انشالله
  Home · New Muslims Stories · Quran Verses Templates · Articles · FAQ · Forum · Links · Search
Navigation
New Muslims Stories
Al-Bukhari
Quran Verses Templates
دَعَا Sublications to Great Allah
yr Benifts in Islam
Funerals(Jinazaa)
Calculate your Zakat
Learn Alphabets
Learn Arabic
Videos
Crimes Photos
Free Webspace
Articles
Downloads
FAQ
Forum
Islamic Date
Links
Contact me
How keep Imaan?
Haram Food Additives
Web Statistics
Site Map
Benifits in Islam
Login
Username

Password



Not a member yet?
Click here to register.

Forgotten your password?
Request a new one here.
Users Online
Guests Online: 2
No Members Online

Registered Members: 8,698
Unactivated Members: 17479
Newest Member: a meeting at david traditional
Welcome to learn Arabic

Great Allah choosed arabic as Quran language and the language of Paradise. And Great Allah made Arabic the most beutiful and completed language of the world.

Arabic is used as the principle language in most countries covered by the Encyclopaedia of the Orient: Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Israel (as one of the official languages), Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Sudan, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates and Yemen.
Arabic is used by around 250 million people, but is understood by up to four times more among Muslims around the world. Arabic is also central to other languages in the Muslim world, as a large exporter of words and expressions. Arabic writing is also used for other languages like Afghanic, Persian and Urdu.

3 TYPES OF ARABIC
Arabic is a language divided into 3 separate groups: Classical written Arabic; written Modern Standard Arabic; and spoken Arabic.
Classical written Arabic is principally defined as the Arabic used in the Koran and in the earliest literature from the Arabian peninsula, but also forms the core of much literature up until our time.
Modern Standard Arabic is a modernization of the structures of classical Arabic, and includes words for modern phenomenons as well as a rich addition from the many dialects spoken all over the Arabic world.

Spoken Arabic is a mixed form, which has many variations, and often a dominating influence from local languages (from before the introduction of Arabic). Differences between the various variants of spoken Arabic can be large enough to make them incomprehensible to one another. Hence it could be correct to refer to the different versions as separate languages named according to their areas, like Moroccan, Cairo Arabic, North Syrian Arabic etc.

SACRED LANGUAGE

Arabic also has a dimension of being a sacred language, as it is the only language from which the Koran is believed to be fully understood - all translations will reduce the quality of the revelations of God.
Arabic is based upon a very strict grammar, in which nearly all nouns and verbs are built from a stem of 3 consonants. From these 3 consonants, a large range of words are derived - there are 10 forms of verbs, there are a number of nouns which can be both feminine and masculine. As an example, s-l-m is the root of the words Islam, muslim, salam (peace), salama (safety), in addition to many others.
Arabic grammar is fairly simple compared to Western languages, but the language has a richness in its used vocabulary that exceeds most languages in the Western world.

THE LETTERS

Arabic writing is an alphabetic script, based upon distinct characters, adjoined to other characters, which in most cases change their looks depending on where they stand in the word. The Arabic alphabet developed from Nabatean characters, one of the West Aramaic languages of the ancient Middle East.



Arabic writing is put together of 28 signs, where 3 have vowel qualities (a, i, u, but i is often used for the letter y, and u often for the letter w). Since some regions of the Arabic world have different dialects, extra letters have been added. The sounds that are not covered by standard Arabic are: p, g, v. These are written almost like the letter that comes closest in standard Arabic, but with an extra dot.
The following Arabic letters does not have any correspondence in the Latin alphabet: kh (equals German ch), gh (a softer version of kh), cayn (guttural stop, but clearly pronounced from the back of the throat), th (as in English), dh (softer version of th), sh (as in English) and strong and emphasized versions of the letters t, d, s, z, h.
One letter, called hamza, is not even pronounced, other than as a stop. In transcriptions it is marked with a ' only.
Vowels are not letters, only signs added to the letter preceding them. In most cases the vowels are not written, so that the name 'Muhammad' is written 'mhmd'. The vowels are normally only indicated in special cases, like where there is doubt about the correct meaning of the word, and in reading books for school children. There are also "long" vowels, and these are written, and in transcriptions they are marked with lines over or under the letter. Due to limited fonts on computers, this encyclopaedia writes such letters like this: ā, ī, ū.
There are 3 declensions (nominative, accusative, genitive), and 2 tenses (perfect and imperfect). In general, sentences are built up as verb-subject-object constructions.

Site language

Please select Your language



after selection site will reload automatically

Enter Keywords:


Member Poll
There is no content for this panel yet
Latest Articles
Names like Ahmadulla...
collection 07
Collection 06
Collection 05
collection 04