Activity for Medi1saif
Type | On... | Excerpt | Status | Date |
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Comment | Post #286591 |
Al-Jinn الجن is the plural of al-Jaan الجان and in singular it is either masculine al-Jinni الجني or al-Jinniyah feminine الجنية. (more) |
— | over 1 year ago |
Comment | Post #281346 |
Somali actually have an own language or dialect which hardly sounds like Arabic for most Arabs. None educated people there actually don't understand Arabic at all -as far as I can tell from my own experience-. (more) |
— | almost 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #281345 |
Well this seems to me too broad as a question, because all local dialects have some basis in fusha, so all of them have similarities, but also differences. And if you start counting the differences between two of them you may nearly find endless ones. (more) |
— | almost 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #278938 |
I think ancient Arabs used to pronounce each diacritic (al-Harakaat) on Arabic letters. In our modern times and maybe also due to the pausing rules in tajweed (of the qur'an) people don't pronounce them at the end of a sentence (when making a pause). I've once heard a scholar correcting his student w... (more) |
— | over 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #277364 |
@user53100 I'm not familiar with the English terms of Arabic grammar :) (more) |
— | over 3 years ago |