إِعْرَاب
Week 5 · Arabic Grammar

Grammatical States & Uses of the Ism

The Ism can be used in 22 different grammatical roles — yet Arabic only needs 3 endings to express all of them. This week you learn exactly how those 22 uses are distributed, plus two powerful sentence types that expand your reading ability dramatically.

1 Session
22 Uses Across 3 States
Kaana & Inna Sentences
Adverb Types
Week 5 of 6
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5.1
Where We Are

The Journey So Far

Over four weeks you have built the complete foundation of Arabic grammar. This week is the payoff — you will see exactly how all the pieces fit together by mapping every single role an Ism can play across the three grammatical states.

The Core Concept — Still in Mind

Most meaning in Arabic comes from vowels (differentiating roles of the Ism), patterns (Sarf — internal word structure), and grammatical structures (phrases). Vowels here specifically refers to the last-letter vowels that show grammatical state. This week we make that map complete.

صَرْف
Week 1
Sarf, Nahw, Parts of Speech
تَرْكِيب
Week 2
Sifah & Idafah Phrases
جُمْلَة
Week 3
Nominal & Verbal Sentences
كَانَ
Week 4
Past Tense Variations
إِعْرَاب
Week 5 ←
Complete Map of Uses
§1
The Big Question

How Languages Convey Grammatical Meaning

Every language needs a mechanism to tell its speakers which noun is doing the verb and which noun is having it done to them. Arabic, Urdu, and English each solve this problem differently — and understanding this reveals why Arabic's solution is uniquely powerful.

🇵🇰
Urdu — Extra Particles
Adds extra words (نے and کو) to mark roles
زید نے عمر کو مارا
Zayd (nay) hit Amr (ko)

نے marks the doer · کو marks the receiver. This allows flexible word order — but at the cost of adding extra words every time.
🇬🇧
English — Fixed Word Order
Fixes the sequence: Subject → Verb → Object
Zayd hit AmrAmr hit Zayd

Position in the sentence determines the role. Change the order and you change the meaning — or make it meaningless. Simple, but inflexible.
🕌
Arabic — Single Vowels
Changes the last-letter vowel of each noun
زَيْدٌ ضَرَبَ عَمْرًا زَيْدٌ (dammah = doer) · عَمْرًا (fathah = object). Any word order works. No extra words needed. The ending IS the grammar.
🏆

Arabic's solution is the most economical of all three. No extra words (unlike Urdu). No fixed order (unlike English). Just a single vowel on the last letter. This is why Arabic can say "Zayd hit Amr" in six different word orders without any ambiguity — as you saw in Week 3.

§2
The Core Question

22 Uses, Only 3 States

The Ism can be used in 22 different grammatical roles. Yet Arabic only needs 3 different endings to cover all of them. Why? And which of the 22 uses map to which of the 3 states? This is the question this entire week answers.

22
Possible Roles for the Ism
3
Grammatical State Endings
رَفْع ُ
Raf' — 8 uses
Dammah (ُ) ending
نَصْب َ
Nasb — 12 uses
Fathah (َ) ending
جَرّ ِ
Jarr — 2 uses
Kasrah (ِ) ending
💡

Three reasons why 3 endings cover all 22 uses: (1) Many of the 22 uses never appear side by side, so they don't need different endings. (2) Sometimes the type of word itself makes its role clear. (3) 3 is the bare mathematical minimum needed to remove all possible ambiguity. No more, no less — the perfect optimum.

§3
First Grammatical State

Places of Raf' — رَفْع

Raf' (the dammah ending ُ) is the state of prominence — it marks the primary players in a sentence. Subjects of all sentence types take Raf'. So do predicates of nominal sentences. There are 8 uses in total under Raf'.

رَفْع
Raf' — Nominative
ُ ضَمَّة
8 of the 22 uses
1
مُبْتَدَأ
Mubtada' — Subject of Nominal Sentence

The opening noun of a nominal sentence. Always in Raf'. Must be a noun or noun-equivalent.

الْكِتَابُ جَدِيدٌ — "The book is new"
2
خَبَر
Khabar — Predicate of Nominal Sentence

What you say about the Mubtada'. Also always in Raf' — both halves of a nominal sentence share the same state.

الْكِتَابُ جَدِيدٌ — جَدِيدٌ is Khabar
3
فَاعِل
Fa'il — Doer of a Verb

The subject of a verbal sentence — the one who performs the action. Always follows the verb and always in Raf'.

ذَهَبَ زَيْدٌ — زَيْدٌ is Fa'il
4
نَائِب فَاعِل
Na'ib Fa'il — Deputy Doer (Passive Subject)

When a verb is made passive, the object becomes a deputy subject. It takes Raf' — replacing the Fa'il which is no longer mentioned.

أُكِلَ التُّفَّاحُ — the apple was eaten (التُّفَّاحُ = Na'ib Fa'il)
5
اسم كَانَ
Ism of Kaana

When كَانَ is added to a nominal sentence, the Mubtada' becomes "Ism of Kaana" — it keeps the Raf' state.

كَانَ الْكِتَابُ — الْكِتَابُ = Ism of Kaana
6
خَبَر إِنَّ
Khabar of Inna

When إِنَّ begins a sentence, its predicate (Khabar) stays in Raf'. Only the subject (Ism of Inna) changes to Nasb.

إِنَّ الْكِتَابَ جَدِيدٌ — جَدِيدٌ = Khabar of Inna (Raf')
7–8
Additional Raf' Uses

The Mubtada' that has a verb as its predicate (nominal sentence with verbal predicate), and the subject of an oath construction — both also take Raf'.

§4
Second Grammatical State

Places of Nasb — نَصْب

Nasb (the fathah ending َ) is the state of objects and complements — it marks everything that receives an action or provides additional context. With 12 uses, Nasb is by far the largest category and includes several types of adverbs.

نَصْب
Nasb — Accusative
َ فَتْحَة
12 of the 22 uses
1
مَفْعُول بِهِ
Maf'ool Bihi — Direct Object

The noun upon which the verb is performed. The most common use of Nasb. Always after the verb and Fa'il.

أَكَلَ زَيْدٌ تُفَّاحَةً — "Zayd ate an apple" (apple = Nasb)
2
مَفْعُول مُطْلَق
Maf'ool Mutlaq — Absolute Object

A verbal noun (Masdar) used to emphasise or qualify the verb. Always derived from the same root as the verb.

فَرِحْتُ فَرَحًا كَثِيرًا — "I became very happy" (فَرَحًا = Nasb)
3
مَفْعُول فِيهِ
Maf'ool Fihi — Adverb of Time/Place

Answers "when?" or "where?" — the time or place of the action. Always in Nasb state.

ضَرَبَ زَيْدٌ عَمْرًا الْيَوْمَ — "Zayd hit Amr today" (الْيَوْمَ = Nasb)
4
مَفْعُول لَهُ
Maf'ool Lahu — Adverb of Reason

Answers "why?" — the reason or cause of the action. A verbal noun in Nasb explaining the motivation.

ضَرَبْتُهُ تَأْدِيبًا — "I hit him for discipline" (تَأْدِيبًا = Nasb)
5
حَال
Hal — Circumstantial Adverb

Describes the condition or manner of the subject or object at the time of the action — answers "how?" or "in what state?"

جَاءَ زَيْدٌ رَاكِبًا — "Zayd came riding" (رَاكِبًا = Nasb)
6
خَبَر كَانَ
Khabar of Kaana

When كَانَ enters a nominal sentence, the Khabar (predicate) shifts from Raf' to Nasb. This is كَانَ's most important grammatical effect.

كَانَ الْكِتَابُ جَدِيدًا — جَدِيدًا shifts to Nasb
7
اسم إِنَّ
Ism of Inna

When إِنَّ begins a sentence, the Mubtada' (subject) shifts from Raf' to Nasb. This is إِنَّ's main grammatical effect.

إِنَّ الْكِتَابَ جَدِيدٌ — الْكِتَابَ shifts to Nasb
8–12
Further Nasb Uses

Additional Nasb positions include: the exception (مُسْتَثْنَى), the specification (تَمْيِيز), the vocative (مُنَادَى), the object of certain particles, and objects of verbs in specific constructions. These are studied in depth in later weeks.

The Four Types of Adverb — All in Nasb

A major insight of this week is that all four adverb types take Nasb state. Once you know this, you can identify adverbs instantly in any sentence by their fathah ending:

Adverb Type 1
Maf'ool Mutlaq — Absolute Object
Answers: How intensely? In what manner?
فَرِحْتُ فَرَحًا كَثِيرًا
I became very (lit. much) happy.
Adverb Type 2
Maf'ool Fihi — Time & Place
Answers: When? Where?
ضَرَبَ زَيْدٌ عَمْرًا الْيَوْمَ
Zayd hit Amr today.
Adverb Type 3
Maf'ool Lahu — Reason & Cause
Answers: Why? For what purpose?
ضَرَبْتُهُ تَأْدِيبًا
I hit him for discipline.
Adverb Type 4
Hal — Circumstantial
Answers: How? In what state/condition?
جَاءَ زَيْدٌ رَاكِبًا
Zayd came riding.

Active vs Passive — Effect on the Object

When a verb is made passive, the direct object (Maf'ool Bihi in Nasb) disappears and becomes a deputy subject (Na'ib Fa'il in Raf'). This is one of the most important transformations in Arabic grammar:

✅ Active — Subject does the action
أَكَلَ زَيْدٌ تُفَّاحَةً
Zayd ate an apple.
زَيْدٌ = Fa'il (Raf' ُ) · تُفَّاحَةً = Maf'ool Bihi (Nasb ً). Both the doer and the object are present and clearly marked.
🔄 Passive — Object becomes deputy subject
أُكِلَتِ التُّفَّاحَةُ
The apple was eaten.
The doer (زَيْد) disappears. التُّفَّاحَةُ promotes to Na'ib Fa'il (Raf' ُ). The verb also changes form: أَكَلَ → أُكِلَ (فَعَلَ → فُعِلَ pattern from Week 4).
§5
Third Grammatical State

Places of Jarr — جَرّ

Jarr (the kasrah ending ِ) is the state of connection — it marks nouns that are linked to other words through prepositions or possession. With just 2 uses, Jarr is the most specific and the easiest to identify.

جَرّ
Jarr — Genitive
ِ كَسْرَة
2 of the 22 uses
1
مُضَاف إِلَيْهِ
Mudaf Ilayhi — Second Half of Possessive Phrase

In an Idafah phrase (Week 2), the possessor always takes Jarr. This was one of the three fixed rules of Idafah. No exceptions — ever.

بَابُ الْبَيْتِ — الْبَيْتِ = Mudaf Ilayhi (Jarr)
2
مَجْرُور
Majroor — After a Preposition

Any noun that follows a preposition (فِي, عَلَى, مِنْ, إِلَى, بِ, لِ, etc.) takes Jarr. Prepositions are governing Harfs (from Week 1) — they impose Jarr on whatever follows.

فِي الْبَيْتِ — الْبَيْتِ = Majroor (Jarr after فِي)
🎯

Jarr is the simplest state to identify: if a noun follows a preposition or is the second word of an Idafah phrase, it is always in Jarr. No other factors needed. This is one of the most immediately useful rules for reading Arabic text.

§6
Special Sentence Type

The Kaana Sentence — جُمْلَة كَانَ

كَانَ is not just an auxiliary verb for the past perfect (Week 4). It is also one of a class of verbs that enter nominal sentences and change the grammatical states of their components. This is its most important role in Quranic grammar.

What كَانَ Does to a Nominal Sentence

A regular nominal sentence has a Mubtada' (Raf') and a Khabar (Raf'). When كَانَ enters the sentence, the Mubtada' becomes "Ism of Kaana" and keeps its Raf' state — but the Khabar becomes "Khabar of Kaana" and shifts to Nasb. This is كَانَ's governing effect as a verb.

Nominal Sentence
الْكِتَابُ جَدِيدٌ
The book is new.
الْكِتَابُ = Mubtada' (Raf' ُ) جَدِيدٌ = Khabar (Raf' ٌ)
Both in Raf'
Raf' Raf'
Kaana Sentence
كَانَ الْكِتَابُ جَدِيدًا
The book was new.
الْكِتَابُ = Ism of Kaana (Raf' ُ) جَدِيدًا = Khabar of Kaana (Nasb ً)
كَانَ shifts Khabar
Raf' Nasb ← shifted
ComponentIn Nominal SentenceAfter كَانَ EntersState Change
The Subject (Mubtada') Mubtada' — Raf' ُ Ism of Kaana — Raf' ُ No change — stays Raf'
The Predicate (Khabar) Khabar — Raf' ُ Khabar of Kaana — Nasb َ Shifts to Nasb!

كَانَ as a governing verb: كَانَ is not just a past tense marker — it is a verb that "governs" the sentence it enters. It pulls the Khabar from Raf' down to Nasb. This is why the Khabar of Kaana appears in the list of Nasb positions, while the Ism of Kaana appears in the Raf' positions.

§7
Special Sentence Type

The Inna Sentence — جُمْلَة إِنَّ

إِنَّ is one of a group of particles that do the opposite of كَانَ — they shift the Mubtada' (subject) to Nasb while leaving the Khabar (predicate) in Raf'. إِنَّ also adds powerful meaning: emphasis, certainty, and the sense of "indeed" or "verily" — making it one of the most expressive particles in the Quran.

What إِنَّ Does to a Nominal Sentence

Nominal Sentence
الْكِتَابُ جَدِيدٌ
The book is new.
الْكِتَابُ = Mubtada' (Raf' ُ) جَدِيدٌ = Khabar (Raf' ٌ)
Both Raf'
Raf' Raf'
Inna Sentence
إِنَّ الْكِتَابَ جَدِيدٌ
Indeed, the book is new.
الْكِتَابَ = Ism of Inna (Nasb َ) جَدِيدٌ = Khabar of Inna (Raf' ٌ)
إِنَّ shifts Subject
Nasb ← shifted Raf'
ComponentIn Nominal SentenceAfter إِنَّ EntersState Change
The Subject (Mubtada') Mubtada' — Raf' ُ Ism of Inna — Nasb َ Shifts to Nasb!
The Predicate (Khabar) Khabar — Raf' ُ Khabar of Inna — Raf' ُ No change — stays Raf'

كَانَ vs إِنَّ — The Opposite Effects

كَانَ — Shifts the Khabar

Subject (Ism of Kaana) → stays Raf'
Predicate (Khabar of Kaana) → shifts to Nasb

كَانَ الْكِتَابُ جَدِيدًا

إِنَّ — Shifts the Ism (Subject)

Subject (Ism of Inna) → shifts to Nasb
Predicate (Khabar of Inna) → stays Raf'

إِنَّ الْكِتَابَ جَدِيدٌ
🌟

إِنَّ appears at the opening of hundreds of Quranic verses. When you see إِنَّ, you know immediately: the noun that follows is in Nasb (Ism of Inna), and the predicate that comes after is in Raf' (Khabar of Inna). إِنَّ اللَّهَ — اللَّهَ is in Nasb because of إِنَّ. You will now see this in every recitation.

§8
The Complete Picture

The Full Map — All 22 Uses Distributed

Here is the complete distribution of all 22 grammatical uses of the Ism across the three states. This is the map you have been building towards across all five weeks. Refer to it whenever you need to identify the role of any noun in an Arabic sentence.

رَفْع
Raf' — 8 Uses
ُ ضَمَّة
مُبْتَدَأMubtada' — Subject of nominal sentence
خَبَرKhabar — Predicate of nominal sentence
فَاعِلFa'il — Doer of a verb
نَائِب فَاعِلNa'ib Fa'il — Deputy doer (passive)
اسم كَانَIsm of Kaana
خَبَر إِنَّKhabar of Inna
Subject of oath construction
Nominal sentence with verbal predicate (subject part)
نَصْب
Nasb — 12 Uses
َ فَتْحَة
مَفْعُول بِهِMaf'ool Bihi — Direct object
مَفْعُول مُطْلَقMaf'ool Mutlaq — Absolute object
مَفْعُول فِيهِMaf'ool Fihi — Time & place adverb
مَفْعُول لَهُMaf'ool Lahu — Reason & cause adverb
حَالHal — Circumstantial adverb
خَبَر كَانَKhabar of Kaana
اسم إِنَّIsm of Inna
مُسْتَثْنَىMustathna — The exception
تَمْيِيزTamyeez — Specification
مُنَادَىMunada — The vocative (calling someone)
Object after certain particles
Objects in specific verb constructions
جَرّ
Jarr — 2 Uses
ِ كَسْرَة
مُضَاف إِلَيْهِMudaf Ilayhi — Second of possessive phrase
مَجْرُورMajroor — After a preposition

Jarr has only 2 uses — both introduced in Week 2. Its simplicity makes it the easiest state to identify in any Arabic text.

🏆

You now hold the complete map. Every noun you encounter in any Arabic sentence — including every verse of the Quran — falls into one of these 22 positions across 3 states. Arabic grammar is not an endless list of rules. It is this map, applied consistently.

Week 5 — What You Have Learned

Arabic determines grammar through vowels on the last letter — not extra words (Urdu) or fixed order (English)
The Ism has 22 possible grammatical roles distributed across 3 states: 8 Raf' · 12 Nasb · 2 Jarr
Raf' (ُ) marks subjects: Mubtada', Fa'il, Na'ib Fa'il, Ism of Kaana, Khabar of Inna
Nasb (َ) marks objects and adverbs: Maf'ool Bihi, Mutlaq, Fihi, Lahu, Hal, Khabar of Kaana, Ism of Inna
Jarr (ِ) marks connections: Mudaf Ilayhi (possessive) and Majroor (after prepositions) — just 2 uses
All four adverb types (Mutlaq, Fihi, Lahu, Hal) take Nasb state
Passive verbs: the direct object (Nasb) promotes to Na'ib Fa'il (Raf') — the doer disappears
كَانَ sentences: Ism stays Raf' · Khabar shifts to Nasb — كَانَ الْكِتَابُ جَدِيدًا
إِنَّ sentences: Ism shifts to Nasb · Khabar stays Raf' — إِنَّ الْكِتَابَ جَدِيدٌ
كَانَ shifts the predicate · إِنَّ shifts the subject — exact opposites
إِنَّ اللَّهَ in the Quran: اللَّهَ is in Nasb because of إِنَّ — visible in every recitation
The complete grammar formula is now fully mapped: 3 states + 22 uses + phrases = all of Arabic grammar
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Week 4 — Past Tense Variations
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Week 6 — Mu'rab vs Mabni
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