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Quizzes > Quizzes for Business > Education

Ultimate Arabic Vocabulary and Grammar Quiz

Sharpen Your Arabic Grammar and Vocabulary Skills

Difficulty: Moderate
Questions: 20
Learning OutcomesStudy Material
Colorful paper art promoting an engaging Arabic Vocabulary and Grammar Quiz.

This Arabic vocabulary and grammar quiz helps you practice key words and sentence rules in 15 quick multiple-choice questions. Use it to spot gaps and build speed before a class or test. When you finish, keep going with a combined vocab and grammar quiz or try a focused grammar quiz .

What is the English meaning of the Arabic word 'كتاب'?
Pen
Table
House
Book
'كتاب' means 'book' in English. It does not refer to a pen, table, or house.
What does the Arabic word 'سوق' mean in English?
Friend
Market
Road
Water
'سوق' translates to 'market' in English. It is not the word for road, water, or friend.
Which of the following is the Arabic word for 'school'?
...درسة
سيارة
...طع...
...طار
The word '...درسة' means 'school' in Arabic. The others mean 'car', 'airport', and 'restaurant'.
Which of the following words is definite (i.e., includes the Arabic definite article)?
...درسة
كتاب
الكتاب
سيارة
'الكتاب' includes the definite article 'ال'. The others are indefinite nouns without 'ال'.
What is the grammatical gender of the Arabic noun 'شجرة' (tree)?
Dual
Plural
Masculine
Feminine
'شجرة' is a feminine singular noun in Arabic. It is not masculine, dual, or plural.
Which phrase correctly means 'big city' in Arabic?
...دين كبير
...دينة كبير
...دينه كبيره
...دينة كبيرة
The noun '...دينة' is feminine singular and the adjective 'كبيرة' must agree in gender and number. The others do not match correctly.
What is the correct Arabic verb for 'he writes' in the present tense?
أكتب
يكتبان
تكتب
يكتب
'يكتب' is the third person masculine singular present-tense form meaning 'he writes'. The others correspond to different persons or numbers.
Which sentence is grammatically correct for 'He went to the market'?
هو ذهب إلى السوق
هو ذهبت إلى السوق
هو تذهب إلى السوق
هو يذهب السوق
In past tense for 'he', the verb is 'ذهب'. The pronoun 'هو' plus 'ذهب إلى السوق' correctly forms the sentence.
How do you say 'They (feminine) are writing' in Arabic?
ه... يكتبون
هن يكتب
هن يكتبن
هو يكتبن
For a feminine plural subject, the verb takes the suffix '-ن' as in 'يكتبن'. The other forms are incorrect for feminine plural.
How is 'the fast car' correctly translated into Arabic?
سيارة السريعة
السيارة السريعة
السيارة السريع
السريعة السيارة
The noun 'سيارة' with the definite article takes the adjective 'السريعة' also definite and agreeing in gender and number.
What is the correct Arabic verb form for 'you (dual) go'?
تذهبين
تذهبون
تذهبان
يذهبان
For the second person dual, the verb takes the suffix '-ان' as in 'تذهبان'. The others correspond to plural or singular forms.
Which phrase correctly translates 'diligent students' (masculine plural) in Arabic?
طالبات ...جتهدون
طلاب ...جتهد
طلاب ...جتهدون
طلاب ...جتهدين
A masculine plural noun 'طلاب' takes the adjective '...جتهدون' in the masculine plural form. The others mismatch gender or number.
What is the correct Arabic translation for 'My friend (female) went to the airport.'?
ذهبت صديقتي ٝي ال...طار
ذهبت صديقتي إلى ال...طار
ذهب صديقتي إلى ال...طار
ذهبت صديقتي على ال...طار
The past tense feminine form 'ذهبت' plus the subject 'صديقتي' and the preposition 'إلى' for 'to' gives the correct sentence.
What is the correct past tense form of 'to eat' for 'they (masculine) ate'?
أكل
أكلن
أكلوا
أكلت...
For masculine plural in the past tense, the verb 'أكل' takes the suffix '-وا', forming 'أكلوا'. The others are different persons or numbers.
In the Arabic sentence 'كتب الولد الرسالة', what is the sentence order?
VOS
SVO
VSO
SOV
The verb 'كتب' comes first, followed by the subject 'الولد' and then the object 'الرسالة', making it a VSO structure.
Which phrase properly expresses 'two new books' in the Arabic nominative case?
كتابان جديدان
كتابين جديدان
كتابين جديدين
كتابان جديدين
In the nominative dual, both noun and adjective take '-ان'. Hence 'كتابان جديدان' is correct.
In the sentence 'قرأتٝ الكتاب الذي اشتريتهٝ أ...س', what is the grammatical function of 'الذي'?
Definite article
Demonstrative pronoun
Relative pronoun
Interrogative pronoun
'الذي' introduces a relative clause describing 'الكتاب', so it functions as a relative pronoun.
Which sentence correctly translates 'She saw her two brothers' into Arabic?
رأت أخوي
رأت أخويها
رأت أخوها
رأت أخاها
In Arabic, the dual possessive is shown by 'أخويها' meaning 'her two brothers'. The others are singular or malformed.
In 'ذهبتٝ إلى ال...درسةٝ', what grammatical case does 'ال...درسةٝ' have?
Jussive
Genitive
Accusative
Nominative
After the preposition 'إلى', the noun takes the genitive case, marked here by the kasra ending on 'ال...درسةٝ'.
Which Arabic sentence correctly means 'If he studies, he will succeed'?
عند...ا درس ينجح
إذا درس ينجح
إذا يدرس سينجح
إن يدرس ٝسوٝ ينجح
The conditional 'if' uses 'إذا' followed by the past-tense verb 'درس' and then the present 'ينجح'. The other forms misuse tense or conjunction.
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Learning Outcomes

  1. Identify common Arabic vocabulary terms in context
  2. Analyse Arabic sentence structures for grammatical accuracy
  3. Apply noun-adjective agreement and gender rules
  4. Master verb conjugations across different tenses
  5. Evaluate translations to ensure proper grammar usage

Cheat Sheet

  1. Master the Arabic Root System - Dive into the magic of three-letter roots that power everyday words! For example, k-t-b yields kitab (book) to maktab (office).
  2. Understand Noun-Adjective Agreement - Make your descriptions sing by matching adjectives to nouns in gender and number. Think "bint jameela" for "beautiful girl" (both feminine singular).
  3. Learn Verb Conjugations Across Tenses - Tackle past, present and future by mastering each verb form. Watch out for sneaky irregulars like yakul (he eats) vs. akala (he ate)!
  4. Grasp the Concept of Iḝĝfah (Possessive Construction) - Learn how to link nouns to show possession, literally saying "daughter of Hasan" instead of "Hasan's daughter." This trick unlocks smoother sentences!
  5. Recognize the Dual Form in Nouns - Arabic isn't just singular and plural - there's a special dual! Add "ان" or "ين" to count exactly two, like kitab → kitaban (two books).
  6. Understand the Use of Definite and Indefinite Articles - Spot the "al-" prefix to mark "the" and drop it for "a" or "an." Compare al-qamar (the moon) to qamar (a moon).
  7. Learn the Cases: Nominative, Accusative, and Genitive - Nouns and adjectives shift endings based on role: "kitabu" (subject), "kitaba" (object) and "kitabi" (possession). Practice makes perfect!
  8. Practice Personal Pronouns and Possession - Attach tiny suffixes to show ownership: bayti means "my house," with "-i" signaling "my." Then build baytuka (your house) and beyond!
  9. Understand the Use of Prepositions - Tiny words like fi (in) and ala (on) guide relationships: ana fi al-maktab means "I am in the office." Master them for clarity!
  10. Learn the Formation of Conditional Sentences - Set up "if…then" ideas with iza (if) to sound clever: iza darasta, tanjah ("if you study, you will succeed"). Challenge friends with your new skills!
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