Arabic Grammar - Class 10 Cbse

“ Yaktubu —he writes,” she said, mimicking a scribbling motion. “ Taktubu —she writes.” She tilted her head gracefully. “ Naktubu —we write.” She gestured for them all to join.

Ms. Fatima wrote on the board:

Kataba (he wrote) Katabat (she wrote) Katabtu (I wrote) arabic grammar class 10 cbse

Ayaan wrote: Anti tadrusaana al-nahw . (You—feminine—study grammar.)

Slowly. But surely. Like every past tense turning into a present one. “ Yaktubu —he writes,” she said, mimicking a

It was the tenth period on a Thursday, and the October heat had turned the CBSE classroom into a slow-cooker. Twenty-eight students of Class 10—mostly staring at the ceiling, the fan, or the last shred of their sanity—sat in Ms. Fatima’s Arabic grammar session.

Riya wrote: Ana darastu al-lughah al-‘arabiyyah . (I studied the Arabic language.) But surely

What followed was a slow, reluctant choreography of scribbling, running, eating, and sleeping—all in Arabic. Riya was in her element, conjugating with her whole body. Ayaan turned running ( yarkudu ) into an exaggerated slow-motion chase around his chair. Even Kabir smiled when he realized that yadhhabu (he goes) and nadhhabu (we go) shared the same rhythm, just a different first letter.