Nominative Case (الرَّفْع)
The nominative case identifies the subject or topic, using 'Dhamma', 'Alif', or 'Waw' to show who's in charge.
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Nominative case marks the subject or the topic of your sentence.
- Singular nouns usually end with a 'u' sound (Dhamma).
- Dual nouns end in 'aan', and masculine plurals end in 'oon'.
- Use it for the doer of an action and the sentence topic.
Quick Reference
| Noun Type | Ending Mark | Example (Arabic) | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Singular | Dhamma ( ُ ) | الطالبُ | The student |
| Indefinite Singular | Tanween ( ٌ ) | طالبٌ | A student |
| Dual | Alif + Noon (انِ) | طالبانِ | Two students |
| Sound Masc. Plural | Waw + Noon (ونَ) | مدرسونَ | Teachers |
| Sound Fem. Plural | Dhamma (اتُ) | مدرساتُ | Female teachers |
| Broken Plural | Dhamma ( ُ ) | طلابُ | Students (Irregular) |
주요 예문
3 / 8الجوُّ جميلٌ اليوم.
The weather is beautiful today.
وصلَ المسافرونَ إلى المطار.
The travelers arrived at the airport.
الكتابانِ على الطاولة.
The two books are on the table.
The Default Rule
If you are unsure which case to use, go with Nominative! It's the 'home base' for Arabic nouns and you'll be right more often than not.
The 'Al' Trap
Never mix 'Al-' and 'Tanween'. It's either 'Al-Kitabu' or 'Kitabun'. They hate being in the same room together!
The Rule in 30 Seconds
- Nominative case marks the subject or the topic of your sentence.
- Singular nouns usually end with a 'u' sound (Dhamma).
- Dual nouns end in 'aan', and masculine plurals end in 'oon'.
- Use it for the doer of an action and the sentence topic.
Overview
Welcome to the heartbeat of Arabic grammar. If words were a sports team, the nominative case or Al-Raf' would be the star player. It is the default state for nouns in Arabic. Think of it as the 'natural' form of a word before it starts doing heavy lifting in a sentence. Most of the time, when you look up a word in a dictionary, it is in this case. It is the starting point for almost everything you will say. Whether you are ordering a coffee or introducing yourself, you are likely using Al-Raf'. It tells your listener who is doing what. It acts like a spotlight on the subject of your sentence. If you master this, you master the foundation of the language. It is friendly, predictable, and very common.
How This Grammar Works
In Arabic, nouns change their endings based on their role. This is called 'case marking'. For the nominative case, the magic usually happens at the very end of the word. Most singular nouns will end with a short 'u' sound. This sound is written as a small loop above the last letter called a Dhamma. However, Arabic likes to keep things interesting. If a word is dual or plural, the ending changes to a letter instead of a vowel. Think of it like a grammar traffic light. The Dhamma is the green light telling you this noun is the subject. It signals that the noun is either the topic you are talking about or the person performing an action. You won't always see these marks in modern books, but you will definitely hear them in formal speech. Even native speakers sometimes drop these endings in casual conversation. But for a student like you, knowing them makes you sound much more polished.
Formation Pattern
- 1Creating the nominative case depends on the number of people or things you are talking about. Follow these simple steps:
- 2For singular nouns like
kitaab(book), add aDhammato the end:kitaab-u. - 3For dual nouns (exactly two), the ending always becomes
aan. For example,mu'allim(teacher) becomesmu'allimaan(two teachers). - 4For sound masculine plurals, use the ending
oon. So,musafir(traveler) becomesmusafiroon(travelers). - 5For sound feminine plurals, keep the
Dhammabut add it to theaatending.Mu'allimaat-u(female teachers) is the result. - 6For broken plurals (the irregular ones), treat them like singular nouns. Just add a
Dhamma. For example,kutub(books) becomeskutub-u. - 7If the noun is indefinite (no 'the'), use
Tanween(double Dhamma). This sounds like 'un', such asmadiinat-un(a city).
When To Use It
You will use Al-Raf' in three main scenarios. First, use it for the Mubtada. This is the 'starting word' or topic of a sentence. If you say "The house is big," 'The house' is in the nominative case. Second, use it for the Khabar. This is the information you give about the topic. In the same sentence, 'big' is also nominative. Third, use it for the Fa'il. This is the person or thing doing an action. If you say "The student studied," 'The student' must be nominative. Imagine you are in a job interview. When you say "The manager called me," 'The manager' is your Fa'il. You would use Al-Raf' here. It is also used after the word Kaana (was) for the subject. In short: if it's the 'who' or the 'what' of the sentence, it’s probably nominative.
When Not To Use It
Don't use Al-Raf' when the noun is the receiver of an action. If you say "I saw the teacher," 'the teacher' is now an object. It needs the accusative case (Al-Nasb) instead. Also, avoid it after prepositions like fi (in), min (from), or ila (to). These words demand the genitive case (Al-Jarr). If you are describing possession, like "The book of the student," the student's name won't be nominative. It is like a VIP club; only subjects and topics are allowed in. If you use it for an object, people might think the pizza is eating you instead of you eating the pizza. That would be a very strange lunch indeed. Stay alert when the noun follows verbs that change the sentence structure.
Common Mistakes
The biggest mistake is sticking a Dhamma on everything. Remember the dual and plural rules! Learners often say mu'allimeen when they should say mu'allimoon. The een ending is for objects, not subjects. Another slip-up is forgetting the Tanween. If you say "This is a book," you need kitaab-un, not just kitaab-u. Don't forget that some nouns are stubborn. Words ending in a long 'aa' (like Mustafa) don't show the Dhamma at all. They are like undercover agents; the case is there, but you can't see it. Finally, don't mix up the subject and the object. In Arabic, word order can be flexible. The ending is your only map to know who did what. Even native speakers mess this up in fast speech, so don't be too hard on yourself.
Contrast With Similar Patterns
It helps to compare Al-Raf' with its siblings: Al-Nasb and Al-Jarr. Al-Raf' is the 'subject' case (usually Dhamma). Al-Nasb is the 'object' case (usually Fatha). Al-Jarr is the 'prepositional' case (usually Kasra). Let's look at a sentence: "The teacher (Raf') wrote a letter (Nasb) in the classroom (Jarr)." Notice how each noun has a different job? The teacher is the hero (Raf'). The letter is the receiver (Nasb). The classroom is just the location (Jarr). While Al-Raf' uses oon for masculine plurals, the other two cases use een. This is the most common point of confusion for A2 learners. Think of Al-Raf' as the 'resting state' of a noun. The other cases are 'active states' triggered by verbs or prepositions.
Quick FAQ
Q. Is every word that starts a sentence nominative?
A. Almost always, yes! That is the Mubtada.
Q. Can an adjective be nominative?
A. Yes, if it describes a nominative noun. Adjectives are like shadows; they follow the noun's case.
Q. What if the word is 'the' (Al) word?
A. Use a single Dhamma. Never use Tanween with Al.
Q. Does this apply to pronouns too?
A. Pronouns like Ana (I) are technically in the nominative position, but they don't change their shape.
Q. How do I say "two books" as a subject?
A. Use kitaabaan. The 'aan' is your signal for the nominative dual.
Q. Is this the same as the English 'Subjective' case?
A. Exactly! It's just like 'I' vs 'Me' or 'He' vs 'Him'.
Reference Table
| Noun Type | Ending Mark | Example (Arabic) | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Singular | Dhamma ( ُ ) | الطالبُ | The student |
| Indefinite Singular | Tanween ( ٌ ) | طالبٌ | A student |
| Dual | Alif + Noon (انِ) | طالبانِ | Two students |
| Sound Masc. Plural | Waw + Noon (ونَ) | مدرسونَ | Teachers |
| Sound Fem. Plural | Dhamma (اتُ) | مدرساتُ | Female teachers |
| Broken Plural | Dhamma ( ُ ) | طلابُ | Students (Irregular) |
The Default Rule
If you are unsure which case to use, go with Nominative! It's the 'home base' for Arabic nouns and you'll be right more often than not.
The 'Al' Trap
Never mix 'Al-' and 'Tanween'. It's either 'Al-Kitabu' or 'Kitabun'. They hate being in the same room together!
Listen for the 'Oon'
When watching Arabic news, listen for the 'oon' ending. It's a massive clue that the speaker is introducing the main characters of the story.
Casual vs. Formal
In daily street Arabic, people often stop the word at the last consonant (Sukun). But in job interviews, using the 'u' ending shows you are highly educated.
예시
8الجوُّ جميلٌ اليوم.
Focus: الجوُّ
The weather is beautiful today.
Both 'weather' and 'beautiful' are nominative because they form a topic-comment pair.
وصلَ المسافرونَ إلى المطار.
Focus: المسافرونَ
The travelers arrived at the airport.
Plural masculine nouns use 'oon' to show they are the ones who arrived.
الكتابانِ على الطاولة.
Focus: الكتابانِ
The two books are on the table.
Dual nouns use 'aan' instead of a Dhamma to show nominative case.
الطبيباتُ في المستشفى.
Focus: الطبيباتُ
The female doctors are in the hospital.
Feminine plurals use a regular Dhamma at the end.
قالَ المديرُ كلمتَهُ.
Focus: المديرُ
The manager gave his speech.
In a formal setting, the 'u' on 'Al-Mudeeru' is clearly pronounced.
✗ المهندسين هنا → ✓ المهندسون هنا
Focus: المهندسون
The engineers are here.
Since 'Engineers' is the subject, it must end in 'oon', not 'een'.
✗ هذا كتابُ → ✓ هذا كتابٌ
Focus: كتابٌ
This is a book.
Indefinite nouns as the predicate need the double Dhamma (un).
كانَ الامتحانُ سهلاً.
Focus: الامتحانُ
The exam was easy.
After 'Kaana', the subject stays nominative, but the predicate changes!
셀프 테스트
Choose the correct nominative form for 'The teachers (masc) are busy'.
___ مشغولون الآن.
'Al-Mudarrisoon' is the masculine plural nominative form used for the subject of a sentence.
Which word correctly completes: 'The girl is a student'?
البنتُ ___.
The predicate (Khabar) of a simple sentence must be in the nominative case, which is 'tanween dhamma' for indefinite nouns.
Identify the correct doer: 'The two players won the match'.
فازَ ___ في المباراة.
For dual nouns acting as the doer (Fa'il), we use the 'aan' ending.
🎉 점수: /3
시각 학습 자료
Subject vs Object Endings
Is this noun Nominative?
Is it the sentence topic (Mubtada)?
Is it the doer of the verb (Fa'il)?
Is it singular?
Add a Dhamma ( ُ )
Common Roles for Nominative Nouns
The Topic
- • البيتُ واسع (The house is big)
The Action Doer
- • نامَ الولدُ (The boy slept)
자주 묻는 질문
22 질문It is the nominative case in Arabic grammar. It marks nouns that act as the subject or the topic of a sentence, like al-waladu (the boy) when he is the one acting.
No, it's only for singular and some plural nouns. Dual nouns use an alif (aan), and masculine plurals use a waw (oon).
Because nouns are nominative unless something else—like a verb or a preposition—forces them to change. It is the dictionary form of the word.
A Mubtada is the subject that starts a nominal sentence. For example, in ash-shamsu mushriqa (The sun is shining), ash-shamsu is the Mubtada.
The Khabar is the information or predicate provided about the Mubtada. It is also in the nominative case.
The Fa'il is the doer of the action in a verbal sentence. In dahika al-rajulu (The man laughed), al-rajulu is the Fa'il.
Change the ending to aan. For example, kitabaan means 'two books' acting as a subject.
These words end in oon when they are nominative, like mu'allimoon (teachers).
They use a Dhamma just like singular nouns, placed over the final 't'. For example: al-banaatu.
Yes, if the noun is indefinite (no 'Al'). You would use double Dhamma, which sounds like 'un', such as babun (a door).
Nouns like Mustafa or Dunya are indeclinable. The nominative case is 'hidden' because you can't put a Dhamma on a long 'a'.
Yes! The word after Kaana (the subject) stays nominative. For example: kaana al-ta'amu ladheedhan (The food was delicious).
Arabic is flexible, but the case ending tells you who is who. Even if the object comes first, the nominative ending identifies the true subject.
Yes, adjectives must match the noun they describe. If the noun is nominative, the adjective must be nominative too.
Very similar! Those are nominative pronouns. In Arabic, we apply similar logic to all nouns.
That is the accusative case (Al-Nasb), usually for objects. It's the opposite of Al-Raf'.
Yes, names like Muhammadun or Zaydun take Tanween Dhamma when they are the subject.
In daily conversation, yes, people usually drop the final vowel. But for reading and formal writing, they are essential.
These are irregular plurals like kutub (books). In the nominative case, they behave just like singular nouns and take a Dhamma.
Yes, Inna is a bit of a rebel. It actually makes the subject accusative, but the predicate stays nominative!
Look for the oon on plurals or the aan on duals. For singulars, you often have to infer it from the sentence structure.
No, possessors take the genitive case (Al-Jarr). The 'thing possessed' can be nominative, but the 'owner' cannot.
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