MSA Arabic Conversations - Lesson 3 - TRAVEL

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  • Опубликовано: 11 окт 2024
  • Free Arabic Conversation lesson 3: Talking about travel. PDF of the questions in the description.

Комментарии • 11

  • @vincentmartinez4565
    @vincentmartinez4565 10 месяцев назад

    very useful brother thank you very much

  • @AkeelAhamedInsights
    @AkeelAhamedInsights  10 месяцев назад

    Lesson 3 PDF Here: generalakeel.blob.core.windows.net/generaldata/ArabicConversationSeries/Conversation3.docx

  • @ghulamqadiri638
    @ghulamqadiri638 9 месяцев назад

    Salam

  • @1luckzz922
    @1luckzz922 9 месяцев назад

    تعلم اللغة جميلة. انا طالب و رحلتي بالعربي أسهل معك، شكرا يا أستاذ (أخبرني خطأي)

    • @x.d9329
      @x.d9329 4 месяца назад

      تعلم اللغة جميل

    • @1luckzz922
      @1luckzz922 4 месяца назад

      @@x.d9329 كيف؟ من فضلك، الكلمة ‘الغة' هي مؤنث صحيح؟؟

    • @x.d9329
      @x.d9329 4 месяца назад

      If u want to say learning the language is beautiful
      u can say like this
      تعلم اللغة جميل
      .......
      but if u want to say learn the beautiful language
      U can say like this
      تعلم اللغة الجميلة

    • @1luckzz922
      @1luckzz922 4 месяца назад

      @@x.d9329 ohhhh that makes soo much sense that you

  • @OutNaBoutYallahBiNa
    @OutNaBoutYallahBiNa 8 месяцев назад +1

    Your arabic is amazing and the video is very helpful for language learners. But to some extent, using this extremely rigid and formal way of Arabic for casual everyday topics sounds strange and even mechanical and robotic. This formal way of talking is more suited for politics, diplomacy, education, scientific and other social topics. For such everyday topics, even if you use a more formal MSA style, it would still be more natural to use some ammiyah elements such as (bas, ktiir..saakin..kamaan..leish) and drop some of those case endings. Language learners should learn to know how to use language base on context and setting. That's the more useful way forward

    • @AkeelAhamedInsights
      @AkeelAhamedInsights  8 месяцев назад

      جزاك الله خيرا كثيرا I deeply appreciate and value the comment. However, the goal of this series is to acquire the ability to understand and eventually speak the pure, unadulterated form of Arabic (from which all the dialects stem from).
      Just like with learning anything, once the fundamentals are mastered, it becomes easier to learn the extras.
      باركالله فيك

    • @OutNaBoutYallahBiNa
      @OutNaBoutYallahBiNa 8 месяцев назад +1

      i see your point. Many thanks..It's great. The fundamentals are crucial. But often times arabic learners become too overwhelmed (e.g. case endings and elaborate grammatic rules) and then they give up after weeks/months. I think it is more useful to start from something less daunting and something closer to everyday contexts/semi-formal everyday speech. I guess most people learn arabic are for communication purposes not to become imams, teach arabic at universities or to become news anchors. Learning an excessively formal style of Arabic actually prevents effective communication both for the non-native learners and also for native speakers (as your videos show even a lot of native speakers are not comfortable speaking fusha). I am just saying that learning fusha is fine but maybe some less formal elements can be added so that it feels more natural@@AkeelAhamedInsights