Start learning Arabic in 10 minutes a day for only $10. Or choose from 10 other languages 👉🏼 bit.ly/10-day-language
@11111mhmhmh3 күн бұрын
10 minutes a day will not help in any languages especially Arabic.. very few western people learn it.. I’m one of the few :) Thousand and thousands of hours ..not minutes
@ismailsteitiya8785Күн бұрын
I'm not exaggerating if I say that Classical Arabic is deeper than that. The Arabic sentence is literally like logic circuits. الأمر أوسع من أن أحيط به فأخبرَ عنه.
@omsofi11113 күн бұрын
All fun and games untill 200BC arabic poetry shows up
@SkipEditing3 күн бұрын
😂😂😂
@shenoudaesam14713 күн бұрын
oh boy , this comment kinda made me remember the living hell i had to go through trying to read this stuff at school and it's no like i'm stranger to the language ,quite the opposite , i am egyptian so this is my native language
@omsofi11113 күн бұрын
@@shenoudaesam1471 ١٢ بيت ١٠ قصائد 💀💀
@inamurrahmansir94713 күн бұрын
Arabic was not in its current form during the time of 200 BCE. Classical Arabic started to develop in the 5th century, although different dialects and versions of Arabic have been present since much earlier. The early forms of Arabic were influenced by scripts like Nabatean and languages such as Sabaean, which played a key role in shaping the Arabic language and writing system. Before the Revelation of the Quran, Arabic consisted of many different dialects rather than a single language. Modern Standard Arabic, which is based on the Quran, has borrowed many words from foreign languages. Additionally, Arabic has had a significant influence on languages worldwide, including Spanish and Indonesian.
@omsofi11113 күн бұрын
@@inamurrahmansir9471 اي اعرف
@anarchist_parable3 күн бұрын
Learning other languages taught me how much we take English for granted and how we have some difficult grammar ourselves. Like I actually find the dots that tell you the pronunciation easier than some English words where silent consonants change the sound of the vowels. Language is cool ❤
@a.r.47072 күн бұрын
@anarchist_parable And I feel the same about my native language which is Finnish😄
@atrumluminarium3 күн бұрын
As a Maltese native speaker, this is bringing so much primary school Maltese lesson flashbacks 😅
@Haywood-Jablomie3 күн бұрын
I can understand maybe 70% of Maltese when you speak to me slowly
@averestless2 күн бұрын
Very close to Tunisian dialect (of Maghrebi family) and with many borrowed words from italian
@averestless2 күн бұрын
Though, the pronunciation is unfamiliar to north africans due to the lack of exposure to it. And some sounds are missing like ع
@marwaqoura78042 күн бұрын
I am Egyptian and was surprised to understand 80% of Maltese ❤😻
@atrumluminarium2 күн бұрын
@@averestless about 60% of the vocabulary is Italian 😁
@AmyBalot3 күн бұрын
It just takes a little longer because of the grammar differences and having fewer cognates, but it is rewarding and a lot of fun. I am watching Libyan TV dramas on KZbin right now as a supplement and to understand dialects better, after studying MSA for a while.
@a.r.47072 күн бұрын
@@AmyBalot How is your comprehension of the Libyan dialect with your MSA background?
@chaoslanguagelearningКүн бұрын
There's no need to follow the strict grammar rules in Arabic. Many Arab speakers don't use grammar correctly, be it MSA or colloquial, yet they understand each other. The pronunciation you see in this video are exaggerated. No one pronounce them that heavy , except perhaps the people from the Gulf region and Iraq.
@AmyBalotКүн бұрын
@@a.r.4707 I am watching the series "Rubik" right now (available on YT with English subs) with subs and consciously focusing heavily on the audio and making notes on things to look up. In general, pretty good. I know there are minor changes like q->g, and everyone in this show, for example, says "dinar" whether it's singular or plural (MSA says it's "dananiir" for pl.) so I assume that's a simplified thing that happens. I am also watching each episode more than once. Many things seem a bit simplified, and I need to learn more vocabulary, mostly, I can understand some whole sentences easily, and then sometimes bits and pieces. But the subs tell me what I need to look up or listen to again. So I am watching with a notepad to take notes, and a dictionary near me. Also I learned "كراج" for garage, a sign on the outside of a building in the show says "ورشة"
@AmyBalot15 сағат бұрын
@@chaoslanguagelearning True, but I am coming from a background of German and Latin where everyone cares too much about the grammar sometimes (lol). I am using MSA as a jumping-off point! I have looked into Palestinian Arabic (via Maha's channel) and some Egyptian, and Libyan TV shows and cartoons which have been great fun! I am just now getting used to differences in accents and dialects.
@MO-ec9nc5 сағат бұрын
@@chaoslanguagelearning They actually follow very strict grammar rules in common arabic dialects, only difference that these grammar rules are not arabic. If you take the Libyan - Tunisian example, it follows perfectly the Shilha (native amazigh dialect) grammar rules with a heavy use of arab words and vocabulary. Same goes for East Algerian/West Tunisian dialect, where the grammar is Kabyle, or Moroccan where the grammar is Amazigh, with again a strong use of arab vocabulary, that's why people in the west think it's arabic, it sounds like arabic and it's understandable if you talk arabic, but it's not. It as if Swahili, which is an African language with it's own grammar, but that relies heavily on arabic vocabulary, and that we, arab-talking populations understand perfectly (especially egyptians/yemeni and omani people) would be considered as arabic while it's not.
@Sarah-ni2bu2 күн бұрын
Very useful information. I suggest you talk more about Arabic dialects. I always advise those who are interested in learning conversational Arabic to choose the Egyptian dialect. It is one of the easiest dialects, it sounds beautiful and it's widely understood by almost all Arabic speaking countries.
@corinna0073 күн бұрын
I've asked this more than once already, but please make a dedicated video about Finnish. It doesn't get nearly as much love as it deserves.
@Mag-fj1sz2 күн бұрын
Yeees, it's so hard to find stuff for Finnish, which is a shame because it's a unique and beautiful language 😭
@corinna0072 күн бұрын
@@Mag-fj1sz It's my favourite language that I've encountered. I wish I could speak it better.
@bokshil3 күн бұрын
As an Arab I appreciate the ones who tries to learn Arabic but I was astonished by few Westerns not sure if they were Americans.. who not only learned Arabic to fluency.. they learned Arabic literature and poetry in the old classic form not the modern one .. they really learned Arabic better than today’s Arabs .. their video is still on KZbin
@Jhehantkt3 күн бұрын
There is no Arabic language if natives only speak dialects
@AbdulMuhammad-mh7eg3 күн бұрын
من اين؟
@bokshil3 күн бұрын
@@Jhehantkt we all use the MSA in our daily work and daily life .. plus our dialects
@bokshil3 күн бұрын
@@AbdulMuhammad-mh7eg موجود لهم مقطع عاليوتيوب حتى مختارين لهم اسامي عربية قديمة
@JolivoHY92 күн бұрын
@@Jhehantkt every human on earth speaks a dialect regardless of their native language. shocking right?
@sherifomran924922 сағат бұрын
thank you a lot for that video , you spooked well about my language ( the Arabic Language ) , thanks again
@viurii48923 күн бұрын
The hardest part in learning Arabic is not the grammar. The grammar is fairly simple and regular. The hardest part is vocabulary and dialect continuum. These things are just brutal and sadly they're not mentioned in this video.
@xxtentacionfan990..3 күн бұрын
I'll learn arabic but not now and its a great idea that i watch videos about every language and i only can speak english at b2 and native hungarian
@Relaxihub2 күн бұрын
As an Arab myself, I still struggle with it sometimes :)
@Dimitra.Saltou3 күн бұрын
I would prefer a book about Greenlandic language! Short stories!!
@Animelover865612 күн бұрын
السلام عليكم Im muslim from a young age my parents been taking to a quran institution i have been reading quran my whole life so i can read arabic write it i just dont undersand it good i know the basics and know how a word can change depending on the person i really just need to memorize words and there meanings. eu sou somali tôi là người Somali انا صومالي
@ruralsquirrel51583 күн бұрын
Like learning any language, you must have a long-term motivating factor to push you through, and especially with the "hard" languages like Arabic, Mandarin, or Japanese. I find many English speakers just breeze through languages like Spanish or French, because they are so related, but totally different languages need heavy motivation.
@fantomgo69252 күн бұрын
8:05 you mentioned them well, but you forgot about one which is the case of جزم حالة الجزم Which is only for verbs. Thank you for the video ❤
@nimmira3 күн бұрын
just to add some icing, probably the hard part of "dialects" is the overflowing usage of idioms and slang (many of which sometimes cannot be traced back clearly, but people still use them). Believe it or not, some expressions or slang were derived from TV shows and plays and somewhat became like a mainstream thing (talk about pre-internet memes)
@darioshub3 күн бұрын
انا كرواتي و أدرس العربية و آدابها. العربية هي لغة صعبة و رائعة و جميلة في نفس الوقت. تحياتي!
@omsofi11113 күн бұрын
لغتك العربية ممتازة
@a.r.47073 күн бұрын
ممتاز، انا أتكلم اللغة الكرواتية أيضا.
@norama39983 күн бұрын
تعبيرك في تعليقك باللغة العربية جميل .. 👍
@Khaled-kardashev3 күн бұрын
مرحبا داريوس! أتمنى لك النجاح في تعلم العربية!!
@darioshub3 күн бұрын
@@a.r.4707 حقا؟ أين تعلمتها؟
@homyce3 күн бұрын
Am a native Arabic speaker, and honestly I have no idea how non-Arabs manage to learn the language. It's incredibly difficult!
@marioluigi95993 күн бұрын
It's basic. You just make a load of throat sounds
@a.r.47073 күн бұрын
It is pretty difficult but you'll get used to it eventually.
@a.r.47073 күн бұрын
@@marioluigi9599Those throat sounds are the easiest part😂, there is a lot more to come.
@marioluigi95993 күн бұрын
@@a.r.4707 you just remember which throat sound means what. And that's it
@Jhehantkt3 күн бұрын
You don't speakers Arabic you speak dialects Arabic is msa .there is no Arabic language
@alaskawatchers804512 сағат бұрын
Finding a dialect and remaining with it for a time, that really helped in learning. I had always used stories Which I'm familiar with along with unabridged CD versions To learn a language. Head your approach Existed back when I was learning French, Spanish and German I probably would have saved myself a lot of time and maybe some heartache.
@junaidbaghdadi-dd1eb2 күн бұрын
شکرا 😊 Now, we`re waiting for "Is Hebrew hard? And "Is Hungarian 🇭🇺 hard?"
@ritarock60Күн бұрын
Hebrew is like Arabic but easier 😉 the main struggle is figuring how to read without vowels. Otherwise a bit less complex grammar than Arabic. So take what he says and remember Hebrew has some of these stuff but less complex. Hope I helped 🙏🏻
@junaidbaghdadi-dd1ebКүн бұрын
@@ritarock60 Thanks a lot :) But Hebrew verbs` roots lit. fed us up 🥺 Although, they`re around 7 and Arabic has 12+6+4+8=😭
@Cyclonus23773 күн бұрын
Interestingly enough, Cyrillic has 33 letters. *More* than Arabic. Also, most of the letters in the Cyrillic writing system is based on the Greek and the Latin alphabet. With one *very* interesting exception: The letters ш and щ ("sh" and "shch," respectively) are both based on the letter س ("sh"). Also, in Persian, which is a different language but which uses the Arabic script, the word for the number "six" is ۷ ("shesh"). While in Russian, it is шесть ("shest"). And in Ukrainian, it is шість ("shist"). It's all so fascinating! 😃😃😃😃
@panzerdegree99843 күн бұрын
Do you speak Russian?
@Cyclonus23773 күн бұрын
@@panzerdegree9984Да, хотя это не мой родной язык. Yes, although it is not my native language.
@AbdulMuhammad-mh7eg3 күн бұрын
you said sh wrongly, its "س", "ش" is sin wich makes s sound
@Cyclonus23773 күн бұрын
@@AbdulMuhammad-mh7eg Okay, thank you for letting me know.
@AbdulMuhammad-mh7eg3 күн бұрын
@@Cyclonus2377 np 👍
@iracohen3864Күн бұрын
Nice and positive view but it is indeed a very difficult language...practice and dedication are what lead to mastery of any language.
@asmaaabdellah60633 күн бұрын
I'm a native Arabic speaker and I'm learning Russian.. I can say Russian is much harder than Arabic 😂 Arabic is a piece of cake 😍 once you get familiar with letters and its pronunciation it gets much easier. Greetings from the great Egypt ✌️
@norama39983 күн бұрын
👍
@hakim78943 күн бұрын
You're talking BS
@asmaaabdellah60633 күн бұрын
@@hakim7894 look who got Zero in the Arabic exam 🤣 But seriously it's quite easy for me.. You tried Russian or Chinese, Japanese or even Finnish?
@a.r.47073 күн бұрын
@@asmaaabdellah6063 Arabic is ranked harder than Russian in general. Also Russian is generally difficult but not as difficult as Arabic. I speak some Arabic, Serbian and little Russian too. My native language is Finnish.
@hayabusa13292 күн бұрын
@@asmaaabdellah6063Russian is so easy, every European languages is
@عبدالله-ن6ه2ص2 күн бұрын
In the Arabic language, there is an important existential question for atheists and Christians that they ignore when talking about the Arabic language. It is a test of the credibility that the Qur’an is the word of the Creator by testing its challenges, eloquence, and miracles. There are scholars such as the British scholar Arthur Allison and the French scholar Maurice Bucaille and And the American Dr. Raymond Farren who learned Arabic to test whether the Qur’an is truly the word of the Creator. The best curricula for learning Arabic for non-native speakers is the book Medina and the book Arabic at Your Hands. Arabic is the most beautiful language in the world in terms of poetry, literature, beauty, description, imagination and depth of meaning. It is the language of 22 countries and a quarter of the world’s population speaks it in their prayers.
@gog_magpie13 сағат бұрын
I mean it's alright, overrated in my opinion, I can enjoy it without existential questions and still be an atheist
@tompeled61933 күн бұрын
4:27 Only with the harakat. Without the harakat, guessing the pronunciation from the spelling is difficult.
@tahzeebulalam8094Күн бұрын
Yeah unfortunately except for the Islamic religious holy book,the Qur'an has the HARAKAT while the others like newspapers,tv news shows and magazines etc,they DON'T. 🤬
@norama39983 күн бұрын
معلومة لمن لا يعرفها : ✅ ..لا يوجد حرف الضّاد ( ض ) نطقا في أي لغة على ظهر الأرض إلًا في اللغة العربية ..جميلة هي !
@CristianoRonaldo-ke7vg3 күн бұрын
وحرف الضاد نسخة مخففة، مثل حرف الد. الحروف متشابهة نسبيا
@shwanmirza93062 күн бұрын
@@CristianoRonaldo-ke7vg ليس متشابهة
@norama39982 күн бұрын
@@shwanmirza9306 👍
@CristianoRonaldo-ke7vg2 күн бұрын
@@shwanmirza9306 لكنه مشابه. حرف الضاد لا ينطق بشكل مختلف عن الد
@shwanmirza93062 күн бұрын
@@CristianoRonaldo-ke7vg بل مختلف
@jamesmcmillen52683 күн бұрын
Jazz piano is hard. What you are doing is several levels of degree more difficult. Kudos!
@kholoudal-amir2 күн бұрын
أنا مصرية ولما كبرت وفهمت قد اى اللغة العربية لغة بتاخد وقت للتعلم من الأجانب وسمعت رأيهم بيقولوا صعبة قولت الحمد لله إنى عربية 😂❤ وتعلمت ثلاث لغات أجنبية ❤❤
@عبدالله-ن6ه2ص2 күн бұрын
كيف تتعلم اللغات بشكل سريع ؟
@ismailsteitiya8785Күн бұрын
I'm not exaggerating if I say that Classical Arabic is deeper than that. The Arabic sentence is literally like logic circuits. الأمر أوسع من أن أحيط به فأخبرَ عنه.
@hotwow20002 күн бұрын
Hello Olly! I'm a native Arabic speaker. It was quite fun watching this video! However, there were two mistakes: one was the example of D-R-S the verb to learn and the words you can make of that root. Teaching is actually تدريس (Tadris) not مدرس (Mudarres) which is teacher, and student is either طالب or تلميذ. There's a similar word that can be formed which is مُدَرَّس (Mudarras) which is an adjective that can mean the "taught" as in the taught lesson was so and so. The same goes for the root "to love". حبَّذ means more like "rather" and is not related to the world love.
@pierreabbat6157Күн бұрын
I recognized the first word for student from Taliban (-an is a plural ending in some Iranian language) and the second from Hebrew תלמיד, which it turns out it was borrowed from.
@hotwow2000Күн бұрын
@@pierreabbat6157 طالبان is the dual form of student or two students. And yes exactly, the word in Hebrew "Talmid" is similar to the other in Arabic for student
@Rayene-k8s3 күн бұрын
It's wonderful how non native arabic speakers are describing our beautiful language.. everyone, I'd like to motivate those are studying our amazing language .. it may be hard at the beginning but after you get used to the language it will be your best decision you ever took! لا تستسلموا أبداً! ❤I'm learning german and have found cases interesting to me that Akk Dativ genitiv e.tc Is a piece of cake 😁
@jonathanlange13393 күн бұрын
So german is easy compared to arabic dialects?
@Rayene-k8s3 күн бұрын
@@jonathanlange1339 not at all, german what makes it unique to other languages is that they don't have many tenses such in french or english and this is a benefit for us learners, arabic dialects isn't as pure as the Standard arabic so like you're learning the street language if you know the standard arabic that's awesome but in order to communicate with people you need a dialect even we can understand arabic fusha however having the standard arabic with a dialect much spoken such egyptian. or whatever and one from the northern african countries is pretty good in short dialects are easy to learn while german take a while to master the basics!
@jonathanlange13393 күн бұрын
@@Rayene-k8s I think there are 7 tenses in german (if you count future tenses to it)? But used in speech only 4 or so. But still in french or english it's way more for sure. Anyways. Maybe I want to learn lebanese. Do you know how much easier it is to learn compared to MSA? And wil I be able to understand other dialects without a problem? And how big of a deal is it if I don't use dual forms to adress two people but instead use the normal plural form? Will it sound weird or unpolite? I'm just curious.
@Rayene-k8s3 күн бұрын
@@jonathanlange1339 you've got it right! while german has several tenses, not all are used in daily speech while french and english have more.. as for learning lebanese arabic compared to (MSA) Modern standard arabic I guess is easier for conversational purposes.. Msa is more formal and used in writing and formal settings across the Arab world ... regarding understanding other dialects by learning lebanese itself.. you'll likely be able to understand other levantine countries such «syria, palestine, jordan etc.. however it might be trickier with distinct dialects such egyptian or gulf dialects or even north african countries such Algerian dialect which you need to be exposed to these dialects but repeating that it's not that hard for dialects since you have a good basis in MSA and one dialect such lebanese.. as for the dual form it's completely normal if not using it since many native arabic use them less and it is not rude or impolite for not addressing two people.. in general Arabic MSA is the base once you master it then it's a good idea to move to a dialect and then go deeper in other dialects which are almost the same and you can understand us just for catching some new word which you'll learn with additional exposure as we love who learn our language and appreciate that so much.. I hope one day to master german deutsch Deutsch liegt mir am Herzen."♥
@AbdulMuhammad-mh7eg3 күн бұрын
انا عربي من الغرب، لا عرف بزف العربية
@yourlinguisticlatebloomer98933 күн бұрын
When someone recommends that I learn Arabic, my question is which dialect?
@NShll-sd9yw2 күн бұрын
learn Egyptian or Levantine because they are the most intelligible amongst the Arabic dialects.
@nicco-sixty2 күн бұрын
Fusha, it is the language of the poets and the learned.
@marwaqoura78042 күн бұрын
Egyptian or Levantine ,they have the best resources
@عبدالله-ن6ه2ص2 күн бұрын
The classical language is the most important language that can communicate with all the peoples of the Arab world, and the dialects of the Arabian Peninsula and the Levant are the closest to the classical language.
@languagelearningdabblerКүн бұрын
Same! Haven’t settled on a dialect 😅
@averestless2 күн бұрын
In standard (and maybe dialects too), word order is flexible but it could be used to express emphasis/focus. Starting with the verb can be employed intentionally to the put the emphasis on the action, while starting with the subject is usually to put the emphasis on the subject/person that does the action (like for example when answering "who did something?"). Also, in standard Arabic, starting with the verb is the default form while for dialects, the default is to start with the subject. Native speakers might not think of this difference because it comes as second nature.
@banandababa3 күн бұрын
The Arabic on your website story learning is it in MSA?
@croko6914 сағат бұрын
I recommend u to read some arabic poetry
@omarsalkamusic3 күн бұрын
Very good video!
@EduJord3 күн бұрын
Love your videos, Olly. Thank you for your contributions to the language learners "community".
@Doommhp-ov1is3 күн бұрын
I am an Arab and I speak Arabic easily. My dream in life is to speak English easily as well, but beware, the Arabic language has rules and things that will paralyze your tongue, even Arabs do not know it.
@MO-ec9nc5 сағат бұрын
"Arabic can look and sound difficult, but is it really that hard to learn?" Maghrebi Arabic: Hold My beer !
@pierreabbat6157Күн бұрын
Arabic is harder than Spanish for English speakers, but Arabic is easier for Spanish speakers than for English speakers. Spanish and Portuguese have lots of words from Arabic, such as "mezquino/mesquinho", "rincón", and "azahar" (not to be confused with "azar", which is also from Arabic and cognate with English "hazard").
@darknight77103 күн бұрын
You know I have Arabic class in school and if you focus a bit it’s pretty easy I mean if you get the same opportunity 😅there is nothing you can’t speak
@BarcaFan18993 күн бұрын
Are they teaching you a specific dialect or only the modern standard version? That’s what made me not want to take it in school since I still wouldn’t really be able to understand a native
@user-xq3sf8tw7g3 күн бұрын
It really depends on your mother tongue, if it's Hebrew or Aramaic then it will probably be easier.
@PolyglotGremlin3 күн бұрын
Where do you live, my school onlu offers spanish and ASL
@user-xq3sf8tw7g3 күн бұрын
@@PolyglotGremlin maybe turkey idk
@PolyglotGremlin3 күн бұрын
@@user-xq3sf8tw7g i live in a tiny town in the USA
@coolbrotherf1273 күн бұрын
At least it'll take a lot longer than learning more similar languages to English.
@akiraak22472 күн бұрын
have learned Arabic for 12 years in the School but still can not form a prefect sentence 😬
@a.r.47072 күн бұрын
@akiraak2247 Maybe you should put some effort to it. Not good to be illiterate.
@Hevf13 күн бұрын
I want to learn arabic i want to go to egypt
@tehadethcenter3 күн бұрын
Lol not strong enough
@a.r.47072 күн бұрын
@@Hevf1 Good man.
@unquietthoughts3 күн бұрын
Arabic is easier than Classical Greek imo
@abdallah_studyalawamy76413 күн бұрын
فيديو جميل لكن اظن انك اهملت جانب النحو ف هو به 5 بحور نحوية اساسية و اخرى فرعية، بالاضافة الى جانب الصرف و علم المعانى، ولا تنسى ان العربية فى الاصل غير منقوطة و غير مشكلة. ❤
@laithtwair2 күн бұрын
3:01 the translation is completely wrong, it seems like you took it from another example sentence
@MostirrelevantКүн бұрын
I am not wondering
@martin2233610 сағат бұрын
Funny Egyptian Arabic to me as a native speaker is like speaking German Some of the words are exactly the same. Just stick to the Egyptian dialect easier than the rest we don't speak
@ryan9818Күн бұрын
Honestly Easy Egyptian arabic is the easiest for beginner
@highchamp13 күн бұрын
Alphabet Mnemonics Basic Rules of Arabic Letters Islamic Lessons Made Easy - Arabic for Beginners playlist KZbin Grammar Method Michel Thomas (I made cheat sheets based on it) Verb Tenses, Nouns & Adjectives 3 Letter Roots (make Verbs (al awzan), Nouns and Adjectives) Very useful (unfortunately few resources, nothing helpful)
@Jason-c1b3r3 күн бұрын
As far as languages not using Latin letters is concerned, Arabic is my favorite to write.
@DNFsolves3 күн бұрын
I am a native arabic speaker, like let me show you my arabic skills, اذا انت تقدر تقرأ هذا الجملة ، قلي المعنى لهذا الجملة و ترجمها للناس الاخرين
@bokshil3 күн бұрын
المفروض تكتبها بالفصحى If you can read this sentence, tell me what it means and translate it to others
@shamsenahar3 күн бұрын
"هذه" الجملة 😌☝🏼
@eslamabdelbaky58163 күн бұрын
(قل لي)😅
@JolivoHY92 күн бұрын
بما ان لغتك الام هي العربية جرب تتعلم الفرق بين المؤنث والمذكر طيب هذه الجملة** وحتى في اللهجات تكون مؤنثة "هذي الجملة"
@kumoric3 күн бұрын
hello
@mohamedkhrarba36913 күн бұрын
You Can start Reading and writting arabica just After less than tree months.by the way i Can helpanyone to study arabic and free.
@AbdulMuhammad-mh7eg3 күн бұрын
سلام، انا عربي بس في الغرب لا اعرب بزف العربية ان شا الله تعلمي
@AlvinSeville13 күн бұрын
The handwritten script for me seems really hard to decipher. I'd rather learn Russian and the Cyrillic Alphabet.
@nicco-sixty3 күн бұрын
28 letters ain't hard.
@banandababa3 күн бұрын
The letters is the easiest bit
@AlvinSeville12 күн бұрын
@banandababa I can read from right to left. That ain't a problem. It's similar to Hebrew in that respect. Guess I'd have to delve deeper.
@marwaqoura78042 күн бұрын
28 letters and much easier with diactrics , we write only long vowels in words .
@sidharth11233 күн бұрын
Loved the vid as always Olly but how about some love for Farsi? I want to hear about its connections to both Europe and India!
@DENVEROUTDOORMAN3 күн бұрын
Nope
@Mohamed_hosny834Күн бұрын
Why a lot of people learn Egyptian arabic ?
@rahav23242 күн бұрын
I am jewish i learn it now, its pretty hard every word has a lot synonyms and not like you said they have past, present of now and "present future" for things you do often also most of the vowels look the same and they doesn't have real E in vowel, not mentioned the latters look the same how hard is to think on other symbols for different latters the only difference is a diacritics Ah and the plural of most words are different from the one like you need to think to find the many of every word
@chaoslanguagelearningКүн бұрын
Those Ain A ع pronunciations are exaggerated, and I might add unrealistic. In normal speaking they're not pronounced like that. There is no need to push too hard to pronounce them. Even Maha who is a native speaker, pronounce them in an realistic exaggerated way to perhaps get non Arabic speakers work harder to get their throat get used to it.
@Bashar-n3s2 күн бұрын
نعم اللغة العربية صعبة جدا
@andresb16402 күн бұрын
LANGUAGE SIMP MENTIONED RAAAAAAAAA
@Exodus26.13Pi3 күн бұрын
Summary: 1. Josephus Flavius was wrong about the Wilderness Tabernacle structure being "50 cubits wide and a 100 cubits long." In truth, the Exodus blueprints measure a 100-cubit diameter, a 50-cubit radius, and a 314-cubit circumference because of Exodus 26.4, 13. It's a circle and NOT a rectangle. He did NOT follow the "pattern" in chronological order as directed by God. 2. For accommodation, "selvedge" has been incorrectly inserted in place of the right word מִקָּצָ֖ה or "cut off/warp," from Exodus 26.4. The basics of Hebrew and loom weaving make this error easy to see and correct. This means the inner courtyard curtains are to be coupled/joined short end-to-end, not long side-by-side. God gave Moses three kinds of Pi on Mt. Sinai to build the Wilderness Tabernacle in 1440 BC. But Josephus, the historian, misinterpreted the Exodus blueprints in 94 AD, 1500 years after Moses, and was unaware that Exodus 26-27-38 approximated Pi. Fortunately, after two millennia, Exodus has been correctly translated and interpreted. Exodus 26.4a "And thou shalt make loops of blue upon the edge of the one curtain from the WARP in the coupling;" A) Pi from Exodus 26.13 330 cubits long = Exodus 26.8 Eleven curtains each 30 cubits long 315 cubits long = Exodus 26.12 One curtain is folded in half to 15 cubits long 314 cubits long = Exodus 26.13 Curtain hang over/seams taken in 1 cubit long & B) Pi from Exodus 27.18 3.14 = 314 circumference/100 diameter ≈ π ratio (100-cubit court per Exodus 27.18) & C) Pi from Exodus 38.13 c = 2 π r Pi is woven together in the spiral of the double helix in your DNA. ................. In 2 Kings the Israelites rediscovered their FORGOTTEN scriptures in Solomon's Temple itself. We lost the understanding of Exodus ≈ Pi almost 3500 years ago on Mt. Nebo when Moses died, but now we have it back. Religious or not, in good faith, utilize the scientific method and maintain consistent hermeneutics in proving this. Please remember these are blueprints for a big tent. Renformation.com
@krowhenkvothe60103 күн бұрын
what are you talking about mate
@user-xq3sf8tw7g3 күн бұрын
What the hell is that
@DENVEROUTDOORMAN3 күн бұрын
I love to eat pie...are you talking about cherry pie
@steveschmidt51563 күн бұрын
Hebrew also has root triplets.
@a.r.47073 күн бұрын
@@steveschmidt5156 We know that Steve.
@mariamb17772 күн бұрын
It is the case in every semitic language.
@محمودعمر-ف2فКүн бұрын
all languages has the same....please give me a language that pronounces words according to letters. in fact the english is the oddest.... for examlpe "know' what the hell know= no ....what k and w do ?
@MukhtarReldiya27 минут бұрын
Binod
@jadersolano30803 күн бұрын
Now hebrew
@OzkAltBldgCo-bv8tt3 күн бұрын
Babadum language picture games
@faithfulforhopeКүн бұрын
don't
@mariemyriam56163 күн бұрын
اللغة العربية هي اللغة التي اختارها الله سبحانه و تعالى للقرآن خاتم الكتب السماوية فهي أعظم لغة بلا منازع.
@tysond14953 күн бұрын
نعم، شو انت كتبت مجموعة القصص بالعربية ؟ صحيحححح 🤥🤔 كل شي بنفسك؟ واو. رائع.
@Maha_s1999Күн бұрын
This video is an oversimplification of the Arabic grammar. While it is true that 50-60% of the verbs fall on the tri-letter root system (where all the letters are different from each other), there other much more irregular verbs and there are actually 10 verb forms in Arabic. Yes, the basic tenses are 2, but there are active and passive voices and 6 moods (indicative, subjunctive, jussive, imperative, energetic long and energetic short). The derivational system has 19 forms. OK in dialect this is much simpler but not simple. If your Arabic is anywhere as bad as your Italian, then you are really talking out of your backside.
@HamzaHamzayt-y5p3 күн бұрын
That first translation is not true .
@Nailamouhoub3 күн бұрын
First ❤🎉 i am proud of you ❤
@DENVEROUTDOORMAN3 күн бұрын
No loser you re not first...cause you got nothing worth saying ...just a baby crying for attention
@darrenjurme7231Күн бұрын
@ollyrichards, dear Mr. Richards, Every time you talk about Arabic you mention how the US considers it a “critical language”, and every time you come across as either blissfully ignorant or entirely unaffected by the quite straightforward fact that they do so because of their purely colonial-settler military objectives to oppress & slaughter Arabs. This isn’t news, of course, but it does leave one bewildered by why you would hold up as some standard bearer the motivation to destroy Arabic cultures & exterminate their populations, leaving this viewer (& Arabic student of yours) only able to suspect that you yourself harbor an imperialist colonial-settler world view. And you actually cite US militarism quite often in your videos, regardless of language, as your way of attempting to make money from people with aspirations to join the US, or others’, militaries in order to maintain the current western-dominated world order. I’m writing to let you know that, regardless of your intentions, none of this is a good look, & makes me suspicious of what you actually stand for as you try to carve out a space for yourself on the world stage. For me, this has left me no longer willing to share your videos. Most sincerely, dja
@Jhehantkt3 күн бұрын
Don't waste your time learning a language only used on paper. People only speak dialects..there is no natives speakers of msa its a dead language.
@norama39983 күн бұрын
إيه هدفك من هذا التّهجًم على لغة هي محفوظة بفضل الله جلّ و علا ؟ ..تُحارب الله بضعفك أمام عظمته ؟ ..مستحيل ..أنت تهذي SHAME ON U
@Jhehantkt3 күн бұрын
@@norama3998 i don't understand what did you say?
@Jhehantkt3 күн бұрын
@@norama3998 im talking about the Arabic language spoken language I'm not talking about religion. Dont be mad man. This has nothing to do with your religion . Go back to school .
@norama39983 күн бұрын
@@Jhehantkt أنت مُجادِل ..الصّمت جوابك I'm not a man..I'm a MOM
@Jhehantkt3 күн бұрын
@@norama3998 do my message has something to do with religion where did i talk about religion ? Stop no sense. U know Arabic is a language not spoken Arabic people speak dialects not the Arabic language.
@Lsaldivar20233 күн бұрын
No thanks!
@Nailamouhoub3 күн бұрын
Cheers 😂😂
@slightlyopinionated81073 күн бұрын
The haircut, that stare… just too perfect lol. Almost made me instinctively ask my manager to come over when I’m the one who owns the business 😂
@rosaschwanz30383 күн бұрын
Yep... I would never want to learn this language, even if it was the easiest one:)
@norama39983 күн бұрын
مع السّلامة !
@a.r.47073 күн бұрын
@@Lsaldivar2023 To each his own
@BornKafir3 күн бұрын
It's difficult and it's a useless language for non-arabs to learn. It's better to invest your time in something useful, like Español, Mandarin, English or Hindi.
@NotCreeper1373 күн бұрын
Russian is also a useful language because it's the 3rd most popular language on the internet
@norama39983 күн бұрын
أراك جهلك أنًك في نعيم ! حينما يتحدًث الجاهِل لاااااا يضرّ إلًا نفسه !
@BornKafir3 күн бұрын
@@norama3998 This guy here is a great example of why not to bother learning this language of bigots. Your Rasool was a jahil, not me.
@a.r.47073 күн бұрын
@@BornKafir Hindi is also useless to many and Mandarin as well.