Maltese edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Arabic هُم (hum).

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ɔm/ (generally)
  • IPA(key): /ħɔm/ (after -h, -ħ, -għ)
  • IPA(key): /jɔm/ (after -i, -ie)
  • IPA(key): /wɔm/ (after -u)

Suffix edit

-hom

  1. 3rd-person plural pronominal suffix: their; them
    sħab (friends) + ‎-hom → ‎sħabhom (their friends)
    taħt (under) + ‎-hom → ‎taħthom (under them)
    jisma’ (he hears) + ‎-hom → ‎jismagħhom (he hears them)

Usage notes edit

  • When the suffix -hom follows one of the diphthongs -aj, -ej, -aw, -ew, there are two possible pronunciations. The vowelised -h- may either be represented as a glide [j], [w], or it may lengthen the onset of the diphthong. Hence għajnejhom (their eyes) may be pronounced /ajˈnɛj.jɔm/ or /ajˈnɛː.jɔm/. The latter is more common.
  • When the suffix is added to a verb in -a that disallows imala, the sequence -ahom is contracted to [ɔːm]: attakka (“he attacked”, /atˈtak.ka/) → attakkahom (“he attacked them”, /at.takˈkɔːm/). There is, however, a fairly common nonstandard pronunciation that treats -ahom by analogy with -agħhom (as in jismagħhom above). This yields pronunciations such as /at.takˈkaħ.ħɔm/.

Synonyms edit