In Modern Standard Arabic, questions begin with question words. However, in some colloquial dialects like Egyptian, question words often appear at the end of the sentence, e.g. what is your name? in MSA (ما اسمك؟), and in ECA (اسمك إيه؟). It is interesting to note also that question words differ from standard and colloquial and from one dialect to another.

The table below gives questions words in Arabic and some examples of their use:

What (ما)

ما اسمك؟

What is your name?

What (ماذا)

ماذا تفعل؟

What are you doing?

Who (مَن)

مَن هو؟

Who is he?

Where (أين)

أين تسكن؟

Where do you live?

When (متى)

متى يرحل القطار؟

When does the train leave?

How (كيف)

كيف الخروج من هنا؟

How to get out of here?

How many (كم)

كم طالباً في الفصل؟

How many students are there in the class?

How much (بكم)

بكم هذا الكتاب؟

How much is this book?

We have 2 words for what. The first one is (ما) which is used when questions do not have a verb in them, i.e. the question is not about an action, e.g. what is your name? (ما اسمك؟). When questions have a verb, i.e. when they are about actions, we use (ماذا), e.g. what are you doing? (ماذا تفعل؟).

Yes/No questions in Arabic begin with the question word (هل)

هل أنت عربي؟

Are you Arab?

هل تدرس في الجامعة؟

Do you study at university?