رجعت الكهربا بعد شوي، وصار في ضو بالغرفة.

Questions & Answers about رجعت الكهربا بعد شوي، وصار في ضو بالغرفة.

How would I pronounce رجعت الكهربا بعد شوي، وصار في ضو بالغرفة?

A rough Levantine pronunciation is:

rijʿet il-kahraba baʿd shwayy, w ṣār fī ḍaw bil-ghurfe

A few useful sound notes:

  • ع in رجعت and بعد is the deep throat sound ʿ
  • ض in ضو is a heavy/emphatic d sound, written here as
  • غ in غرفة is like a French or German-style r, written here as gh
  • ة at the end of غرفة is usually pronounced -e in Levantine, so ghurfe

Different Levantine regions will pronounce parts of it a little differently, but this is a good general guide.

Why does the sentence start with رجعت الكهربا instead of الكهربا رجعت?

Both are possible, but verb + subject is very common in Arabic, especially in narration:

  • رجعت الكهربا = the electricity came back
  • الكهربا رجعت = the electricity came back

The second version puts a little more focus on the electricity itself. The version in your sentence sounds very natural for telling what happened next in a situation.

Why does رجعت end with ?

Because the subject الكهربا is grammatically feminine.

In Levantine, كهربا means electricity/power, and it is treated as a feminine noun. So the past tense verb agrees with it:

  • رجع = he came back / it came back masculine
  • رجعت = she came back / it came back feminine

So:

  • رجعت الكهربا = the electricity came back

Even though electricity is not a person, Arabic still gives nouns grammatical gender, and the verb follows that.

Why is it الكهربا and not الكهرباء?

الكهربا is the everyday Levantine form, while الكهرباء is the Modern Standard Arabic form.

So:

  • الكهربا = colloquial Levantine
  • الكهرباء = MSA

The meaning is the same: electricity or electrical power. In this kind of sentence, it usually means the power supply came back on.

What does بعد شوي mean exactly?

بعد شوي is a very common colloquial expression meaning:

  • after a little while
  • a bit later
  • shortly afterward

Breakdown:

  • بعد = after
  • شوي = a little / a bit

So literally it is something like after a little bit, but idiomatically it means after a short time.

What does صار في mean here?

This is a very common Levantine pattern.

  • صار literally means became or happened
  • في can function existentially, like there is / there was

So:

  • صار في ضو literally = there became light
  • natural English = there was light / light appeared

It often introduces a new situation or state. Compare:

  • في ضو = there is light
  • صار في ضو = there came to be light / there was now light

So صار adds the idea of a change: before there was no light, then there was.

What is ضو, and is it the same as ضوء?

Yes. ضو is the colloquial Levantine form of ضوء.

Both mean light, but:

  • ضو = everyday spoken Levantine
  • ضوء = MSA spelling/pronunciation

So in this sentence:

  • صار في ضو بالغرفة = there was light in the room

You may also hear نور, which can also mean light, but ضو is very natural here for physical light.

Why is there no ال in ضو? Why not الضو?

Because في + noun in this kind of existential structure usually introduces something indefinite:

  • في ضو = there is light
  • صار في ضو = there came to be light

This sounds natural because it is talking about the presence of light, not a specific previously identified light.

If you said الضو, it would sound more definite and context-dependent, like the light as a specific known thing.

What does بالغرفة break down into?

بالغرفة is made of three parts:

  • بـ = in
  • ال = the
  • غرفة = room

So:

  • بالغرفة = in the room

In pronunciation, بـ + ال often becomes bil-, so you hear:

bil-ghurfe

This kind of attachment is very normal in Arabic. Prepositions like بـ, لـ, and كـ usually attach directly to the following word.

Why does the sentence use و before the second part?

و simply means and.

So the sentence has two linked events:

  • رجعت الكهربا بعد شوي = the electricity came back after a little while
  • وصار في ضو بالغرفة = and there was light in the room

In Arabic, و is used very frequently to connect actions in a natural sequence, especially in storytelling.

How would this be different in Modern Standard Arabic?

A more MSA-like version could be:

عادت الكهرباء بعد قليل، وأصبح هناك ضوء في الغرفة.

Or slightly closer to the original wording:

رجعت الكهرباء بعد قليل، وصار هناك ضوء في الغرفة.

Main differences:

  • الكهربا becomes الكهرباء
  • شوي becomes قليل
  • colloquial existential في is often replaced by هناك in formal writing
  • the whole sentence sounds more formal and less conversational

Your original sentence is clearly natural spoken Levantine.

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