15

در فصل

Mastering Complex Plural Patterns

قاعده 4 از 5 در این فصل
A1 nouns_gender 5 دقیقه مطالعه

Broken Plural Pattern for Quadriliter

To pluralize four-consonant nouns, stretch them into the 'fa'alil' rhythm by adding a long 'aa' in the middle.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Used for nouns with four consonants like hotels or offices.
  • Insert a long 'alif' (aa) after the second consonant.
  • Follow the 'aa' with a short 'i' vowel for the third letter.
  • Examples: 'funduq' becomes 'fanadiq' and 'maktab' becomes 'makatib'.

Quick Reference

Singular Broken Plural Pattern English Meaning
`funduq` `fanadiq` `fa'alil` Hotel / Hotels
`maktab` `makatib` `fa'alil` Office / Offices
`shubbak` `shababik` `fa'alil` Window / Windows
`miftah` `mafatih` `fa'alil` Key / Keys
`mat'am` `mata'im` `fa'alil` Restaurant / Restaurants
`masjid` `masajid` `fa'alil` Mosque / Mosques
`tathkira` `tathakir` `fa'alil` Ticket / Tickets

مثال‌های کلیدی

3 از 8
1

الفنادق في دبي غالية.

The hotels in Dubai are expensive.

2

أريد ثلاث تذاكر.

I want three tickets.

3

أين المفاتيح؟

Where are the keys?

🎯

Hum the Rhythm

Think of the rhythm 'Da-DA-di-da'. Say 'Ma-KA-ti-bu'. If you can sing it to that beat, you've probably got the plural right!

⚠️

The 'T' Trap

Some words ending in 'ta marbuta' (ة) like 'tathkira' lose that 't' when they become broken plurals. Don't let it stay in the plural form.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Used for nouns with four consonants like hotels or offices.
  • Insert a long 'alif' (aa) after the second consonant.
  • Follow the 'aa' with a short 'i' vowel for the third letter.
  • Examples: 'funduq' becomes 'fanadiq' and 'maktab' becomes 'makatib'.

Overview

Welcome to one of the coolest parts of the Arabic language. You might already know that Arabic doesn't just add an 's' to the end of every word to make it plural. Instead, it often 'breaks' the word apart and rebuilds it. This is called a broken plural. Today, we are looking at a specific group: words with four consonants, or quadriliterals. Think of these as the 'heavyweights' of the noun world. They are longer words like funduq (hotel) or maktab (office). If you are ordering for a large group or booking multiple rooms, you need this rule. It sounds intimidating, but it is actually very rhythmic. Once you hear the beat, you will never forget it. It is like learning a new song on your favorite playlist.

How This Grammar Works

Arabic is a language built on patterns and roots. Most basic words have three root letters, but many have four. When you have a word with four main sounds, the plural usually follows a specific 'math equation.' You take the original word and stretch it out. You drop a long 'aa' sound right in the middle. This shifts the internal vowels and changes how the word feels in your mouth. Think of it like a piece of dough. You aren't adding a new topping; you are stretching the dough to make a bigger pizza. Even native speakers rely on this 'feel' for the rhythm rather than memorizing a list of rules. You can do the same thing.

Formation Pattern

  1. 1To make these plurals, you follow a very reliable step-by-step recipe. Most of these words will fall into the fa'alil pattern.
  2. 2Identify your four main consonants in the singular word.
  3. 3Keep the first two consonants exactly as they are.
  4. 4Add a long 'alif' (aa) immediately after the second consonant.
  5. 5Put the third consonant after that 'alif' with a short 'i' vowel.
  6. 6Finish with the fourth consonant.
  7. 7For example, take funduq (hotel). The consonants are F-N-D-Q. Following our recipe: F-N + 'aa' + D + 'i' + Q. You get fanadiq. It sounds like a musical bounce, doesn't it? If the singular word has a long vowel (like ee or aa) before the last letter, the plural gets even longer. It becomes fa'alil with a long 'ee' sound at the end. An example is miftah (key) becoming mafatih (keys).

When To Use It

Use this pattern whenever you are dealing with 'thing' nouns that have four consonants. This happens a lot with places and tools. If you are in a city and see many 'offices,' you say makatib. If you are looking at a row of 'windows,' you say shababik. This pattern is your best friend when traveling. It covers everything from fanadiq (hotels) to masajid (mosques) to mata'im (restaurants). Even if the word started as a three-letter root but grew an extra letter (like the 'm' in maktab), it still follows this four-letter rule. It is the go-to plural for the physical world around you.

When Not To Use It

Don't use this for human beings or professions most of the time. If you are talking about 'teachers' or 'engineers,' you usually use the 'sound' plural (adding un or in at the end). Also, if a word is very short, like kitab (book), it won't fit this four-consonant mold. It has its own three-letter pattern. Think of it like a grammar traffic light. If the word has four consonants, the light is green for this pattern. If it is a person's job or a tiny word, the light is red. Stop and look for a different rule. Using this for a person might make you sound a bit like you are calling them an object!

Common Mistakes

The biggest mistake is trying to add at or un to the end of these words. Saying funduqat for hotels will make a local smile, but they will know you are a beginner. Yes, even native speakers mess this up sometimes when they are kids! Another common slip-up is forgetting the long 'aa' in the middle. If you say fandiq, it sounds like a half-finished word. You need that long 'alif' to give the plural its power. Also, watch out for words that look like they have four letters but actually have a 'shadda' (a double letter). For example, shubbak (window) has a double 'b'. That counts as two consonants, so it follows our four-letter rule to become shababik.

Contrast With Similar Patterns

You might confuse this with the three-letter broken plurals. A word like qalb (heart) becomes qulub. Notice how short that is? It only has one vowel change. Our four-letter pattern is much more 'stretched.' Compare kalb (dog) -> kilab (short) with maktab (office) -> makatib (long). The four-letter pattern always feels more substantial. It has that distinct 'aa' then 'i' rhythm. If the singular word is long, the plural must be long. It is all about maintaining the balance of the word's weight. Think of it like a heavy-duty shelf compared to a small wall hook.

Quick FAQ

Q. Does this work for every four-letter word?

A. Almost all non-human nouns with four consonants use this.

Q. What if the word has five letters?

A. Usually, one letter gets dropped to fit this four-letter pattern.

Q. Is this formal or informal Arabic?

A. Both! You will hear this in the street and read it in a newspaper.

Q. Why does the vowel change to 'i' at the end?

A. It is just the 'song' of the language. It makes the plural sound finished and clear.

Reference Table

Singular Broken Plural Pattern English Meaning
`funduq` `fanadiq` `fa'alil` Hotel / Hotels
`maktab` `makatib` `fa'alil` Office / Offices
`shubbak` `shababik` `fa'alil` Window / Windows
`miftah` `mafatih` `fa'alil` Key / Keys
`mat'am` `mata'im` `fa'alil` Restaurant / Restaurants
`masjid` `masajid` `fa'alil` Mosque / Mosques
`tathkira` `tathakir` `fa'alil` Ticket / Tickets
🎯

Hum the Rhythm

Think of the rhythm 'Da-DA-di-da'. Say 'Ma-KA-ti-bu'. If you can sing it to that beat, you've probably got the plural right!

⚠️

The 'T' Trap

Some words ending in 'ta marbuta' (ة) like 'tathkira' lose that 't' when they become broken plurals. Don't let it stay in the plural form.

💬

Polite Plurals

In some dialects, using the correct broken plural makes you sound very educated and respectful. It shows you've put effort into the language's structure.

💡

Visualizing Slots

Imagine four chairs. In the plural, you push chairs 2 and 3 apart to make room for a giant 'A' balloon. That is your plural pattern!

مثال‌ها

8
#1 `al-fanadiq fi dubaī ghalia.`

الفنادق في دبي غالية.

Focus: `al-fanadiq`

The hotels in Dubai are expensive.

A very common use for travel.

#2 `uriid thalath tathakir.`

أريد ثلاث تذاكر.

Focus: `tathakir`

I want three tickets.

Perfect for buying bus or train tickets.

#3 `ayna al-mafatih?`

أين المفاتيح؟

Focus: `al-mafatih`

Where are the keys?

Uses the longer 'fa'alil' pattern because of the singular's long vowel.

#4 `shababik al-bayt kabira.`

شبابيك البيت كبيرة.

Focus: `shababik`

The windows of the house are big.

Notice how the double 'b' in shubbak counts as two letters.

#5 ✗ `maktabat` → ✓ `makatib`

تعمل في مكاتب كثيرة.

Focus: `makatib`

She works in many offices.

Don't add 'at' to 'maktab' unless you mean 'libraries' (maktabat).

#6 ✗ `funduqun` → ✓ `fanadiq`

هذه فنادق جميلة.

Focus: `fanadiq`

These are beautiful hotels.

Avoid the sound masculine plural for buildings.

#7 `al-masajid qadima.`

المساجد قديمة.

Focus: `al-masajid`

The mosques are ancient.

Formal architectural description.

#8 `al-mata'im maftuha.`

المطاعم مفتوحة.

Focus: `al-mata'im`

The restaurants are open.

Essential for hungry travelers!

خودت رو بسنج

Choose the correct plural for 'office' (maktab).

fī hadhihi al-binaya khamsa ___ .

✓ درسته! ✗ نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: a

The word 'maktab' follows the fa'alil pattern to become 'makatib'.

Select the plural form for 'hotel' (funduq).

hal hunaka ___ qariba?

✓ درسته! ✗ نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: b

The plural of 'funduq' is 'fanadiq' with a short 'i' in the third syllable.

What is the plural of 'key' (miftah)?

ma'ii kulla al-___ .

✓ درسته! ✗ نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: a

Because 'miftah' has a long vowel 'a', the plural becomes the longer 'mafatih'.

🎉 امتیاز: /3

ابزارهای بصری یادگیری

Singular vs. Plural Weight

Singular (Balanced)
Mak-tab Office
Fun-duq Hotel
Plural (Stretched)
Ma-ka-tib Offices
Fa-na-diq Hotels

Pluralization Decision Tree

1

Does the word have 4 consonants?

YES ↓
NO
Use 3-letter plural rules
2

Is it a human job?

YES ↓
NO
Apply fa'alil pattern
3

Use sound plural (-un/-at)

YES ↓
NO
Proceed with caution

Common Word Categories

📍

Locations

  • mata'im
  • makatib
🔧

Tools

  • mafatih
  • masamir

سوالات متداول

20 سوال

It is a word based on a root with four consonants instead of the usual three. Examples include funduq or miftah.

Most non-human nouns in Arabic use broken plurals. If it is a 'thing' or a 'place' with four letters, use this pattern.

If the singular has a long vowel like 'aa' or 'ee' before the last letter (e.g., miftah), the plural becomes mafatih. It just stretches a bit more.

In casual speech, you just say fanadiq. In formal grammar, the ending vowel changes based on its role in the sentence.

Generally, no. For humans like muhandis (engineer), you use the sound plural muhandisun. This pattern is mostly for objects and places.

Usually, the fifth letter is dropped or ignored to fit the fa'alil pattern. Arabic loves its four-slot structure for long plurals.

Yes, it is often called the 'ultimate plural' or muntaha al-jumu'. It is the final form a plural can take.

Actually, maktabat means 'libraries'. The plural of maktab (office) is makatib. It is a very common point of confusion!

Look for words that start with 'ma' or have a long 'aa' in the second syllable. That is a classic giveaway for this plural.

This pattern is actually quite regular for four-consonant words. It is one of the more 'stable' rules in Arabic.

Yes! Because broken plurals are irregular, dictionaries will always show the plural form next to the singular noun.

Sometimes borrowed words fit this! The word for 'telephone' can pluralize to talafin in some dialects, following the same rhythm.

Because you 'break' the internal structure of the singular word rather than just adding a suffix at the end.

For these broken plurals, the pattern is the same regardless of the singular's original gender.

Once you master the fa'alil rhythm, you will find yourself guessing correctly about 80% of the time!

Yes, in Arabic, non-human plurals are treated as 'singular feminine' for verbs and adjectives. So you'd say al-fanadiq kabira (The hotels is big).

It is a short, sharp 'i' like in the English word 'sit'. For example, ma-ka-tib.

Yes, the 'b' is doubled (shadda), so it acts like two consonants: Sh-B-B-K. This makes it a quadriliteral.

Of course! They will understand the singular word, but using the broken plural makes you sound much more fluent.

Yes, usually toward the end of level A1 or start of A2, as it is essential for basic conversation about the world.

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