Arabic Pronouns: Attached and Detached Complete Reference

Complete Arabic pronoun reference: detached (انا, انت, هو) and attached (ـي, ـك, ـه) pronouns with full tables for verbs, nouns, prepositions, and reflexives.

Arabic Pronouns: Attached and Detached Complete Reference

Arabic distinguishes sharply between two sets of pronouns: detached (منفصل munfaṣil) and attached (متصل muttaṣil). Detached pronouns are independent words that function as subjects of verbless sentences or emphatic subjects. Attached pronouns are suffixes that cliticize onto nouns (for possession), verbs (for direct objects), and prepositions (for pronoun objects of prepositions). Every Arabic learner must command both sets fluently because they pepper every sentence.

This reference lays out both sets with full tables, usage rules, and examples. For how attached pronouns work in the iḍāfa construction, see the Arabic idāfa reference. For verb conjugations that mesh with these pronouns, see the Arabic verb conjugation guide and the Arabic verb forms reference. For broader grammar, see the Arabic grammar rules guide.


Detached (Independent) Pronouns

Table 1. Detached pronouns.

Person Singular Dual Plural
1st أَنَا anā (I) نَحْنُ naḥnu (we - dual uses same) نَحْنُ naḥnu (we)
2nd m أَنْتَ anta (you m) أَنْتُمَا antumā (you two) أَنْتُمْ antum (you m pl)
2nd f أَنْتِ anti (you f) أَنْتُمَا antumā (you two) أَنْتُنَّ antunna (you f pl)
3rd m هُوَ huwa (he) هُمَا humā (they two) هُمْ hum (they m)
3rd f هِيَ hiya (she) هُمَا humā (they two f) هُنَّ hunna (they f)

Classical Arabic distinguishes gender in 2nd and 3rd person and has a separate dual (two people). Modern Standard Arabic preserves all distinctions in writing. Most dialects have merged some (e.g., Egyptian uses انتم for mixed groups).

Uses of detached pronouns

As subject of verbless sentences:

  • أَنَا طَالِبٌ (anā ṭālibun) I am a student.
  • هُوَ مُدَرِّسٌ (huwa mudarrisun) He is a teacher.

For emphasis with conjugated verbs (since the verb itself marks the subject):

  • أَنَا ذَهَبْتُ (anā dhahabtu) "I myself went" - emphasized.
  • هُوَ كَتَبَ الكِتَابَ (huwa kataba al-kitāba) He (specifically) wrote the book.

After copula أَنَّ:

  • أَعْلَمُ أَنَّكَ طَالِبٌ (a'lamu annaka ṭālibun) I know that you are a student - here annaka uses an attached pronoun suffix.

Attached Pronouns: Three Roles

Attached pronouns take slightly different forms depending on what they attach to. There are three main sets:

  1. Suffixed to verbs - direct object of the verb.
  2. Suffixed to nouns - possessor (muḍāf ilayh).
  3. Suffixed to prepositions - object of the preposition.

Table 2. Attached pronouns by role.

Person To verb (object) To noun (possessor) To preposition
1st sg ـنِي -nī (me) ـي -ī (my) ـي -ī / -nī
2nd m sg ـكَ -ka (you) ـكَ -ka (your) ـكَ -ka
2nd f sg ـكِ -ki (you f) ـكِ -ki (your f) ـكِ -ki
3rd m sg ـهُ -hu (him) ـهُ -hu (his) ـهُ -hu
3rd f sg ـهَا -hā (her) ـهَا -hā (her) ـهَا -hā
1st pl ـنَا -nā (us) ـنَا -nā (our) ـنَا -nā
2nd m pl ـكُمْ -kum (you pl) ـكُمْ -kum (your pl) ـكُمْ -kum
2nd f pl ـكُنَّ -kunna ـكُنَّ -kunna ـكُنَّ -kunna
3rd m pl ـهُمْ -hum ـهُمْ -hum ـهُمْ -hum
3rd f pl ـهُنَّ -hunna ـهُنَّ -hunna ـهُنَّ -hunna
dual ـكُمَا / ـهُمَا ـكُمَا / ـهُمَا ـكُمَا / ـهُمَا

Notice: The 1st singular has two forms. ـنِي (-nī) is used as a verb object ("me"), while ـي (-ī) is used as a possessor ("my"). For prepositions, ـي generally attaches, though ـنِي appears with مِن (minnī).


Attached Pronouns on Nouns (Possession)

Table 3. كِتَاب (kitāb, book) with all possessor suffixes.

Form Arabic Transliteration Meaning
1 sg كِتَابِي kitābī my book
2 m sg كِتَابُكَ kitābuka your book
2 f sg كِتَابُكِ kitābuki your (f) book
3 m sg كِتَابُهُ kitābuhu his book
3 f sg كِتَابُهَا kitābuhā her book
1 pl كِتَابُنَا kitābunā our book
2 m pl كِتَابُكُمْ kitābukum your (pl) book
3 m pl كِتَابُهُم kitābuhum their book

When the possessor suffix attaches, the noun loses tanwīn (like a muḍāf in iḍāfa). The suffix itself counts as the muḍāf ilayh. In pronunciation, the preceding vowel may shift slightly for some suffixes (-hu after -i becomes -hi).


Attached Pronouns on Verbs (Direct Object)

Table 4. رَأَى (ra'ā, he saw) with all object suffixes.

Form Arabic Transliteration Meaning
me رَآنِي ra'ānī he saw me
you m رَآكَ ra'āka he saw you (m)
you f رَآكِ ra'āki he saw you (f)
him رَآهُ ra'āhu he saw him
her رَآهَا ra'āhā he saw her
us رَآنَا ra'ānā he saw us
you pl رَآكُمْ ra'ākum he saw you (pl)
them رَآهُمْ ra'āhum he saw them

Attached Pronouns on Prepositions

Table 5. Prepositions with attached pronouns - مَعَ (ma'a, with).

Form Arabic Transliteration Meaning
with me مَعِي ma'ī with me
with you m مَعَكَ ma'aka with you
with you f مَعَكِ ma'aki with you (f)
with him مَعَهُ ma'ahu with him
with her مَعَهَا ma'ahā with her
with us مَعَنَا ma'anā with us
with you pl مَعَكُمْ ma'akum with you (pl)
with them مَعَهُمْ ma'ahum with them

Similar tables exist for عَلَى ('alā, on), فِي (fī, in), إِلَى (ilā, to), لِ (li, for), بِ (bi, with/by), and others. Each preposition has its own vowel interaction with the suffix.

Special interactions

مِن + ي = مِنِّي (minnī). The n doubles to preserve the length when the possessor suffix is applied. عَن + ي = عَنِّي ('annī). Similar doubling. لِ + ي = لِي (lī). The fatḥa doesn't appear; just lī. لِ + him = لَهُ (lahu). The li takes a fatḥa.


Pronouns in the Predicate Construction

Arabic verbless sentences use detached pronouns as subjects:

  • أَنَا طَالِبٌ anā ṭālibun - I am a student.
  • أَنْتَ مُعَلِّمٌ anta mu'allimun - You are a teacher.

But when these are negated with لَيْسَ (laysa, "is not"), the subject becomes the subject of laysa, and attached pronouns go on laysa:

  • لَسْتُ طَالِبًا lastu ṭāliban - I am not a student.
  • لَيْسَ طَالِبًا laysa ṭāliban - He is not a student.

Reflexive Pronoun: نَفْس

For reflexive ("myself, yourself, himself"), Arabic uses نَفْس (nafs, "self") plus a possessive suffix:

  • نَفْسِي nafsī - myself
  • نَفْسُكَ nafsuka - yourself
  • نَفْسُهُ nafsuhu - himself

Example: رَأَيْتُ نَفْسِي (ra'aytu nafsī) - I saw myself.


Demonstratives (Bonus)

Although not pronouns in the strict sense, demonstratives pair with pronouns:

Table 6. Demonstratives.

Near (this) Far (that)
m sg هَذَا hādhā ذَلِكَ dhālika
f sg هَذِهِ hādhihi تِلْكَ tilka
m pl هَؤُلَاءِ hā'ulā'i أُولَئِكَ ulā'ika
f pl هَؤُلَاءِ hā'ulā'i أُولَئِكَ ulā'ika
dual m هَذَانِ hādhāni ذَانِكَ dhānika

هَذَا كِتَابٌ - This is a book.


Common Mistakes Learners Make

  1. Using detached pronouns as verb subjects. Since the verb already marks the subject, adding a detached pronoun marks emphasis, not necessity. أَنَا ذَهَبْتُ إِلَى المَدْرَسَة is emphatic; just ذَهَبْتُ suffices.
  2. Confusing -ī (possessor) and -nī (object). Use -nī with verbs; use -ī with nouns: "my book" is كِتَابِي, "he saw me" is رَآنِي.
  3. Forgetting vowel shifts. After -i or -ī, هُ becomes هِ: بِهِ (bihi) instead of بِهُ.
  4. Attaching pronouns to al-. Attached possessive pronouns replace al-, they don't stack with it. الكِتَابِي is wrong; كِتَابِي is right.
  5. Using wrong pronoun gender. Arabic distinguishes m/f in 2nd and 3rd. Matching to the person addressed matters.
  6. Forgetting the doubled n with من. منني is wrong; مني is right.
  7. Using nafs without a possessive suffix. Reflexive requires the possessive: نَفْسِي (myself), not just نَفْس.
  8. Skipping dual forms. Dual suffixes (-kumā, -humā) are required in Modern Standard Arabic when exactly two persons are meant.

Quick Reference

Detached pronouns: independent words, used as subjects of verbless sentences or for emphasis. Attached pronouns: suffixes on nouns, verbs, and prepositions. Key contrasts: -nī vs -ī (1st sg object vs possessor); -ka vs -ki (m vs f 2nd sg); singular vs dual vs plural. Reflexive: نَفْس + possessor suffix.


FAQ

Are detached and attached pronouns ever used together?

Yes, for emphasis: أَنَا رَأَيْتُهُ (anā ra'aytuhu) "I (emphatic) saw him" - detached subject pronoun plus attached object suffix.

Can I skip the dual forms in modern Arabic?

In dialects, commonly. In Modern Standard Arabic (news, books, formal speech), the dual is required when exactly two are meant.

What's the difference between -ka and -ki?

Masculine vs feminine 2nd person singular. كِتَابُكَ to a man, كِتَابُكِ to a woman.

Why does the ة at the end of feminine nouns become -at when a suffix attaches?

The tā' marbūṭa is pronounced as a full t before any suffix or the next word in iḍāfa. مَدْرَسَة madrasah alone, مَدْرَسَتِي madrasatī (my school).

How do attached pronouns work with dual nouns?

The dual suffix -ān (nom) or -ayn (gen/acc) drops its n before attaching a possessive: معلماني (my two teachers): مُعَلِّمَاي mu'allimāy.

Are there polite pronouns in Arabic?

Unlike some languages, Modern Standard Arabic doesn't have a distinct polite-you. Formal Arabic uses the standard pronouns; politeness is conveyed through titles and word choice.

What's the difference between nafs and attached reflexive suffixes?

Nafs + possessor = explicit reflexive. Some verbs have inherent reflexive meaning (Form VII, Form VIII) that doesn't require nafs.


See Also

Frequently Asked Questions

Can detached and attached pronouns be used together?

Yes. أَنَا رَأَيْتُهُ combines a detached subject pronoun for emphasis with an attached object suffix.

Can I skip dual forms in modern Arabic?

In dialects, often yes. In Modern Standard Arabic the dual is obligatory when exactly two persons are meant.

What's the difference between -ka and -ki?

Masculine vs feminine 2nd person singular. كِتَابُكَ to a man; كِتَابُكِ to a woman.

Why does ة become -at before a suffix?

The tā' marbūṭa is pronounced as a full t whenever a suffix or the next word attaches: مَدْرَسَة → مَدْرَسَتِي.

How do dual nouns take possessive suffixes?

The dual ending drops its n: مُعَلِّمَانِ (two teachers) → مُعَلِّمَاي (my two teachers).

Are there polite pronouns in Arabic?

Modern Standard Arabic has no distinct polite-you. Politeness is conveyed through titles and register, not pronoun choice.

What's the difference between nafs and verbal reflexives?

Nafs + possessor is an explicit reflexive pronoun. Some verb forms (VII, VIII) have inherent reflexive meaning and don't need nafs.