Personally vetted instructors

Arabic Grammar tutors, lessons & classes

لنبدأ li-nabdaʾ "Let's begin" — what the right grammar tutor says when the architecture starts to click for a student.

Personally vetted Arabic grammar specialists. Lessons that take the root-and-pattern system, the 10 verb forms, the case system, and the gender and number agreements seriously, because Arabic grammar is patterned rather than chaotic once a tutor walks you through the architecture.

5.0 · 500+ reviews · Free 30-min trial · Match in 24 hrs
Arabic grammar tutor walking a student through the root system and verb forms — Strommen
20 yrs
EST. 2006
In-Person Online
250+Tutors
18+Years in LA
150+Film & TV Credits
50+Languages

Your instructors

Arabic Grammar tutors for private lessons & classes

Strommen is a curated boutique school. Grammar-focused tutors are a smaller niche on our roster because the skill of teaching the architecture clearly, without overwhelming or under-explaining, is rarer than the skill of teaching conversation. The tutors below were vetted specifically for that pedagogical depth.

Read the bios, then book a 30-minute free trial and bring the grammar questions you have been carrying around.

Below are the Strommen tutors who specialize in Arabic grammar. Photos, ratings, and rates are real. Click any card to read the bio and book a free 30-minute trial.

Reset Filters.
  • Price Per Lesson

  • Offers Free Trial

  • Near Me

    • View on Map
  • Check Availability

  • In Person?

  • Student Age

Search Results: 0 Tutors

النحو — Arabic grammar architecture

5 architectural ideas every Arabic grammar student needs

These are the structural pillars of Arabic grammar. Once you see the architecture, vocabulary stops being a pile and starts being a derivation game. Screenshot the list, then book a tutor to walk you through them.

  1. 01

    الجذر al-jadhr

    The three-consonant root that nearly every Arabic word derives from. The root ك-ت-ب (k-t-b) carries the field of writing, generating kataba (he wrote), kātib (writer), kitāb (book), kutub (books), maktab (office), maktaba (library), maktūb (written / a letter). Internalizing the root system in the first months turns vocabulary from memorization into recognition.

    e.g. د-ر-س (d-r-s): darasa (studied), dars (lesson), mudarris (teacher), madrasa (school).

  2. 02

    الأوزان al-awzān

    The ten verb forms (the binyānīm in Hebrew-aligned terminology), each run from the same three-consonant root with semi-predictable meaning shifts. Form I is the basic root verb. Form II usually intensifies or makes-transitive. Form III is reciprocal or directed-at-someone. Form IV is causative. Form X often means "to seek" the root's meaning. A vocabulary-generation engine that compounds for years.

    e.g. kataba (Form I, wrote) → kāttaba (Form II, made write) → istaktaba (Form X, asked to write).

  3. 03

    الإعراب al-iʿrāb

    The case system. Classical and Modern Standard Arabic mark three cases with short vowel endings: nominative (-u), accusative (-a), and genitive (-i). Subject is nominative, direct object is accusative, noun after a preposition is genitive, second noun in an iḍāfa is genitive. The endings are usually unwritten in everyday text. Spoken dialects have dropped them almost entirely.

    e.g. al-kitāb-u jadīd-un ("the book is new," nominative on both).

  4. 04

    المثنى al-muthannā

    The dual. Arabic's third grammatical number, fully separate from singular and plural, marked by -āni in the nominative and -ayni in the accusative and genitive. Most other languages lack a dual entirely or have lost it. Arabic uses it actively for pairs, with gender agreement extending into the dual form. "Two boys" and "two girls" take distinct dual forms.

    e.g. walad-āni (two boys) vs bint-āni (two girls).

  5. 05

    الإضافة al-iḍāfa

    The construct state. Arabic indicates possession by stringing two nouns together: kitāb al-walad, "the book of the boy." The first noun drops any definite article; the second takes the article if definite and is always in the genitive case. Chains can run three or four nouns deep. Replaces the English preposition "of" in most contexts and feels foreign for about a month before clicking permanently.

    e.g. bāb bayt al-rajul ("the door of the house of the man").

About Arabic Grammar

Arabic grammar is patterned, not chaotic

What you'll cover

Lessons & classes tailored to Arabic Grammar

The root system as a vocabulary-generation engine

The three-consonant root that nearly every Arabic word derives from. Lessons walk through how to recognize the root of a new word, how to predict its plural and its verb forms, and how to use a root-organized dictionary like Hans Wehr. Once the root system is a working habit, vocabulary stops piling up and starts compounding. This is the single highest-leverage idea in Arabic grammar and tutors front-load it for that reason.

The ten verb forms and their meaning shifts

Methodical walks through awzān I through X, with the semi-predictable meaning shifts at each form. Form II intensifies or makes-transitive. Form III is reciprocal. Form IV is causative. Form V is the reflexive of Form II. Form VII is passive-like. Form X often means "to seek" the root's meaning. Tutors show how the same root behaves across the forms it produces, so students develop intuition rather than memorizing tables.

Case, gender, number, and agreement

The case system (nominative, accusative, genitive) and when the endings matter. Gender (masculine vs feminine, marked by tāʾ marbūṭa with the predictable exceptions). Number (singular, dual, plural, with the dual fully active in Arabic). Adjective-noun agreement, verb-subject agreement, the patterns of broken plurals. Drilled with sample sentences rather than tables alone so the patterns settle into recognizable rhythm.

The iḍāfa and other syntactic constructions

The construct state for possession and its chains. Sentence-level word order (verbal sentences starting with the verb, nominal sentences starting with the subject). The two negation systems (lā for present, mā for past, lan and lam for various tenses). The conditional structures. Question formation. These are the structures that organize Arabic sentences beyond the word level.

FAQ

About Arabic Grammar lessons & classes

Why is Arabic grammar considered so difficult?

The reputation comes from the sheer number of moving parts: a three-consonant root system, ten verb forms, three cases, two genders, three numbers including a fully separate dual, the construct state for possession, and the agreement rules that connect all of these. The reputation underrates the structure, though. Arabic grammar is patterned rather than chaotic, and once a learner sees the architecture (usually in the first six months of dedicated grammar work), vocabulary stops being a memorization pile and starts being a derivation game. The intimidation gives way to a sense of system.

Do I need to learn all ten verb forms?

Eventually yes, but they come in over time rather than all at once. Forms I, II, IV, V, VII, VIII, and X are the most frequent in everyday Arabic and tend to be drilled in the first year. Forms III and VI are common enough to be worth learning early. Form IX is rare (mostly colors and physical defects) and can be picked up later. The pattern is the point: once a student sees how Form II relates to Form I and how Form X relates to Form I, they can recognize and generate new verbs from any root they encounter.

Do I need to learn the case system, or can I skip it?

Depends on your goal. For purely conversational dialect goals, the case endings are largely irrelevant because spoken dialects have dropped them almost entirely. For Modern Standard Arabic reading, you can usually get by without active case study because the endings are unwritten in everyday text and context resolves ambiguity. For formal writing, classical reading, and Quranic Arabic, case study is non-negotiable. Your tutor walks through which level of case mastery your specific goals call for.

What is the difference between the root system and the verb forms?

The root is the three-consonant skeleton that carries the core semantic field (k-t-b for writing, d-r-s for studying). The verb forms are the ten systematic ways that root can be conjugated to produce related verbs with related but distinct meanings (kataba "wrote," kāttaba "made write," istaktaba "asked to write"). Roots are about semantic families; verb forms are about how that family expresses different shades of action. Together they form the vocabulary-generation engine that makes Arabic grammar so structurally rewarding.

How long until Arabic grammar feels intuitive?

It depends on how much you put in. With one or two grammar-focused lessons a week plus regular reading practice, most students reach a working command of the root system, the main verb forms, and basic syntax in 9 to 18 months. Real intuition (the kind where you can parse a sentence's syntactic roles before reaching for a dictionary) usually takes longer, often 2 to 3 years for committed students. Your tutor sets concrete milestones at the trial and adjusts as you go.

Are your Arabic grammar tutors native speakers?

Most are native speakers with formal training in Arabic grammar (al-naḥw wa-al-ṣarf). Several have teaching backgrounds at the university level and bring that systematic pedagogy to private lessons. Each tutor's bio specifies their background and approach to teaching the architecture. Grammar specialists are a smaller niche on our roster because the skill of explaining clearly is rarer than the skill of conversational coaching.

Should I combine grammar lessons with conversation lessons?

Often yes. Grammar without conversation can become an academic exercise that does not produce living fluency; conversation without grammar can plateau in patchy correctness. Most students who come specifically for grammar work pair it with some conversation practice, either with the same tutor or with a separate conversational Arabic tutor. The right balance depends on your goals; your tutor will help you think through it at the trial.

Ready for Arabic Grammar lessons or classes?

Book a free 30-minute trial with one of our personally vetted tutors. Private lessons or small-group classes — your choice.