '*'
y Ox>0 '*
it is
""
sUf
impossible to translate
in combination, except
when preceded by
and
We
have
"the
soon. (
Cardinal Numbers.
when they
refer
$~
to
"be
i^Ji&.
AVxx
five daughters.'
noun
As
^J
"throe sons;"
to
215
S
then govern in the genitive ease
s
thus ?
1XL
Jjbl
As a
"five months."
9^
"
+\l\
U
-*v
a.
txiT and
3^^
feminine.
The
object
one, as
first
numbered
is
form of each
not expressed
also
"
^^^ ^
t/^1 "oae
H^lJ
uf^\
^?^r ^ "no
there
was no one
of the
1\^^ are
fj^ "one
thus,
JI^-JS!
adjectives,
(or bays);"
of them/'
"one
still
^ g^\j Jg
J^
^
^ls^ x&&
^JMO! *Wb
Ifi^-tJ
They
O.-O
J*3T
Uu$
^
"the other
fc
"
thus, 1j^-lJ ljo-V^ ^JU-
sl^y
*.*j>
^1.
distribution $.
repeated
individuality;
cow*
The number
"
two/'
is sufficiently
represented
"two
],
When
half."
o^
5.
"the one-half;"
sellors,
degree."
agreeing in
"one"
the
5^^ ^j3
object;"
They
"one of
Oo-T
"
one (masc.)
(fern.)/'
men;" *LJ1
is
as di~1
is
69,
and by
may
we shewed,
degrees/'
by
thus, tJk>>j
the
mere dual
"two men;"
fern.
^ISJ,,
"*
"
two
"
210
it
perhaps
c"*
\&\
c^
(&&~3) \jr^ L
for
expression;
example^
a pair of each
species/'
create(i
apparently superfluous.
The numerals 11
257.
"^ c
cr*^
is
the
to
99
to
"both inclusive,
govern the
-0
&^y&
as
"eleven stars;"
Jolt
^Ls^
OGO
ejiS
together with
three hundred
tJj3!!
JA^
"a hundred
so
men;"
X 0x xx-x
J^ U
itjX
men;" j4y
***"**
ninety-
jllj
"bored, IE
^^-^
nine sheep."
(^ff
4^1
.liuj
"*
"^
"eleven thousand
SS-1
^^J
and-eighty
noun expressive
is
is
ti*a
;POXX
^ye-u*^
1,
xO*^
f.
numbered
the
classes,
is
/ O
^l^**^
fi;li
two-and-twenty
composed of several
"
u^
^/ty)
of the objects
number, and
total
VJli j
number
If a
dinars."
XO X
years)
J^XX
i^T SSU
-Ji
*O
^U^yi
for example,
thus,
x-
O,v"
^^
</
O-*O
t/?7
X OX
^rf
be-
tween the
llijra
o*
x ^xo
5 /***
/-
cS
y^^j ^b jW,i? ^^
X^XXjCXXx"^"
uJil
Uj9 ^yUJj
/3S.
</
^oft,
^i^J^^t? ^-^ ^^
Tho revenue
x^
^*
o x
ljlj*ar*
viz.,
Oxop^o
jf-0
I*J
Jill
of Gharblya (a province of
a.
it is
<ss
j^yUj
x
x^ iujl
literally,
sv^s: ^
&Ujl
"
the
(S'XX^X
UJlS!
<UUwu/^>-j
amount of
it
U-c!1 uJiil
(is)
this,
dXuJ
thus,
U-Xlt) 4W4T>~
X*
9,584,264 dinars,"
five
hundred of
and-sixty dinars."
b.
*r
'
s>
uJST
Js>~j
^
is
used In
"^
***
from 11
to
tlio
the objects
9
ox
ten,
When
thus,
*"-
is
dinars."
L^\
yL*
<f
l^ ^\ "11,000
or
any
is
case, as
objects
"
Ox
'
iU
f s+
ej!0
300,000 dmars.
258.
Inclusive (
may
to ten,
L^ ^
to the land;
lo, It
J1
was
M*^
full of large
218
259.
When
a unmoral
is
employed
to
denote a certain
number out
it
is
j>
JjT^t
^1
the numeral
so
culine;
feminine
is
uT
because
the gender
is
added immediately
is
?
masis
If an epithet indicating
feminine.
is
genus
where eJj
xVO"*C
such epithet
agrees in gender with
u
as a
masculine because
thus,
f&\
*^C-O ^
5>
s<"
e^W eJ3
P^ 9sss
^ j/3
three
<31$
a.
53
masculine form
always put- in the
half of six."
When
nouns of
tiros,
&#
Sxxx
t*i<w
"
tliree as the
fiSJ
provided
immediately following
it,
ton,
*'
^XX'J O'SC/'Xx'
il
to
mo
under one
as
$*U
**&\
L^ ^
If
we
be as follows
hero reverse the objects numbered, the expression will
^
e ht handmaids and {eight]
to mc ^ bo lo:Q
4^* J
(J
:
^ \J$
slaves,"
If the objects
'
^ %
numbered be under
to
six,
219
When
b.
the
apply to rational
ten
."X
^1^
examples:
>?
OX
\<+&
XX
XXC X
.X
me
belong
fifteen
"
<uo^ L/^
j&s.
to
me
fifteen
belong
male
^^ "
to
If the numerals
apply to irrational beings they take the gender of the nearest subif -"X
X X
O
XX G X
X-" X
"
<?
stantive
j&& <w*>-
there are in
<j$&*&
my posses-
"
or,
by
transposition,
and
[fifteen]
L*^ SU ^Lc
he-camels.
If,
"
^^^c^ t^^f
^-
^j U,
etc.,
J^>-
<SUj
^U
Xj&^>
"
is,
we
numerals
if
in this last
a year,"
& "three
So cjClIi.
singular.
is
feminine in the
is
suppressed
jj}j
^^ ^^^ U
creatures) that
walk on four
example;
n
what
^^
singular
is
260.
jiUcH
u^*^ <-?^
expression
"
-.
feminine.
,
^
So also
as
in the following
,
1JL/
S',,x'iroxl|i
u^U
$%&
"^ |x
l
Mne which
3
xxx
Cx
sevjen lean
x?
L5
220
word "kino"
"being
nature,
Is
feminine, the
understood.
a,
"When the
such as
may
objects
^s
9SS**
>as^\
$515
f O
^
,
**'*'
<8XJ is
s-
ss
cji5
whether the objects be male or female. In like manner
"
"
whether
to
females
or
throe persons" or
individuals/'
applicable
(
males.
^\
If,
num-
Gx
9 P
**s
tS3-
t"
word
or words
s ss
annexed; i}m*,jax*j
(j^y^ *$* <^\ &-*
LS^?>
"
and 1 had for a shield against those whom I feared two (young)
9 *s/
^V^
Here we
is
^UsK
aiulJ^wJo
word
numbered than
male sex
ytSA
"soul,"
JJftJ
tiiiij
the
is
to
is
by
the
had more
their strict
feminine; bat
"ilirco souls"
is qualified
is
each of which
epithets
u^
it
when
the
applied to persons of
in this instance
If the
name
noun understood
its
;
its
place
vi.
160
*U-
"he who
221
Here
shall receive (as his reward) ten (times) the equivalent thereof."
is
is
is
considered as a
mere
masculine; because
understood.
The
261.
cardinal
numbers may be
numeral
is
laid
by the article
1. "When the
restricted
251.
down,
is
thus,
of the objects
numbered
six."
2.
stood,
is
under-
and hence
"well
known;
as
3 to 10 (both
inclusive) precede the objects
state of regimen, ia
""
"the
trio
of men."
JL^ilM 2U5
uJLJ\
name
in a
"
&N
9
<f
the three
Occasionally, however,
numbered
men"
or
the numeral
of the objects
numbered
the law."
a.
name
When
govern the
same
member only
or to both; thus,
xo
S57,
may sbe
ss s
pre-
XGX
U^oyks ^i\
or
222
^J'
*r
h-
L^l
^
<SU
elusive),
when
numeral
the
and
consists of a imtliiplo of
such multiple
if
^^O^> x
I'oJi^
With regard
i.
"
be combined
F
thus, /LR^
*xx
From
the article;
(lie
for
*?*
>
of*
is
CM*
II
I.H
fu <!H*
nanut of
ilii"
"
fiirou lanifl
ilw,
;"
HO
^j
where
laai>
tlio d^nioiiHfnilivi*
ihe
Ordiiialrt
are oxprc^sed
tlio
tiro
im^ro ucljtiCtiv^H,
By
"tlio
an
may
first
tlife
all
In
*^A>
."iicfi
riiiji]tv*<I f
ami
tlntt
CIIHI*
Htat*Hl,
ubow
iiji
Hint
hey are
<n
not,
be,
rc^tmtod
u
J^r^l!
plmw<,
fliey take
Ijy
7*1,
If tat
ruua1r,
ecw,>;iiler<ij
Tint
the nriieln; UH
tlm ilmt
Uo
f}n
with th
year;"
last
Wc%
multiples of ten
tho ctmlinalH, HO
oommou
ordinals may, or
i;
pron<;u
'ft
UU!
Ordinal Jtfwnbew.
^1
The
of
^<
>
ninotoeaflx they
"bo
!*;"
f<
ojifiuiin!
O/
262*
titfy
a Imndrwl or a
the article
to
dia
'"'
"*
examples as the
ukiv
/-
f>/>xx
"the
^bj$\ ^XTSSU
nuifs
t\v<*uiv
llin
^^A!^
oufiro niminrnl,
<*t
xo,^0
wifh
<
numbered;
it
only,
niimoruk connirtting
to
tu
tff
SjS+s
XxxxC.*O xxO Ox
ss"*'
also <3 J
cliiimte/*
artidi^ Uiev
re
203
SECTION
VII.
we have
treated of the
syllables,
We
It
is
(common
is
may
not have
On
tongue.
this account,
we
a.*
A simple
agent ;
"Fire
a verb
is
&
and
art
attribute, predi<fefe%
'
<# complement ;
In the
first
thus,
sentence,
204
ANALYSIS OF SENTENCES.
is
that which
is
wood," ^7*0
wood
is
hot
is
the attribute, or
the nominative,,
is
"
serves
is
Fire consumes
is
and
the verb,
"
?
consists in appearance of only two words ; as
winds blow ;' "ships
"
"
which expressions arc equivalent to
sail ;
winds are blowing,"
"
must
It
shortest sentence
and
will
it
and no more*
good man
offered to a great or
naturally excites
some emotions of
resentment even in hearts that have the least esteem for virtue,"
In this sentence the verb
verb,
h.
is
the nominative
"
is
naturally excites
is
it, is
"
;
the complement.
apply to each individual part with the exception of the verb. When
"
is expressed by means of the verb
to be," the three
1
the sentence
parts
may
attribute
by
and complement
as
"
and
object
as
may
Mecca
to
When
Isfahan."
is
Lastly,
when the
is
are
0,
compound
sentences connected
thus,
Knowledge
to
it
fills
fills
with complacency,
it
it
abilities
and administers
and,
when
two clauses
to this
merely
The leading
simple sentences, in
The
the nominative.
amount
lustre
it."
European languages.
its
It
himself, the
by
mixed
it."
249.
five
is
it,
to
which consists of
last
it is
all
205
As
in our
a general rule
own and
other
the
We
Words
the
in
a Sentence*
ifastfi
of arranging
th$se parts.
is
to
the complement
thus,
pi
"
jyj
tlJJ*
Zaid struck
20 G
cT
said to
the
Ms
SOIL
beginning
otS*j
the
a
created
"
ail!
^j(l
Lukman
^-x-xo-O
"In
iljJl ^J
jU,
*T>-
2J
When
Baghdad.
c^UJt
Jo^\ j
J^ ^1^1
5 '
**"
??
God
^J
^U^l
'"xyt3^ ^. -0 x^x
viz.,
cl^&l
genitive case the governing word comes first; as CjlsT
"
O *H"?O
^
a
"loyo of the world;" uls*' u- listening unto wisdom."
a.
tlio
ment
aT>ove alluded to
Osesar vanquished
Pompoium
vicit ;"
vicit Caesar
i{
OfiBsar;"
Csesar/'
is
Csosar vicit," or
Pompoium
lastly,
The Arabic
more
is
Poinpoimn," or
"
vicit
Pompeium
"Pompeium
example, the
"Anns an
first
infer,
it
it
for
toiseach chrathaich
vicit
and
for
however, that
one another,
The drfhute
article
Jt*
207
its
Greek.
%,
<$,
TO of the
restricted
is
by an
by
adjective,
f)
a&a.
ham
the faithful/
a proper
is
Afipaap
^^
thus,
The
mcrro^
"
\
!*/].
article is
Abra-
always
9 ?/<sS
prefixed to
used
sects;
<4>/3t
o^Jl "the
thus,
"the Arabians;"
nouns
It is
to express collectively a
& S
/O-P s
-*
example
J^s)
'
j+
to the camel."
The
a,
article is
mistaken
trouble
"
;
thus,
By
my reason has
when
departed," Jlj
J|j-!jJ
f OXO/'
^ JA!
lj
me, and in
my
x^i^O
^G^G/-
L5^J ^r^V*
t^'
The
as
other languages,
in
"the prophet,"
^-Sl
book,"
f)
before
general, in
S
J
Trp^r^,
per antonomasiam,
for
s'-Q*^
1
t-jrlyj
&S
SS<^~G
J^aasr
J^ U
in the
Muhaamriad
as
"by
article in
activity the
English
reward
is
thus,
obtained,
SYNTAX OF SUBSTANTIVES.
208
not by slotlifuhiess;"
P
regioiiH, etc.
"'Iridt;"
as
it is
OX
"
<us'i
J? X"
wisdom
"
"Syria," or
fl&
j> J?
names of
OX
sciences, arts
S
Ijs
government;" jl
*S|
"
;" LijlsH
Damascus."
SYNTAX OF SUBSTANTIVES,
Of
Nominative Case,
the
The nominative
252.
case
is
ample.,
hoavonft
J*$\
Mm
(is)
G
tho earth;
79
whatever
XO
CC
//
modem
mode
to
i.e.
in our
(or, as to
(IB)
^^^ ^^j
rntah
God
4]^ literally,
**
in the
is
w>,
9
among you/
belongs whatever
oartli," is
cpt^ll
rjtf.
God,) to
"To God
is
IB called
of construction
among you,"
is
This
is "by
no means rare
"Auld
EoWnGray:"
*<
My bwui
it
mid
a.
Wo
it
nay,
^\^ ^\
is
I look'd for
Jamie back
it wan a wrack,"
;
fillip
verb
fr
eatirely omittod,
tiomteativo
CMC
when
""Mel
**
its
is
is
seldom used
learned;"
1
J^
Here we
4)1
"God
(is)
In
mmj
instances
209
SYNTAX OP SUBSTANTIVES.
make
it is
optional to
thus
we may say^Sl
"
or
<dil
Muhammad
or jJLir* lllj
When
that the
by the
stricted
17
which we may
God
(is)
&*?*
our prophet."
Genitive Case.
which
first,
(is)
the
Of
253.
"
<d!1^-^
is
is
called
&&\.
^
The
first
word
*""*
is
governed;'
as
*.
alii
is called
"the wisdom
<_JuuJ1 or
^\
of Grod;"
is
' ?*"
the
^^^ cl?l^
s-
quently the
of sleep,"
effect of
"much
i.e.
i.e.
periences,"
noun j
"the
Such
is
totality,"
uniformly the
which answers
our
"*
^
is
governed
J^
(jwUSl
"length of ex-
J^t
c-^lasSl
"long experience."
construction of the
to
sleep;"
"
all
$^L J
"everything;"
men."
men?"
5U*1
>1
"what woman?"
gation
"
for example,
<Lc
iX
* s
s's
a
for
wordjlc signifying
j^lir^i
difference,"
<,??<.'
s^s'tt
increate;"
fy^
what reason?"
"
s^
Juiw
*
hence "ne**~*
SYNTAX
HlO
state of
Tlio
1).
01?
When
tilings/
as
'
i-ij**
IcL
an adjective the
is
latter is
its signification
5
instead of
c^UU
x
xxi'zL
as
^-^
^
ex-
quick at calculation/
'
TJ3
sometimes restricted in
"
c-^lU
8UBSTAMIVES.
t^UUH
jj^i
x
"
violent in
Of
254
We
stated
Accusative Case.
the
may
ease*
in this
is
language
frequently
used adverbially in instances whore the Latin would employ tiio aTblttiivo, or tlio accusative with a preposition;
"
^ perished of hunger/ mortnm est
thus, l^jpf*
^^
oJU
5
/
ticiple
Ccljft
\yy*
An
with
accuBative
adjective or par-
termination
frequently
cor-
^^
<a>
x yc^o
^9
The
accu-
as C? jtf iSjlJ
ermliendimi*
Mm
pur
et simple^ expresses
guo^ "by
reason of,"
c^i "Isaac
wif.li
Tftsnoet to
Ms
mind, or
"
cliSDOsitioB,"
i.e.
he
SYNTAX OE SUBSTANTIVES.
power;"
The
Sj^
*j\??^
"God
^\
"and
^9
stones, or
a.
Lk
#yj? *xAl^
yw
jji
well disposed;'
211
is
great
'
is
9?<J$
to)
stones), as to hardness.
(as
4 s o ?
^Gi o
O-GJ,^
there
5-
a variety of food
is
9? $
--
<~s
d\ ^^\
t^jiUs^
in xxi. 3
"
99&
* ' o
<d^l
Ulxs^
J^j <^
where
;"
u^i
they
may
turn
&&
N.B.
"+&J&J.
which
is
equivalent to
So
various."
it
^^
is
%*$
equivalent to
Eoman numerals
as above, the
is
"
S>
Arabic
is
expressed
"although," "even
&
./
UU-
"
-"
CS^o
^1
by the
preterite preceded
by the conjunction
-Ui3
Jua UU-
^ J^iL
jU!l
Jfamasa:
"verily, I will
wash away dishonour from me, even if the decree of God should
draw upon me whatever it may draw;" where \^[^ (when it first
s
occurs)
s
o^
iL*^~
ji
<s*
is
.#
equivalent to c r
s
U^Js
s s
^U
&
U5l
"""
C^V
J^
9s
y$
<*s
^0^
^s
^|yb
s s
JU
him on
&<*
L&
to
it,
s-s
t^yb
o ^
whatever
"whoso
it
may
c.
is
SYNTAX OF SUBSTANTIVES.
212
Kur,an ?
ii.
^- U^
842: ^^Jb^M
(t
So
^#
M^
<JUbJl
^y
this is
^l^w*
*3 uJ33
we have
^^1
nee <dM
the following
^ "and
lyl^
if
there
sisters)
where we
;"
^ ^/
this is
an ordinance
in Apposition.
255*
way
in
case,
Wlicn OHO
Biibstantivo IB subjoined to
oocxi
xxiv.
35
ijajj
oil
when
^C
S^c^
is)
a
oJjJ
it
L/^^
and
So
poison."
(the lamp)
is
The same
The same
>C
in
another by
first:
"
literally,
thus,
^^o
^Lu ^Ju&}\
"I
??
1 ate the cake, the half of it
^^
ciJ^\
by way
??
as Ji5
eorroboration
confirmation^ or
(Suf/), Buch
a
"the eye" or "ossenoo,"
"the souP or self, ?? and
of
haying subjoined
to
them the
to the
SYNTAX OF SUBSTANTIVES.
md
213
both dual
]he following
fC-r
rr
i/
\^ju
and
"I saw
\J
5.
which may
thyself,"
'*"
the
^e may
also
"
'
ci^li-
s-^J
$j "I saw
J**}\
The words Jj
o princes themselves."
c'^V'T
11
l^
also
for example,
be expressed
'
or
'
?$*
as <d
n general;"
<-
t--
^ttte
(jV?' *^r
S>S
<">*?
'
the
army
O^<5^
,ribe
came
Xt*"10
w^
;"
t,
'the whole
army came,"
^
the words
l$l
^^ "
cps l>-
all
SS
women;" <x*U
of them
* CXO-<J
JM?
I passed
or
U^
To
<^V,J;
"I saw
<u^Uj
by both thy
the
in-
brothers;'
clC^Xl
IsiG
thus,
<->]/*
sisters."
99
5.
z\&~
S(j
M ^
;"
lal^
Ue^
x
the
literally,
the whole
fern,
^,
all
-^^ '
passed by
Umar;"
x-0>0
aiLJil
xx
cuJX "I
is
"
j^ *LJ b
stances
O'Sr'
*$ c^Jj
+$
a
x-C/^0^0
so
it ;"
word 3^ thus
words
x-
-*
^s>\
fern.
214
&?
?<* -"VC-iO
<S35U!
The word
^ras
^Jisf-1
be sub-
applied
s-
'*
'^f^r\ * $i
thus,
may
*^u>-
fern,
^y^>~\
*xs*"*
and
all
is
or feminine.
f
The word
or
x*
**"
--*>- 1
applied as above
j2l,
tr^sfU
*Ud,
and
jiUs^;
f;
fern,
and
and
<g\,
whose
their plurals
and
u, ju^ab,
same
femiriiQ.es are
masc.
xj2
9 xi?
The
last throe
in combination; except
J^iidijf,
and
j^*c>-|
x o^
^^ t^W
it
is
"<*
^
"~
^f
impossible to translate
SYNTAX OF THE
Of
ihe
NTT ME HALS,
Cardinal Numbers*
69) that
tlio
and
verbatim.
respectively, *Uej,
^^1,
time in addition to
"
by one
s.
be accompanied
all
viz;,:
may
cardinal
tliat
numborw from
when
tlioy refer
"
throe sons;"
be of the masculine form; thus, <3i5 ^^4
"
As adjocfcivos they are placed
fiye daughters."
tijlw
after the noun to which they belong, and agree with "the
to
J^
case.
215
^f
<&*.
As
"five months."
thus,
^\
noun thus
The number
j^-T and
o^VT
feminine.
The
object
we shewed,
one, as
numbered
is
form of each
expressed
is
uz~3\
may
also
\^>\ "one
men;" *LJ^
The forms
j^J
tives; thus,
of the
3^\J
"
f^
thus,
Jls^JM
women;"
They
a*J "one
of the
U U^
(or bays);"
"one
'
^
^
*&&
^.uM Sx&b
degree."
agreeing in
still
j^tj J^
x*t*\j
&
cities."
of them."
^i^-V^ i>-ji
"
"one
adjectives,
one object;"
no one (masc -)
(fern.)."
S
IfcJ^Lt
*j
the words
by
is
69,
They
O*0
"one"
or
U^\
'
"the other
^^ Ij^J \jV
sellors,
b.
^VJJ^I
ft
When
half."
distribution
iX^-ljSl
or
^P
-Ox-
uJ^zJl
repeated
individuality
to the coun-
is sufficiently
represented
^1^5
^
o
"two
degrees."
thus,
^131,, fern.
216
perliaps
it
0~0
j^
e^fjy ^ur^
where the numeral
257.
"
^ \& o^
^\
is
for
example
apparently superfluous.
The numerals 11
to
99,
"both,
govern the
inclusive,
C^ y
nine sheep."
uj*^i>
/>
LU
J^
^U
o>
a thousand dinars;"
"ninety-
^u^
'*
men;
""
?J
a hundred
so
j&o
"X
cjili
"*
uJSljA^ j^|
eleven thousand
thus,
Ctlfi
and-oiglity
years);
If a
dinars."
AJHJ
j^USj
a
eighty-three years" (literally, three-
\j&$
number
&$*)
&W
"
two-and-twcnty
+rs
tween the Hljra and the Beluge (there elapsed) 3,974 years."
In instances of this kind, however, the substantive may be
repeated after each class of the numerals; as follows,
viz.,
is
2 IT
a.
SO^
it is
VX~
^Lj
literally,
thus,
u^
j "the
amount of
it
(is) this,
9,584,264 dinars/'
five
hundred of
thousands, and four-and-eighty thousand, and two hundred, and fourand-sixty dinars."
b.
the objects
Jj^J uJST
from 11
and the
to
dinars."
or
uliil
^ Jig
When
the
20,000
number
thus,
objects
JtJ
is
genitive singular
When
33
"
thus,
th
Ibs. ;"
^\
^%
"
*fa 1^]
11,000
and the
f.
? ss
objects
"
300,000 dinars.
258.
inclusive (
objects
s
cardinal
numbered, as
s
may be
s
.,-',."
fishes,
to ten,
may be employed
"
case, as above;
lo ? it
was
full of large
218
When
259.
number out
a numeral
is
denote a certain
to
employed
it
is
for
means
example
Jail
^f*
kj&jiT
"
S!L
of the preposition
"
^ &Z3
"from"
or
"out
of;'
93
;
three birds"
i.e.
genus bird," It is
in such instances, agrees in gender with the objects num.?/'"
XXO^c,
culino;
is masculine
*XO*0 ^
9 '*
kJi
dl$
^1
<3ilS
"three sheep;"
is
'
three
ducks;"
where
mas-
LL?HS
is
~s
feminine, because
the gender
is
&
is
added immediately
an epithet indicating
If
feminine.
"
*xt-O ^
"S.
A&\
thus,
,S
^\j\ CD^J
?? j'xx^
^ j/j
Uj
"three
When
thus,
ff
<*>
uJ*oJ
<&**?
-Sv^x
<5515
arithmetic, are
"
three
is
the
it,
latter agrees in
?^% 9s s s
^^
iJU) ^J
as
$U1
both
to
from
nix
inclusive;
ton,
% $e\
extending
/-
&i
to
me
(belong) eight
lavs and
If
we
-*
**
iW ^UJ
slaves/*
If the objects
numbered be under
to
six,
When
b.
the
219
ten
apply
to
rational
^jV
me
fifteen
belong
If the numerals
apply to irrational beings they take the gender of the nearest sub&' 's
stantive
thus,
&Uj
**
[fifteen]
-&S
"
<L^^- ^5xxc
^.^LC
there are in
[fifteen]
X XX OX
L*^ ^b ^L&
transposition,
and
XX
xx x xx
x x
L*s>-
he-camels.
If,
"
^
^5^5^
(juu^i.
k ave
Xx
OX
X-'O
^U
<SUj J^.^-
XJ&.A
^j U,
X O X
etc.,
"
u^>. L.?^
"
is,
we
expression
singular
what
numerals
3'
if in this last
So cpCCU-
singular.
is
feminine in the
"three baths,"
<8ib
"
a year/'
example
she-camels
is
by
260.
*Ud
fifteen
or,
my posses-
she-camels ;"
creatures) that
n
feminine.
^j
j-Tjt
rv
is
suppressed;
^^ ^
wait on four
I
"
Xf^>
as
(feet)," Jjjfy
^
^^ ^^y
the joame of
the following
So also t-jUsf
when
^JU^
"a
foot,"
4^^ x Ox
^y^
being
xf
t/^ ^;
5
^1
220
5
where
devoured/
j^
is
??
feminine, the word "kino
being
understood.
a.
When
such as
the objects
may
apply
according to the
x"
"a
Psss
V,xv
For example,
objects.
<
"
asff&\ <SAj
&
JjJU is
whether the
objects
"throe persons" or
males,
nature,
l>e
"
male or female,
lu like manner
CI
O^
num-
"and
bf s
thus,^^
had
**
P $
^Ucl^
^^^
used with
Ox
s ss
^\ ^ ^ \J^ (^
<&$,
whom
ss
ijii
1 foared
*.
two (young)
oxx
Here we
ss
djilo
ff,
annexed;
^\
see that
c^U
fern.
^y^
word
is qualified
by the
to females.
andJUt* each of which is applicable only
Sometimes, however, fegard is had more to the signification of the
thus the
objects immbnrod than to their strict grammatical gender;
epithets ^C^lS'
X"
u&\
^ij
b.
<'-
*>S
J3HS
If the
name
of the objects
its'place
<LwJv sU-
"he who
221
shall receive (as his reward) ten (times) the equivalent thereof."
the numeral
the latter
^Lc
is
feminine, although
mere
considered as a
is
J\L1
is
Here
masculine; because
a^&-)
understood.
The
261.
cardinal
numbers may be
numeral
is
j&LM Jjuw
laid
restricted
251.
down,
six."
2.
stood,
known;
by the article
1. "When the
yb ^j*$\
"and
^frj*
3.
When
thus,
(number)
under-
is
the numeral
is
employed in
~&
"the
of
trio
men,"
Occasionally, however,
as
?^
^.*+o
a^*Ul
or
the numeral
of the objects
numbered
s-
aiXll\
jwlfii
name
men"
the three
the law."
a.
name
When
same
we already remarked,
govern the
"may
s
257,
be pre-
XEC-'
Ufc^^&x j^DH
or
222
"$
"
'the eleven
"
i\A*H
(wJUl
*
when
elusive),
the article
dirhams;" also
5.
and
^otS^o ^xc33
With regard
if
x*
"
thus,
1u
<Lsr
f O
*&^\ L^T
to numerals consisting of a
-*O
x-
it is
so
optional to prefix
name
of the objects
P**"***"
OX
last,
so also,
Of
word immediately
the
J?
tlie
all
C5tO*0
is
In such
employed,
following.
and up to the
gender, ntimbor, and case with the
adjectives,
twentieth," and
Ox
Ordinal Numbers.
by
OX
xX
USUJ1
are expressed
<*J&\
tlio
takes
for
examples as the
it
hundred or a thousand,
xx
262,
in-
"
99 (both
or
<f
^/k*H
X C w *o
to
ss O Ox
luiSI
OX
numbered;
.c
ss o s
&U
From 20
#s '
We
stated,
73, that
The
gender, as tliey are indeclinable.
ordinals may, or may not, be restricted by the article; as
o*^
*
jptflaso-o
to bo of the
"(&
When,
common
"the
first
year;" J^l
"tho
first
climate."
j^iS!
223
connected with
tlie
by means
regimen, but
U
3
of the preposition
or
^3
Babi n-l-awwal
by the
When not
accompanied
article,
for
W UU,^
thus,
^-X-fa
5J
^.U
m\
tf.
#.j&\
&\A\
example
OXX X-
^ fa "He
after
x-
**
""x-
a.
An
ordinal
clusive) is often
in.
X 0-O
its
correspondirig
OX
^\ ^U c^ol
cardinal; thus,
"then
art a
"
"
j^
so
thou art one of the two ;
l^h^
"
one of the ten/'
tenth of the ten," i.e.
is,
or
(fern.)
j& S^U
"
com-
to
it is
them ;
in which case
noun
which reference
to
or (fern.)
is
made;
xxOx
xC-0
j\5
We may
x o
(fern,)
xx
thus,
"
(^\ "thou
the decades),
art
j&&
^\
""
^IS c^>l
or
S^^*
22 J
"
""
lie is
a thirteenth/'
There
/>.
mode
another
is
own
its
^\
thus,
by unity;
yL&LLJlS 1&
i.e.
d-JU y*
This rule holds with regard to the ordinals from the third to the
ninth (both inclusive); which in fact are viewed by
grammarians
as the present participles of the active verbs <JLJj
"ho made
may
thus,
hence they
ISU
^LjVj
y&
"ho makes
the
compound
may
When
he made three
above;
"
\IQ
ordinals
{S
fourths
into four."
to the nineteenth
(both inclusive) are thus employed, the units only are declinable,
XX s
xG-Ox-X-X
y*#
^\ jJLz
*
-*
ciJlj
xxL
x?
"
y&
he adds a thirteenth
*-vO,*C ''X
X*
<5JJj
"
she," etc.
xxv
^jUs.}
ajSj
twentioth."
sf
*j\j yb or
^y^
The multiples
xx-"x
of ten,
sf
j-^lj
j&
it
viz,,
"he makes a
thus,
ployed as above;
lionce,
wo may
say,
yu
up
is
thus,
four-and-
to 90, are
^Mu$
is
^yux^, em-
Lj ^^-^
"he
"
is
203. la expressing
tlio
year of an
Alex-
etc.,
225
num-
bers as
we
state of
with
in gender;
The word
do.
"year"
(fern.)
put in a
is
^Vx-
it
with
article as
The numerals,
us.
as
we
are
79,
stated,
"
i^Lij J
u
"
then commenced the year (of the
Hijra) 396 literally
On
six,
with us
thus,
x-uco
'-('x'
^L*^ ^J^i
--oo
<_U1
employed precisely as
>->
<_<U
^
3~^>^"-o
<L j\J <LJ
1
Alexander. 53
As they reckon by
mences at sunset, as
lieve, till lately,
civil
the evening
when
the
new moon
(ljk\
22G
etc.
Arabian
Thus,
the
first
or
c^^j
<J
(viz.,
month Eajab,
of the
"
on the
JJ*!
OXX
pressed,
blst.
aLU
In
like
"
-^
^^
up
The
night)
"
cjW
would be
cfjlaoJl,
"
*"
<f-
expressed *_x>y
nights of Eajab
still
**-**>-
^ ^^ JU
word
>?
;'
<3J
The
fifteenth
expressed
to the
is
is
expressed
day
is called
O-H
v^rj
XOX
^A*
remaining;
From
expressed,
is
X /"CX
XX O X
5'
is
this rule
twentieth day
and
in the singular,
is
ui^Jw (<EU)
still
e-?iil
S
S
"
i?x x
number
C x X
then,
,vT X
ex-
is
55
??
or "middle;
denoting "half
^
"^*
expressed
or 1^4-j
day
^
"
first
AVOX
word ^lU
thus,
JJ
S s
if supplie^l
or
is
xx
holds,
-QjJ
u.^
^
&''<?>"
??
which
s> jf
<5J
"two
x y
is
literally,
exr
*"
t^Jcd-
xx x
first
,f
<
haying elapsed,"xx
stood,
expressed
night of Eajab,"
first
x-^ x
thus, L^s^y
In
is
j-j^S, literally,
and
fourteen
up
to
JU
is
is
expressed
^^j
pressed,
c-^j
?
of Eajab
3>
^
^
and
if
<3J
&
remaining."
l~jb
is
may be
x x
^r^rj cr*
CXX X
x x
**
or
s x
*_
^-^
on
e l as*
^ ay
thus ex-
is
on the
last night
is
^-X.
x-
or finally,
or ^^>-j
^JUJj!
-^
C. x
^
""
"
"
^-
".
w*^ f
^5
still
"one night
^f& -^
the thirtieth
Finally,
4w
expressed c^>^
-^
C
^
Ox
L^P-J
x-
ing
The twenty-eighth
still
^X X
of Eajab remaining."
XX O
XOX
227
'
0^- *^ e
*x
^a
twelye hours
of sunlight) of
Eajab."
a.
table
month
instead of twenty-nine.
all
sist
Mnhammadan
final short
it is
The months
countries,
names
[the
vowel.
1.
30 days.
2.
29,
3.
30
4.
29
*
5.
30
6.
29
in
228
It is needless to
is
expressed as follows
except the
last,
in
month
still
^ (^Jj
^Ux
remaining
JlSLc
cJb!
;"
we above
which, as
AUjwHwM
that, as a
"
is
employed
estimable "book."
in
its
L&s
If,
by being in a
signification
having the
article prefixed or a
Ox
G-*O
"
by
0*0
lima, *Ai!
restricted
"be
"an
of regimen, or
state
pronoun
<L>ls
^^ LJc
the estimable book of Moses ;" **&\ <~>&M "the great (or
u
The same
book. ??
estimable) book;" i-JoS &$*, his estimable
\
"Abraham
**$\
We may further observe that when the substantive
definite in their
the faithful"
is
own nature;
not restricted In
thus,
its signification,
;
thus,
j^.
*
^i\
^^ ^
^
JbtJI
"
I have read in
Tho
case
adjective, or epithet agrees in
with
its
sub-
229
stantive;
as,
J^UM
*>j&\
J\*n
^p
<$
"I passed by
This agreement,
is
however,
when
Zaid,
the substantive
is
say, <J^lS
L^3
J2$\
^ cj^.
we may employ
word L5 J^ "I mean,"
or finally
understood..
it
may be put
in the accusative.
An
267.
its
whether
it
be masculine or feminine.
If,
&
"
sons,"
i.e.
?S
^O-O f
-"
a^C*
S^ ty\
^
"many
O-O*
"Men
examples
iii
12
women, and
children,
and
silver,
J^
is
though singular,
is
em-
consequently equivalent to
230
however,
it
according
substantive plural masculine^ not
cbl^U
thus,
ened swords
The
we have
cl^ail XW
also
S^lj
destructive lions
cblls?Vj
a.
may
??
days enumerated.
just detailed,
no means
rare*
is
the
more usual
11
*Mx&
Ss&
is
by
thus, Kur,an,
There
is this
employed
collective
noun
^gg "much"
or
tribe*"
many
an,
iii,
146
j^ ^J;
"*3
t,
141; ^yjjWI
iii.
a singular form,
is
^t
^3
J^J
^ ffl
myriads
(of
men)?"
(viz,
and women*"
We
Also
Iv.
Adam and
1:
lUj
often
\^
il^
U^
(s
how
many
^5j "and
may, however,
231
by
is,
a sub-
adjectives, each of
individuals,
number;
thus, tte^j
it refers
but
it
0^ u^^ (J u^ "" ^
a(^ *
wo companions,
a wise, and a foolish ;" Lli^J D^C? *>/ *Ub ^^ tlfj^ u^*? J&
a
a certain ting had three wazirs, (one) liberal, (one) stingy,
^
and
(one)
elliptical
extravagant."
mode
however,
This,
merely an
is
above sentences,
if
expressed in
fall,
would be
as follows
"
companions,
one of them wise, the other foolish ;"
j\4- *4^^!J
or it
"
^^ ^r^^
i^A^r^ (J
and a
<1>^
foolish
might read
^d
com-
companion."
more singular nouns, all of which are in the same case and
of the same gender, the attribute will be put in the dual or
plural, according to the number of persons referred to ; and
it
J$\&\
\**j <JLwl(j
$&
latter in
kLJik
"I have
ttcus,
Jf,
liowevar, the
and
it is
XI
cumstances ; thus
we may say,
dml
232
or
we may
t'
L^
^^U-H
X
J^ L^-,^
AJJ
nr
<-M
u-^K.
In the
"
first
is
\t
say 3
"they
is,
^\
they both,"
"I mean"
"I
or
signify/' is
understood.
The verbal
270.
^U and
of the measures
adjectives
ill-xl^ are of
common
tho
i
,
"a most
^j
wearied man;"
U^
"a
very
few of
^^
fern, ii'li^;
^X^
"
SjiS
^j
"
poor? fom.
morcifuy fom*
lx>J
when
aj^;
-SL^-j
hostile," fern.
is
66
ii.
3?
unto
also
IxvL 8
God with
sure Ik&i
**@
iL^J %$ $\
sincere repentance."
when
****'
*5j)
,J\
\j>
(that
the
"turn yourselves
woman
till
to
ground
common
had boon)
by a wounded maiden."
If,
"
53
slain;
-O
fpf*
^^ <^p
I saw
l passed
233
an adjective of
the foregoing
-rr
J.T.
>;?
thus, Kurgan, v. 4
"it
fr
A'
*M!I <d*SJj
' 1*7?"
><$-
4*^^ f3
\?
'"'<-*n
<&~*J
>X"
AJua
"
'-
c^p-
is
itself,
been
(partially)
s^
in
masculine form
vastating wind."
termination
is
Sf
praiseworthy quality," or
quality deserving
of censure."
i
is
mate object;
"
44^
thus,
*5lp "your
wonders" or
"
evils,"
wonderful things;;
<L\Q&\ "the
as in the Eur,an, ii
59
3^ j
quently,
or
IsAi
its,
"and he (who) hath done a good deed." Frewhen the substantive is thus omitted, the adjective,
Iv.
56: <-J^aH
u
cjVj^l5
T#J
ia these
234
*s
So yL2l
understood.
who
(of one
(arrows)
^\ ^ ^ {JL ^^
he shoots
is)
272.
and retaining
its
"two
J^j
X
^Jl
"just men,"
JJj
thus,
asleep,"
just
men;"
The
when
sentence
own
gender; as
J^
where
&&*
&jj* "I
^^
also
the substantive
^ ^L
D4y
P a ^sed by a
l iavo
l^Sj
and
)j^ ^J^rj
'
SS;
man
(who)
is
So
speech familiar
which
offence accom-
man;
??
"a
Hi 181 wo have
&j cSi^
a just
"sleeping,"
fi
Again, Kur,fwi,
"
otherwise indeterminate;
is
4^0!
panied"
substantive in case,
be a verb or clause of a
equivalent to
is
noun remains
so in the plural,
may
epithet
its
not unfre-
example,
in which
just;"
^jjlfi
for
is
another example
"
ufy^
If they have
have been falsely accused, (men who) came with proofs (of
So in the following expression:
their divine mission)*"
^^
for
jL^J e-^5
atll
firgt
built
men*"
a.
sentences as
tlio
foregoing;
is
for example,
is
inde-
235
equivalent to
is
example:
Jdl*n cjXfll
"
^^ L/$\ cjO^
nominative of
When
251.
On
the king
the relative
who is just;"
thus,
equivalent to
its
when
we then employ
JQ1
-"
>
f ?t
affixed
(sS
"
with
optionally suppressed
when
^
"
And
last
word \$*\
5, referring to
is
is
quite
thus
5-
estranged them
in love."
"
it
"
(for *jj
W)
no ambiguity or
obscurity.
273.
When
an adjective
is
man
etc.
first place,
and the
there
came
to
me
it
restrictive
noun or complement
iO^O ^
a
"
In the
is
as in the phrases
it,
"
by
"
.S.0X
*^x
as ^Ji\
in which expression
we may
"
also
I passed
say xjA
by a man
^>*.
Again,
NOUNS WITH
CTNTA.X OF
236
where wo might
may
Tbc
follows^
fair of
te~}\
ance ;
also say
&-j ^J.
state of
put In a
'ADJECTIVES,
me
to
as
man
^^
?)
where we may
Thirdly, the
<.)***
its nunation^
is
thus,
U>4
*
\JH
^-
"
following example
\#>-J
^^^
J>^j
c^pi
"
1 passed "by a
man
In
fair as to
mode
this third
fail to rceogiilHo
article
X O X"*
X X
*&$]
^^>
"Os
Latin poets have, not unfroq[uontly, imitated; thus,
n "miloH fractus m,eml)ra >? etc.
Of
Iiumeresque d<K> hailirt
course the reader would consider a translation of these phrases
?
m an affront.
274* la the three kind** of censtruction just described, the
adjective
may
or
preceding mil^tuntivc
ment rimy
U!HO
dcfluilo, 1
by
may
l>o
in definite
definite
article,
according as
or indefinite*
or indefinite.
its
by an
additional
affixed pronoun;
complement having that article; 8 by an
and 4 by an additional complomont haying an affixed *,proof
It follow* an a cotisccpoaco that we have a variety
different eonstruetioiiH,
COISTCOBD
from
OF ADJECTIVES, ETC.
237
De
met with
more esteemed Arabian authors.
1st
Classical constructions
x x
A man
ma3a
Zaid
of fair countenance.
w^ ose
who
is
238
*1\
X
9 G
^*.^'
XGO
GW3 X
x o x
$.
AO<
^^W-WST
"^
/ x xg-o
sox
is fair
of countenance.
&
^\
X
t>
j,Go
G x
X x'V'O
S"
tw"*'
^JJ
SadConstructions not
theless, are to
T
3t
Jo
of,
Zaid
fair
of countenance,
t*>
M^*>- J^TJ
x
9 o
be approved
be met with*
to-.
*AwJ
J SjJ^^
cJl
to
A man wliose
X xV*o A Ox
ouj
is fair
of countenance,
x x
t|
&^
*cf
"^^ jp_
Gx j>xx
x o x
A man
of fair conntenaBCe,
A man
whose father
vP'x"
x x
1
fif
IIJAWU>.
is
of fair countenance,
239
4th
o x
^-
The
a.
X>
an
countenance.
fair of
adjective even
also receive
"
Zaid the
s xc-o 5-ox
,*xu^sr
affixed
when
pronoun
it
as,
of countenance.
is fair
may
it
the ugly of visage, the strong of head, and the small of it,"
In
for
"
example
"
&>^1
i.e.
this
^cl
l^-j
man
fair of
article, see
countenance
;"
b.
it
must
itself
passed
by a man
fair of
saw a woman
to
me
fair of
two
thus, &>-p
countenance ;"
fair
te?'^
;"
&>-^l
teJL-
ing example
of countenance."
l^J
of countenance."
tive^
maybe
^/^
If,
-ii/*
"
l*j*\
c^yjj
\1^>.
c:
^1>^ J^r^
"
^>-j ^^^r
there
governs
"
;
countenance
men
it
(jt-Ct
came
which
though the
"
J^r^ ^jf*
P 81686 ^ ky a
as for
man whose
example
face is hand-
240
some ;" IJ^J
handsome.'
examples
^^
handsome
;"
as in the
following
"
&!**>
J^fy
^^ ^jj*
&
L>
"
faces
i^lSJ Jiy
j^jjls
men whose
passed by
&
i>
c.
passed by a
are
is
adjective
"
^- jpy*b ^jj*
J!
!
jective is usually
O
example
*"
*^
saw a
man whose
slave-boys
The
are sick."
^^y
\j*
When
275,
an adjective
sentence
subject
first
is
24,8, l,\
employed as the
it,
is to
"my
a,
tlms,
father
subject,
article,
as
is
*j*
sick;"
wo have
by an
^IkLiJl
J^tr**
"the Sultan
affixed pronoun^ or
we
is sick;
when
observed in
??
J^ ^}
??
The
"Joseph
may be restricted by the
is
*~*~*ji
just soen ?
place the
158,
attribute of a
by
its
own
sick
nature as being
When
it
"he
is," etc.)
241
for a
$f "God, he
yaT^T^
attribute agrees
^^ ^ ^
thus,
"
substantive ; thus,
The
55
the living, the eternal.
is
in gender
its
his parents
believers.'
If
"
i-W^1
^^
thus, I'gd
Jv
tL>^\
do see."
(their) hearts are blind although (their) eyes
Kur,an, Ixxix. 8:
When
shall
be perturbed
"
C^
<
So,
that
OI1
jL^jT j.l J
"
\
do not go out."
may
do the two
men
enter ?"
thus,
JU-JJ 1
^U-
as follows
men
the
is
^f&
him."
b.
When
the attribute,
ought grammatically
j-/
rf
avoidance of decorum
S
nine singular
plural as
is
them
thus,
shall) taste of
^ Com-
meritorious, and
a virtue."
among them
the
word governed
agrees with the
we have just
stated above.
J^\j&
broken
31
212
(he
Of
Decrees of Comparison.
211 we enumerated
270* In
tlio
of
verbal adjectives.
superlative degrees
we
of the measure
and ^JSJ
noun
prefixed to a
observed in
81
in a atato of regimen
may
When
&j!\
Jj^yl
"he
is
*'
she
is
a very excellent
*'
woman
^
a most excellent
man
;"
Tbe
in a state
$f
or used in an abso-
These
Jl^v
;"
P^
JsfJ
^*
r^
thus,
3^1
1&
great men,"
is,
when
it
has the
article or
an
measure of
tlio
may be
^ w^D
the
"aho
tlio
fi
following
noun both
in gender
and in number;
woman;"
$\
how-
is
a most excellent
'
as in the
excellent
*
article prefixed^
DEG-KEES OF COMPARISON.
is
it
placed absolutely,
243
number with
it
refers;
^ An
J^Jl IsX
<u^j
u^
^ 3*r "He
become most
is
supreme."
insignificant
Again, ^tSt
as
adjective,
and in
like
measure
last
they two
ix.
The
has caused
may be
either
of the
may be
j*I,
see
"When the
215.
neither accompanied
is
of the regular
by the
article,
example
JoS
3.
s>
LXL
S'^'BQ
thou;"
is
"
"t-
^fii
<^J
iL^l jV^I
^^
followed
is
are
jfSil &*^-\
SS
is
for
equivalent to our "than;"
7
is
Ox-
2*11
than he;'
is
^ which^
^ ll
j
it
"we
5
God
example,
e^Ul*.?, or irregular, as
o~o
particle
40
comparative adjective
by the
ll&
"
lib
u U/u^
50-0
^iciM
QiM
thus,
murder;"
Ahmad
^
is
more
^1^1
^U
than
trutfcfal
-ng
HJ\ fj^
"
there
vile pliant."
word
or is accompanied
superlative
degree;
by the
tjius,
artiole, it
^^$1 U^
God
is
the
244
Gx-O-O
ji\
35
yj
jjj\
"God
is
most
groat"
278. "When the comparative adjective
is
J^\
must
"be
J^j
Q\ ^
J^
Ui
"When
by
Jjl
<jwUl
y*>
he
is
is
little
of comparison
is
man."
t/uoad
same
u complement, the
men,
Or
yb "lie is
noun which
iir*Uv
followed by an
xr
*"
^<*0
as jJi'\ ciUl
f^\
*
is
^ "than which
<*~*^a\
&L+
LLJJ^J
the fruit of
tlu%
^ does not
of the
Jj
JiaU
two art
^
\*J-*O
L5L^JbjT;
compared u
as 7^c
restrictive or
JL
o%
^1
jjji
"Zaid
in
more abundant
m wealth than
Js^t
and J&.\*
\*%
^^
x o*
u?^?
XCi^l and
If the noun which con-
DEGREES OF COMPARISON.
stitutes the subject of
it
&U ^1^1
ing example:
whose father
#y*l
as in the follow-
passed
by a man
(is)
ought we to say
245
'&*
&y\
c/*, though
^^-\ J^-y
"***'
it is
quite
$.
correct to say, as
we
formerly stated,
man whose
passed by a
*\
be correct to say
man whose
father
thus
made
When
more
"
of,
c/J^
I passed
by a
as in this last
When,
than he
is."
affirmative,
use
father is fair,
is
than he. 57
55
^^ ji^ ^j^
*sL*
is fairer
is
^^
father is handsome.
it
x\
ox
j^j jj-^
differ
VST*
^^
,<,
'
Jjs^l a^c
man
"*?/"
' <v-
i"
UT
I have not
in
^,
preposition
c,x
<^
^U
cr^
^
,
we may
for the
^s?
^
.
*,
^^s^ Jsr
J^-x
^/^sr; M>-J
in the eye
it
is
when
derived from transitive verbs, never have the noun which they
directly govern
i"
"the
tnio
^^
^iJt
rf.
believer
*<J
*O
c"^
fndli
its
Hum
''
*il
lg(
lo
j&
lm
than you."
than
is
willi
more beloved
"
or "to
recognise
m<uns
of
th<^
preposition
more*, ctonvorsant
ifn
ohjoct
with the
any other
by means
(///,
Bearchful) of
i^
IB
and moat
and very
far r<unov(d
ftirthcr ol>sorv(
d
Si
than
thaii
thus,
and very
from crime,
may bo somewhat
nio
cnuiloutf of
28 L W<* may
elliptical
1
of
scon in tho
following example:
mon* studious
is
^*>[f
himself-"
*
comparative adjective
know,"
l>y
J^
may bo
tlw proposition J; as
/
"I am
coiuicHjfcMl
IB
it
Higiiificatioi^
believer
liirn."
Ul
**-ir^
WliHi
you."
tril
<*omplomcni
'^ J^V
thus,
<^;
^ 1C
combined with
God more
loveth
f
*.
^ L^
J[;
*Jb'
llius,
^ ,2*
thuH.
;
*
"
'
1"
my
Sr
'
V*j\*
(am) of him;"
~)i\
</
m wowmtnilar
<jwJS\
to tho buffalo
"ho
^
^^
where
)J>
uecennity
&
in
more needful
for
^j^lJ
of
^&j^
U
"
jij
aad
GOVERNMENT OF NOUNS.
*L
is for
extend*
still
"
^Xl5
farther,
*
tj
&**
(J*-
than
its
^ ^^^ *^
The
resemblance."
the
in
as
247
example
^**
may
already given:
"*-
\Jt
ellipsis
I have not
man
^L ^
We
may even
say here
Government of Nouns,
282.
put
first,
and
the
first
place,
;
it
thus,
or
c-^j
cl?l^?
respectively, as Joj
cl?\^
Secondly, if
plural masculine,
as joj l7l^
250
stated,
is
simple vowels
we
in the
it
drops
Zaid's
"
^l^
merely the
a book,"
its final
In
when
cSlix^,
it
is
in
be a dual, or a regular
syllable
or
Thirdly,
if
Jj
68)
the govern-
ing word be a
an affixed
some farther
when we come
a.
An
when
worf governed
pronoun, then the govemiag word undergoes
modifications, which we shall notice hereafter
Lastly,
th.e
adjective, or a participle
-48
by a complement,
is
preceding examples;
J^. ^>J
^LjH
The
be definite
arriving at
flic
BtcKlfant in
arc*
Ka'ba."
indefinite
XG-O
*)
though
"
jJU ^oJ& a
its
complement
If the antecedent or
subject
is to
be made
it
definite,
Urns, Kur,an, v. 96
of face;"
fair
(lit.
employed remains
adjective thus
man
"
^^
prayer;"
t,
;"
<k>-jS
^j
'*r' &,
"*
who
^1^
countonanco."
b.
The
in
prefixed
tlnw, j-^t
is
mO
.J\
(jwU\
x
r
what
IKJ
arc the
l)OKt imtioii
***"
*J *'
XCiJ C/A!]
**
^^
cl^l
283*
him;"
*
^J] ^*y
Wo
forbidden;"
to
xiSS
j>\& J^\
"do not
among mankind f
so likewise,
*"*"
J}
culj J^l
*'
y;t
worship God)
is
that (which
Bamo
&
(jwU15
mankind (wherein
is
serves to
it
5,
mankind
not unfrequently
qualify
used adjcctively
or notin
a<Ijcctiv(i
is) at
when two
Mecca,"
substantives
(or wallet),"
moans jjj
x
xt,o
so
^
^w-^t
'"O
u
;
^0
(J^\ ^J
"Zaid nicknamod
a oJ^"**9
f4^!1
tho
}*
is
X-10-M3
,^\
for"
/X ^
X5u
249
GOVERNMENT OF NOUNS.
"the
the
elliptical
called
by
expression for
When
noun
is
generally put
cLJLtf
jJLs
turn unto
God
The words
rule, for
the house
is
by some
as (jLSJuJt ut-4?-
complement which
$\
^J\ \jj
and
(fern,)
may,
is
number
in the dual,
less elegantly,
to
this
See hereafter,
dual number.
284.
"
UL^J
(or temple)/'
which expression
is
the
the prayer of
"
first
an
is
first
There
285,
c.
are
It is always
stood.
"
"
possessors
expressed after
"
^L
likeness
>;
;
"pos$es$0r ;"
^
exception.^
There
4?
article
fo;
such a^f
the totality ;
?>
250
where Ql
is for
J,j7
"the
U$J>, literally,
Again,
"as to these
ii.
254:
we
apostles,
^^
O-O
^OrtO
x^
-*U^\
J^\
j?c/"'
<jJJ
y^<3J
U\
names
excellent
??
;
where
u $
He
verily,
*&
is for
in-
has most
o**
-Si
*J
Words
^U
which
are
indefinite
is
definite
*
thus
'
i
>j
"
noun u/ remains
affixed pro-
indefinite,
^ ^
and
"timof
when employed
state of
follows
the
j^X*
^ "a day;"
in a vague
and
IX
"an
hour,"
single
^lir^JEi
thus,
from
the
Kur
an,
at the time
vi 119
uL$
jij
Ji53T2
etc.,
"
to
him
vi,
kingdom
73
(on
GOVERNMENT OF NOUNS.
that)
25 1
sounded.'
Tbe
"When
may be put
they
16
when
so also
^fi jU
J~?
rQ^
^ "on
"
or*J
tlie
a* *^e
day
**
me
day/
a.
S x
The words
and
*jj, <!#%
JJ
a night/
cj,
and such
etc,
also be
may
like,
may
say jJbJ
\&&
in the phrase
There are
b.
after
many
,*^^
we may
is
|*j>
also say
indeclinable words
IjJb
lj
whose
(as above),
"
^oW
final
"behind;" Jj$
the right;"
viewed as adverbs*
Whim
"on high;"
U1 "before"
"after;"
left/'
'.'^
are)
sufficient*^
is
like,
Such are
"otter;"
j^3 "above;"
*T]
"to
''
t"
'
&&
*
)
,-^
J>*y
4i
A/^5
^*I
"*
J ^*
and such
j*
generally suppressed*
we
vowel
JJ^ "sufficient;"^
J2
the
jj
tiiii^p as dedSunbl^ or
JJJ
^j^JT^J "To
3Miay
b@
indeclinablo
God belongs
252
command
the
tence, according to
c*
either
by the
own nature,
<xw
^r
(fern.) lsi
by an
article or
affixed
dual,
and
restricted
pronoun, or be
name
thus,
^^J^S
\3|J M-i^jll
""
**
both of these
men and
good and
both of these
*rj
uxlJ
;"
"Verily
the words
liK*
***
UK "We
Ui*l
we
women
'
^ fe-s^J^J,^ J
<
K and
sen-
"
K and
The words
which
;"
set aside
"
Both,
my
by
U&K
and say,
*&j jjj
Sometimes, however,
this
brother and
my
friend find in
me
a support in
rule
their mis-
what
u
Is
liiddon
and
^J^\
J5l<ll\j
pji
"tho knowerof
\^
L^\^\ Jd^
Sometimes
the governing
without
it,
word
is
omitted,
when
\ys
the sense
**
**&
is
obvious
GOVERNMENT OE NOUNS.
253
"^ y
^Sj J>
of
?^
jJli'*
tfJ^C-O
Jf
/?^M fkSH
Muhammad
The
following sentence
X
where we
fire
^^
w"
Kalawun
the son of
^^
"when
arrived/
which sentence,
^r
, ,',
^^^
Muhammad
a.
The
fire
by De Sacy,
i"
viz.
"The
and hospitality."
287.
thus,
the voice,
<* jLUlJ
by God,
of her
^
s
bridle.
7'
verily,
'Qs
Abu
"
own master
^j^
,
3'
$omeifcp&es7 either
by an
"
next sentence^
-.i
^;^4;^e
,'***)
one mi^ht
An exception
^flstto otit
a^i
with a
a/bu^i of langti^e or
by
IB:^-^
af
i"
atifi th
*& regimen;
thus,
254
tlic
Jew;"
l!
U.U
^ cJ^Tf ^J
in war,
brothers,
Mm
of
\'j\
who has no
brother."
SOTAX
OF THE
PKONOUNS.
Personal Pronouns.
288, In a simple sentence the isolated personal
pronouns
fj^jT^^Tji
$O
^
"
Ho
(is)
contentment."
"
noun of the
isolated pronoun,
which
Uiw0
as
111
dfH
last
case, followed
lit.
is
a pro"
1 am.
light of the
affixed
its
by
own
a
to
jit
cent,"
to
"opulence,
<1>)\ y& Ul
"1 am the
^1*1
then expressed by an
is
"i.
pronoun
to be,"
God;" jj'&Tjy
When the
world,"
yjb y*
C&J\ "as
or second person
first
The
fire ;"
li
j^
5R
pronoun
is
am
thy lord."
affixed
"When the
of emphasis?
in the aominativ
ease,
by
its
it is
frequently accompanied,
so toans-
255
PERSONAL PRONOUNS.
*
^ XU
me
beholdest me,
'*
\j\
tf
C,
if
thou
and
"*
offspring;" ?cJxJJ
uJol* Js\
thus, Sl^
^JJ
^\
^x
^ ULM
Uc^ U
"what hath
s
u!
<*
'
prevented
t
'
-0
<x
c.
,-
attendants;"
^ ^\ ^
M
{J
Ul
3^j!^
^^, (I say,)
the miserable."
more emphatic;
thus,
d-^>"
(even)."
I,
IJ1
^\& "if
uLJ!sj~
s
its subject,
&U^
\xxs>-UL
'
LiLJ>
\j\
we
IxjU-
will
what
There
is
different persons
come,
thus,
is on,e
it
defender of
attacks
(fjfeejbc)
made upon
289,
rights
only
is
be of the
tions
^-*
will take
b.
Ul^U
and even of
"
may
I,
or
when
first
or second
the proposition
\J\
the
their reputation/'
We
undergone by
to <iie modifica-
250
We
RolvGB.
Htiidonl
De
all
to
er
Sacy's rulen to that effect (Or. Ar. Tom. l
457).
-
In the firt
of
them-
affixes
where we
length
by the
now
remain, as
place,
we
stated,,
2nd The
of nouns,
affixed
pronoun
to the
government
84 a)
hence, in this instance, the distinction of the three case terminations of the
noun
IB
we
final
change
"a
'^L disappear
"two books/
it
do in our
into cj> ?
and the
;
thus,
^y/with
and
C^?
into
^,
if it
pi.
or
nem. dual
nom.
pi.
^l>^
shot ;"
'$)
gen.
become
"
^>
u^J
5th.
thy sons."
sons,"
if its
Nouns end-
vowel be dawma
to
Ms women."
6th.
^
9
"they assisted;"
"
of masculine
and
final
so,
language.
"his benefit."
J\jf\ft
OWE
on receiving the
&&
benefit;*'
of the duals,
plurals ending
^^
J}
pronoun; as Xi
The
4th.
entirely lost,
^S
' '
"thoyaasistedmo;"
as
s s-
^J"they^eV
PERSONAL PRONOUNS.
257
pL masc, of the
made moyeable by damma* followed by .
*
preterite, the * is
'
S-
inert; as 1SSVJ
them,"
8th.
for the
final radical,
^j& "he
thus,
has
rendered
The
me
for
powerful;"
\j&*
(Kur.
may, in
^
nouns as well as in verbs, either be retained or changed into
9th.
xviii. 94).
as
alif]
J^ "a
boy;"
&
threw;" Jly or
terminating in
when
followed
"
by
290.
The
principal modifications to
of the
of Jcasra
first
is
"upon;"
The
affixes
them-
pronoun
instead
"sias/ Jty&&~
is to
jazm
towards thee."
which the
1.
takes
the
affixed
modified according to
affix
"
thus, tfli&L
10th. In particles
"
"
upon us ;
"he
^j
"
"my
in
sins;" ^UliLc
^ , or
"two
^ inert
slaves,"
final
be joined ends in
^ "in me
;"
258
"
upon,"
two slaves/
"
^L^)
^U
"upon me;"
^iSl "of
of the
Muslims/
flamwsr-that
is,
in long
"
^iLi
the ^
7,
inert or quiescent
affix
sense
y^\
"my
which
friends," for
J^\
person singular
employed in a vocative
Is
then becomes
"
last
lT
so
my
^ in place of ^,
3.
Muslims."
This
when
iljT.
"my
Mmm^
J UT,
^A^
affix
;
Is
used when
such as
also to
and
^.
an accusative
pronoun hero always represents
words
and
when
In like
The
affixed
case.
The
first
person
****
-si*
-as
#*'**
tit
and
^t, ^&, ^, ^,
as,
fathers," for
the
some-
the noun
united ends in
is
when
"
pi.)
is
first
its
^iLli (nom.
thus,
of the
When
my Muslims."
affix, as
This same
(modified
is
^LlC
of
^(l) "of
(modified
two slaves;"
my
3
J$i
so,
and .Jj
for
^zrv
manner ^$ makes
5,
^\> and^x
^1
as Ut
and
* X*
and
U<3
Ui,
4,
The same
^^
^^
The
UK
affixed pro-
their
PEESOKAL PKONOOTS.
Mm"
two;" 4J "in
The
a.
<uU
Mm;"
shoot)
"
affix *
or
"in
sometimes loses
it;" <u^j
259
on them/
its
(or
etc.
takes
jazm
this,
The
unto him."
affixes
JU
becomes
JU
{s
a^J
we
shall give
damma
then the
final
A transitive verb
different
or a verbal noun,
may
have attached
S
S"
s-
"he gave
me
to
it"); so
affixes,
"
may
/^o-*,,
as
5'
gave
i
it to
^j+f*ub\
them two
first
to verbal
>
pf ike I
is
the
gave them
to drink."
made
njoveable
to
them
as
it
w
,
"
(against)
to eat ;"
UU^wL^
is
it is
"
-m^*
a rule,
and that
my affeotion fop
<"*
"you"
by damma and
affix J thus,
The
&^'
O? 9*
L
me
gender or
In such instances,
infinitives
of the affixes
to
differ in
nouns or
first
it
When
two
he gave
^^**&
however,
JlLel
as
to it
affixes, viz.,
we may
^^
,
9?^^
say *%A& and even >^lc
5.
7fl#$fe
pL*\
36,
the letter ^
f
^Jf^>
or
"
is
inserted
289.
260
We
c.
affixes,
many
C|
mode
This
prefixed.
of construction
it
thee to
him/ but
f
^^f\
but
^2^
"
I
Itol^Sc?
c*
"thou
0ave
In like manner
iJac!
me
<$\
fK(
U5
uAn
^ 99( J
hence we must not say ujCgJa^ "
uJ3c^
not sav
;"
It is
"
I
u/U uJcl^
thotightcst
we must
So
me
be)
(to
(lit. I
for
(i.e.
"thought
for
Lastly,
we must
say Ubut
rf.
"We remarked in
singular
dative;
for
added
is
it is
to verbs
*'
O" *^?
^\
"*
"
i&$y^ (j^
\
of the
first
person
only, to
away
^
^
**
are
w^10
With verbal
camos to
disappointed
me
complement, or the
first
truly towards
you acting
e.
example; <<A?<&*
\2li Siji
of the affixes
me
(that he
L^
first
\Jpf^ Jl^-Il\^
when
of
them
With a noun
of
When
be two, ought
be expressive of the
a genitive, whether
always to bo considered as
the
or
of the verb,
complement of a verb
transitive.
be
if there
subject
as a
may
it
receive
may
me?"
DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS.
261
We
an accusative case.
have shewn,
84, /. that
it is
more elegant
to
is
more
With
affixes
when two
suffixes,
infinitives
may
and
provided of
participles
it
accusative.
Demonstrative Pronouns,
291.
As
tlie
its
demonstrative pronoun
y
"those armies;"
IbJIl
**
horses;"
j&9
^
**
O-O
$^
c33j
c*"O*^
*i
,-/*
OS.
9 02G-0
uj5H cJSlM
x*&
this million
//
>
(lit.
thousand of
thousands) of dinars."
in
^filter
may remain
delusion*"
flius,
*$&
indefinite;
Sometimes the
$&\j!**
Kulzum
js^
attribute is
L^kf J^
as
lxa>
^^ '*and
(i,e.
the
this (is)
what
Bed Sea)."
(is
found) on
In interrogative
262
that?"
lli*
"
Is
put
what
is
this?"
292.
formed
is
the noun
it
qualifies,
is
c-jls&l
expressed
cL3J
and
if to
one
woman
~"*
<
c^li^l
cj3J
if
^ o~o
and
if
the affix
Practically speaking, however,
o
alone
Of
the Relative
relative
pounded of the
either
pronoun^ or
by means
by being in a
of the article
those
generally
53
1S5O
3-.
Aii^t
^jjti]
**o
also IT.
14
being coms
1J
(modified
relates in itself
it
or of an affixed
)T
state of regimen, or
p
name;
tfx
and ^JJ
pronouns
'
^3^
T
o s
article Jl
definite,
is
Pronouns.
tf-"
The
c^l^
used, as
293.
is
'<
into
being a proper
*^Uj
C"*
^ i^lSl ^17
to disgrace."
-^
J^\
263
^T
^.x?
^U
$j^
<UJ
(viz.,
Si '
'
^M
cdtt
c->U.V
God
his
prophet."
and
^jf
as
^T,
we
stated in
*86,
u<^c
me ;"
*ij\\
this
tS
??C
fcj\
"
^\
^^
f'ss-
t&i ^jj
x&
*$*>
maiden
is
~o
u-^Jal!
t^jiSt
"&
"
"
the robber
j^llll
The
a^xW.
55
^&\
'-
where cXljX
is
^j&s
^i^
for
2jj^.
may
by
<u
when
elliptieally
thee
is
a blessing ;"
affix
preposition
is
may
an4
A^
''ttafl*
fe
affix
Itself is
m ^^^* ^^ ^Js*
Sufaanmi jws@d
omiffed.
for
Hm whom
^* the complement
used
The same
is
God bestoweth on
when governed by a
and preposition
JuJ^
where
when governed by a
may
c~
So in the sentence $*
sustenance which
omitted
as
;
'
L^ <j&
^ 9 j{?
whom
example:
whom my
found."
with
is
%;"
whare
after
264
sentence
as
from which
s o<x
tlion
desircdst
^^J
LJS^
"I
ci?ifcj
mo;"
oxx
.tf~
^^J ^^
*J c^l? g^U
^J
^y*
Bitting the
last
word aj.
Such
we
The
295,
relative
^ and U
like
of
^A\
tu^j
^b L^ ^ ^
*?'
~2
s?
j>
^i^jl s^H
frf
rt
"that which I
despised (would have) saved me, and that in which 1 confided has destroyed me." TMs kind of construction is
adopted
when
in the sentence
examples.
??
poets sent a letter to the waj5irs.
*
If the emphasis be on
x-
$,
^^jT"
^Hn
"**'
"
*\jj$\
UU;
99^ f
y\j$\M\
^j
?*
^\
'
they to
whom
"
7
emphasis be on the word
letter/ then the sentence
5JV
run thus,
t*O
*O
^J
will
tS>*
In each of these
phasis is to be placed,
nominative ease*
case, is
relative agroeis in
in a simple proposition,
When,
^o S^S-
<u^s>
<s
we must employ
if
we intend
last,
"
day on which
and
I fasted
(was) Friday."
-"
it is
if
is
employed in a
"
I
<u; u^JU^
came
'vBS
S L^Jl>-
"that
i.^.,
t^^ll,
We may
is
affix,
may
the word
is
noun
which
for
which
on Friday
<Uc;
t^Cj
I fasted
that
"desire," or "purpose,"
manner
emphatically a
the preposition
JJ
When
"
to lay
b.
to express
L^VK^P
we wish
265
The reason
be masculine.
is
is
"Zaid
emphasis,
when
?>
"'Amra
*$
is
required,
indicated
it
^&\
be meant
to place the
^s.
say, cJ^I
If
Ijlf
yj ^jJl
^*
if
^jJI
"he who
**
he who
(is)
(is)
standing
must
th,e rela-
Amru."
Ij
the
LJ^I
standing
by employing
15^
tive
is
as,
is
we
"&.
(is called)
Zaid
(is)
34
thy
2GO
father;"
ffi
(is
called)
'Amru
(is)
standing."
pronoun
288) along with the relative, the real antecedent to both being
j^T "the man," understood.
is
employed
297.
^\,
by a verb
^/*-
article
Tho^
relative
where it is followed
or a preposition, as in the
following examples; viz.,
<*f}
judgment
is
p^V
"thou
&$\
satisfactory;"
Jl
art
is
\J&
who
^$\. So,
"from
], M'A$$\'&
7:
JUC4
l^
19
aSf
lyii.
x, w*x^
t
^^1*
a.
acceptable loan,
it shall
to those
be doubled
*."*
and CJU^A^
The
Kur,an,
1^ ^liii^ ^T^
who
in the following
phrases, viz.:
"to
IB
article
)1
may
in combination with a
participle, active or passive,
which we
may
say emphatically,
f
the brave
man
God;" or
(is)
brave
man ;"
""
who
$Tji4T,J$T"he
^5
0**0
135
protects
jCo
pro-
may be omitted.
illustration, let us
26*7
^ uL
expressed
Ul JLlC^
^^LUn
ij\
J>fy\
{p*
is
as
ways,
j4^H' "the
V/v
I,"
be
viz.
follows,
conveyer of a letter
'
y
-p
yz>
different
Muslims was
to the
s?
noun
four
may
viz.:
^wjli
whom
&\~>j
'
i
whom
conveyed a
letter
conveyed a
to the
Muslims (was) a
\<\
ui
Uf**
j^*^
(are) the
Muslims
letter to the
"^
?^
\'
"that which
The pronouns
which," when employed
298.
It
^J]
^^^ J^ W
o/n
^^LMM]
(are) the
to
*u"
\'<>*n
-,
must be expressed,
"
"those
Muslims;"
I
conveyed
letter."
^tfoat
They
"he
who," and
or she
j&
passed."
to
As
disbelieved ;"
a general rule
whatever
is irrational
or
when
and
^ iM^
:
1b@
ap-
^.
cp^lJl^
To
when the
for instance,
or lifeless.
sonified
JC
j^rt
4iS
urito
make
thtu%
God
for
those
example
who
adoration ;" or
are in
we might
268
"
unto
t,
la the heavens
IB
Again the
adoration."
c\jjy
whatsoever
the
(for
women
whomsoever)
(to the
number
declined In
against
espouse yo
When
so employed,
it is
^
"$>
"
whom-
^ ^ ^^
"bring
\*a&
(lit,,
mo f \&
>
^j^- ^
unto mis
8:
plural;
"and
iv.
wlio or whatsoever,"
effect of a rolativo.
tlio
tliuB,
Kur,an,
somotimoH tho
to rational
The
be applied
in
299,
U may
^ *& C^ ^ t>sP^
*&A\
J^
t?iij
is
from others as
that which
when we
"beings
relative
God
^U
"We may
*
"
JlJlS
^A\
inform
me what
(female)
indoclitiablo
tion with
when
it IB
in a state of construc-
proposition, tho
holongfl to
have
vfe.,
situations
IB oxprostfod,
shall
In certain
$,
ubjct of which
but which
Is
ifl
most
violent
in
thoir
rebellion
against
the
269
Merciful;" &ti\
shouldst meet with
them
is
jj
In the
most virtuous."
S5
declension of the
we
sentence
word
we
J>1
<L1
"
\g\
first
of the
thus, jJSl j^
^\
So in the second
have
said,
^ ^\ ^
"if thou
same kind
\*\
a.
iLJb
been omitted,
affix of {j\
tlie
^J3U
is
others of the
for
example
34^
\A
{$\
"we
^~s?
"
fj\ 12
band."
or a
If,
noun
f^\\
thus
will
Q God! pardon
act,
we on our
us, us
who
The words
if
the
\Q\
and
noun
\$y\
may
specified be restricted
by
a
of
t~A?&A
men
(juliS\ c..g/t
t^JJ&\ (j^r
far hospitality/'
a pronoun of tto
first
Of
300.
are a special
preceding,
<Ahus,
part;"
\sjs.\
""
We have
This
we Arabs
mode of
is
are the
expression
is
it
so resipoted
m&k
prompt
person singular or
the Interrogative Pronouns.
just
&hewu th
270
briefly notice
In
Interrogatively.
asking a question
and
which they
case.
we showed
declined as
B, ^4-j
"
??
(^^
in
mm
For example,
87, a.
came
^m
mo
to
If
regularly
says to
should
ask
**
IE like manner,
"
should ask
tive case*
or
If,
L^
is
??
however,
<Ir**
"I Mlled
the expression
asks
youth?"
There
whom ?
"whom,
\J& ^
if
is iCi
whom
alone
is
(*>
a man," and
in the accusa-
used; as uLl0
or
aro,
f ^
o ^jf
>x}l
w^,^
^^
u^U^
from that of
which they
stated In
they came to
wo
my
said, the*
^
tt
The
1^1
301.
^U
$ and
inasmuch as
If
'*
case, as
we
88.
If
u
i^jr-li
\l
^!f
what two
whom?
my
??
the ex-
friend?"
271
a.
The interrogative
^j\ is also
employed with an
"
me with
(a certain)
indefinite
noun
in
&rAs L^^T
s
T
#
If,
how-
s
ever, a definite
noun
precedes, the
^\
word
Jkl is to
Jjj \J*?\^
be put adverbially in
what a man!"
is
thus ex-
pressed
by means of ^\ may be
*
prised in a verb
and
<^s\
is
itself
^\
$Q^\
is
put
X"
it
expressed.
MO
the accusative
272
SECTION
SYNTAX OF
\mm
VIII.
AND PARTICLES.
ample
Uuj^
l^L>~tS
^/J}
^ ^y, jinow1^
UB in the
following ex-
bti%
^Ul
HftlS
Sjtj*
"
it
corresponds with
^^ !U^f ^
"verily
cestor,
'
irit
^^W
my
\'
H'^
^Lc jjaLa5
:V^V
*-^
u>,4*?i
$
'
^1
J&J&
17*^
%*
of their an-
remaining;"
'**\*?*\u
-k
^\ L^*i
Ijr
remember
4 *'
wo
when
"now/* "verily,"
that
the preterite
oto.,
by no uneani the
it
is
preceded by
always
case in
signifies
many
The same
other
rale holds
respect to u]
rcdth
and ^-^
"
when," and
otlier
2*73
words synony-
The
303.
preterite is frequently
tive propositions of
.
tences,
jj
SV^
^ ^ "he who
J^
53
conceals his secret attains his (wished for) object, literally,
who
etc.
so ujCIs
^ 3& ^ "he
<
thee
secret
(thy
to
another);'
literally,
or
3^
kind
first
When
correlative
"
whosoever,"
^f\
the
"whatsoever," Ui
"as
often as,"
L# { ?
tests'-
GJ^Ssix oy/ f
<.
\'\*s
LC
<
shall
/T
rn
as often as their
sMns
them
other
skins."
304.
The
by employ-
L!C
and
cL^ <JUK
"&he
tstd written;"
strictly
When
with each,
35
274
succeeding preterites
also
into
jt
cUJ
the
pluperfect;
thus,
^i ;&
a$l
when
it
s' s,
"
jlc^3
a.
and LJju
The
that of
it
<A
particle ll,
when placed
after
^,
has a similar
effect to
throws them
all
into
thus,
for
is,
example
"and when
Jj ill
3
the
305.
When
is
preterites
tive
as? L3cLr*J
1oj&
cLJ^
"
j)
if
I had
known
this* assuredly
*&$
%&]
275
Cljj&
jfj
"if Grod
99 gives to the
plained in
thus,
^^]
us, assuredly
aorist the
(JlvJ
dU
life!*
power of the
If,
the
ex-
preterite
here,
my
If after
a.
Jl
member
first
of the proposition is
uL^
LL$j
jlo
JI^Jl
may
first
by the
future conditional;
[y^\
L5J^c Z^\j
be translated by the
J^ij
thus,
touched the palm of Yahya, his soul would have become generous in
5
After the
bestowing gifts/
of the
first
compound
particle
u3i$ JJx
"had
5)
not been
it
is
is
>Umar
signification,
when
K^LIj 5
J
jf
i/j*&
example:
your food, unless you will promise me that you will not inconvenience yourselves on my account." The peculiar effect
of
tion
is
on 0$h
as
may be
viz.
276
(I
soul is in
my
body, and
my
my
words in
my
power
of
speaking."
When
#.
} \)\ i\jj
all
^\)\
4^^ ^ ^^ "I
kave ex-
^, and
JU
which
(| 195), in
51
is
307
The compound
arid (what)
^^
* *
When
particles XI,
follow.
if precedes the
pretcrito ? the latter then acquires the force of the future or sub-
junctive;
as,
L^\
X
"
\j*s>
c/p
^ LZJ^\
Jc
Js<^>-1
I
j^.
\&\
&
??
there be) a wili
If the verb ^\
*
t
signification; thus,
xnittod a crime or
present tense
"j
you
,
J\
|s
0x0*
ci^f^ ^^jA
e^ ^\
t/
fault,"
When,
M ^S
^^
^
coino between
boon guilty of a
is to
should
employed
44
"giTO thanks
IjXM
"*
X
to
after ^1 , a
and the
God,
if It
be him
*
serve."
When
the particle
^ comes
A
277
'which the
le
first is
conditional
JU <JJ2
'he
f2
same
Ais
may
zbjunctive,
erty ;"
&
LlOJ
&\
iili.
5\j
[3
$\ ^
first
may
me, I will
tell
(for
51
unto you."
"
"
but
(it is
not;"
if
as,
essential)
if not, I will
tel1
jf
^\)
hand
each clause be
not
to
me
'
preterite
jlS &\ ^\
pro-
"
^ y^ ^ ^
^^^^
tell
thus,
my
be expressed either
o *o
^5
by
first,
the present
the
"#
first
^TciJL
on the
secqjid dependent
be rendered, the
ense
and the
u\^"if
etc,
\l|
"
when' gives
^ &r ^.^
S^^U^
"when
the
by means
L'$
cdj^fiT^ {)
\\
thti^ for
"when Ta^ya
becomes easy."
example
tmdertakes the
It is needless to add,
278
Ql
\^\\\ f^ \fy
jj
"
when
or maledictive sense.
benedietive,
employed in an optative
For example, when an
$
exalted.*'
S
"&
of God, he adds,
^li? y&
"may He
Muhammad, he adds
*&
1i5"*CJ
'
SU1
unto him, and
Ju may God be propitious
jXj feU
may
ft
he have granted unto him peace;" so, <&^ djj|
"may God
**
jfo"*
^J
Ms
Mm,
35
men
deceased, as
tomb.
3?
When
is also
allunion is
Jp
used when
is
5111
made
Jjf
"may
to a
reign-
Ms
iZli
3?
or
"
A^ " may
Mm
??
;
On
the
Uw md Application
grammars and
marians,
is
of
the
Aonst.
Hebrew gram-
is
by Be Saoy)
employed
'to
express not only fatority, but also time past or present, ac-
cording to eireumstaneos-
The
a*
aorist, as
279
out in
This
99, etc.
is
when
it is
preceded by the
OO
"$.
negative particle
man
is
we pointed
1*>
tff
"not;"
&L-J jj&l
as,
house."
by our present
indicative
is to
"
fire
has sent
down
"
(from, heaven),
it
He
neither will
311.
God
fifl
who
own
be translated partly
us
they
The
them."
aorist
1.
compound.
all/' ul*^,
justify
^1
^, ^X,
all
Jg,
of
2. When preceded
futurity.
by the negatiye
"
I
not
provided, however, that none of the other negatiye
or Ul has occurred in the
particles U,
phrase immediately
which indicate
a
we
before, as
cursorily observed
may
102.
3.
When,
as is often
Ear,
^S>
"whosoever
we
shall cast
^ 5^ uIi^J ull^
(hell) fire
shalt
find
tfljlc
ujxJ3
^] & ^7 ^ J^S ^
my
unto
return
?>
thee
shall do
him
^ i^
into
^thou
230
&H
jib
l^L
Xj
m*&J
3,
thus in Kur,an,
^ Jjj
which
"foar ye a
\^J\
make
satisfaction
it
employed
may be
ceded by "that,"
^li
fell
to
ll
Sometimes the
down
aorist thus
participle
the
kissing
as,
employed
^J^
<j*jl
may
lS^>
^JJ
(as it were)
a bridle ;"
*"
+%%
**
by
1.'
*O
^^\
^ %
ii^
<*
^j ^y
new
of the festivities."
313.
We
have shewn,
be
himself;" A^tjU*
pre-
A^ilj *UJ1
moon
it
by our present
"and he
by our subjunctive
to the
u %&
might drink."
translated
aorist is frequently
of another verb, to
we have
45,
The
l*
312.
^ir
li.
When
the two
tlm% uUij y\
lio
was writing*"
281
^)
aorist
latter
(of
j&
<$\ i^/u
'x&jxjtj
&~*j
(jSy^Jlt
5ylsL*l
y\
beasts
visited
him;"
S-
u-Qg^ j
i;
^
c^^sr
^= -x
c-^-a
*M
&
"!A
*' 'KI X ^
.
^AXC
<u)U ^u\oj5
s- j
s <>s
^T
^
Jatar
Sometimes the
nite,
verb
did
is
you
$3
thus,
kill the
<dSl
sllJl
&j^ {*$
"
^ a7
In
(to
them) why
this sentence it
jjl
^j&& must
combined
be translated.
"When
fcbe
Mve
i-osr
eu%3
<Kjyu
cui
to
wouldst love
by
282
to the preterite
and
tense,
"by prefixing
the aorist of
^
"$
j?
is called
^^U* {& J\
Jj
for
t"*O
\&
tXCjl
example
f
^
"
"they say
when
will this
menace (take
ySy
effect) if
Uj
j^<?
upon
.$
UU
\# s
U^
^ ^?
their camels ?
have taken
O^
and
/'*
**.
%*.{<*
ss
^s
Eush
^iXe^Ub A^JU
(j^f^
^JLC Jj^l
UJe>-} Ja
lot
retaliation for
to us.
we
shall
55
which the
ticles
aorist is subject in
it,
Tho
aorist apocopated,
which
99, is employed
etc.,
^aC ^
he who
you may
thee, do
imperative
i0
In propo-
but
may
if
the last
optionally be
99, a*
When
j>f
the
a con-
"
J<\
When
a.
;ter
s^s sister? ?
*aJJ
j^&j
When
The
b.
comes
is prefixed to
ss
{(
loses its
"*'
vowel
thus,
,*&
x&L
*^*M
"approach not
!ll
IJ^AJ
this tree."
lot yet,"
ji
*<j
him
)nth, let
u (two)
ms uJ and J.
?
assist
the particle
expresses
283
by
the particle
4&11J
^ J^Sl "he
&
but found
(it)
not;"
so,
"not," and di
thus, for
example
J^ ^
^JjSl
J^
*r
"
ill
when he
at-
apted to ascend,
100 we
responds to the Latin present subjunctive. In
ve given a list of such particles as
require this form of
3
aorist after
ill
now add
aotes
we
a few observations.
"scope/'
"end,"
.t
.j
"I
bread witlx
>
When
me
i wigit
the particle
^,1
is
followed
by
"not," as in 5f
(for
y!+fc,
284
after
it still
ii.
^1
aorist antithetic
intended to express
simple, pre-
is
'$.
p&
j*u
'
f^
will assist/
"^
r*
form of the
^, v*^">
^J,
etc.,
the regular
aorist is generally
is
It
i.
nc).
We
some word
which
in the proposition
"they who
that they
and
may
not
their persons
"
verily
stand
it
God and
believe in
we have
fight,
so, xviii.
occur
we have
(for
may
may
^w
58:
^1 $&\
^Ls
^5^
^*f
(the Knr,fin)/'
c.
The
particles jjf
"ho came
same
aorisfc antithetic
as,
that/'
"in
LjC^ L/*^"
The
to the
tioA
XX
XX
might
"\
eat it/'
thus,
The
compounds
1L
^^i.
thus.
me
inform
I will
d.
that I
march on
The
may
fly
away from
tliee ;"
285
<
till
when
denoting our conjunctions "that," "until," "unless," requires the antithetic aorist
.J^.
thus,
my
due;"
ILxJ
so,
me my
*
0<
<?
LXl^jJ 3
jjl
due/
me
i*e.,
'&''?<?"'
^^jlH
"verily
cA
"
Muslim
or he shall become a
"
^if
L5
;"
*>J^\
j\
'^J^l
him
wait for
I will
<?
come
until he
Sometimes
out."
"
"
whether,"
ps
c->ji>
ifl
when
me)
or" (Latin
G X
j\
SS
^ uJo
^\ s^-fc ^ij)\
t-.
j i
it is
^w^i
no anair of
<*
^
^.
The
particles ^,31
&
antithetic aorist,
This will be
signification.
sV*
^s*
best understood
viz.
"
LjCJI ,<?^1
X
*
I "will
..
come
when
the reply
^j
"good
c/J^^
^j
"
aid thee;" or
cJ^l
it
^\
""
"welf!
different
aorist is
or lastly,
by the Lord
^^
g^
my
friend
t ) J\
may
I will
In th0se
by a negative
particle.
If,
however, any
used; thus,
the pronoun
good
^\
may
a vocative case
wojd
I)
rf
c^yjUl
^*
f '
^
c3^^
'
is s ,5-^
be,
^\
jilij
may
151
^JS
"not
When
at all,"
286
PABTICLE13.~
^
UU
* s ?<*S
Gehenna)
shall
When
ii.
74: a^j**
by no means touch
the conjunctions
a future
it
^"^
"
-f
'
jUl lLJ3
XI
sigrdfica-
<$
"the
fire (of
uJ and j
two propositions,
indicating,
in the second, an immediate dependence on the first, of which it is a
jf.
join
s"
^ifcl
't
*r
own
6&
inhabitants;"
he forbade any
*Y.
-"C*
houses, until
^^
woman
*-*/%
(J^**-
bL*j
MB
Zaid in
followed
may
house, that I
The
expresses
of
them
is
other, it has
317,
may
go
*rf
ye
^ 10 ^
particle ula,
"is
when
$,
"punish
LJ and ^
me
not, lest
is
When
either
and
is
aorist la
.*<"<"
#^yi
of'iioX'
cA^
formed by affixing
may be
strongly asserting; as
P#M tji*
^^ %Z*
"pardon me,
commanding^ urging,
"
The
^^ly
aorist antithetic^ as
in
^J^l
lj
him?"
to
c31^
as,
The paragoglc
signification
|yl
^J\
tlao
jJS
as '
j^
*3h^\
by a negative
lyjsL
you ask
F ^
**f* <t
**
by
"
^^ Aj^.j^a
lyiUwj j I^M^U^U
^^s
0<r.
tfl
r*
seen in
,^T
or simply
101*
forbidding,
may be
is
wisliing 3
to the
employed
asking,
or
ox {'VfSi
^^ c^*
It
ye
'
f r^-
^^
venly
with
the
eye of certainty
287
life)."
)f
^\
children of
jhall
Adam,
SJ
vii.
*&+ l^j
33:
among
f^
^^
yourselves
>
It is also
-o
"3-
"by God he
.JJ0V dUlJ
{-**$,
^article
he (the devil)
[
employed
will deceive
will assist;
said, verily (I
them
*f.s
75
^M^T\ HMjsS
J>y thine
swear)
t-^&j*^ JlJ
eminence that
all."
we have
,he aorist as
just shewn.
its
ilready mentioned in
319.
The
infinitive or verbal
Infinitive,
noun, as
we
stated in
>o
105,
own verb
in
we have
103.
.he
of
in
me
expression;
mte
^*M>
*>
U*lw ,^-y*
thus,
$~*
$'
j+&3* \jy*
U^U
jvv
|*
*>
is
12
*-
fed
titte
Kur,
^!"^
^p^Ke
Hi. 9
day on winch.
iii6
utterly
move away n
u
(lit.
inova
away by moving
u
alsg used adverbially to express
purpose,"
').
cc
iateutk%
288
or
"
design/
**"*
ilpr
jj&
etc.,
llS
"Zaid stood up
dum
gerund in
honour
jjj
to
Amru. 3?
may
115: <uS
'
'/ s>
J^tA] o^j"
part) of Abraham
'
Ijb^t
''
"and
tf
Abraham, the
God,"
Kur,an
thus,
"understood,
subject, is
,
where we
which
will
be more manifest
if
<uJ *1H
/*
^J>\J&^\
*
xx
"man
father/
C""*O
is
for
"
fij\
expressed,
was a prayer
there
'
by*
is
governed in the
"be
as follows
(.
xli.
-rf
49 JLS *12j
:
is
of
God
thus,
for his
OO
^ ^Ci
5'
good
we
(or
jLCJ
"for
happiness ")*
Kur. xe. 14
C^ I^Ti '^ ^ ^
sentence
llcy the object of the
thus*/
\AP\ '<&\d\
X*
x*
JLtS
** <**
??
;
"(thp act
may
by the
of)
where we see
article
case.
Jl, its
immediately follow^it;
tie
tie
When
lenitive,
Lll
289
#3J*
|pCw>-
<LU^
J^j
"
thus, for
was in
it
example
"
Jaliph
is
The preceding
is
the most
common mode
by no means unusual
that
of
is
tie
nominative.
bject is a
'
^s s - S~
lyoj
nto
UcU^o
'
SS
<T
""
whether in speaking
*J1
j^l teJb\&*
<te-jlCj
*"
*?**
Z$
all
laster
Qa\
4r4-3l
it is
to him, or in writing to
*
ouse by whomsoever
him;"
a pilgrimage to the
(holy)
practicable."
'&&
^ J>ffij\
yj
manner."
1th regard to th
**
samples: ^J33
iat,. w..
P
its
"the
As
falling of
&
fjjj ^J
"I have
121
tfce
following
"I
antive verbs have their subject in the genitive and their at37
200
SYNTAX OF VERBS
"
that
of religion ."
sitive
verb
Is
AJ8TD
jJt
J^\
created
Sometimes an
PARTICLES.
is
infinitive derived
from a tran-
j^ ^ ^
Use
nd Application of
is a
the Participle*
"
J5aid
to the
whoso son
is to
same thing an
??
^j
324
sitive
The proBont
^^\
\&&
comes
i
T.
by employ-
a)j?
participle or
noun of agency
of a tran1. It
maj
"
which
trol
it
as
has been
CKW)
atiRw;
J4afe
^ ^^
wily
a
as
fcff&$fa\
^uT
^
2. It
athou
may
^oso who
sMt
not
t,^"^ ;x
qjyM
^
IE
JV
may
in
^j
of
MOT
^^ C&
mode tho
con-
this
lasl
"the
here to say
nor
ox
dj
u^
c_^uLll
-53
thus, j^!
&\
x-
291
c
striker of
x-
be incorrect, however,
It "would
neither ought
we
to say j^J cl
7?
of agency governs
its
thus,
u^j
may be
it
"
Hu^ A^~
^Jc^
"
jllll
verily,
it is
whoever
rises
up
God who
causeth the
b.
its
When
the
for the
(of time)*"
first
rejected, as if the
final
and
it
retains
of the dual
graph.
computing
tlie
nunation and
state of
final
regimen, (vide
aue
382)-;
more men)
striking Zaid."
in theaccusative be a pronoun,
participle, ot the particle
When
the pronoun
is affixed
it
If,
may
290
c),
be either
may
292
in the singular
but
strikers of
"
iJI
may
we may say
two
SYNTAX
Mm,"
So
either
"
*$>j&\
or
'
in the plural
of the
*lijlSjl "the
s 's ?
-CS'*
or
it is
or it
derived,
may
may govern
the
first
may
say either
may
say either
***
"C
xtf
***<
-*
objects in
of its complements
i.e.
Hence we
"
Ox
si?
or
"
iUli
iJXc ^Ife
when
observe that
Amru
c^j
$b
or
5iJiU
j^
^fe dLJl ji
We
may
***
a wise
man?"
further
governs
participle
^Ixi^l
tute?
dJdj
jjU
So ? in
Kur 5n
ady.
48
When
*UJ *&%
him who
Jjsllr*
act contrary to
thus,
is desti-
2M ^^l^i*
Ms
promise
time,
may
may
govern
its
a
say
mnrfn
A-P
^TplsTSjj
ivvneffiii/fin'n
ftAlrlA-m
fntns
nl^fiA.
is
thug
standing."
fYJTftfiTyfc
we
This
wh&TL the
USE
AJSTD
participle is derived
when such
verbs,
c.
o-o
293
It is sometimes
come from
mere
are used as
participles
transitive
adjectives;
tf-o
The noun
article
is
)1
of
equivalent to the
relative
-C5-.O
killed >Amru.
a.
The present
with
participles of intransitive verbs are applied,
unto him
o4^w
;" *-^
L
came ;
"
Jil
* ^ >
^Jj \$ S j
"
U^ God is not
<dll
are obedient
all
thus,
& f^
heedless of what
ye are doing,"
327.
is
The
subject to
l\
sentence:
participle is attached
as in the following
2Ul
father
is
now
slain."
or
\>\
its
<
hence we
c_^
'
'jf&
^J
/"*
Jjiul
doubly
of
\ .
complements
thus, li^J j
(J**!*
&J
"
t^
The
more
clearly explained as
follows:!.
By
may be
substituting, for
294
either in the
pre-
itself,
understood.
restoring, if
3, Lastly,
In
2.
.#3;
relative
pronoun
^ oooU
or
**
11.
233
as
may be
PO f\
ypjj ^
tf
^ ^ J&& ^ ^
*t
'S
<
o*To
i">
-d
/-
*,-"."To"?
viz.,
is
it
<**
/*
i<O
**!*
is
bom,
?J
So,
234
*<jfy
*^
npon the
15^
child,
man
to
5s
on account of her
(to con-
where S j
whom a child
a
the mothers shall give suck unto their children for two
is
the
}<-**
$
*"*'
is
unreasonable)
3^
In
thine anger,"
<f
o?v
Afljus
***>**??
t<
CP^MJ 1^
whom
who have
of those to
whom
way
We
mmcfum cum
it
Nominative*
jrole (liable!
howeve^
to
iracundia*
numeroBS
250
that,
as a
exceptions), the
comes
295
then the
first,
line,
j^3
of his Lord."
If,
it
gender.
and
if it
But
its
if,
l^\
L^Jli
"the wife
of 'Aziz said."'
it,
the verb
in the masculine
thus, Sj^Vj
may be
used
"
J^
whom
verb
may be
immediately
"
of either gender,
not
or
is
thus
that from
whether
in
it
the
precede
its
following
is
gone ?
subject
example
"but
wlten
gone the milk is bare." When a&y word interthe verb should rather be ia the masculine; thus,
the s^um
is
^
.wUU
^^
'Qs
$Q "in
order that
nominative feminine
by the
particle $[ "unless," or
^s
C**O
cept,"
is
as JUM
*o
^1
SlSS l\
"exs
J0
l^
29 G
"there
?
is
?3
directly
uLf;;
Slx3
thus^
JUu,
when
174,
cLSj U.
Hi
the subject
The verbs
is
feminine
of
may
is
excellent
When
the subject
^
??
opinions
^l^LJl
believed?'
*!&
is
"
When
ul^J $*$
as
maybe
it
preceding
better to say
?
the
is
in the feminine
331,
it is
preferable ; thus,
those
the subject
ii.
58:
altered their
as fools
have
is
it
may
their
<
"
-rr-
j-i
*-^s^
u.
/A
69
""
cJJa
Kur,an
hearts became hardened
a
^ D^J c~4<^ ^3
were treated
as liars.
When
^ ^
Ox-
*"/
OPP fp
>^jb
after that
??
;
<u
<*
Li^uud
tff
*j
,,
then
again in vi 34
^w
plural of
tho subject
"
^1
is
^Tpl
also
cu!^
the children of
297
etc.
as SL.
-TX
Ic.
jlLlT ffi
^7
>
x<
Kur.
so,
'<
-.xtf,?
>
107;
Ti<
2^
ii.
^\T
<jf
"women
\Z U c^V*
evils
p^
them."
assail
t.
&*&\
^-
^3
"J\i
"and
the
Occasionally,
though rarely, a regular feminine plural may have the premasculine thus, Kur, an he 10
ceding^verb in the singular
^
O^o
:
~Q
oTx
.,*
x ?
J^i^uU u\j>\k
(.
*^
ff
?\'*'?\i*s\''
cj^^iH &\s>>
\A\
when
1*
believing
women
faith with
^jJOl
"
ox
L-ft-^s
o^/,
i"f
fft>
^ l^Ujj^^y-jJuu^^x
iC/v.-'x'x
0,"
<s><? Cxxt^ex
J.JU 4yax^
Pb
ix
^^U
x^i^^
L^nX^sf
another,
Saifa-d-Daula."
of
what
befel
of)
298
334.
The dual
C3
plural ; thus, U
**
follows the
^ ^^
JX
as the
im
v^Jtf "tho
two men
said."
Although,
when
as
we have
just
seen, it is
may
usual
<*
t"*"
fiS'"
^^\
my
335.
When
is
25 2, and consequently
precedes the verb, tho latter must agree in gender and number
"
with the noun thus, <Lx> IS jL$$\ J^lf Sjl
God produces
;
creatures,
"this money
o
of ours that
o^s>
7'
life;
(k\
<JLsjj
11x^1^ *$>
is
from
Ms
prayer, he put
Iris
hand
and he took
verbs
3^ and
Ms
leisure-"
Hero wo
the
see that
*
xxt?
jjjl
Again,
299
is
^j,
referring to
l^
^L being understood,
"the papers."
a. It
plural,
ployed
feminine singular;
in the
o ^c-o
^
example JJ^\
"
\
doves
who
rest
^Ju
as
s '' s
~+*>
<&
s'
^l^-^^U^r
/:
jt"-o
C/VjSl
!
cyU*U^
t>
31
b.
may
#&i ; jS b Xy& jj
j$\*
who by
day;" l^julil
they lay
\\
S3fc
*JJ
God
has angels
F*-"**
waste."
<?,
verb
it
^j Ijl^-J
you
'
^&j
"
put between the two verbs, the verb ^l follows the rules of concord
of the verb which precedes its subject, and the second verb follows
those of the verb placed after
collective noun,
men
^/^Lj
51
afraid of
its
subject.
(jwUnJ&T
When
latter is
^^
the subject is a
commonly
"but
placed
the generality of
of
them
are
men."
336.
The
rules
laid
down
respect-
300
The verbs
of the
first
subject
by the
ciJl
S I>"^
SI
95
is
one,
thou
Ul llJU-
thee
5?
where 5dl
*Ts-
any
X
??
s.
except/
$\
cJij
particle
When
337,
nouns
"
may
or the verb
may be put
example:
tortoise
J^sd
W$l-j
i*-*3j\j
tween them."
made
5usr*^
thus,
\j&? $>$)
is
put in the
the two feet
33
When
^fJLjiJ ailT^
J^f-;
f$^?%
<3*^
may be
idleness
and
301
plural, the
#j
tence:
"
verb
is
is
shall
blast,
be broken to pieces."
339.
consists of
two nouns in a
state of
"
u ^^
rt
..
done of good;"
|-gS
(jwulJ
,,-53-f
s<*
opo^,
c^-^1 ^1 j-^- /^
340.
'
which rule
also holds
If,
when
has
it
_
among mankind."
//
its
nominative in
be expressed or understood,
and in such
/*
I j-,
-,
..
th&u,
for
because
its
Again, in
302
S>s
s s
^y*
ju*
*t
the example,
's
<dn
"
^
s>
^jj
"S
" G
9 9
'
<
.1
Li.
u->^y^j u^ol
l^/**-
thou
nearest nominative
it
of the third
is
plural
Government of Verls.
341.
complement
^iX
When, however, by an
verb precedes
it,
prefixed to
J
*"'
it
as Jjj^S? t[jjU
&\
vision."
and
thing both; as
1^1^ $U
xo
<?
^IkU!
"
ing/'
tl-sl
f*
\j&*$$
$*
"$>
^jH
Zaid
Amru
presented
^X
"
L^
"I
\}
(as) dead
believed
Zaid
^$\^^
slain in the
(to
be)
thus,
intelligent;"
way
of
0od"
(i.e.
in de~
GOVERNMENT OF VERBS.
303
Q^
^
&.. s
^'i
^s
ff
{[ rr
may be
-i
seen
IT
by
ji
i*
-^..i"^
??
"I
343.
When
is intelligent.''
like
first
of their
still
remains in
its
preced-
J*
Q ]pi
^Zaid gave
^L
In a similar manner,
Amru
a splendid garment,"
a)
in the passive voice becomes, VpL^
Amru has
{Ja*\
o o
*^
been presented with a splendid garment
&^ uj] '**L\ u thy
son has been given flesh to eat."
So in the Kur,an, ii, 95:
l^s^
joj JUcl
"$
'
9^
,>*"***
-j&]\ \^\
i.e,,
*>
^\\
those to
whom has
the Kur,an*
and the object of another that folIf the verb wMch governs the noun as its object
lows
it.
comes
ject,
first,
to
is left to
is
the sub-
304
me ;"
(Zaid),
Amra), and
Amra
^^> eLu^
as, 3SJ
'$
"
^& ^ ^
J ^H;/*
"I
struck
I passed
(by
It is permitted,
however,
to
the
verb
first
is
thus, joj
^^
6^
If the verb
and then
first,
that
which governs the object, the latter is in like manner suppressed, and the usual rules arc observed in the agreement of
verb with the subject thus, ^l^fj cLJjJ J
53
two Zaids struck me, and I struck (them).
the
first
345,
the
first
verb
having
also
the
termination
that
"
^^
the
case,
indicates
its
noun
that
for ^Jjj^n
struck therou
and an
subject
"
^^ i^^/^
ciop J
??
as, ^tjjjj
uLj^J ^
\jj
me
and I
became;" and
attribute, like
if
the attribute
may
pro-
tions,
ill,
ill,"
noun;
as,
ill," or,
fejjX ojj
&^i
s
$\ Ck^i ojj
a
I was ill, and
or
is
^
^ uL^
SuJ
j JCl
&
jj
so
uL
"I waB
I was
(ftl>)
so,
an<l
but
all
first
of
^ a^
two
^^
u>^^
ill
;"
ill,"
that
is,
them
was
other-
305
GOVERNMENT OP VEKB3,
^ S
346.
The same
believed, or
by means
The
of a subject and
CJJ.lc
different subjects
of the proposition
which
believed
me
ty
so,
\*j uLolb j
CLSli
"he has
is,
believed
"I have
peated; thus,
and
Amru
as
me and I
?
have
believed Zaid to be
The
so."
^^
x$\
"&.-'
be the subject
uiojJs j
loSj
^jJk
C*J
the subject
,x
or
is
is
"he has
"I
L^olk
IjJj
may be common
attribute
learned."
J^ "he
first is
If the subject be
J.\ \^ j
\*
&.!
^jj^^
the
"
J&\
re-
I regard Zaid
as
a brother,"
a.
Grammar
the reMer
as
peculiarities of Arabic
is
246 to p. 252,
referred to
From
De
that excellent
Tome
ii.
p.
30C
SYNTAX OF VERBS
Of
"he
The verb ^l
347.
AN!) PAETICLES,
Ms
ness for
ll^pi
shall
jJiian
^ w\ "God
have subdued
^^
It
"there
Jj
no
is
and
its
merciful;"
??
has greedi-
^K;
l^od
The same
tribute precedes
??
-i*
thus,
l\
^\
'
^x ^
ij^
rule holds
is
is
"he who
o"
what
ease,
tS-O
^ Cj&^ ^ U
j^\
x
A!
asCL&J
nominative
u
VjLi"
"
ty/
when
bc
it
be ye
the
at-
great or
ranall."
are construed like the latter, such arejjli and JoT "it
Tbe-
^^
"i*
camo
5J
?
was"
or
or
"
"came
to pass
etc.
happened at eve
the morning/
^l
??
To
by
ili
j"
those
"it returned/'
"
ip^
it
was or came
practice.
All of them
L5
to pass on
which
however,, like
0^1
All
x
"
are
etc.
XXI
t4
307
became black;"
face
^1*X aL^^M
scorching;"
be worthy of praise;'
The verb
uLjJj
is
march ye
to denote possession, in
349.
manner
rule, est
pro habeo
uXiX "a
obvious from the following examples, viz., j^jj &
^
"
a king, there was to him a
king had a minister," literally,
minister ;" again,
jjj
^S
'Jtj^r^
of this
(is),
The
ject
"
it
mere
had a camel;"
those (people),
it is
not? "
in the accusative.
existence, without
^^
iS^i. SJ
^1
^U
"$
c3CJSj1
the attribute is
phasiSj
*
^Wheu
<"*"
SI
it is
often employed in a
is
any reference
a copula or connective between a sub^
^
&
$
?
unjust.'
^j
father
and serving as
JJ3 "he or
^ Umy
55
^^
%\ c33J JlU^
that there
he had a son.
350.
2&r
Jl&
y ^
$>
W3
Jill
*'
'
"
Ju!3
$
St
<c
unless,"
except/'
308
put In
tide
nominative;
thus,
JQL
J51j
^ s
i,
s^S"**3
*^\
l\
""
the
JlJ
is
(present) life
is
times
tjLj3
is
Some-
LLj "it
5
they/
is
not he;
??
l^lJ "it
is
thus,
not
is
etc.
Censure.
The
Ij^l (made
ho
a$J^o2l PU
a bad dwelling.
man
principal verbs of
may add
it is
are
They
is
up of
is
article J1 it is
an excellent
When
is
Zaid
Akin to JJu
manner;
is
clslXe lou*
ti
"
it is
without the
+ \3) "this
is
delightful."
3 '
"
JJb
J0
without the
SbfJ
is
"wicked
is
lj "an
"
a bad
is
article
excellent
bad/ which
assistant;
thus,
is
^^
is."
construed in the^same
is
the
man
is
man
??
Zaid;
Zaid."
or
309
Any
352.
and
Jjjjft
When
tlie
former expression
is
used, the
object
fe
ployed; thus,
acute
is
him
jj& U
liSS
"
how, very
his genius,
excellence in
!"
admiration,
it
J^Osfoj^
viz.,
jf
is
t-3&
j^&? +j\
"how
very noble
is
the disposition of a
prophet!"
Sometimes the noun or pronoun which is the object of admiration
omitted ; but this very rarely happens, and only in such instances
a.
is
as lead to
no obscurity in the
sense.
c~o
UJ*U| ^Isajl
jJ
"
^-juo-l
"how
battle-field!"
Inchoative
853.
The
and Approximate
is,
Verbs.
that of themselves
310
Among
that,"
conjunction ^\
^v G
which
aorist,
thus,
-^
"by
the following
few examples;
""
""
other
o
??
^tf
-^
?/"
/|
u
j^^. ^jl J^j
^yw
c?
^ L5^c>rji
P.
^j*
V.
Jyy. c)^
Moses pity
?
receive them P
to say 3
earth.
Among the
354.
3'
pened that;
(Lat.
parum
me
%s
uXjl
&, and
abfwit gum).
tlJj*
s, , ,
_
b J^^r aTr
ly-arun
little
The verbs
^^
will
tion; thus,
jr%
tlr*
^^ ^ 45^
S0
"
^loft
^A^ Jpt
H
descrip-
??
(of hospitality) ;
H "perhaps
L5
may
nearly took away their sight;" Jjyf JJJSl cf?5K "the spirit
5*
All of these rarely require the
was nearly departing.
thus,
"
355.
it
^js.
it
311
Such are
1.
Verbs
a place ; such as
expressive of entering or tending towards
"he went or preceded;" thus,
"he entered;"
^^
"
'
'
*~^*o
f>
'**
?s
o^x^-
"he continued"
+\9\
or "persevered;" as aujT
"
CJ
"
33
he was accustomed
;"
to
c>lJ
"
and cjC01
Cc,
rule
oli
;"
<a
1J U, JS
5JJ {j
The same
night)."
"Jj\ 3~>Vjj
Ibn Buwaih."
U "he
"he
failed not,"
ceased not;"
"he
i.e.
per-
When
going, the
a negation
is
"he
is
you
$yntm
356. In Section Y.
Ijliaj
of Indeclinable
we
first
verb
thus,
fore-
^!j oUj
^\ vxll^ Ui
"
perhaps
P<wUd$
particles of the
Arabic language
312
"We
shall
same
now conclude
with, a
mentioned.
All prepositions,, whether separable or inseparable
~o
35V.
&
118,
"
<&
**
etc.),
God
to
*CJU^
"*
'~
>>*
"
<xjpr
^J\
<d!b
J"~
"in God;"
;" jlSif
-'
^ "in
We have
a.
already stated,
verbs govern the accusative case direct, without the aid or intervention
of any particle.
instance,
tlio
phrase
pressed -sr*? LS *J
<u
lie
X'
"
"
he knew
lj!s?-
^j
"he threw
It."
The
***
is liable to
"he threw a
some exceptions
may
stone,"
also
for
be
ex.-
latter phrase,
however,
may
be rendered
it."
^ J^
<J\
or
its
^,!
complementary proposition
&
&\
j^^
not do that
revolts against
??
:
me/
is
instead of
so,
3
frequently "omitted;
u^J
3^
^ 4^ ^ ^^
instead of
^\
"
^j^t. ^
thus,
"J16
J wonder that te
c4f^
^o likewise,
313
-$.
.!J
4-f.
J)ot[
,,-ss
<&\ * JA>
SI
'* *
permission to any
remarkable, as
is particularly
+&&
a. It is to
omitted, if
it is
"
signifies
he ordered."
for example,
"
u33J Jx&?
I desire that
omitted
^ "
^ i*?$j
preposition, such as
S s
be
$.
LXjp Jxi
359.
^\
:" for if
left to
am
is
in this
book;"
In
house."
jllll
When,
conjunction, the
j]&\
s~
i^j j
j>
2t
Jt\
<r
"
c^l^ll tj3p
^
,llfy
yjUotf
<dll
C<*O
there
t-&
2*\2*}j
the house/' or
there
is
no
man
is
after
5,
two nouns
second of them
is
it aztd
follow,
no
is
no doubt
there
^ intervene between
by some other
in the
&~
tive
^^j
had been
subject; thus,
f
place
^\
J^AJ*
subject of negation
its
not say
"
the 'preposition
supply
for instance, in
we must
<*
be-
the nega-
coupled by a
hence we
may
either say,
**
^Jij 1
cc
we may
there is no
man and
(no)
woman
in
^e
negative
1,
If
314
It
it
may
may
Influence each
Influence only
or last, or ?
finally,
first
may
M^U&^ J^y
we may say,
"O
X-^-Ox-^^^X
or x*\\ $j D^j y or finally, ^St
no man and (there Is) no woman
*>
^ S*]^
^ J>J
or h\^\
'
~*
-^
f~
j O^-J
In the house."
"
there
SS
Is
So in the
*O $
s<$ ?
41 b SI
*S
i-
or lastly , Allb
$\
'S3.-Ol3S6i3i.P-'"
or AJJU
5t
*j>
J| *
j^*
x'Cij'
viz.,
x
or
"there
**O
tf
-*
no power and no
Is
a. If the subject of
^^ xx
djU
Js>-j
J),
or 1SU
j4y
we may say
"there
^s JU J>-J S,
1dSI
no man sleeping
is
in
the
house."
**
no
man
Is
may
<
Zaid
Is
l^C 54y ^
particle
In
there
not standing."
not Intervene
to a
particle 2|
U may
"
except/^toay
not liave the
it:
and
when
lastly,
must be
is
indefinite.
which
attribute
3jj
1S\-
<14&
"the
a
ptf
secret trusted to
Zaid
is
not
"
The
361.
there
3JU
4-^ ^ ^J ^* "Zaid is
"
Muhammad is not
^1* U
73
is
i-u3
not a liar;"
J^
them
not betrayed;"
is
ill."
on the
God is
iJJU
their influence
lose
not standing;
is
and
is then,
"Zaid
315
we
should say
no man immortal."
^ and
interrogative particles
^l^ or
how
<t>
killed."
s
"55
362.
sides," etc.,
accusative,
IjuJ
in
When
the proposition
^J^r
is
is affirmative
the proposition
excepted
"
except," "be-
(^1 +2)
when
(J*&\
1\
is
may
me
for
example
except Zaid,"
may be
accusative case, or it
to
316
tho exception
me
accosted
Is
made;
thus,
3?
..
In which
except Zaid;
tS
substitute U'T
optionally
J.
J
)H
"I have
L^ ^ " no one
a^-1
SI
\ju[j
sentence
**O
pc*o
"55
S\
so also I>jIS\
<*SJ
we may
c^i3b
&
>
"3.
cLJjl C*
??
;
x-"""
case as
'-55
expressed subject
interpretation of
so \jj
"^
SI
>
cLiVj
M-/
lastly,
God
except
??
?
whore oo^
^^ U
"I
we have J^U
Is
>?
"
*.
Ja'far is
as
but a
4>9&
v)
SI
liar ;"
^^U
me
a.
"
JA^ ^
X
<
"
verily
cxcopted
to
When
understood*
tive CUBC
lli-1 is
it
bo In the nominative
?
understood;
follows
is
^^
HH
un-
5 ^^
j^c,l\
X
/
>
tlie
-X
t/
it
"
>
Jjo
thus, <dSH^ <^/0*
x
understood;
Har
is
thus,
Cl
-^
5l
l*Ll
>
,3*1^
v"
.
X]
"
must be
in the accusa-
53
except a horse.
When
tho particle
Sj
for the
is
subject
is
name
of the
317
first
thing ex-
thus, Slsr*
\
^ yif
z^
Ju*^
"
JH flj
Muhammad.
and
the proposition should be affirmative, all the exceptions are put in the
were
1M
jpiiHjXe
Ijjj
$]
"the people
J;xj
l^Sl
'Amru."
If the general
"
511
if
"G5'^5$x'C'rf*
$\ S>.\ Ju ll
^-" r
"ui
^j&i*
1\
\^ 1H oj^
-*
$>
s>
Ja'far,"
&,
take after
them.
If
we
them
consider
If
we view them as
prepositions, then
as
thus,
as
joj
ll>-
^U
and lastly,
as ojj liU-
thus, CC!c
?
alight ^excepting
L,
Abbas."
^^jjli
3 18
The exceptive
365.
of
all
which
particles Jlc ?
^, ^, and ?T^,
3,
In reality,, substantives,
signifying "dif-
are.
in the
same
me
to
except Zaid
have not
djj^
JA*S>-
^0JP "no
i^p \^L ^-AiU culil U
Un
L*
^Jp\*r
J^ Ux
ll
"
OI10
came
I have passed
"I have
a horse.'
^^
and
had been
31
to
&$\21
J?
the
Pentateuch
me
except Zaid;
me
J?
??
except Ja far;
?
by no one except
Ja'far;"
?
crca ^ ire )
came
me
to
It is to
^^
to
struck no
except
men came
the
LS i*^
or
books
the
u
brought
gwQl
j^
the particle
"^^
^^^ I*
Ix>.1
7?
if
except
particles
not apparently.
it is
"if
prefixed
thee,
rt
So
"
and
ie,
TT
ijJ
rt^o
God
f *^iT
before
Kur. u. 252
if
if it
"un-
"
??
not,
nori), lias
sentence to which
8jl
^^<f
ox
it;
visited
"had
not prevented."
o#/o^
^JJl
jJ**>JljJ
r SoHie-
319
when
omitted,
it
may
"had not
the clemency of
his
[verily
mercy
verily
a.
God
When
God
a pronoun
example
^ ^ U&M ^c
S
~G
2""**^
'
uJ
jJuUjl
is
is
as in the following
' S
i*}*?***
perjurers], for
is
it is
&\l
gy
him
the
Sometimes, however,
"had
it
we should have
The
367.
particles
or
^ "verily," ^"indeed;" ^
space;"
iS^sr*
^j
noun
66,
thus,
J),
that follows
$ ^^
^jjL iU ^
I
fi#
&3
& and
*% \g>
them
to
"
verily
be
God
$$ jy "she
JJU-
Muianunad
"like as;"
were!" (utinam)
desires that
3^l>.
it
"perhaps," "peradventure"
liarity,
is
or
is
tl*i
ill SuJ
L^J3
\jJiss4
"as
if
is
standing,
but
that
Muhammad
were present!"
perhaps
Muhammad
is
"would
1$
"Zaid
"
returning to-
320
ing power,
it is
between the
necessary
particle
tliat
governs
as
When
a sign."
particles are
may
LA
uJ3<i ^J
the preceding
particle, so as to form
"
to our
An
use of
"the
lion!
so jlill
the lion
tho
vocative case,
referred to
enemy
or
67.
our
exclamation
is
own language;
that
is,
sometimes made
s^*v*
thus,
x41
,,*<>*
<xJt
rather of its
case in
of the
is
321
SECTION
^>"
369,
u^^\ *b
Prosody
The prosody
IX.
Ilmu4-'ArucL
which
derived
is
which consonant
is
primitive vowels
22).
by
position.
in so doing let
it
when
0, f9
Jcasra
and
-7-,
&,
and
we have
just
by a
as
are, in
41
PROSODY,
322
we have
5,
J,
and
yet seen.
w,
a.
<</y3,
atif,
tlio
happens
to liave tho
quantities
made
!"^Lf
to
ilras,
in
marked
assurance doubly
Anapsesttis
^^
Fadilun, the
it
vowel
first
is
also
marked
long, except
"make
same vowels
tlie
respectively.
fladilun.
li
andj waw,
letters
Of
870*
adopted
Wo
mentioned,
tlio
various modifications, as
Its
i\^\
Its
formations, as models
word
it IB
the other
all
feet.
Thus,
is
)j*s,
an
and
The Arabian
ingly
the
i
eye.
,
is,
The only
as
we
objection to the
employment of the
it Is
root
altogether raroitablft
323
to
We
the Arabs.
It
prove to
may
easily
realize.
a.
in Arabic
we have
such as
that,
"a vowel
in
"a vowel
sonant
is
The
classical rale
if
IB
short," can
the
in
last syllable of
The reason
foot
Latin
and Greek,
following
may,
for
and
(369),
another classical
munis syllaba
rule,
versfts/' does
is,
often
begin
cloas,
viz.,
This rule
an equally obvious
if
Finally,
hold
viz.,
Hence our
M%tXr/o<?,
long by position."
one particular,
more vowels
U^X^laSew
naturally Bhort,
in
a concourse of two or
differs
Ultima
with
a
est
vowel.
com-
371.
The Perfect
or
Standard
Uteral,
Of
not
reason, viz.,
cuj usque
:
(loos
by
prolonged*
foot
those,
eL?UJC*
talm&t in
each consisting of three syllables; four arc septieach consisting of four BylkblcB
septilitoral,
but consisting
324
PBOSOD7.
MEASURE,
NO,
2.
JupU
c
3.
(/
"'
Ampbimacor
Mafadlhm
Epitritus primus
*"
quartos
^iLpl^.*
Mafftclilatuu
lambo-Anapccsius
8.
^L^l^vn Mutafadiltm
An&p&sto -Janibus
several modifications,
either
by
tlxe
feet
vil/tf or
iL
to
^7fo/,
appears to bo of
ever,
^-^
*x
\-y
s*x
admit,
of
eaeh^
This result
called
is
"deviation," or "infirmity/'
i.o. ?
some
^^
s /
addition or abstraction
MaiVlulillu
7.
8T2.
v - /<
lertius
cujA^-
6.
"^
sectindus
Fadiliitun
^L^xLuu* Mustafdilun
"
^J'SloU
6,
"Ffidiluu
^l.MtflL
4.
Bacchlus
(^y^i 3?adulun
1.
QUANTITY.
thirty
or
Imperfect*
little
more
additional feet,
Tliis distinction^
how-
utility, for in
most
practical
mingled with
make
tlio
himself
Perfect.
acquainted
Tho
student, therefore,
with
all
the
feet
had
better
ample,
the
regular
BaccMns
f
by becoming
MA
'^ -^
i-
^t
^Jlai
f "
dy**
^^
as
simply
cir-
3?or ex-
S lve nse
^
JL
O"^
feet
a
<
^U
325
which,
however, being matters rather of curiosity than of practical
utility, are here passed over.
326
PROSODY.
a. It
may
list
of metrical feet
number and
Romans
quality,
is
the
with those
of old.
more
to ascertain,
Of
the
Metre
-jy*&\ (plural
now proceed
of
These,
may be
but, as
we hare shown
body
distinction is whimsical
and
useless
It
too
much
of our
name
Is
we
did, for in
nor would
We
when printed in
terms? however,
wo
shall
be of any
It
make
the
Roman
all
character.
Arabic
Of such
WA
OF THE METBES.
"
rivalling the
to
name
a.
fact,
J?
Rhetorician,
whose
327
his tools."
to consist of
what we
which they
call
a couplet
u^Jo
call
is,
"
bait, i.e.
a tent" or
"
in
"
It is
generally allowed that a bait, or verse, cannot consist of less than two
S"
hemistichs
a
j?J*32 misra',
is
"
word which
si*
j^
called
misra? or
-?
literally signifies
of a door ;" and the resemblance between a distich and a door of two
folds, consists in this, that in
folds
may
you
the same
manner
it is
still
distich,
is called
Jj^
darb or J^f
general
name
first
foot is called
The intermediate
'qyz.
hashw,
jJ*L>-
The meaning
Jo^c
f Jcyl
ibtida,
feet of
"commencement;"
the
first
for, as
hemistich
is
Of the
and the
last
"
of sadr is the
first
The
the
'arttd.
first" or
beginning
last foot of
"pole of a tent;"
complete, nor
hemistich
and
its
is called
measure known.
"
darb,
i.e.
The
last
of one kind," or
foot
of the second
"
alike," it resembling
"
signifies, literally,
situation in filling
feet are 80 caflled,"
up the
Hashw
and on account of
their
PKOSODY.
VJ
'
H
W
pq
d
#
cf
pf
J3
.55
1
5
S
f
I
PH
A
T*
T3
|
a
rt
1
I
j*q
te
^
S
<r"i
OP THE METRES.
329
)
_[_
I
1
I
i
f
J
i
$
ft
a
3
I
1
1
330
I'HOSODY.
Secondly,
marked the
I have carefully
quantities of the
vowels ?
"but
two consonant^ or by a
and
to write the
Mmtajllun^
on the
as
wo have
It
wibjoot.
seen
followed
it is
and consequently
it
it
still
or,
more absurdly,
figure in some recent works
word MustafflUun,
we
at
by a
short
is
to have
rule (sec
by
369).
Lastly,
measure,
with
its
a, If
true principles
yoi
of
in the
Bo
Roman
Grammar,
Saey's
p. 618,
where the
v -v-.
>.
The grand
defect here
is,
,
that
which
we have no
is
representa-
altogether ignored
OF THE METBES.
331
the consequence Is that the learner is not only perplexed, but utterly
misled.
eschewed the
Roman
have
more
With a view
375.
made use
of the straight
line,
which
Let
two
by the
examine Class
that,
first
syllables of the
and
on with
Madid from
we have
the be-
by
so
Werve
otvfc
the rest
ifoe
>,
all
#*
MyjtatMh from
We
its close.
may
further
of the
four
What we have
Epitriti
feet
of
the
Mve
Circles
Fwe
ancients,
variously
by means of
circles,
of which the
ircle
they
call the
Discordant
332
PROSODY,
its feet
The
cordant.
common to
two
first
first circle
and the
fifth,
Arabs
the
the Coa~
376)
is
preferred
when
each stanza or
we have
first
hemistich of
vorflc,
mind
of an even
number
A verse
of feet.
consisting
is
Muf/mmman
foot, like
Class IV*
or Oetametcr
called (J^^JZo
it is
if it
be of six
we
&
those in
Mttmdfhs or Hexameter.
Some
after
foot
said to be
or Tetrameter,
Wo
shall
now
!Fbw~il\
the Kfimil) the Khafif^ the &arV, the MntaJcaril and the Hq/ae.
XI) o
especially
among the
of
comparatively rare
older writers.
We
usage,
JJ78),
373, a) which
that
wo
should
we must
make
OP THE METEES.
ciseness.
this sort
may
333
the
Of
Metre Tawll, or
the
work he
will
less.
Long*
378. This
poets.
It is
is
first
hemistich, which
second hemistich
it
may
a.
Hashw
and Fadulu
posed about, or a
little
metre
the
viz.,
of each hemistich
com-
Muhammad,
Taml.
Occa-
respectively.
The Mu'allakat
may
In the Darb or
are
the
first
of Zukgir, are in
what we
may
call
the
and suspended
of the
temple of Mecca.
Of
the
J^^?*% MdiU^
(twice),
f%
It Admits of
is
we .derkeon
ia
&e 'Amd,
viz.,
334
PROSODY,
By omitting
it
admits
both.
the Darb
may
Mustafdil.
Fibaaliy, all
Muiadil&n,
Of
Metre Wafir^ or
the
the Exuberant*
is
Its
Hexameter; in
is
which case both the ^Arud and the Darb generally admit
the deviation MafSUlil instead of Mafadilatun.
By
withdraw-
The
fifth
may
poom
and
of
it is
by
Of
the
Metre J&nl, or
the Perfect*
it
is
OP THE METRES.
33$
ameter
it
In the DarI
for Mutafddilun.
it
may
'Ar&d,
viz.,
Mutafa
or MutafddiL
foot into
tlie
Mutafd
by Labid, and the sixth "by 'Antarah, are composed in the
Hexametric form of this metre.
Of
the
Metre Khafif, or
FadUatm,
is
the Nimble.
(twice).
Hex-
Fddilatun.
verse,
by dropping
may
by
The
Hillazah,
is
generally
instead of Mmtafdilun, as the middle foot of the hemistich
Of
the
Metre Sarf, or
Standard, MBttafftiw,
83. This
poets.
metre
is
the
MMafdilm, MfduUtu,
(twice).
boh
:
in the
and
of
336
PROSODY.
tho verse,
t^
Sari
is
MafduU)
With
or Mafdu.
JM
Of
Metre Mutafcarify or
the
Mdntm,
Standard* Fadnlun,
is
the
Faffl'km,
Proximate*
Fadulun
(twice),
F^
instead of
F<$ulw<
It is occasionally used as a
Hexa-
meter? in which form both tho *Arud and tho Darl admit of
As an Octamoter it is
Persian poets who generally
with the
groat favourite
change the
last foot of
Fmlal
Of
Metre Hq/a&9 or
the
the Tremulous.
885. This
is
(twice),
intimated in
the
foot,
pose In
876
a.
In consequence of
it
as if it
which
we
it in
;
hence
It Is
scientific subjects of
Of works
of this nature
generally em-
any length
are
we may mention
OF THE RHYME.
The
which
metres
the
viz.,
it
differs
337
from the
rest of the
Arabian
first
as in our heroic
rhyme
is liable are,
In the Darb or
dilun.
Mustafdilun
may
This metre
who employ
it
is also
both as an
frequent occurrence
come down
among
most
we may add
'All
Our* limited space does not permit us to notice the remaining eight
metres.
Suffice it to
deviations as
Darb of the
all
subject to
The
some such
met with
in the
once
perceive that
Greek tragedians.
Of
386.
the
^/\
).
one verse
PKOSODY.
338
There
following*
is this peculiarity,
rhyme
It
said to
is
"be
The
it is
said to be
last
the rhyme, and is called the tVJ rawl^ "that which binds"
"
The species of poem called jwaj Jcafidafa (See
unites,"
or
389),
may bo further
qualified
by a
from the
letter,
coded by
tlicir
homogeneous
when
pre-
is
the rawi*
When
the
(
consonant of a verse
vowel
inert,
and
is
is
lowed by
geneous
and
the
mwl of a
1,
j,
what we have
and ^,
just
as not constituting
Of
the
Di/mnt
Jfibwk of
Poem.
to their
manner of
subject, the
Of
&
and the
Jcaiidah)
j*j+
339
each of which
muzdawaj ;
we
shall
Of
the
Kifah
among
(pi.
and
to
poem appears
&
Muhammad.
to native writers,
or, as
we
must
consist
first
is
The
admit of more
it
difference as to form,
that the
merely this
rhyme
two
in the
the rhyme of the second hemicouplet, the same must be continued in the
may be
In conclusion,
we may observe, that both the lEasldah and the Kifah may
Hi composed in any metre which the poet may choose though
of most frequent occurrence are the seven metres we
;
Bt**V
iefly noticed
from
Of
l"f
378
the * Ju*o
pL
ootf*)*
subjects,
living or deceased;
Deflections,
Kasidah
p0em
"This kjn(j Of
Ife
to
In the
f
the
satire; elegy;
first verse,
'JLriid
also paoral
or as
we
and
should say,
340
PROSODY.
as in the case of
When
tlic
or prayer for the health and prosperity of the person addrcssed, such as ?
"
May thy
life,
health,
moon revolve!"
According to the
0110
uppearn
in
for,
to
haw
the
first
fuivonty-fivo.
This statement,
however,
to liuve
may bo
alao,
111
true, for
we
all of
a.
and tho
wo may
$s Ghazal,
Tho 2iul&\
first
Imfe
first,
as its
name
the
^j^j
imports, con-
viz.,
In
fact if
have the
we
Rub&\
its
its
more
It is
application.
341
especially
em-
ployed in order to express the date of any event by the <xsrl mode of
numeration.
5.
(See
The Ghazal
39.)
a short
is
As
twelve stanzas.
poem
consisting, at
an average, of
five to
must
rhyme, and that same rhyme is continued in the JDarb of eaqt stanza
to the end of the composition.
The ordinary subjects of a Ghazal
are extravagant descriptions of the beauty of a mistress, and the sufferto which we may
From what we have just
it
hilarity.
Ghazal
by
to length.
Kulthum
differs in
no respect
In fact the
is to
fifth
all intents
of
and
The
differs as to form.
Of
390.
the
l^oj^
the Arabs.
among
Mwdawqf,
i.e.
"paired"
we haye
those
,
it is concerned ; it
merely
and the Ghazal are more in use
among
is
JRuba'l
already described.
It is
unrestricted as to
from three couplets upwards to any number, according to the nature of the subject. It consists of a succession
of stanzas or couplets, all of the same metre, and the *dond
length
of each stanza
Ifee first
but the
a,s
Muzdawaj
3,
as
we
is
its
numerous modi-
385
342
PROSODY.
**
>
The Mu^dawaj
in Arable corresponds
with the
hoxamotric poems of the Greek and Latin, or with such of
our own poems as are composed in the Iambic metre of ten
j*r\j\).
with rhyme.
syllables,
a,
from
classes described
still
more
it treats
888-390.
poem, however,
poem
is
"?
called
i^ ^
4-Jr* (#"
t^]/).
paniment
is
'
or l*s&\ (pi.
**
sj,
/Vr^l
*
have a
are prefaced
wo
Q* the praise
^r^
).
"**
of any person,
A
^uu),
^-
(pL
An
which
is
elegy
called
satiric
-M
&, or
-V
1
When
otc.> as
may
fall
is
noticed in
or Iku "verse/
42, a.
Poetic
891.
The
of the
of
may bo
poetry
The Arabs,
like the
Tho
may bo
Italy,
modem
The shortening
by
they
to it tho
may
2.
By
word
a contrajy
homogeneous
letter of prolongation, or
by doubling
343
OF POETIC LICENCE.
the following letter according to certain rules.
3.
They may,
it.
4.
verbal terminations, in a
manner
wash
similar to
36, a.
what we
stated
and
plural.
my
object
elementary
Grammar
may
desires further
This Treatise
is
to a
generally appended
"Carmen, Tograi,"
etc.
is
V^^B im|^0
(
tions
lajbour.
but
still
The
a perusal of
it
wilt
amply
best work,
t<>WOT^, 0m
fcepay
Aiatea Prosody
^Ito^Eimg
Boto% i$S%^4^^!T,
ife
is
der Arabisc&a
PBGSODY.
ject In a clear
and
satisfactory
poets,
The only
is,
that
it is
known
objection to
it
(if
a language
composed in German,
is
throughout
Germany.
SlWd
a,
edition of
the reader be possessed of the second
lie will
Grammar, a wort now exceedingly scarce,
end of .the second volume a very neat Treatise on Prosody.
De
find at the
Sacy's
Professor
mu
to express
any opinion,
as I never
had
am
So
sufficient
differs
perseverance to
make
how-
Arabs square with that of the ancient Greeks and Komans. In order
in every one
to effect this object, Professor Ewald is forced to set up,
of the sixteen metres, a standard of
Ms
bnm, which
all
preceding
upon
my
own
authorise
experience does not
a positive opinion.
he
may
preface,
rule,
If Prof.
me
and those of
all others
to give
that
wake
why
then,
prtmatwly
i& his
however,
is
BND,
WJtnnBDt AUSTIN,
standards of
the exception,
"
anything like
Ms
JHUQftfcBH, BttKEtfOftD.