Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Arabic_verbs> ?p ?o }
- Arabic_verbs abstract "Arabic verbs (فعل fiʻl; pl. أفعال afʻāl), like the verbs in other Semitic languages, and the entire vocabulary in those languages, are based on a set of two, three, four and also five consonants (but mainly three consonants) called a root (triliteral or quadriliteral according to the number of consonants). The root communicates the basic meaning of the verb, e.g. k-t-b 'write', q-r-ʼ 'read', ʼ-k-l 'eat'. Changes to the vowels in between the consonants, along with prefixes or suffixes, specify grammatical functions such as person, gender, number, tense, mood, and voice. An example from the root k-t-b 'write':Various categories are marked on verbs: Two tenses (non-past, past; future is indicated by a prefix sa- or sawfa) Two voices (active, passive) Two genders (masculine, feminine) Three persons (first, second, third) Three numbers (singular, dual, plural) Six moods in the non-past only (indicative, subjunctive, jussive, imperative, and, only in Classical Arabic, short and long energetics) Nineteen forms, the derivational systems indicating derivative concepts such as intensive, causative, reciprocal, reflexive, frequentative etc. For each form, there is also an active and a passive participle (both adjectives, declined through the full paradigm of gender, number, case and state) and a verbal noun (declined for case; also, when lexicalized, may be declined for number).Weakness is an inherent property of a given verb determined by the particular consonants of the verb root (corresponding to a verb conjugation in Classical Latin and other European languages), with five main types of weakness and two or three subtypes of each type.Arabic grammarians typically use the root f-ʻ-l to indicate the particular shape of any given element of a verbal paradigm. As an example, the form yutakātabu 'he is corresponded (with)' would be listed generically as yutafāʻalu, specifying the generic shape of a strong Form VI passive verb, third-person masculine singular present indicative.The maximum possible total number of verb forms derivable from a root — not counting participles and verbal nouns — is approximately 13 person/number/gender forms; times 7.385 tense/mood combinations, counting the sa- future (since the moods are active only in the present tense, and the imperative has only 5 of the 13 paradigmatic forms); times 17 form/voice combinations (since forms IX, XI-XV exist only for a small number of stative roots, and form VII cannot normally form a passive), for a total of 1,632. Each of these has its own stem form, and each of these stem forms itself comes in numerous varieties, according to the weakness (or lack thereof) of the underlying root.".
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageID "36170582".
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageLength "165193".
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageOutDegree "182".
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageRevisionID "683336837".
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Active_voice.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Affricate.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Affricate_consonant.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Anticausative_verb.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Arabian_Peninsula.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Arabian_peninsula.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Assimilation_(linguistics).
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Autocausative_verb.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Category:Arabic_grammar.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Category:Verbs_by_language.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Causative.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Causative_verb.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Classical_Arabic.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Classical_Latin.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Coronal_consonant.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Delimitative_aspect.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Denominal_verb.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Denominative_verb.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Derivational_morphology.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Derived_stem.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Dictionary_form.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Dual_(grammatical_number).
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Durative.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Egyptian_Arabic.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Emphatic_consonant.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Energetic_mood.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Fatah.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Frequentative.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Future_tense.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Geminate_consonant.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Gemination.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Glide_consonant.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Glottal_stop.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Grammatical_aspect.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Grammatical_conjugation.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Grammatical_gender.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Grammatical_mood.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Grammatical_number.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Grammatical_person.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Grammatical_tense.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Grammatical_voice.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Hamza.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Hamzah.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Imperative_mood.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Imperfective.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Imperfective_aspect.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Inchoative.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Inchoative_aspect.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Indicative.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Indicative_mood.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Indirect_object.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Infinitive.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Infix.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Intensive.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Intensive_word_form.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Interdental.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Interdental_consonant.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Intransitive.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Intransitive_verb.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Iraqi_Arabic.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Irrealis_mood.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Islam.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Islām.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Istiqlal.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Istiqlal_(disambiguation).
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Jihad.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Jussive_mood.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Khartoum.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Lateral_consonant.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Lemma_(morphology).
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Levantine_Arabic.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Lexical_verb.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Mediopassive.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Mediopassive_voice.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Mesopotamian_Arabic.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Modern_Standard_Arabic.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Moroccan_Arabic.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Morphological_derivation.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Object_(grammar).
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Participle.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Passive_voice.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Perfective.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Perfective_aspect.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Present_tense.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Quadriliteral.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Realis_mood.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Reciprocal.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Reciprocal_(grammar).
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Reflexive_verb.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Reflexive_voice.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Roman_numeral.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Roman_numerals.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Semitic_languages.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Semitic_root.
- Arabic_verbs wikiPageWikiLink Semivowel.