أنا أحب هذا المطعم، لكن المطعم بعيد.

Breakdown of أنا أحب هذا المطعم، لكن المطعم بعيد.

هذا
this
انا
I
يحب
to love
بعيد
far
لكن
but
مطعم
restaurant
Elon.io is an online learning platform
We have an entire course teaching Arabic grammar and vocabulary.

Start learning Arabic now

Questions & Answers about أنا أحب هذا المطعم، لكن المطعم بعيد.

Why is it أنا أحب and not أنا أُحِبُّ? Do I have to write the vowels?

In most everyday Arabic writing (including Modern Standard Arabic), short vowels (ḥarakāt) are usually omitted, so أحب is the normal spelling.
If you fully vowel it, it would be أُحِبُّ (uḥibbu). Both refer to the same verb form; the unvowelled spelling is just the standard convention.


Is أنا required here, or can I drop it?

You can drop it. The verb already shows the subject in its conjugation.

  • أحب هذا المطعم، لكن المطعم بعيد. = I like this restaurant, but the restaurant is far.
    Including أنا adds emphasis or contrast (like I as opposed to someone else).

What does هذا mean exactly, and why is it هذا (not something else)?

هذا means this (masculine singular). It agrees with the noun it points to.
مطعم (restaurant) is grammatically masculine, so you use هذا.
If the noun were feminine, you’d use هذه (this, feminine), e.g. هذه السيارة (this car).


Why is المطعم repeated? Can I avoid repeating it?

Repetition is common and perfectly natural, especially for clarity. But you can avoid it:

  • أنا أحب هذا المطعم، لكنه بعيد. = I like this restaurant, but it is far.
    Here لكنه = لكن + هو (but + it/he), referring back to المطعم.

What’s the role of لكن in this sentence? Does it change the grammar after it?

لكن means but. In this sentence, it’s functioning as a simple conjunction introducing contrast, similar to English.
In more formal grammar discussions, لكنَّ (with shadda) can behave differently (as a particle that affects case), but your sentence uses لكن in the straightforward “but” sense.


Why is it بعيد and not بعيدة?

Because مطعم is masculine, the predicate adjective must match in gender:

  • المطعم بعيد (masculine)
    If the subject were feminine, you’d use بعيدة, e.g. المدرسة بعيدة (the school is far).

Where is the verb “to be” in المطعم بعيد?

In the present tense, Arabic usually does not use an explicit verb “to be”. A nominal sentence is common:

  • المطعم بعيد literally “the restaurant (is) far.”
    If you want past tense, Arabic uses كان:
  • كان المطعم بعيدًا = The restaurant was far.

Why does المطعم have الـ but مطعم in هذا المطعم also has it—what does الـ do?

الـ is the definite article the.

  • مطعم = a restaurant (indefinite)
  • المطعم = the restaurant (definite)
    In هذا المطعم, the phrase is naturally definite (because this points to a specific thing), and Arabic commonly uses الـ with the noun: هذا + الـnoun.

Should there be a comma, and what punctuation is standard in Arabic?

Arabic often uses punctuation similar to English, but the comma is usually the Arabic comma ،. Your sentence correctly uses ،:
أنا أحب هذا المطعم، لكن المطعم بعيد.
You may also see no punctuation in some texts, but in modern writing, punctuation is common.


How would I pronounce this sentence (roughly), and what should I watch out for?

A rough pronunciation (MSA-style) is:
ʾanā uḥibbu hādhā al-maṭʿama, lākin al-maṭʿamu baʿīd.

Things to notice:

  • هذا = hādhā (the dh sound is like th in this)
  • ط in مطعم is an emphatic (darker/heavier than English t)
  • ع in بعيد is the consonant ʿayn, which is unfamiliar to many English speakers and takes practice.