Terminology
The Arabic grammatical terminology for this construction derives from the verb ''ʼaḍāfa'' "he added, attached", verb form IV from the hollow root ''ḍ y f''. * The whole phrase consisting of a noun and a genitive is known in Arabic as ("annexation, addition") and in English as the "genitive construct", "construct phrase", or "annexation structure". * The first term in the pair is called ' "the thing annexed". * The first term governs (i.e. is modified by) the second term, referred to as ' "the thing added to".Kinds of relationship expressed
The range of relationships between the first and second elements of the ''idafah'' construction is very varied, though usually consists of some relationship of possession or belonging. In the case of words for containers, the ''iḍāfah'' may express what is contained: ' "a cup of coffee". The ''iḍāfah'' may indicate the material something is made of: ' "a wooden ring, ring made of wood". In many cases the two members become a fixed coined phrase, the ''idafah'' being used as the equivalent of a compound noun used in some Indo-European languages such as English. Thus ' can mean "house of the (certain, known) students", but is also the normal term for "the student hostel".Forming ''iḍāfah'' constructions
First term
The first term in ''iḍāfah'' has the following characteristics: * It must be in theSecond term
The second term in ''iḍāfah'' has the following characteristics when it is a noun: * It must be in the genitive case. * It is marked as definite (with the definitive article) or indefinite (with nunation, in those varieties of Arabic that use it), and can take a possessive pronoun suffix. The definiteness or indefiniteness of the second term determines the definiteness of the entire ''idāfa'' phrase.Three or more terms
''iḍāfah'' constructions of multiple terms are possible, and in such cases, all but the final term are in the construct state, and all but the first member are in theIndicating definiteness in ''iḍāfah'' constructions
The ''iḍāfah'' construction as a whole is aAdjectives and other modifiers in ''iḍāfah''
Nothing (except a demonstrative determiner) can appear between the two nouns in ''iḍāfah''. If an adjective modifies the first noun, it appears at the end of the ''iḍāfah''.Modifying the first term
An adjective modifying the first noun appears at the end of the ''iḍāfah'' and agrees with the noun it describes in number, gender, case, and definiteness (the latter of which is determined by the last noun of the ''iḍāfah'').Modifying the last term
An adjective modifying the last term appears at the end of the ''iḍāfah'' and agrees with the noun it describes in number, gender, definiteness, and case (which is always genitive).Modifying both terms
If both terms in the ''idāfa'' are modified, the adjective modifying the last term is set closest to the ''idāfa'', and the adjective modifying the first term is set further away.Karin C. Ryding, ''A Reference Grammar of Modern Standard Arabic'' (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005), p. 214 �8.1.3.3 For example:''Iḍāfah'' constructions using pronouns
The possessive suffix can also take the place of the second noun of an ' construction, in which case it is considered definite. Indefinite possessed nouns are also expressed via a preposition.Variant forms
For all but the first person singular, the same forms are used regardless of the part of speech of the word attached to. In the third person masculine singular, ' occurs after the vowels ''u'' or ''a'' ('), while ' occurs after ''i'' or ''y'' ('). The same alternation occurs in the third person dual and plural. : ' "her friend" : ' "her new friend" : ' "a friend of hers" : ' "a new friend of hers" In the first person singular, however, the situation is more complicated; ' "my" is attached to nouns. In the latter case, ' is attached to nouns whose construct state ends in a long vowel or diphthong (e.g. in the sound masculine plural and the dual), while ' is attached to nouns whose construct state ends in a short vowel, in which case that vowel is elided (e.g. in the sound feminine plural, as well as the singular and broken plural of most nouns). Furthermore, ' of the masculine sound plural is assimilated to ' before ' (presumably, ' of masculine defective ''-an'' plurals is similarly assimilated to '). Examples: * From ' "book", pl ' (most of nouns in general). * From ' "word" (nouns ending on ة). * From ' "world"; ' "hospital" (nouns ending on ـَا ـَى ـًى). * From nom. dual ' "teachers", acc./gen. dual ' (dual nouns) * From nom. pl. ' "teachers", acc./gen. pl. ' (regular plural ـُون nouns) * From pl. ' "chosen" (regular plural ـَوْن nouns) * From ' "judge" (active participle nouns ending on ـٍ as nominative) * From ' "father", long construct form ' (long construct nouns) * From any nouns ending on ـُو ', ـَو ' or ـِي ' (more commonly loanwords). * From any nouns ending on ـَي ' (more commonly loanwords).Pronominal nouns in most of Arabic dialects
* From ' "book", pl ' (most of nouns in general). * From ' "word" (nouns ending on ة). * From ' "world" * From ' "father"References
{{reflist Arabic grammar Genitive construction