For a while, I thought that you hated me.
The Arabic phrase For a while, I thought that you hated me. is pronounced i3taqadtu liwahlatin 'annaka kunta takrahunii and written ﺍِﻋﺘَﻘَﺪﺕُ ﻟِﻮَﻫﻠَﺔٍ ﺃَﻧَّﻚَ ﻛُﻨﺖَ ﺗَﻜﺮَﻫُﻨِﻲ
The Arabic words in For a while, I thought that you hated me.
Below you can see detailed information about every word in the Arabic phrase For a while, I thought that you hated me.. 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 think
ﺍِﻋﺘَﻘَﺪﺕُ
Pronounciation: i3taqadtu
English translation (of the word in its basic form): to think
Part of speech: verb
person: I
tense: past tense
The base form of the word to think
ﺍِﻋﺘَﻘَﺪَ
i3taqada
(past tense he)
for, to
ﻝِ
Pronounciation: li
English translation: for, to
Part of speech: preposition
A word that follows a preposition has genitive caseRead more
Attached to the word that follows.
moment
ﻭَﻫﻠَﺔٍ
Pronounciation: wahlatin
English translation (of the word in its basic form): moment
Part of speech: noun
The word has genitive case since it follows a prepositionRead more
The base form of the word moment
ﻭَﻫﻠَﺔ
wahla
(singular, indefinite, no case)
that
ﺃَﻧَّﻚَ
Pronounciation: 'annaka
English translation: that
Part of speech: mixed
Suffix
ْﻚَ
ka
your (m)
The suffix forms an idafa construction with the word.
to be
ﻛُﻨﺖَ
Pronounciation: kunta
English translation (of the word in its basic form): to be
Part of speech: verb
person: you (m)
tense: past tense
The base form of the word to be
ﻛَﺎﻥَ
kaana
(past tense he)
to hate
ﺗَﻜﺮَﻫُﻨِﻲ
Pronounciation: takrahunii
English translation (of the word in its basic form): to hate
Part of speech: verb
person: you (m)
tense: present tense
The base form of the word to hate
ﻛَﺮِﻩَ
kariha
(past tense he)
Suffix
ِْﻲ
ii
me
Suffix after verbs indicates the object of the action.
Type of phrase: Complete sentence
A complete sentence. The sentence contains a verb, but there are also complete Arabic sentences without any verb.