Arabic for pit
manjam
ﻣَﻨﺠَﻢ
pit – masculine singular
The Arabic word for pit is pronounced manjam and written ﻣَﻨﺠَﻢ.
Part of speech: noun. Pattern: time and place noun
Do you want to help arabic.fi?
We have thousands of words and almost two thousand phrases with detailed information, grammar lessons and many other resources. Everything is free to use. With your help, this website can be even better.
Read more here
Important letters:
ﻥ
ﺝ
ﻡ
The root of the word pit consists of three Arabic letters:
nun that is written ﻥ and pronounced n,
jim that is written ﺝ and pronounced j and
mim that is written ﻡ and pronounced m.
Words with the same root letters are often related.
Words related to pit
All letters in pit
ﻣَﻨﺠَﻢ
The Arabic word for pit consists of: The letter mim that is written ﻡ ( here ﻣـ ) and pronounced m. The short vowel a that is written as the sign َ above the letter. The letter nun that is written ﻥ ( here ـﻨـ ) and pronounced n and is a part of the root of the word. The letter jim that is written ﺝ ( here ـﺠـ ) and pronounced j and is a part of the root of the word. The short vowel a that is written as the sign َ above the letter. The letter mim that is written ﻡ ( here ـﻢ ) and pronounced m and is a part of the root of the word. Therefore, the word is writen ﻣَﻨﺠَﻢ and pronounced manjam.
Arabic is written from right to left. Short vowels are placed above or under the letters, the are usually omitted.
Learn how to write with Arabic letters
Learn how to write with Arabic letters
The pattern for pit
maf3al becomes manjam
We have seen that the Arabic word for pit is written ﻣَﻨﺠَﻢ and pronounced manjam. It follows the pattern time and place noun. All Arabic words with this pattern has the structure maf3al where f, 3 and l is replaced with the root letters of the word.
Since the pattern is maf3al and the root letters are n, j and m, the word becomes manjam.
All Arabic words with the same pattern follow the same structure. If you know the pattern and root of a word, you can often guess its meaning. Learn more about Arabic word patterns
Since the pattern is maf3al and the root letters are n, j and m, the word becomes manjam.
All Arabic words with the same pattern follow the same structure. If you know the pattern and root of a word, you can often guess its meaning. Learn more about Arabic word patterns