ܠܝܬ

Etymology
From, a contraction equivalent to.

Adverb

 * 1) there is/are not
 * 2) to not have
 * 3) to not be (years) old [+  (age)]
 * 4) to not have (a characteristic or internal or inherent feature)
 * 5) to not be able to, to be impossible
 * 6) to not be bothered [+ ]]
 * 7) to not care, to not mind [+  + attached pronoun +  + attached pronoun]]
 * 1) to not have (a characteristic or internal or inherent feature)
 * 2) to not be able to, to be impossible
 * 3) to not be bothered [+ ]]
 * 4) to not care, to not mind [+  + attached pronoun +  + attached pronoun]]
 * 1) to not be bothered [+ ]]
 * 2) to not care, to not mind [+  + attached pronoun +  + attached pronoun]]
 * 1) to not care, to not mind [+  + attached pronoun +  + attached pronoun]]
 * 1) to not care, to not mind [+  + attached pronoun +  + attached pronoun]]

Usage notes

 * While is an adverb, it is used in much the same way as a present-tense verb. Its corresponding past tense is expressed by  + / and its future tense is expressed by //; followed by its suffixes agreeing with the subject in person, gender, and number.
 * “I do not have” in English may be translated with either or  depending on context. For “I do not have” in the sense of owning an item or other possession, physical or not, metaphorical or true, the form  is used. In all other contexts of “I do not have,” the form  is used. In some contexts, it is possible to use both forms with difference in meaning, for example: ,

Etymology
A contraction of ; compare 🇨🇬.

Verb
(peal construction (irregular))


 * 1) there is/are no/not
 * 2) to be not
 * 3)  to have no/not
 * 4)  to be not possible, not allowable; must not

Usage notes
This word does not inflect like a regular verb. It mostly occurs as an uninflected particle, though it can take type-II suffixes (as certain prepositions or plural nouns), agreeing with the subject in person, gender, and number. Its past tense is expressed by a following, inflected in the third person and agreeing with the subject in gender and number.