Arabic How much- How many كَمْ
How much- How many – كَمْ
- In this part of the lesson we will learn a new Interrogative Article, In-Shā’-Allâh (God willing). We have already learnt the use of Interrogative Articles in (Lesson 4 section 4).
- In this part of the lesson we will learn the rules for the Interrogative Article كَمْ meaning (How many?), In-Shā’-Allâh (God willing). We have previously learnt that the noun following an interrogative article takes the nominative case i.e., single /đammah/ if the noun is definite and double /đammah/ if the nouns are indefinite. However this rule does not apply to the noun following the interrogative article كَمْ. The following rules are applied for the use of the interrogative article كَمْ:
- The noun following the interrogative article كَمْis mostly a singular indefinite noun e.g.:
كَمْ كِتَابًا عِنْدَكَ؟ i.e., How many books do you have?
كَمْ كُرَّاسَةً مَعَكَ؟ i.e., How many notebooks are with you?
The noun following the interrogative article كَمْalways takes an accusative case i.e., /fatħatain/ double-/fatħah/ on the last letter. It must however be remembered that a masculine indefinite noun takes an /Alif/ along with /tanwīn/ in the accusative case but the feminine indefinite noun ending in the ة /tā’ marbūŧah/ does not take the /Alif/ – e.g.:
كَمْ قَمِيصًا هَذِهِ؟ i.e., How many shirts (masculine noun) are these?
كَمْ سَاعَةً فِي حَقِيبَتِكَ؟ i.e., How many watches (feminine noun) are in your bag?
- Let’s look at some more examples for a better understanding of the rule:
Picture | English | Arabic |
| How many brothers do you have Oh’ Muhammad? I have one brother | |
| And how many sisters do you have? I have two sisters | |
| How many wheels does a bicycle have Oh’ Hamid? It has two wheels | |
| How many Eid festivals are there in a year Oh’ Baquir? There are two Eid festivals in a year: they are Eid-ul-Fitr and Eid-ul-Adha | كَمْ عِيدًا فِي السَّنَةِ يَا بَاقِرُ؟ فِي السَّنَةِ عِيدَانِ: هُمَا عِيدُ الْفِطْرِ، وَعِيدُ الأَضْحَى. |
– كَمْ
- In this part of the lesson we will learn a new Interrogative Article, In-Shā’-Allâh (God willing). We have already learnt the use of Interrogative Articles in (Lesson 4 section 4).
- In this part of the lesson we will learn the rules for the Interrogative Article كَمْ meaning (How many?), In-Shā’-Allâh (God willing). We have previously learnt that the noun following an interrogative article takes the nominative case i.e., single /đammah/ if the noun is definite and double /đammah/ if the nouns are indefinite. However this rule does not apply to the noun following the interrogative article كَمْ. The following rules are applied for the use of the interrogative article كَمْ:
- The noun following the interrogative article كَمْis mostly a singular indefinite noun e.g.:
كَمْ كِتَابًا عِنْدَكَ؟ i.e., How many books do you have?
كَمْ كُرَّاسَةً مَعَكَ؟ i.e., How many notebooks are with you?
The noun following the interrogative article كَمْalways takes an accusative case i.e., /fatħatain/ double-/fatħah/ on the last letter. It must however be remembered that a masculine indefinite noun takes an /Alif/ along with /tanwīn/ in the accusative case but the feminine indefinite noun ending in the ة /tā’ marbūŧah/ does not take the /Alif/ – e.g.:
كَمْ قَمِيصًا هَذِهِ؟ i.e., How many shirts (masculine noun) are these?
كَمْ سَاعَةً فِي حَقِيبَتِكَ؟ i.e., How many watches (feminine noun) are in your bag?
- Let’s look at some more examples for a better understanding of the rule:
Picture | English | Arabic |
| How many brothers do you have Oh’ Muhammad? I have one brother | كَمْ أَخًا لَكَ يَا مُحَمَّدُ؟ لِي أَخٌ وَاحِدٌ. |
| And how many sisters do you have? I have two sisters | وَكَمْ أُخْتًا لَكَ؟ لِي أُخْتَانِ. |
| How many wheels does a bicycle have Oh’ Hamid? It has two wheels | كَمْ عَجَلَةً لِلدَّرَّاجَةِ يَا حَامِدُ؟ لَهَا عَجَلَتَانِ. |
| How many Eid festivals are there in a year Oh’ Baquir? There are two Eid festivals in a year: they are Eid-ul-Fitr and Eid-ul-Adha | كَمْ عِيدًا فِي السَّنَةِ يَا بَاقِرُ؟ فِي السَّنَةِ عِيدَانِ: هُمَا عِيدُ الْفِطْرِ، وَعِيدُ الأَضْحَى. |