The goal of #TeamMaha is to make the process of learning and speaking Arabic a bit less maddening for you all, whether that be through offering language study advice, detailed vocabulary and grammar notes, or a bit of much-needed comic relief. We focus mainly on Egyptian Arabic (Team Maha) and Syrian Arabic (Team Nisreen), but you’ll also find posts on Modern Standard Arabic, Moroccan Arabic, Iraqi Arabic and other dialects.

The original #TeamMaha site went down in 2024. This is an archive. All credit for the content goes to Chris Hitchcock, Caitlyn Doucette, and guest authors.

FuSHa to Shami 13: Object pronouns

Object pronouns The object pronouns are pretty similar to fuSHa, especially if you’ve been taught the less literary variants used in many readings of MSA. They are also almost identical to the possessive pronouns: ana: -ni inte: -ak/k inti: -ek/ki huwwe: -o/h hiyye: -(h)a ni7na: -na intu: -kon, -kum hinne/hum: -(h)on, -hom The forms -hom and -kum are only used in Jor/Pal, whilst -hon and -kon are not used in Jordanian. In Syr/Leb, -ha and -hon often lose their h. ...

February 18, 2017 · Chris Hitchcock

FuSHa to Shami 12: Compound tenses (future, continuous, past habitual)

Shami has a few more complex structures that do not involve simply conjugating verbs. Future There are various ways to express the future. One is by using the simple present with b- on its own: بروح معك bruu7 ma3ak ‘I’ll go with you’ One is by using bédd- (literally ‘want’): بدي امرق لعندو بكرا béddi émro2 la-3éndo bukra – I’m going to go to his house tomorrow Another common way is with the particle رح ra7(a)- or the prefix حـ ‭‭7a-: ...

February 17, 2017 · Chris Hitchcock

FuSHa to Shami 11: Participles

For a much more detailed explanation of participles see the PDF. Participles (اسم فاعل واسم مفعول) are much more broadly used in Shami than in fuSHa. Often described lazily as equivalent to the English continuous, this is only sometimes the case and learning to use them properly (and understand their meaning) is very important to understanding normal speech. Formation Passive participles are basically the same as in fuSHa, except that those which are formed with a mu- prefix are usually formed with a m(é)- prefix instead (مكسر mkassar ‘broken’). Form I hollow participles are regularised (مبيوع mabyuu3 ‘sold’, not مباع) and in Syr/Leb – though not in Jor/Pal – form I defective participles are prefixed with me-, not ma- (مطفي méTfi ‘switched off’). ...

February 16, 2017 · Chris Hitchcock

FuSHa to Shami 10: Imperative

The formation of the imperative (فعل الأمر) is one of the major dividing lines between Jor/Pal and Syr/Leb. However, the differences are exclusively in form 1 (‘simple’) verbs. For non-form-1 verbs, the imperative is simply the present form with the prefix removed: تتعلم té-t3allam > تعلم t3allam ‘learn!’ (masc) تعلمي t-3allm-i > علمي ‭3allmi ‘teach!’ (fem) تشتغلو té-shteghl-u > اشتغلو shtéghlu ‘work!’ (pl) Sometimes, especially where it appears in fuSHa writing, the initial ا may be written in forms in Shami before consonant clusters. This does not mean it is necessarily pronounced. ...

February 15, 2017 · Chris Hitchcock

FuSHa to Shami 9: Subjunctive

The form in Shami that looks more like the fuSHa present tense (and the present tense in lots of other dialects), without b-, is very similar in behaviour to subjunctives in European languages. Conjugation The b-less present conjugates almost identically to the forms with b-: درس daras ‘study’ ana é-dros (a-dros) ادرس انا inte té-dros (ti-dros) تدرس انت inti té-dros-i (ti-dros-i) تدرسي انتي huwwe yé-dros (i-dros) يدرس هو hiyye té-dros (ti-dros) تدرس هي ni7na né-dros (ni-dros) ندرس نحنه intu té-dros-u (ti-dros-u) تدرسو ...

February 14, 2017 · Chris Hitchcock

FuSHa to Shami 8: Present tense

One of the first differences you discover between fuSHa and Shami (or indeed fuSHa and Egyptian) is that the present tense you’re used to seeing in fuSHa is always appearing with a mysterious b- prefix. It’s difficult to miss, since it appears all over the place. Of course, present tense verbs can also appear without b-, and often do – but in this case, they are typically doing something vaguely subjunctive-y which we will discuss in more detail later. ...

February 13, 2017 · Chris Hitchcock

FuSHa to Shami 7: Past tense

The past tense in Shami is basically pretty similar to FuSHa in its uses and structure. Conjugation The suffixes used for conjugating all past tense verbs are as follows: درس daras ‘study’ ana daras-t درست انا inte daras-t درست انت inti daras-ti درستي انتي huwwe daras درس هو hiyye dars-et (dars-at) درس هي ni7na daras-na درسنا نحنه intu daras-tu درستو انتو hinen daras-u درسو هنن As you can see, they generally line up with fuSHa but without the final vowels, except -et. In Palestinian -at and not –et is used, as in fuSHa. There are no dual forms and no plural feminine forms, and the forms for ana and inte are identical and can only be distinguished by context. The consonant cluster at the end of darast is often broken up with a helping vowel: daras@t. ...

February 12, 2017 · Chris Hitchcock

FuSHa to Shami 6: Numbers

In fuSHa numbers are famously terrible and impossible to master. In Shami, they are much better. One The number one has two forms: واحد waa7ed (in Jor/Pal waa7ad) and واحدة waa7de/wa7de. As in fuSHa, this typically follows the singular noun as an adjective to emphasise ‘one’: في شلغة واحدة بس fii shéghle waa7de bass ‘there’s just one thing’ With certain collective nouns (like foods and currencies) it can be placed before as a counter: ...

February 11, 2017 · Chris Hitchcock

FuSHa to Shami 5: Adjectives

Adjectives work pretty similarly to fuSHa, but are simpler. Masculine, feminine and plural Adjectives typically only have three or four forms in colloquial – a masculine singular, a feminine singular, and a plural which does not distinguish gender. In most adjectives the feminine is formed through addition of -a/e, sometimes dropping an unstressed short vowel: كبير كبيرة kbiir kbiire – big شاطر شاطرة shaaTer shaaTra – clever مشهور مشهورة mashhuur mashhuura – famous ...

February 9, 2017 · Chris Hitchcock

FuSHa to Shami 4: Nouns

In Shami (and in spoken dialects more generally) nouns work very similarly to fuSHa, but there are some things you should be aware of. Gender Nouns can be either masculine or feminine. In the singular, most feminine nouns are distinguished by the presence of a ـة (a taa marbuuTa), as in fuSHa. Unlike fuSHa, this is pronounced as –a or -e depending on the preceding sound: generally, it is -a after ط ص ض ظ خ غ ق ح ع ه ء ر but -e after other consonants: ...

February 8, 2017 · Chris Hitchcock