C1 advanced_syntax 4 min de lecture

Accusative Case

The Accusative case (Nasb) is the default mode for all details, objects, and descriptors that receive the action of the verb.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Marks objects and details.
  • Usually ends in Fatha/Tanween.
  • Duals/Plurals use -ayni/-ina.
  • Fem Plurals take Kasra!

Quick Reference

Type of Word Nominative (Doer) Accusative (Object/Detail) Notes
Singular Damma (-u) Fatha (-a) Standard pattern
Dual Alif (-ani) Ya (-ayni) Change the letter!
Masc. Plural Waw (-una) Ya (-ina) Rhymes with 'seen'a
Fem. Plural Damma (-tu) Kasra (-ti) The exception! No Fatha.
The 5 Nouns Waw (Abu) Alif (Aba) Long vowels only
Diptotes Damma (-u) Fatha (-a) No Tanween allowed

Exemples clés

3 sur 9
1

Shahadtu al-mubarata ams.

I watched the match yesterday.

2

Inna al-muhandisina bari'una.

Indeed, the engineers are brilliant.

3

Kaana al-jawwu baridan.

The weather was cold.

💡

The 'Inna' Switch

Think of 'Inna' as a laser that zaps the FIRST word it touches into Accusative. 'Inna al-rajul-a...' (Indeed the man...).

⚠️

The Feminine Plural Hazard

If you see a group of ladies (At-Talibat), never give them a Fatha. They hate it. Give them a Kasra (-ti) even when they are the object.

The Rule in 30 Seconds

  • Marks objects and details.
  • Usually ends in Fatha/Tanween.
  • Duals/Plurals use -ayni/-ina.
  • Fem Plurals take Kasra!

Overview

Welcome to the VIP section of Arabic grammar: the Accusative Case, or *Nasb*. If the Nominative case is the boss (the doer), the Accusative is everything the boss affects. It's the receiver, the detail, the color, and the flair of the sentence. At the C1 level, we move way beyond just "I ate the apple." We're talking about expressing states of being, clarifying ambiguity, and navigating the famous "Inna" and "Kaana" landscape. Think of *Nasb* as the "Object Mode" of the language. It turns static nouns into dynamic parts of the action.

How This Grammar Works

Arabic relies on case endings to tell you who is doing what to whom. The Accusative case usually shouts "I am the target!" or "I am the detail!" It changes the vowel on the end of the word. Most of the time, this means you'll see a *Fatha* (a) or *Tanween Fath* (an) floating above the last letter. It’s like a flag waving to say, "Hey, the verb happened to me!" But be careful—Arabic likes to keep you on your toes. The sign changes depending on whether the word is singular, dual, plural, or one of those stubborn "Sound Feminine Plurals."

Formation Pattern

  1. 1Getting the ending right is 90% of the battle. Here is your cheat sheet:
  2. 2Singular Nouns & Broken Plurals: These are the easy ones. Just add a *Fatha* (-a) or *Tanween Fath* (-an). Example: Kitab becomes Kitaban.
  3. 3Dual Nouns (Two things): Forget vowels; we change letters. The -ani suffix becomes -ayni. Example: Kitabani becomes Kitabayni.
  4. 4Sound Masculine Plurals: similar to the dual, the -una becomes -ina. Example: Mu'allimuna becomes Mu'allimina.
  5. 5Sound Feminine Plurals (The Trap): This is where even native speakers trip up. These ladies refuse to take a *Fatha*. Instead, they take a *Kasra* (-i) to show they are Accusative. Yes, it looks like Genitive, but it's not. It's just being difficult. Example: Sayyaraat becomes Sayyaraatin (NOT Sayyaraatan).
  6. 6The Five Nouns: Words like Abu (father) become Aba. Example: Ra'aytu Aba-ka (I saw your dad).

When To Use It

Use the Accusative case in these specific C1 scenarios:

  • The Direct Object (Maf'ul Bihi): The thing receiving the action. "I wrote the *report*."
  • The Absolute Object (Maf'ul Mutlaq): Used for emphasis. "I ran a *running*."
  • Adverbs of Time/Place (Maf'ul Fihi): "I will travel *tomorrow*."
  • State of Being (Hal): How the subject was doing the action. "He arrived *smiling*."
  • Specification (Tamyiz): Clearing up ambiguity. "I bought a kilo of *apples*."
  • After Inna and her sisters: "Indeed, the *weather* is nice."
  • Predicate of Kaana and her sisters: "The lesson was *difficult*."

When Not To Use It

  • Do not use it for the Subject (Doer) of the sentence (that's Nominative).
  • Do not use it after a preposition like fi, ala, or min (that's Genitive).
  • Do not use it for the predicate of a basic Equational Sentence (A is B) unless Kaana or Inna invited themselves to the party.

Common Mistakes

  • The Feminine Plural Trap: I mentioned it before, but I'll say it again. Saying Ra'aytu al-mu'allimaat-a allows grammar elves to steal your socks. It must be al-mu'allimaat-i.
  • The Inna/Kaana Mix-up: Students often flip them. Remember: Inna wants the Noun in Accusative; Kaana wants the Predicate in Accusative. They are arch-rivals.
  • Forgetting the Alif: When writing *Tanween Fath* on indefinite nouns, you usually need to add a silent Alif at the end (e.g., Kitaaban, not just Kitaab with accent). Unless it ends in a Taa Marbuta (Hadiqatan).

Contrast With Similar Patterns

  • Nominative (Raf'): Mark of the Doer (-u, -una). Passive and calm.
  • Genitive (Jarr): Mark of Ownership or Prepositions (-i, -ina). Deep and connected.
  • Accusative (Nasb): Mark of the Detail/Object (-a, -ina, -ayni). Active and descriptive.

Quick FAQ

Q. Why do we say Shukran and not Shukrun?

A. Because Shukran implies "[I thank you] a thanking." It's an invisible verb triggering an Absolute Object!

Q. Does the adjective follow the noun's case?

A. Always. If you saw the "tall man," and "man" is Accusative, "tall" must be Accusative too. They are best friends.

Reference Table

Type of Word Nominative (Doer) Accusative (Object/Detail) Notes
Singular Damma (-u) Fatha (-a) Standard pattern
Dual Alif (-ani) Ya (-ayni) Change the letter!
Masc. Plural Waw (-una) Ya (-ina) Rhymes with 'seen'a
Fem. Plural Damma (-tu) Kasra (-ti) The exception! No Fatha.
The 5 Nouns Waw (Abu) Alif (Aba) Long vowels only
Diptotes Damma (-u) Fatha (-a) No Tanween allowed
💡

The 'Inna' Switch

Think of 'Inna' as a laser that zaps the FIRST word it touches into Accusative. 'Inna al-rajul-a...' (Indeed the man...).

⚠️

The Feminine Plural Hazard

If you see a group of ladies (At-Talibat), never give them a Fatha. They hate it. Give them a Kasra (-ti) even when they are the object.

🎯

Tanween Alif Helper

When adding 'an' (Tanween Fath), you almost always add a helper stick (Alif) at the end. `Bayt` -> `Baytan`. No Alif needed if it ends in Taa Marbuta.

💬

The Polite Accusative

Many polite phrases are Accusative because they imply a hidden verb. `Ahlan wa Sahlan` implies "(You have reached) family and (trodden) ease."

Exemples

9
#1 شَاهَدْتُ المُبَارَاةَ أَمْس.

Shahadtu al-mubarata ams.

Focus: المُبَارَاةَ

I watched the match yesterday.

Standard direct object taking Fatha.

#2 إِنَّ المُهَنْدِسِينَ بَارِعُونَ.

Inna al-muhandisina bari'una.

Focus: المُهَنْدِسِينَ

Indeed, the engineers are brilliant.

Noun of Inna takes Nasb (Ya because plural).

#3 كَانَ الجَوُّ بَارِداً.

Kaana al-jawwu baridan.

Focus: بَارِداً

The weather was cold.

Predicate of Kaana takes Nasb.

#4 وَصَلَ المُسَافِرُ مُتْعَبًا.

Wasala al-musafiru mut'aban.

Focus: مُتْعَبًا

The traveler arrived tired.

Hal (State) is always Accusative.

#5 اِشْتَرَيْتُ كِيلُو تُفَّاحًا.

Ishtaraytu kilo tuffahan.

Focus: تُفَّاحًا

I bought a kilo of apples.

Tamyiz (Specification) clears up 'kilo of what?'.

#6 قَابَلْتُ المُعَلِّمَاتِ فِي المَدْرَسَةِ.

Qabaltu al-mu'allimati fi al-madrasati.

Focus: المُعَلِّمَاتِ

I met the female teachers at school.

Fem Plural takes Kasra in Nasb! (Tricky one).

#7 رَأَيْتُ الطَّالِبَانِ فِي الفَصْلِ (✗) -> رَأَيْتُ الطَّالِبَيْنِ (✓)

Ra'aytu at-talibayni fi al-fasli.

Focus: الطَّالِبَيْنِ

I saw the two students in the class.

Dual must switch from Alif to Ya.

#8 زُرْتُ أَخُوكَ (✗) -> زُرْتُ أَخَاكَ (✓)

Zurtu akhaka.

Focus: أَخَاكَ

I visited your brother.

Five Nouns use Alif in Accusative.

#9 سِرْتُ وَالنَّهْرَ.

Sirtu wa an-nahra.

Focus: النَّهْرَ

I walked along the river.

Maf'ul Ma'ahu (Object of Accompaniment) - advanced usage.

Teste-toi

Choose the correct ending for the direct object.

قَرَأَ الطَّالِبُ ___ (The student read the books).

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : الكُتُبَ (Al-kutuba)

Direct objects take Fatha in the Accusative case.

Select the correct form for the Sound Masculine Plural after 'Inna'.

إِنَّ ___ مُجْتَهِدُونَ.

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : المُوَظَّفِينَ (Al-muwazzafina)

The noun following 'Inna' is Accusative, so the plural ending is '-ina'.

Identify the correct Feminine Plural ending.

كَرَّمَتِ المَدْرَسَةُ ___.

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : المُتَفَوِّقَاتِ (Al-mutafawwiqati)

Sound Feminine Plurals take a Kasra instead of a Fatha in the Accusative case.

🎉 Score : /3

Aides visuelles

Signs of Nasb: The Lineup

Fatha / Tanween
Singular Kitaban
Broken Plural Kutuban
The Letter 'Ya'
Dual Kitabayni
Masc. Plural Mu'allimina
The Imposter (Kasra)
Fem. Plural Sayyaraatin
The Letter 'Alif'
5 Nouns Abaka

Do I use Nasb?

1

Is it the DOER of the action?

YES ↓
NO
Next Step
2

Is it after a Preposition (fi, min, ala)?

YES ↓
NO
Next Step
3

Is it the Object, Time, State, or after Inna?

YES ↓
NO
Check Logic

The 5 Maf'uls (Objects)

🎯

Bihi (Direct)

  • Hit the ball
  • Ate the food
🔥

Mutlaq (Absolute)

  • Ran a running
  • Slept a sleeping
🤔

Li-ajlihi (Reason)

  • Stood out of respect
  • Worked for money
📍

Fihi (Time/Space)

  • Morning
  • Inside
🤝

Ma'ahu (With)

  • Walked with the wall
  • Along the river

Questions fréquentes

21 questions

The Fatha (-a) or Tanween Fath (-an). If in doubt with a singular word, this is your best bet.

It's just a unique rule for the 'At' ending (-aat). They simply do not accept Fatha. So Muslimaat becomes Muslimaatin in Nasb.

The Alif turns into a Ya. So Kitabani (two books) becomes Kitabayni. The sound changes from 'Aani' to 'Ayni'.

Yes! Adjectives are copycats. If the noun is Accusative, the adjective must be Accusative. Ra'aytu rajulan tawilan (I saw a tall man).

Context. Both look the same (-ina for masc, -ti for fem). Look for a preposition (min, fi) or possession – if yes, it's Genitive. If it's the object, it's Accusative.

It's a specifier noun that is always Accusative. It clarifies vague measurements, like Kilo mawzan (A kilo of bananas).

It describes the state of the subject while doing the verb. Ja'a rakidan (He came *running*). It answers 'How?' and is always Accusative.

Yes. Kaana al-baytu kabiran (The house was big). Kabiran is Nasb because of Kaana.

Yes. Inna al-bayta kabirun (Indeed the house is big). Al-bayta is Nasb because of Inna.

Ab, Akh, Ham, Fu, Dhu. They take an Alif. Aba, Akha, Dha.

Most masculine names do (Muhammadan). Feminine names and some specific masculine ones are diptotes and get only one Fatha (Fatimata), not Tanween.

It's an idiom where the verb is omitted. It technically means "(You have found) family and (you have found) ease."

The 'Absolute Object'. It uses the noun form of the verb for emphasis. Daraba darban (He hit a hitting / He hit hard).

The 'Reason Object'. It explains why. Qama ihtiraman (He stood *out of respect*).

Yes! If you say "I said: [He is leaving]", the whole bracketed sentence is the object of 'said' (Maqul al-Qawl) and is in the place of Nasb.

In formal recitation (Tajweed), no, you stop on the Alif sound (Kitaaba). In casual speech, you usually drop the case ending entirely (Kitaab).

It's the Waw al-Jama'a spelling rule, not Nasb. Don't confuse Katabu (they wrote - verb) with Mu'allimu (teachers - noun).

Yes, as an adverb of time (Maf'ul Fihi).

Look for the extra Alif at the end of indefinite words (kitaban), or the Ya in plurals/duals. Those are visual giveaways.

Yes. Laysa is a sister of Kaana. Its predicate is Accusative. Laysa al-jawwu harran (The weather is not hot).

Yes. Laakinna (but) is a sister of Inna. Its subject is Accusative. ...laakinna al-sayyarata ghaliyatun (...but the car is expensive).

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