Treat people's flaws with patience.

The Arabic phrase Treat people's flaws with patience. is pronounced 3aalij 3uyuuba annaasi bialHilmi and written ﻋَﺎﻟِﺞ ﻋُﻴُﻮﺏَ ﺍَﻟﻨَّﺎﺱِ ﺑِﺎَﻟﺤِﻠﻢِ

The Arabic words in Treat people's flaws with patience.

Below you can see detailed information about every word in the Arabic phrase Treat people's flaws with patience.. You can see the English translation of the word, how the word is spelled and pronounced and how the word has been conjugated in the phrase. There is also a link to get even more information about the word.

to treat

ﻋَﺎﻟِﺞ
Pronounciation: 3aalij
English translation (of the word in its basic form): to treat
Part of speech: verb
person: I
tense: imperative

The base form of the word to treat

ﻋَﺎﻟَﺞَ
3aalaja
(past tense he)

fault, shame

ﻋُﻴُﻮﺏَ
Pronounciation: 3uyuuba
English translation (of the word in its basic form): fault, shame
Part of speech: noun
case: accusative
definiteness: definite form (beginning of an idafa contruction)
gender: masculine
broken plural
Accusative has many usages. Among others, it is used for the object in a verbal sentence. It is also used to express time an dplace. It is also used as predicative to incomplete verbs like kaana.

The base form of the word fault, shame

ﻋَﻴﺐ
3ayb
(singular, indefinite, no case)

people

ﺍَﻟﻨَّﺎﺱِ
Pronounciation: annaasi
English translation: people
Part of speech: noun
case: genitive
definiteness: definite form
gender: masculine
The word has genitive case since it is the owner of an an idafa contruction

by, with

ﺏِ
Pronounciation: bi
English translation: by, with
Part of speech: preposition
A word that follows a preposition has genitive caseRead more
Attached to the word that follows.

gentleness

ﺍَﻟﺤِﻠﻢِ
Pronounciation: alHilmi
English translation (of the word in its basic form): gentleness
Part of speech: noun
case: genitive
definiteness: definite form
gender: masculine
The word has genitive case since it follows a prepositionRead more

The base form of the word gentleness

ﺣِﻠﻢ
Hilm
(singular, indefinite, no case)

Type of phrase: Complete sentence

A complete sentence. The sentence contains a verb, but there are also complete Arabic sentences without any verb.