Made Simple: A Step-by-Step Guide for Masculine and Feminine in Arabic.

There is a video about gender in Arabic made simple.You can learn about masculine and feminine in Arabic.

The Arabic language does not have a gender.The genders of the words are based on their subjects.In Arabic, nouns are the only part of speech that has any gender.

There is no neutral option when it comes to the gender of a nouns.Masculine is the default gender in Arabic and a word does not have to be special in order to reflect this.Femininity is not a default and a noun would have to reflect this gender in Arabic.There is a discussion of femininity in Arabic nouns.

The pronoun is masculine by default.It must have at least one of four signs in order to be considered feminine.It's entirely coincidental that which nouns receive one of these four signs and which don't receive any of them.There is no rule as to whether a word will be masculine or feminine.The word'man' is masculine and the word "woman" is feminine, so there are clues that will most likely be masculine as well.

This applies to both static and gerunds.Derived nouns can be either masculine or feminine depending on the requirements.The masculine and feminine forms of the derived word are similar.

The round Taa is a sign of femininity.It can be appended to masculine participles to make them feminine.Learn Arabic Online's sister site has more information about this letter.The Last 4 letters of the alphabet is an alphabet lesson.

If they are extra, the is a sign of femininity.The at the end of a word is part of the base letters.The word is not feminine.The word is feminine because it is extra.There is more information about the from The Last 4 letters of the alphabet.

The fourth sign of femininity is an assumed round-Taa.There are only a few words in the Arabic language that are feminine by means of an assumed sign.The round Taa appears in the diminutive form of the word, which makes it feminine despite not having an explicit sign.The word is feminine despite not being a sign, and we say there is an assumed round-Taa.The diminutive form is one of the reasons we know this word is feminine.

There are a few words in the table that do not have an explicit sign of femininity.

There are two types of femininity, one of which has a masculine counterpart among the living beings.(she-camel) is the first type because its counterpart is a male and it is both masculine and living.The word is the second type because the moon is masculine and not alive.

When it comes to complying to gender correspondence, feminine nouns of the second type are given a lot of lenience.If the word is the subject of a verbs, it doesn't need to be feminine.Most of the time, this happens in relation to feminine gerunds because they don't have live, masculine counterparts.One can say that is a feminine gerund and yet the sentential verbs is masculine.

The rules surrounding femininity are discussed in Arabic.There is a rule regarding feminine nouns that is pervasive.

This rule says that if you have a singular singular, and the entity to which it refers is not a human being, then this singular will be treated as feminine.The word (foxes) is a form of the same name.The word is masculine.It refers to something that isn't human.It will be treated as feminine.It will be described using singular feminine adjectives, verbs for which it is the subject, and so on.

One of the 3 signs of femininity in Arabic is a round Taa.It is called if it is written.It is called if it is written.

A masculine noun in Arabic doesn't need to have anything special to reflect this.Femininity is not a default in Arabic.One of the signs appended to the end of a word is necessary for it to be feminine.A round taa is the most popular.

The feminine word is.The Arabs use feminine adjectives to describe this word.

The house/estate is a feminine word.It is part of the subset of nouns that are known to be feminine despite not having any visible signs.