Arabic nouns have three grammatical cases (I'rab) that change based on their function in a sentence: the nominative case (marfu') marked by tanwin damma (un) when the word is a subject, the accusative case (mansub) marked by tanwin fatha (an) when the word is an object, and the genitive case (majrur) marked by tanwin kasra (in) when the word follows a preposition or serves as mudaf ilayhi.
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Noun cases in Arabic #MisterBakur #learnArabicAdded:
In Arabic, we got three cases for nouns.
The first case, nominative case, when the word comes as a subject, like kitabun.
The double damma here called tanwin damma, and we say it like this, kitabun, kitabun.
The second case is the accusative case, when the word comes as an object, you got double fatha. You need to make the double fatha, kitaban.
And the last case is the genitive case, when the word follows a preposition or comes as mudaf ilayhi. So, we're going to say it kitabin. Those are the three cases in Arabic. The first one, kitabun, kitaban, kitabin.
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