The additional change when it comes to attaching a pronoun to a harf jarr which ends with a YAA with sukkoon occurs in the first person singular, and this is because we have 2 YAA sounds comming together, which will result in having a shaddah because we mentioned before that 2 sukkoons can not come one after the other and the last letter gets a fathah | Harf jarr ending with other letters than YAA or ALIF MAQSOORAH Harf jarr and adverbs ending with other letters than YAA or ALIF MAQSOORAH It was mentioned in the last lesson how to attach a pronoun to an ISM, and attaching them to the prepositions which do not end in a YAA or alif maqsoorah, or to adverbs, is very easy |
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This looks as following: The rest of the pronouns remain the same | We said in the previous lessons that the word comming after a harf jarr is an ISM and that the ISM following a harf jarr will be majroor, so therefore, when we attach a pronoun to a harf jarr then the attached pronoun in this case will be majroor |
As already mentioned in the previous lesson, when an attached pronoun is attached to an ISM then we have mudaf and mudaf ilayhi the possessive case.
14Same rule applies for the adverbs | One thing that must be noted is regarding the first person singular and plural here ORANGE COLOR |
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Let us look at the following examples: This is for the third person masculine |
DO you remember how every lesson on this blog starts? But what happens, for example, if a pronoun is attached to a harf jarr or adverb or a verb? Now the question is, what is the additional change? The suffix pronouns are divided into three categories : The first person singular and plural , the 2nd person singular and plural and the 3rd person singular and plural.
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