This is how I would approach learning Arabic from scratch - I've left some links to resources in the description for each stage so do check those out if you're not sure where to get started :)
@ADEN-ft2ty7 ай бұрын
Thanks man, I’ve been needing to strengthen my grammar, really nice video and resources
@shoaibriz5 ай бұрын
How long would it take to start speaking and understanding Arabic for basic conversations. I am moving to the middle east and want to learn arabic to survive.
@Floorgang_222 ай бұрын
stage 2 is a huge block. Majority of learners are stuck there, it would be amazing to have a dedicated video for that. Like in what order does one progress? considering one's learning msa, how and what kind of practice should be done, how to actively recall and use the grammar rules etc etc
@Arabicinuse993 ай бұрын
I' m an a native Arabic speaker and l agree with you completely Keep it up brother قاسم!
@assiabns14333 ай бұрын
To everyone who wants to learn arabic, I just want to tell you that arabic is one of the most beautiful languages to exist, it will open doors for you to heaven and to a magical extraordinary world and a rich culture (despite all the stereotypes you hear)
@Alejand883Ай бұрын
Once I learn Arabic every language would be easier
@israaallam81363 ай бұрын
انا فخورة بك جدا يا قاسم انا مدرستك الاولى في مصر اسراء
@kgh224 ай бұрын
JazakaAllah for making this video. I'm just halfway through it but the ease with which you are explaining is making me more motivated to learn it now
@Ummahmoud15 ай бұрын
As someone who is learning Arabic with previously no exposure to the language at all and later married into an Arab family. I started off learning Levantine Arabic because SO MANY PEOPLE recommend staying away from fusha. However, after having learned Fusha and being exposed to different dialects, I have so much better of an understanding of Arabic, including the dialects, as a whole. So glad to see you recommending this since I think so many people advise against it.
@basmala6474 ай бұрын
برااااافووو 👏🏻
@rashidah93074 ай бұрын
Your experience is so interesting to me because mine has been the opposite. At the beginning of my Arabic journey, I had SO MANY Arab friends and acquaintances insist that I had to study Fusha first (even though this is, of course, not how they themselves learned to speak and read). I have a theory that the advice an Arabic learner receives depends on a number of factors, including the religion of the learner and the person giving advice, the cultural background of the learner, the attitude of the person giving advice towards the dialects (whether they consider them real languages), the educational level of the person giving advice, and where the Arabic learner lives (inside or outside the Middle East). As an American Christian, the vast majority of my Arab Muslim friends (and Arabic teachers and Arabs in the KZbin comment section) insisted that I must learn Fusha first, as, to them, this is REAL Arabic and the language of Allah. Christian Arabs, from my experience, don't share this attitude, although, of course, their Bible is in Fusha and their church services are a hybrid of Fusha and Ammiyah. I do plan to learn some Fusha, but my primary goal is to be able to speak, understand verbal and text messages, and be able to serve refugees from places like Syria.
@slightlyopinionated81072 ай бұрын
@@rashidah9307 the thing is it's hard to separate arabic literature from islam because the highest form of arabic is quranic. there is also poetry both pre-islamic, early islamic and modern era, both are heavily influenced by religion. the reason why we recommend fusha is because it lays the foundation of any other dialect because dialects are just modifications that happened to fusha. so learning it that way, would make it easier because picking up dialect words replacing with original is easy but learning each dialect on its own is more difficult because youll build dialect on dialect. it will be what youre introduced to most because when us arabs meet we try to speak much more fusha and also the resources for fusha and content online is more widely available in fusha. want to read anything? every single book, article or brochure is in fusha. only written form thats not are comments or text messages. all official video sources like news or documentaries are in fusha. even arabic youtubers, most of them do speak their dialect but in a more fusha way so that all arabs can understand. thats why id recommend fusha unless mostly deal with levantine immigrants then learning levantine would be best because you can start communicating faster and youll also gain ton of practice speaking with them.
@lynaberr27045 ай бұрын
Being a native is such a privilege 🙌
@shinamonpan4 ай бұрын
Agree.
@NadaNuri4 ай бұрын
Thinking it every single day. Trust me you are blessed
@NaliJamaАй бұрын
Jazak! I am new and want to learn Arabic for the intention of having a deeper understanding of the Quran and being able to communicate with my fellow Muslims as I eventually plan to move to a Muslim country inshaAllah.
@rashidah93074 ай бұрын
Qasim, thank you for this video; it's very inspiring and interesting to hear your perspective! I WISH that I could go to the Middle East for 6 months (or even for a month!) and immerse myself in the language, but I'm not a single twenty-something. Lol. I have made two short trips to the Middle East, and I really saw the benefits of even 2 weeks of speaking Arabic throughout the day every day. Thanks for pointing out that that's not realistic or even necessary for everyone. Many people in the West underestimate the size of the Arabic-speaking population in their own cities. I've found, for instance, that through volunteer work with refugee families from the Middle East, there are MANY opportunities to help people in your community who don't know the language or the culture AND make Arabic a part of your regular life. I love what you said about the importance of the dialects for connecting with the people and the culture(s). For this reason, some people (especially extroverts like me whose primary motivation for doing the grinding work of studying is connection) are better off to start with a dialect so that the language can become meaningful and alive for them and they don't give up on the language before they get to some of the cool stuff. Learning a dialect, of course, still involves learning the alphabet, learning how to read (as transcripts and subtitles will be in Arabic script), and learning how to spell (especially if you have friends or language exchange partners that you text with). And I highly recommend teaching platforms like iTalki for learning Arabic in a way that suits your personal goals, schedule, and budget. I look forward to watching more of your videos!
@Shenepoy4 ай бұрын
3:50 for natives is quite the opposite I tend to slow down to read with vowels (harakat) since most time when it's written it indicate this is not the common sounding one
@heshamhelal3 ай бұрын
Great job, Arabic is a very hard language to learn and I feel privaleged being born with it
@mitrarahmatzadeh29365 ай бұрын
As a total beginner who wants to become fluent in Arabic, you have answered all my questions about learning Arabic! Thanks 👍🏻
@QasimRazviArabic5 ай бұрын
Happy to hear that! Any other questions you have, just let me know 💪😅
@MA.20.244 ай бұрын
جميل، تحياتي من مصر
@Seantorky34 ай бұрын
Great video. I am already at stage 2. Workbook are hard ( I am using practice makes perfect) but lots of fun.
@gasalive5 ай бұрын
such a high quality video brother, all the best. جزاك اللهُ خيرًا
@QasimRazviArabic5 ай бұрын
Thank a lot bro! جزاك اللهُ خيرًا for your kind words and support. 🙏
@sairvh6 ай бұрын
Commenting for the algorithm! Loved this video :) I'd love to learn Levantine Arabic - it might be the next language on my list!
@QasimRazviArabic6 ай бұрын
Thanks for dropping a comment, I appreciate it! 😊 So glad you enjoyed the video! Levantine Arabic is an awesome choice tbh I agree. You sound like you already know quite a few languages haha so I'm sure you've got this 💪 🚀
@adriantepesut7 ай бұрын
Oh yeah. Good news is that because of the verb forms and root system someone at a b1 level can know how to pronounce 80-90 % of written words but there are always random nouns or form 1 verbs whose pronunciation they might have to look up in a muajam but if they’re at that point suddenly the way they study and practice is the same way they’re going to be looking up words at c2 years from now albeit less frequently. That’s me right now I’m at probably b1 and it’s a very long journey from here but it’s also straightforward
@QasimRazviArabic6 ай бұрын
Yeah exactly, there's definitely a certain point that once you get up to, things get easier and its just about more exposure and more studying and practice - that's my experience anyway. For sure, even at c2 it's still going to be the same process! It's definitely rewarding though - keep going and good luck :D
@eriksundblad69915 ай бұрын
Wow! Great video ‘Asim. I basically agree with every single point. Best regards /Erik from Arabeya
@QasimRazviArabic5 ай бұрын
Wow Erik - this is insane!!! Crazy you found this video 😂 Long time no speak and great to hear from you! Glad a fellow Arabist sees things the same way ;)
@real.syrian.arabic5 ай бұрын
I agree that reading without the short vowels is one of the biggest challenges. You can't know how to read a word that you haven't encountered before. But it's actually kind of the same in English since there are no consistent rules of spelling or pronunciation. I also agree that learning a dialect is essential to communicate with arabs. I hope you'll go back to learning Syrian soon! 😂❤
@mwt20223 ай бұрын
شكرا لك
@mohdekram12245 ай бұрын
تعلمت اللغة العربية و العلوم الشرعية في ثماني سنوات في إحدي المدارس الهندية، ومازلت أحسنها ، من وجهة نظري ان يعلم المتعلم أن ايّ لغة لها اربعة جوانب . اولا: الاستماع ،هذا من اصعب جوانب اللغة .على المتعلم ان يكثر الاستماع كي يتدرب الدماغ على اللغة العربية .هذا الشيء الذي ينتج القراءة و التحدث. ثانيا :التحدث،الاستماع يقوي التحدث ثالثا:القراءة ،علي المتعلم ان يعلم بعض القواعد العربية .ويُكِثر قراءة الاخبار والمجلات رابعا :الكتابة ،علي الكاتب ان يعلم قواعد الكتابة و يمارس صفحة في اليوم. لابد ان يعلم أن الاستماع والقراءة أساس اللغة ، يقال ايضا التلقي . إذا كان التلقي قويا يكون المتعلم قويا في إلانتاج. والانتاج هي التحدث والكتابة. أما اللغة العامية(Regional dilect) فلاحاجة لها ، إن تريدها فسافر إلي أماكن التي تريد تعلّمَها العامية.
@rustyarchitect5 ай бұрын
Do you have any listening material recommendations? Thanks.
@mohdekram12245 ай бұрын
@@rustyarchitect yes I recommend you to listin alzajerra arabic news, Dw arabic docmentry , almaidan for alzajerra , ashraq docementry. These channels are very useful for listening and I request to read description of alzajerra and dw.
@QasimRazviArabic5 ай бұрын
شكرًا جزيلًا على هذه المعلومات القيمة! فعلاً، تعلم اللغة العربية يحتاج إلى الكثير من الجهد والممارسة في الاستماع والقراءة والكتابة. أقدر تعليقك على الفيديو وأعتقد أن هذه نصيحة رائعة. شكرًا مرة أخرى لدعمك! 😊💪
@Rivan6624 ай бұрын
اللغه العربيه مثل أي لغه تتطلب الممارسه والاستمراريه
@R.M.Y21Ай бұрын
أتمني لك كل التوفيق 👏🇪🇬
@beardedmo5 ай бұрын
How do you only have 1k subs! You deserve way more. Subscribed!
@QasimRazviArabic5 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot bro - appreciate it 😃 💪
@arabiclangclub2 ай бұрын
Very Informative and helpful
@umm-salmaadam66372 ай бұрын
Thank you so much, very useful guide. A very good motivation as I have been working on this but I find it hard to speak. Will start from beginning in shaa Allah
@End_Zionism5 ай бұрын
Well done ❤
@emil-2452 ай бұрын
such a qualitative video👍 thx
@alnomadou5 ай бұрын
You should have a lot more Subscribers - Keep pushing.
@QasimRazviArabic5 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for this, means a lot 😊💪
@АишаЖанатаева-ъ7х5 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@abdullahsohail8601Ай бұрын
Hi Qasim. Your videos are really beneficial. Just wanted to ask that in terms of reading academic literature on any subject, does the dialect matter? If a scholar from any country writes a work, is it necessary to have expertise of that country's dialect to understand it?
@QasimRazviArabicАй бұрын
Hey bro! Super glad to hear it :) for academic literature it shouldn’t matter where the writer is from because it will usually be in MSA. There might be some slight differences you might find in word choices or stylistic preferences when writing MSA depending on the country the writer is from and what dialect they speak but this should be minimal and shouldn’t affect your understanding. So yeah, no need to have any dialect expertise at all - just MSA
@abdullahsohail8601Ай бұрын
Great. Thank you. Actually, I have been learning Arabic now for a year but mainly focusing on the gramatical structures. I believe I now have strong base in 'Nahw and Sarf' but finding a bit overwhelming to keep up with the vocablury. Would you suggest any effective approach to work on extending one's vocab? I find it confusing to just randomly learn the meaning of roots. P.s. A little personal question, what was your motivation behind studying Arabic and Persian and how are they helping you in your profession?
@timwoods317316 күн бұрын
Thank you
@家奇白3 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this! After learning Fusha for a couple of years, I finally got the chance to visit Jordan last month and realized what I learned is not that useful as I expected since I don’t understand what people in the streets are talking about and this is really discouraging for my learning. After watching this video, I just realized that I’ve always been ignoring the importance of Amiyya. I guess I might need to work on it more…
@marcfrankoro2 күн бұрын
تحية من لبنان
@nurtaranamumtaheena75265 ай бұрын
From Bangladesh ❤
@sifat96674 ай бұрын
Qasim: "I spent 5+ years studying Arabic full time" Me: *quits*
@ArwaAhmed-sh4is22 күн бұрын
السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته انا من دولة عربية وهى مصر ❤ تحياتى لك على هذا الفديو الجميل ، تعلم العربية الفصحى ليس بالشئ الصعب ولكن يحتاج للتحدث باللغة وأنصحكم بقرأة القرآن لانه سيقوى من لغتكم العربية ، والتحدث للمتحدثين الاصليين للغة العربية وأخيرا ، السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته ❤❤❤❤
@OmarAbdulMalikDHEdMPASPACPAPro5 ай бұрын
Peace be to you (Assalamualaikum)! I can read Quran but don't know what it is saying. However, with slow, CONSISTENT effort, I am getting there, insha'Allah! I greatly appreciate your insight. I just subscribed to your channel. ☺️👋🏽👨🏽⚕️
@QasimRazviArabic5 ай бұрын
Wa alaykum assalaam - Thanks a lot for your support 🙏 Inshallah you can definitely get there - consistency is key as you say. I'm planning to make another video sometime soon on how to optimise learning for understanding the Quran - hopefully that will be useful to some people. If there is something else you'd like to see me cover just let me know :)
@OmarAbdulMalikDHEdMPASPACPAPro5 ай бұрын
@@QasimRazviArabic I will, insha'Allah.
@Virtues16211 күн бұрын
Many thanks Qasim ---It was enlighening! The book Kitaab has three editions! Does it matter which one to study? many thanks again!
@ieyeieyeieyei26 күн бұрын
if u want to learn msa and then egyptian how do u keep them separate and make shore i dont learn some weird hybrid or is that ok?
@IdinSabahipour7 ай бұрын
Another week, another banger video 🔥
@ViserysTheFirst5 ай бұрын
what is your pfp
@OrikiHotaro-rv4ku5 ай бұрын
i don't now why im watching this video while im already speaking arabic 😂
@asrafulhudaridwan45625 ай бұрын
You learned or your native language Can you help me?
@무니라-t2s5 ай бұрын
I'm also native speaker Arabic @@asrafulhudaridwan4562
@무니라-t2s5 ай бұрын
نفس وضعي احس بالفخر وانا اتكلم وهم يتعلمون
@rithwikreddy59675 ай бұрын
@@무니라-t2su weird af ngl
@무니라-t2s5 ай бұрын
Why @@rithwikreddy5967
@saraamer7205 ай бұрын
I really can imagine how that was so difficult Good for you ❤
@ariansarrafan66657 ай бұрын
Lovely video brother
@QasimRazviArabic6 ай бұрын
Thank you so much 😀
@bahiyyah99395 ай бұрын
Nice video
@Rajul25 ай бұрын
It would be better if there was no music. Nice video!
@ahnafzaheen65935 ай бұрын
why
@Ali-hy7pr5 ай бұрын
@@ahnafzaheen6593 because its haram
@ahnafzaheen65935 ай бұрын
@@Ali-hy7pr he talking about learning arabic language not Islamic hadiths
@Ali-hy7pr4 ай бұрын
@@ahnafzaheen6593 music still haram in all cases at every second every minute every hour every day and year of this earth's existence
@friendlyrobotasmr4 ай бұрын
@@Ali-hy7pr he is not muslim
@rachelparry95095 ай бұрын
Thank you for your video. What books do you recommend for learning Egyptian Arabic dialect?
@QasimRazviArabic5 ай бұрын
I'm glad you appreciated it - thank you for your comment! The book we used to refer to sometimes when I was in Egypt was "Kallimni Arabi" by Samia Louis - from my memory it wasn't really a self-study book though , but it did have some useful exercises/lessons. If you already know some MSA you probably could manage to go through it though and find it useful. Across all the volumes it does cover a decent level
@rachelparry95095 ай бұрын
Thats great, thanks for your advice 😊
@yourPru2 ай бұрын
as a native speaker, I recommend learning Arabic in Fusha (formal) then a dialect of one of the gulf countries rather than North African ones
@BMWBMW-m1q5 ай бұрын
I feel proud because I am Arab and I have no rules or basics that I applied to the Arabs because they are difficult. Thank God I am a single Arab Muslim. ❤❤❤
@Kaiman__san5 ай бұрын
وليش كاتب سنقل ؟
@jadsoj4 ай бұрын
Cool video
@devserendipity30635 ай бұрын
Can you give an advice with learning classical arabic?
@무니라-t2s5 ай бұрын
If you Muslim you have to learn classical Arabic as a Arabian I can help you if were girl
@Acidfrogs5 ай бұрын
@@무니라-t2sis Medina arabic like Classical Arabic?
@SuhbanIo5 ай бұрын
@@Acidfrogs yes
@devserendipity30633 ай бұрын
@@무니라-t2s I am a muslim from bosnia, I don't speak arabic. I am a man, not a girl. But jazak Allah khair for intentions
@asim47995 ай бұрын
What do you think about books like the medinah books and Baynah yadayk for beginners
@Fatima-rn5ji5 ай бұрын
Take off the music pls it’s noisy
@samantarmaxammadsaciid51565 ай бұрын
Why?!? One hears everything, clearly! His voice is louder than the background music!
@Fatima-rn5ji5 ай бұрын
@@samantarmaxammadsaciid5156 i know but still noisy
@AbuInayaAl-Athari-po3yj5 ай бұрын
Also haram😥
@samantarmaxammadsaciid51565 ай бұрын
@@AbuInayaAl-Athari-po3yj Why? This music at the background doesn't express anything indecent to the Muslim ears! So, to comment it's Ḥaraam is misconstrued!
@samantarmaxammadsaciid51565 ай бұрын
@seadeahyun If the musical instrument is bad, in case one should not train physically to be an athletic to earn money and fame, or train one's body to be fit only health wise but to look good! So, you're wrong to say that's what Rasuulu-LLaahi and Nabii’u-LLaahi said or did as all are according to men's nonfactual, gibberish narratives written down!
@ViserysTheFirst5 ай бұрын
good video i think for someone coming to an arabic country won't help him much because especially in the gulf countries people speak in a different dialect with non-arabs than arabs, with there friends and with old relatives or older generations
@gaiavalentini76482 ай бұрын
great video! someone can tell me where i can find the pdf of all the arabic you never learned the first time around? the link doesn't work and i can't find it anywhere uff. thank you :)
@AD-jay4 ай бұрын
You motivated me to learn grammar because there are lots of resources on the internet but which chapter should I start with?
@ahmetsargin297 ай бұрын
This channel is extremely perfect!!
@QasimRazviArabic6 ай бұрын
Thanks so much :D
@sumaya_soma5 ай бұрын
جاني إحساس حلو لاني بتكلم عربي كلغة أم 😩👍
@xerxes-9o8kw5 ай бұрын
How foul
@sumaya_soma5 ай бұрын
@@xerxes-9o8kw What do you mean?🗿
@banandababa2 ай бұрын
The website you mentioned allthearabicyouneverlearnt has shut down 😭😔 or is it just for me?
@banandababa2 ай бұрын
Also so happy I found your channel. Been learning Arabic for 2 years now and finally feel like I’m getting somewhere. These videos are the boost I need to inspire me to get closer to fluency!
@ArabicTalker3 ай бұрын
You are right with every thing, Reading is very important to start with, and some students are in rush and they want to start learning conversation without learning reading and that not good in Arabic as pronunciation depends on what you see, and sometimes it's different depending on the position of the word inside the sentences, or if you stop on this word or continuing, and so on. also, MSA is very important at the beginning even if you want to start a dialect, as it helps you to build foundation and understanding the idea of the language, and Arabic culture too. also it makes learning dialects easier as all dialects come from the same root which is Arabic. also, learning with a native professional teacher who knows how teach Arabic as a second language it helps a lot and save more time. but here something until now I haven't found any mobile apps are useful in Arabic and their methods not organized and make a load on students as they give them a lot of grammar and conjugations and these should be built step by step
@abdladigun64366 ай бұрын
اهلا أتعلم اللغة العربية أيضا لكن أعتقد عند هذا فيديو خطئا، you're supposed to say "how I learn Arabic in 6 months" like other videos. Lol nice video thank you for this video I feel like people make is seem like to learn in language It only takes you a few months instead of maybe like you said 5 years for you. Of course you can do it in a year and less than five definitely. But for the average person, 5 years is reasonable.
@QasimRazviArabic6 ай бұрын
hahaha - thanks a lot man! Yeah I agree, can definitely do significant learning in shorter time frames, so it really does depend on your goals :) Ofc the university degree is kind of different, lots of language stuff, then other modules like history, classical Arabic, modern Arabic literature etc - but bear in mind that's also full time with time abroad too. But for most people to learn any language well it is going to take time tbh IMO. Appreciate your thoughts and glad you enjoyed the video 🙏
@protostar10005 ай бұрын
For an average person, I would say 10 years.
@farisi_uae5 ай бұрын
@@protostar100020 or 30 more realistic. Some would say 40.
@HsHa-mАй бұрын
@@protostar1000to much!
@HakendaNatan5 ай бұрын
good
@DustinWilde-i5s3 ай бұрын
Hey thanks! Im a language major also, what sort of jobs are you anticipating you’ll get with your degree?
@OthmanMagoma-od7wi5 ай бұрын
Any book for a specific dialect
@YoungSmirks3 ай бұрын
Great advice, biggest regret is wasting too much time with transliteration
@lamiamahmoud5996 ай бұрын
برافو عليك 🌺🌺🌺
@QasimRazviArabic6 ай бұрын
🙏 شكراً جزيلاً لك على دعمك
@SuhbanIo5 ай бұрын
"brafou" God, I love Arabic
@facts.explained.5 ай бұрын
Arabic is the mother of languages, it's amazingly structured.
@in4malfella2156 ай бұрын
yo bro what do u think of madinah arabic book 1-3?
@QasimRazviArabic6 ай бұрын
Yo man - solid books imo, I've actually got all 3 but never fully gone through them page by page myself. But from what I've seen they are clear & well structured - if you can get into them then they'll deffo take you to a good upper intermediate level I think :)
@in4malfella2156 ай бұрын
@@QasimRazviArabic Noted. Thanks, man. 💯💯
@QasimRazviArabic6 ай бұрын
No problem bro! You got this 💪
@Kolvatn3 ай бұрын
the thing is... learning darija is hard cuz they speak arabic english and french. edit: im native french speaker and understand english fluently but the moroccans i tried to speak to just switch to either one
@numguero5 ай бұрын
I have no interest in reading the Quran, but I'd like to watch and read the arabic media, so I'll try to start with classic arabic
@QasimRazviArabic5 ай бұрын
Nice one! Think you probably mean MSA for media Arabic? :) For media Arabic I studied this book: 'Media Arabic: A Coursebook for Reading Arabic News' aucpress.com/9789774166525/ . It was actually really good and I liked it so worth checking out IMO
@numguero5 ай бұрын
@@QasimRazviArabic Thanks for the recommendation
@GregfromPhilly5 ай бұрын
The music gets in the way of the video. Turn down the volume. It should be background and not compete with your discussion.
@ameenadeyemi19875 ай бұрын
No add music, it’s distracting
@TIG2MAN02 күн бұрын
I love this. This is so cool. How did you get into Iraq? Did you have to worry about war? Ive heard its a great place to visit. The western media/polititions are wrong. What was your experiance?
@Brosak.2 ай бұрын
What does studying a language full time mean? 37hrs/week for 5 years?
@litezhoweyАй бұрын
My goal is to understand Quran without having to read the translation! ❤
@thebittertruth5381Ай бұрын
you excluded Djibouti and Chad sir
@MalaknourDouha6 күн бұрын
billeh60 Have you started learning it?
@Anonyme202444 күн бұрын
هل أسلمت يا قاسم ؟
@aoy18893 ай бұрын
what is your ethnicity?
@sameh61382 ай бұрын
If someone wants to practice arabic l can help and improve my english too
@youssefmohammed8607Ай бұрын
If anyone who is a native English speaker wants to learn Arabic, I will help him and we will exchange languages. I want to practice English.
@ArmaanEdit14 ай бұрын
Hey bro you want to hire a Thumbnail Designer?
@hafeezanalytics3 ай бұрын
There is a big difference between Arabic and Quranic Arabic If you want to understand the Book of ALLAH Learn Quranic Arabic
@محمدالبحيري-ج3غ5 ай бұрын
Can't lie this is a very good level at arabic but you can be spotted by an arab easily مثلا مفيش لهجة بتبدأ كلامها ب أهلا يا أصحابي
@a.d.sstudioanimation6438Ай бұрын
Bro said go to syria
@munkásapka24 күн бұрын
Yeah ok but what if i want to learn the palestinian dialect? How do I go to Palestine?
@YadOsman6 ай бұрын
Good luck with ق and خ 😂❤
@Saleh-ih5cn5 ай бұрын
حرفيا أصعب الحروف في اللغه العربيه هي ال ع ولا ض او غ
@Сусек5 ай бұрын
K and h are pretty easy, ق is a k, but deeper in throat, and خ is like a French r, but silent. Actually, the letter I was stucked on is ع. First time that I was trying to say it - I wanted to puke, it was really hard to say it first time.
@shaheer_ghazi5 ай бұрын
Don’t take the music off.
@-he6i5 ай бұрын
Plz don't use music in your videos 😊
@ahnafzaheen65935 ай бұрын
why
@-he6i2 ай бұрын
@@ahnafzaheen6593 it's haram
@ahnafzaheen65932 ай бұрын
@@-he6i if its haram then dont watch it. this isnt a islamic video
@SerrvantX29 күн бұрын
He’s not Muslim
@munkásapka24 күн бұрын
@-he6i bruh
@Junaiia5 ай бұрын
Wow
@hamiltonblankson23 күн бұрын
If you don't mind my asking, is Qasim your real name? Or do we all need to adopt pseudonyms as we fall in love with languages? lol
@amal27556 ай бұрын
انصح بتعلم اللهجة السعودية لأنها واضحة ، والسعوديين ينطقون كل الحروف العربية
@QasimRazviArabic6 ай бұрын
شكراً على تعليقك، فعلاً اللهجة السعودية واضحة جداً! ومع ذلك، في الفيديو ذكرت أن اللهجة المصرية ربما تكون الأفضل للتعلم بسبب كثرة الموارد المتاحة وانتشارها الواسع. لكن بالنهاية، أي لهجة ستتعلمها ستضيف لك الكثير. بالتوفيق في رحلتك اللغوية! 😊
@amal27556 ай бұрын
@@QasimRazviArabic إذا كنت تريد قراءة القران الكريم فاللهجة السعودية افضل لأن المصرية لا ينطقون الجيم والذال والضاد وغيرها من الحروف وأنا أتكلم العربية لأني سعودية وانطق كل الحروف نطقاً صحيح
@yourPru2 ай бұрын
اللهجة السعودية جميلة
@R.M.Y21Ай бұрын
اليمنية الأقرب للفصحي
@amal2755Ай бұрын
@ هههههههههههههههه نكته رائعة
@ahmedjassim2293Ай бұрын
وأنا أريد أن اتعلم اللغة الإنجليزية😂
@Boyam15625 күн бұрын
Please don’t add musical tone in background
@pluviophile19882 ай бұрын
Interested in my arab husband 😁😆
@FidanHasanzadeStudent5 ай бұрын
please dont add music, hurts the ears
@Uthmannie5 ай бұрын
Agreed
@Tylersmith-xq2sx5 ай бұрын
While I agree, he’s likely not Muslim which is likely the reason you don’t want music and he’s not catering this video to Muslims he’s catering towards those who want to learn Arabic
@Uthmannie5 ай бұрын
@Tylersmith-xq2sx I believe he is Muslim, Qassim is a Muslim name
@elfinsim5 ай бұрын
@@Tylersmith-xq2sxit’s not about being Muslim or not, the music is really distracting, it hardly sounds like background anymore.
@Aripuni15 ай бұрын
@@Uthmanniejust because someone name is arabic doesnt mean they are muslim, here in indonesia and alot of SEA nation we have native name and we are muslim
@rizzwan-420694 ай бұрын
i just want to understand quran don't care much about people.
@zubairshaikh22993 ай бұрын
I also try to learn Arabic just for understand Quran
@Studentin-q4r2 ай бұрын
اللهم بارك، الله يفتح لكم يا رب
@oumarsow16465 ай бұрын
How long did it take you to become fluent in Arabic?
@무니라-t2s5 ай бұрын
You have to live in Arab countries, it will be easy, and you can also speak fluently
@QasimRazviArabic5 ай бұрын
Hard to say an exact number tbh and hard to define at what point 'fluent' is - but I would say that by the time I was speaking Egyptian Arabic pretty fluently and felt comfortable I had spent 3 years studying fusha full-time and had spent 6 months actually in Egypt going to classes and speaking loads. I think its very dependent on how much you practise though. I practised a lot. I know people who spent a year in Egypt and went to classes etc but didn't end up speaking very well at all. However, with some fusha knowledge already, and practising dialect as much as you can & classes you can be at a good level in 6 months to a year IMO