محمد
(( المدير العام ))
دعاء الدولة : عدد المساهمات : 3173 33056 تاريخ الميلاد : 25/07/1977 تاريخ التسجيل : 28/02/2010 العمر : 46 مدرس - مدير الموقع عزيمة وإرادة
بطاقة الشخصية المدير العام: 10
| موضوع: تعلم اللغة العربية بدون معلم بالصوت والصورة الجمعة يوليو 02, 2010 4:02 am | |
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Credits
| Arabic nouns are either masculine or feminine. Usually when referring to a male, a masculine noun is usually used and when referring to a female, a feminine noun is used. In most cases the feminine noun is formed by adding a special character, the ta marbuta ـة ة, to the end of the masculine noun.
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Feminine Singular |
Masculine Singular |
teacher |
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professor/teacher |
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student |
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friend |
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colleague |
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muslim |
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thinker |
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translator |
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beginner |
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expert |
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envoy, reporter (someone sent on a mission) |
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writer, author |
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| Sometimes the noun used to refer to a male and the noun used for a female are completely different. It's not just nouns referring to people that have gender. Inanimate objects (doors, houses, cars, etc.) is either masculine or feminine. Whether an inanimate noun is masculine or feminine is mostly arbitrary. A lot of inanimate nouns ends in ta marbuta. When this is the case you know it is feminine. Unfortunately, not all feminine nouns end in ta marbuta. Whenever you learn a new word, and that word is a noun, it's best if you learn it's gender too. Here are some masculine nouns.. and here are some feminine nouns..
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