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  2. In standard Arabic, there is also a dual version of "they" (هما - which is gender-indiscriminate as well) and masculine and feminine versions of the plural "they" (هم and هن).

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  3. Jun 26, 2019 · When it comes to subject pronouns (I, you, he, she, it, we, and they) in English) and using the dual in Arabic, note that there is no specific first person dual to refer to "we" in term of two people (we two). Instead, the subject pronoun we or "nahno" is used.

  4. Aug 14, 2024 · This table demonstrates the four Separate Subject Personal Pronouns: Pronoun in Arabic Pronoun in English Number of People and Gender Pronunciation; أنتُما: You both (two) 2nd person dual (masculine/feminine) أنتُنَّ: You all (f.) 2nd person plural (only feminine) هُما: They both (two) 3rd person dual (masculine/feminine ...

  5. The singular form is used when referring to one person or thing, the dual subject pronoun to refer to two people or two things, and the plural form when referring to more than two people or things. ان is added at the end of noun to indicate that it is dual- representing two people or objects.

  6. In Arabic, subject pronouns are distinguished by gender (masculine and feminine) and number (singular, dual, and plural). Here are the Arabic subject pronouns: Singular: – أنا (ana) – I. – أنتَ (anta) – You (masculine) – أنتِ (anti) – You (feminine) – هو (huwa) – He. – هي (hiya) – She. Dual: – أنتما (antuma) – You (masculine and feminine)

  7. In English, you have 1st, 2nd, and 3rd person pronouns. These are “I”, “you”, “he”, “she”, and “it” in singular. Then there are the plural pronouns: “we”, “you”, “they”. In Arabic, you have singular, dual, and plural pronouns in 1st, 2nd, and 3rd person.

  8. Pronouns in Arabic are indeclinable (not affected by noun cases). We differentiate two categories of pronouns in Arabic: Detached pronouns / الضَمائِر المُنْفَصِلة; Attached pronouns / الضَمائِر المُتَّصِلة

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