I can find your ring.

The Arabic phrase I can find your ring. is pronounced 'anaa 'astaTii3u 'an 'ajida khaatamaka and written ﺃَﻧَﺎ ﺃَﺳﺘَﻄِﻴﻊُ ﺃَﻥ ﺃَﺟِﺪَ ﺧَﺎﺗَﻤَﻚَ

The Arabic words in I can find your ring.

Below you can see detailed information about every word in the Arabic phrase I can find your ring.. 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.

I

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

to be able

ﺃَﺳﺘَﻄِﻴﻊُ
Pronounciation: 'astaTii3u
English translation (of the word in its basic form): to be able
Part of speech: verb
person: I
tense: present tense

The base form of the word to be able

ﺍِﺳﺘَﻄَﺎﻉَ
istaTaa3a
(past tense he)

that

ﺃَﻥ
Pronounciation: 'an
English translation: that
Part of speech: mixed

to find

ﺃَﺟِﺪَ
Pronounciation: 'ajida
English translation (of the word in its basic form): to find
Part of speech: verb
person: I
tense: subjunktive

The base form of the word to find

ﻭَﺟَﺪَ
wajada
(past tense he)

ring

ﺧَﺎﺗَﻤَﻚَ
Pronounciation: khaatamaka
English translation: ring
Part of speech: noun
case: accusative
definiteness: definite form (beginning of an idafa contruction)
gender: masculine
Suffix
ْﻚَ
ka
your (m)
The suffix forms an idafa construction with the word.

Type of phrase: Nominal sentences where the predicate is a verbal sentence

An Arabic nominal sentence consists of two parts: a subject and a predicate. The predicate describes the subject. The subject is a noun that is definite. In this type of nominal sentence, the predicate is a verbal sentence that refers to the subject in some way. The subject comes before the verb, otherwise it would be verbal sentence and not a nominal sentence.

Read more about sentence of the type Nominal sentences where the predicate is a verbal sentence