Hal Clause

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The Circumstantial

(Hal) Clause
A hal clause is a special kind of Arabic construction that allows you to indicate that
the action (or event or state) mentioned in the hal clause is occurring at the same time as the
action (or event or state) mentioned in the main clause. It can be translated many ways into
English, but most often you can use the conjunctions while or when at the beginning of the
English subordinate clause. The English equivalents of hal clauses also frequently begin with an
active participle (the "-ing" adjective form: the "talking" dog, the "working" man).
The English sentences below would all probably be translated into Arabic using a
hal clause. The word in italics signals the beginning of the hal clause:
He arrived while carrying a book.
He arrived carrying a book.
He arrived with a book in his hand.
I met Anwar Sadat while/when he was president.
Probably the most difficult thing to become accustomed to--for a native speaker of
English--in forming hal clauses is that they do not use the exact equivalents of those italicized
English words in the examples above. Mostly they use the Arabic word

( and) or they put the

active participle at the beginning of the clause into the accusative case. Below would be two
ways of saying in Arabic (using a hal clause) the English sentence "He drank the cof fee while
looking at her all the time":

.




.



A third way of saying the same thing would be to omit the

and simply start the hal with the

present tense verb:


.



In this last example the main verb (he drank) sets the action of the entire sentence in the past and
the present tense form of the second verb (he is looking) doesn't have a temporal function; it
serves to indicate that the two actions are occurring simultaneously (but both in the past).
If the action in the hal clause has already taken place while the action in the main
clause is occurring, this can be indicated by using the phrase at the beginning

of the hal clause:

He got up, having drunk all the coffee.

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