Significado
Used to express a lack of desire or need.
Contexto cultural
In the Levant, people often use 'Ma biddi' for almost everything. If you use 'La urid,' they will know you are a student of formal Arabic or that you are being very serious. Egyptians are known for their humor. A direct 'La urid' might be met with a joke to soften the refusal. Using 'Mush 'ayiz' is the standard way to blend in. Hospitality is paramount. Refusing coffee ('Gahwa') is done by shaking the cup slightly from side to side rather than just saying 'La urid.' The word 'Bghit' (from the root for 'desire') is used. Refusal is 'Ma bghitsh.' It sounds very different from MSA but follows a similar logic of negation.
Add Shukran
Always follow 'La urid' with 'Shukran' (Thank you) to avoid sounding blunt or rude.
Watch the 'u'
Make sure you say 'Urid' (I want) and not 'Yurid' (He wants). The 'u' sound at the start is key for 'I'.
Significado
Used to express a lack of desire or need.
Add Shukran
Always follow 'La urid' with 'Shukran' (Thank you) to avoid sounding blunt or rude.
Watch the 'u'
Make sure you say 'Urid' (I want) and not 'Yurid' (He wants). The 'u' sound at the start is key for 'I'.
Use the Masdar
Instead of 'La urid an adhaba' (I don't want to go), you can say 'La urid al-dhahab' (I don't want the going). It sounds very natural.
The Polite 'No'
If someone offers you something repeatedly, you can say 'Kallā' (No - formal) or just 'Shukran' with a hand over your heart.
Teste-se
Choose the correct way to say 'I don't want coffee' in Modern Standard Arabic.
How do you say 'I don't want coffee'?
'La' is the correct negator, and 'Uridu' is the first-person form.
Fill in the blank to say 'I don't want to go.'
لا أريدُ ___ أذهبَ.
The particle 'an' is used to connect 'urid' to a following verb.
Match the response to the situation.
A host offers you more food but you are full.
Combining 'La urid' with 'Al-hamdu lillah' is the most polite way to say you are full.
Complete the dialogue.
Seller: هل تريد هذا القميص؟ You: لا، ___.
'La uriduhu' means 'I don't want it,' using the object pronoun 'hu'.
Match the MSA phrase with its Dialect equivalent.
Match the following:
All are correct equivalents in different dialects (Levantine, Egyptian, Gulf).
🎉 Pontuação: /5
Recursos visuais
MSA vs Dialect
Banco de exercicios
5 exerciciosHow do you say 'I don't want coffee'?
'La' is the correct negator, and 'Uridu' is the first-person form.
لا أريدُ ___ أذهبَ.
The particle 'an' is used to connect 'urid' to a following verb.
A host offers you more food but you are full.
Combining 'La urid' with 'Al-hamdu lillah' is the most polite way to say you are full.
Seller: هل تريد هذا القميص؟ You: لا، ___.
'La uriduhu' means 'I don't want it,' using the object pronoun 'hu'.
Combine cada item a esquerda com seu par a direita:
All are correct equivalents in different dialects (Levantine, Egyptian, Gulf).
🎉 Pontuação: /5
Perguntas frequentes
12 perguntasYes, it is neutral. To make it more polite, add 'Shukran' or 'Lā, taslam' (No, may you be safe).
Yes, it often covers both 'want' and 'need' in casual contexts, though 'Lastu bi-haja' is more specific for 'need'.
'La urid' is Modern Standard Arabic (formal/written), while 'Ma biddi' is Levantine dialect (spoken).
Add 'hu' for masculine: 'La uriduhu', or 'ha' for feminine: 'La uriduha'.
This is common in some dialects (like Gulf or parts of Iraq) but is technically incorrect in MSA.
Use 'Ma aradtu' (ما أردتُ).
In shops, you can just say 'La, shukran' (No, thank you).
It's better to use more indirect phrases like 'Baraka Allahu fik' (God bless you) to decline their offers.
No, that's a coincidence! But the root R-W-D does mean 'to seek a path'.
Use 'La uridu min ahadin an...' (لا أريد من أحد أن...).
The verb 'Arada' is used frequently, often referring to God's will (e.g., 'Innama yuridu Allahu...').
Add 'ba'da al-an' (after now): 'La urid hadha ba'da al-an'.
Frases relacionadas
لا أرغب في
similarI do not desire...
لستُ بحاجة إلى
specialized formI am not in need of...
أريد
contrastI want
ما بدي
synonymI don't want (Dialect)
كفى
builds onEnough