Arabic vocabulary
How to say “Aisha” in Arabic, with pronunciation and real example sentences from OpenArabic texts.
وَكَانَ الْمُسْلِمُونَ قَدْ عَلِمُوا حُبَّ رَسُولِ اللَّهِ صَلَّى اللَّهُ عَلَيْهِ وَسَلَّمَ عَائِشَةَ،
And the Muslims already knew that the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, loved Aisha.
عَائِشَةَ — Aisha. A woman's name standing as the object of the loving named earlier; its accusative ending marks it as the one loved, the receiver of the action rather than its doer. So the sentence resolves to the Prophet's love OF this person.
From: Wives of the Prophet →وَأَنَا فِي ثَوْبِ إِمْرَأَةٍ إِلَّا عَائِشَةَ،
And I am in a woman's garment except Aisha.
عَائِشَةَ — Aisha. A woman's name standing as the item set apart by the exception word; its accusative ending is the case such an exception takes here. So she is marked off as the single exception in the statement.
From: Wives of the Prophet →وَقَدْ رُوِيَّنَا عَنْ ابْنِ عَائِشَةَ أَحَادِيثًا مِلَاحًا فِي بَعْضِهَا رِفْثٌ،
And indeed we have narrated from Ibn Aisha hadiths that are witty, and some of them contain obscenity.
عَائِشَةَ — Aisha. A proper name closing the 'son of...' pairing as its owner, so it carries the genitive 'of' ending that fuses the two words into one name. The case is fixed by its slot in the lineage chain, not by the wider sentence.
From: Permissible Laughter and Conduct →OpenArabic teaches words like عَائِشَةَ through real bilingual reading with native audio and spaced-repetition practice.
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