Palestinian-Jordanian Levantine Arabic 3.1. Present Tense

Level I – A1 1. Arabic Alphabet & Pronunciation 2. Linguistic Features of Palestinian-Jordanian Arabic 3. Vowels 4. Hamzah 5. Spelling & Syllable Stress 6.Cardinal Numbers I 7. Word Patterns in Arabic Level II – A2 1. The Definite Article الـ (il) 2. Gender 3. Personal Pronouns 4. Dual & Plural 5. Demonstrative Pronouns 6. Past Tense 7. Prepositions I Level III – B1 1. Present Tense 2. Expressing Desire: “To Want” 3. Expressing Possession: “To Have” 4. Prepositions II 5. Phrases 6. Interrogatives 7. Cardinal Numbers II Level IV – B2 1. Future Tense 2. Negation 3. Relative Pronouns 4. Adjectives 5. Degrees of Comparison 6. Conjunctions 7. Ordinal Numbers Level V – C1 1. Giving Commands & The Imperative 2. Verbal Nouns 3. Active Participle 4. Passive Participle 5. Irregular Verbs I 6. Adverbs 7. Modal Verbs Level VI – C2 1. Passive Voice 2. Irregular Verbs II 3. Progressive & Perfect Tenses 4. Special-Use Particles 5. Special-Use Pronouns, Nouns, & Words 6. Nouns of Place 7. Nouns of Instrument, Intensity, & Repetition
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In Arabic, الـزَّمَـن المُـضـارِع (az-zaman al-muḍāri‘) ‘the present tense’ primarily refers to actions in the present. This tense is also referred to sometimes as the perfect tense.

The present tense is expressed in two moods: indicative and subjunctive. We will focus here on the indicative mood, which is used in most cases. We will cover the few cases in which the subjunctive mood is required in the lessons to come.

Table of Contents

Basic Forms of Triliteral Present Verbs

The base forms of the triliteral present tense verb are as follows:

I-A
بِــفْــعَــل (bif al)
I-B
بِــفْــعِــل (bif il)
I-C
بُــفْــعُــل (buf ul)
بِــشْــرَب (bish rab)
he drinks
بِــكْــسِــر (bik sir)
he breaks
بُــكْــتُــب (buk tub)
he writes
بِــكْــبَــر (bik bar)
he grows bigger
بِــنْــزِل (bin zil)
he went down
بُـــدْرُس (bud rus)
he studies

The primary distinction among the three base forms lies in the short vowel of the middle radical. In Form I-C, the prefix بُــ (bu-) is used to maintain vowel harmony with the following syllable, a feature that is largely absent in North Levantine (Syrian and Lebanese) dialects.

Past verbs of Form I-B, i.e., فِــعِــل (fiil), typically appear as Form I-A in the present tense, i.e., بِــفْــعَــل (bif‘al). For example, the past verb شِـــرِب (shirib) he drank’ follows Form I-B, whereas the present verb بِــشْــرَب (bishrab) ‘he drinks’ follows Form I-A.

On the other hand, past verbs of Form I-A, i.e., فَــعَــل (faal), may correspond to any of the three present base forms, i.e., I-A, I-B, or I-C.

 Past Verb Present Verb 
Form I-Bشِـــرِب
shirib
he drank
==>بِــشْــرَب
bishrab
he drinks
Form I-A
Form I-Aبَــعَــث
baath
he sent
==>بِــبْــعَــث
bib‘ath
he sends
Form I-A
Form I-Aكَــسَــر
kasar
he broke
==>بِــكْــسِــر
biksir
he breaks
Form I-B
Form I-Aكَــتَــب
katab
he wrote
==>بُــكْــتُــب
buktub
he writes
Form I-C

Present-tense verb conjugation varies by gender and number. In the following table, “x” is set based on the three possible vowels that mark the middle radical in the base forms.

To conjugate a verb in the present indicative tense, the appropriate prefix and suffix are added to the stem ــفْـعـلـ (-f‘xl-).

 SingularPlural
1st person
(m/f)
أَنَـا بَــفْــعــل
’ana baf‘xl
I do
إِحْــنَـا مْــنــفْــعــل
’iḥna mnxf‘xl
We do
2nd person
masculine
إِنْــتَ بْــتــفْــعــل
’inta btxf‘xl
You do
إِنْــتُــوْ بْــتــفْـعـلُــوْ
’intu btxf‘xlu
You (all) do
2nd person
feminine
إِنْــتِ بْــتــفْــعــلِــي
’inti btxf‘xli
You do
إنْــتِــنْ بْــتــفْــعــلِـــن
’intin btxf‘xlin
You (all) do
3rd person
masculine
هُـــوِّ بــفْــعــل
huwwe bxf‘xl
He does
هُـــمِّ بــفْــعــلُــوْ
humme bxf‘xlu
They do
3rd person
feminine
هِـــيِّ بْــتــفْــعــل
hiyye btxf‘xl
She does
هِـــنِّ بــفْــعــلِـــن
hinni bxf‘xlin
They do

Here are some examples in context:

.بَــكْــتُــب رِسَــالِــة لَــصَــاحْــبِــيْ
baktub risāleh la-ṣāḥbi
I write a letter to my friend.
.إِحْــنَــا مْــنِــشْــرَب عَــصِــيْــر
’iḥna mnishrab ‘aṣīr
We drink juice.
.أَحْــمَــد بِــفْــتَــح اِلْــبَــاب
’aḥmad biftaḥ il-bāb
Ahmad opens the door.
.اِلْاَوْلَاد بِــكْــبَــرُوْ بْــسُــرْعَــة
il-awlād bikbaru b-sur‘ah
The boys grow up quickly.

Note that the detached personal pronoun may be omitted, since the verb conjugation ending often suffices to indicate the subject.

When describing non-human beings—such as animals, plants, objects, or concepts—in the plural, we use either the feminine singular or the plural form.

.بْــتِــكْــثَــر/بِــكْــثَــرُوْ اِلْــمَــشَــاكِــل
btikthar/biktharu il-mashākil
The problems increase.
.اِلْــبِــسَــس بْــتِــشْــرَب/ بِــشْــرَبُــوْ اِلْــمَــيِّــة
il-bisas btishrab/bishrabu il-mayyeh
The cats drink the water.

Depending on the dialect variant, some Palestinians make the distinction between genders in plural and use feminine forms specifically for all-female groups, whereas many others use the masculine pronoun to refer to both male and female groups.

.اِلْاَوْلَاد بِــكْــبَــرُوْ بْــسُــرْعَــة
il-awlād bikbaru b-sur‘ah
The boys grow up quickly.
.اِلْــبَــنَــات بِــكْــبَــرُوْ/بِــكْــبَــرِنْ بْــسُــرْعَـة
il-banāt bikbaru/bikbarin b-sur‘ah
The girls grow up quickly.

Derived Triliteral Present Verb Forms

In addition to the base verb forms, derived forms modify the triliteral root in various ways, such as doubling a consonant, lengthening a vowel, or inserting a prefix, infix, or suffix.

The ten most common present verb forms in Palestinian-Jordanian Arabic are:

IIIIIIIVV
بــفْــعــل
bxf xl
بِــفَــعِّــل
bifa‘‘il
بِــفَــاعِــل
bifāil
بِــفْــعِــل
bif il
بِــتْــفَــعَّــل
bitfa‘‘al
VIVIIVIIIIXX
بِــتْــفَــاعَــل
bitfāal
بِــنْــفِــعِــل
binfiil
بِــفْــتِــعِــل
biftiil
بِــفْــعَــلّ
bif all
بِــسْــتَــفْــعِــل
bistaf il

Form Legend:

I. Base Form

II. Intensive, Causative, or Transitive

III. One-sided Attempts

IV. Causative

V. Reflexive of II

VI. Reflexive of III 

VII. Passive of I

VIII. Reflexive of I

IX. Colors & Deformities

X. Causative Reflexive

Each present verb form is derived from its corresponding past verb form. For example, the present form of the past verb فَــاعَــل (fāal) is بِــفَــاعِــل (bifāil), both following Form III.

All these derived forms adhere to the same verb conjugation rules discussed earlier.

Let us consider some examples:

  • Verb forms derived from the triliteral root ك – ت – ب (k-t-b).
  • Verb forms derived from the triliteral root س – ل – م (s-l-m).
  • Verb forms derived from the triliteral root ع – ل – م (‘-l-m).
root-'-l-m

Note that only the highlighted verb forms are frequently used in everyday Palestinian-Jordanian Arabic.

Quadri-literal Present Verbs

Most verbs in Arabic have tri-consonantal roots, while only a few verbs have quadri-consonantal roots. We will examine the shortest past verb form for quadri-consonantal root verbs, بِــفَــعْــلِــل (bifa‘lil),  as well as the most common derived form, بِــتْــفَــعْــلَــل (bitfa‘lal).

Here are some examples:

بِــفَــعْــلِــل (bifa‘lil)بِــتْــفَــعْــلَــل (bitfa‘lal)
بِــتَــرْجِــم (bitarjim)
he translates
بِــتْــتَــرْجَــم (bittarjam)
it is (being) translated
بِــدَبْــلِــج (bidablij)
he dubs (e.g., a film)
بِــتْــدَبْــلَــج (bitdablaj)
it is (being) dubbed (e.g., a film)
بِــبَــرْمِــج (bibarmij)
he programs
بِــتْــبَــرْمَــج (bitbarmaj)
it is (being) programmed
بِــزَلْـــزِل (bizalzil)
he shakes violently
بِــتْــزَلْــزَل (bitzalzal)
it is (being) shaken violently

Quadri-literal root verbs and their derived forms follow the same verb conjugation rules discussed earlier.

.اِلْــوَرَقَــة بْــتِــتْــرْجَــم بْــسُــرْعَــة
il-waraqah (i) btittarjam b-sur‘ah
The paper is translated quickly.
.أَخُـــوْي وصَــاحْــبُــه بِــبَــرْمِــجُــوْ الــتِّــلْــفِــزْيُــون
’akhūy u- ṣāḥbuh bibarmiju -t-tilfizyown
My brother and his friend program the television.

Next: Expressing Desire – “To Want”

Back to: Prepositions I

Other lessons in Level III:

Adros Verse Education
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