لولا

Arabic

Etymology

لَوْ (law) + لَا ().

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /law.laː/

Conjunction

لَوْلَا • (lawlā)

  1. if not for
    • 609–632 CE, Qur'an, 34:31:
      لَوۡلَاۤ أَنتُمۡ لَكُنَّا مُؤۡمِنِينَ
      lawlā ʔantum lakunnā muʔminīna
      If it weren't for you, we would have been believers

Usage notes

It is followed by a noun in the nominative case or a verb in the past tense. Pronouns can be either in nominative or genitive case:

  • لَوْلَا ٱلنِّيلُ لَأَصْبَحَتْ مِصْرُ صَحْرَاءَ
    lawlā n-nīlu laʔaṣbaḥat miṣru ṣaḥrāʔa
    If it weren't for Nile, Egypt would be a desert.
  • لَوْلَا أَنَا / لَوْلَايَ
    lawlā ʔanā / lawlāya
    if not for me

South Levantine Arabic

Etymology

لو (law, if) + لا (la, not).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /loː.la/, [ˈloː.la]
  • (file)

Conjunction

لولا • (lōla)

  1. if ... not (hypothetical condition)

Usage notes

  • Although لولا (lōla) implies the negation, it can be optionally followed by the negation particle ما (ma) without changing the meaning.
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