Grammar Class 10 Cbse - Arabic

Zara smiled. Just a little. But it was enough.

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.

Ms. Fatima wrote on the board:

The collective groan returned. But this time, there was laughter buried underneath it.

A collective groan rose from the back. Not because they hated Arabic—many loved the lyrical sound of it—but because grammar had a way of turning poetry into algebra. arabic grammar class 10 cbse

“Why can’t it just stay the same?” he whispered to himself.

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

A metaphor that almost worked. Almost.

“And now?”

Ayaan, sitting by the window, had already surrendered. He was drawing a camel in the margin of his notebook. Beside him, Riya was meticulously color-coding every harf and ism with highlighters, as if her life depended on it. And in the front row, Kabir—the class’s accidental philosopher—was trying to figure out why Arabic verbs changed shape depending on who was doing the action.