Untitled — 3 days ago
I love languages and Arabic looks so interesting! Plus useful and many of today’s words, in many languages, are derived from Arabic
I love languages and Arabic looks so interesting! Plus useful and many of today’s words, in many languages, are derived from Arabic
German was my first language.
I have taken 6 years of spansih and need to focus on conversational ( ahhhh I was great in Spain. Okay maybe great isn’t the word)
Arabic is beautiful to me. As beautiful as the culture that it stems from. I love the Middle East and Africa.
deryufeng is looking at his options
Find ways to learn a little bit of Arabic, in order to speak, and perhaps read a little. Go to bookstore and find English/Arabic books.
I am a fluent Arabic speaking and don’t mind being of any help..!!
Just give me buzz.!
I am learning arabic.
I know the alphabet, sounds, letters, symbols and how to have a basic conversation. I hope I pass my exam on tuesday.
i would like to learn arabic as my boyfriend is tunisian, and i’d love to move to tunisia. i can speak basic french and german, but arabic would be a challenge im guessing??
can anyone help with where i can possibly do this?
Gib_l is currently trying to straighten out his life in the real world
I will enroll in an Arabic class at college next semester, It’s going to mean I’ll have to go to school M-F. It might suck, but I’ll survive, and I might actually enjoy it…
SmileyG is yawning!
I would say that Lebanese or Saudi dialects are better known around the Middle East. Saudi is kind of similar to Kuwaiti (what I speak) but in most of the words, Kuwaitis say “y” instead of saying “j” unlike in Saudi. I, for one, don’t really get Egyptian especially when it’s being spoken fast. An example of the difference between the dialects is the following: I am coming – ana yaya (in Kuwaiti), ana jaya (in Saudi), ana gaya (in Egyptian). If anyone needs help, feel free to ask me. ;)
ShuffShuff is absolutely in love with life.
I signed up to take a wicked intense Arabic course in college!
=]
Over the past few weeks I have learned the Arabic alphabet (alif, bah, tah, thah, jeem, ha, kha, del, thel, ra, za, seen, sheen, sod, dod, ta, tha, ayn, gyn, fa, quof, kaf, lam, mim, nun, wow, ha, ya). Obviously I’m still having some pronounciation problems. And the real problem is taking the alphabet and making words out of them… I get confused between some of the letters and also with the way they connect to each other and when I need to put in a vowel or just a tick mark.
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sandraday asks,
“If it is not offered at my college, what do I do? I'm very poor at teaching myself anything...”
— 1 year ago |
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Columbus
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peacechicken asks,
“So where do I even start? A book, CD, a class?”
— 2 years ago |
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Tashkent
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Gulnoza asks,
“how to learn arabic online”
— 2 years ago |
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