North Levantine Arabic edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed directly from an Aramaic pronoun cognate to Classical Syriac ܗܢܘܢ (hennon), likely facilitated by its similarity to Arabic هُنَّ (hunna, they, feminine plural).

Pronoun edit

هنن (hinnenpl

  1. Alternative form of هن (hinne)

See also edit

North Levantine Arabic personal pronouns
Singular Plural
1st person أنا (ʔana) نحنا (niḥna)
2nd person m انت (ʔinta, ʔinte) انتو (ʔintu)
f انتي (ʔinti)
3rd person m هو (huwwe) هن (hinne) / هنن (hinnen)
f هي (hiyye)