A walker, I am, towards the trees.

The Arabic phrase A walker, I am, towards the trees. is pronounced mashshaa'un 'anaa naHw al'ashjaari and written ﻣَﺸَّﺎﺀٌ ﺃَﻧَﺎ ﻧَﺤﻮ ﺍَﻟﺄَﺷﺠَﺎﺭِ

The Arabic words in A walker, I am, towards the trees.

Below you can see detailed information about every word in the Arabic phrase A walker, I am, towards the trees.. 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.

walker

ﻣَﺸَّﺎﺀٌ
Pronounciation: mashshaa'un
English translation: walker
Part of speech: noun
case: nominative
definiteness: indefinite form
gender: masculine
Nominative is for example used in nominal sentences. Both the subject (the part that is being described) and the predicate (the part that describes the subject) have nominative case.

I

ﺃَﻧَﺎ
Pronounciation: 'anaa
English translation: I
Part of speech: pronoun

toward

ﻧَﺤﻮ
Pronounciation: naHw
English translation: toward
Part of speech: adverb

tree

ﺍَﻟﺄَﺷﺠَﺎﺭِ
Pronounciation: al'ashjaari
English translation (of the word in its basic form): tree
Part of speech: noun
case: genitive
definiteness: definite form
gender: feminine
broken plural
The word has genitive case since it follows an adverb (word for time or place)

The base form of the word tree

ﺷَﺠَﺮَﺓ
shajara
(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.