One of the best sites for beginners to learn Arabic. Thanks a lot. I am learning face to face from a tutor but this is much clearer and I am able to revise many times, thanks
Kumbe kiarabu ni cheppes kiasi ivi..Alooh ,,Mungu mkubwa sasa naanza kukijua kiarabu ,,lugha ya ALLAH!!,, Safi san mwalimu ..tunakuelewa san,,Ubarikiwe
Aaah, Alhamdulillah Tre, thank you so much for your kind words, its means a lot to know my videos helped in some way. please share with others that may also find it helpful
Thank you for your beautiful clear video because of ur video, i can now read and write arabic and now working in hospital where i can read patients name
@18:48, you pronounced the letter as "Kh" with damma.......... so you read "Khuluq-in", but you wrote the english word as "HuluQ-in" is that correct ?? You are the best teacher I found online for Arabic. Regards
Hello, Thank you for your splendid and helpful lesson. After having watched this lesson 7, I've got some questions: - When employing double fathah, must the symbol be always written over the alif or could it be written over the previous letter? For exemple, I find sometimes ثًا instead of ثاً. Is there a difference between them or both ways are accepted? - In 9:27, I understand that لا comes from the combination of lām and alif. Since double fathah implicates the addition of alif, we obtain لاً. Nevertheless, when using double kasrah and double dammah, no alif is needed. Why do we observe لاٍ in 15:15 and لاٌ in 21:12 instead of لٍ and لٌ, respectively ? - Why are some letters in green in 9:37, in 15:21 and in 21:21 ? - Finally, in 21:50, in the word "father", should a fathah symbol be added over the أ? Thank you so much and congratulations for your videos!
In Arabic script, the diacritical mark "fathah" ( ً ) is typically placed over the letter it affects, which means it should be written over the letter that carries the short vowel sound, not the previous letter. So, for example, you would write ثاً with the fathah over the letter "ث" to indicate the short vowel sound "a." Writing ثًا with the fathah over the previous letter would not be standard practice in Arabic script. The first form, with the fathah over the letter it affects, is the correct and accepted way to represent short vowel sounds in Arabic writing.
Thank you again for these great lessons! There is one thing, I am still not clear about. I have read now several times, that spoken Arabic dialects have several grammatical simplifications like, loss of case endings in nouns and adjectives loss of the dual number in nouns, adjectives, and pronouns loss of mood distinctions in the verb Example words: Muslim (مسلم), Muslima (مسلمة), Muslimun (مسلمون), Muslimat (مسلمات) If I understand that right, this means that in spoken Arabic for definite/indefinite in all three cases nominative/accusative/genitive there are just the words Muslim and AlMuslim for male and Muslima and AlMuslima for female; and for plural there are just the words Muslimun and AlMuslimun for male and Muslimat and AlMuslimat for female. (That is, no other phonetic variations at the end are added like un/an/in or u/a/i ) Am I right, and if so, is that also true for people speaking in cinema-movies, television-series, news-channels, which are meant to be understood in all Arab countries; or do they actually speak MSA, with all those variations at the end of the nouns?
Yes you are correct, you will find that arabic in films tends to be Amaiya or a specific dialect. Most the the Arabic is the same some minor differences.
Congrats, Mr. Hussain. I'd like to know if this lesson is the 7th and how many lessons are there in your course. I downloaded from lesson 01 to lesson 11 but lesson 07. I'm from Brazil. Thank you very much!
At 6:24 : isn't it redundant that we need both the damma at the end and AL at the beggining to indicate a definite noun? is it not enough to just have AL before the noun? if i understand correctly from the chart, the damma also indicates a word being in the nominative case. also how does one read a text correctly if there is no written case marker at the end of words? for example, i don't really see case endings written in books or the news
The only time you need to pronounce the damma at the end is if there is another word after the noun. الكِتَابُ can be pronounced as al-kitaab but if its الكِتَابُ جَدِيدٌ then we would pronounce the damma as al-kitaabu jadeedun
السلام عليكم I have one question , I understand that arabic has different forms based on what country are you residing. My question, is written arabic are all the same? The Vowels most specially? Because im here in Dubai and they have this emirati arabic language. Again thank you so much and God bless you. 🌹
Ok but what do Nominative, Genitive, and Accusative mean lol sorry if you already explained in another video. Native English speaker but I don't know what those mean.
One of the best sites for beginners to learn Arabic. Thanks a lot. I am learning face to face from a tutor but this is much clearer and I am able to revise many times, thanks
this is THE best explanation of Tanwin. you explain it so thoroughly
Kumbe kiarabu ni cheppes kiasi ivi..Alooh ,,Mungu mkubwa sasa naanza kukijua kiarabu ,,lugha ya ALLAH!!,, Safi san mwalimu ..tunakuelewa san,,Ubarikiwe
Very helpful for learning Arabic. May Allah bless you all.
You are amazing you and a few others helped me to the point were I reading now 85 %……. May Allah bless you
Aaah, Alhamdulillah Tre, thank you so much for your kind words, its means a lot to know my videos helped in some way. please share with others that may also find it helpful
Thank you for your beautiful clear video because of ur video, i can now read and write arabic and now working in hospital where i can read patients name
You are amazing person 💜💚❤️ Thank you may Allah bless you for this❤️💚💜
@18:48, you pronounced the letter as "Kh" with damma.......... so you read "Khuluq-in", but you wrote the english word as "HuluQ-in" is that correct ?? You are the best teacher I found online for Arabic. Regards
Salam. Thank you for an excellent presentation. A simple but comprehensive lesson in Arabic. A big help for a beginner like me.💚
This is Baljinder Singh from India. And i m learning Arabic. I have written all examples in my notebook. Thanks for these beautiful explanations
Most welcome!
@@EasyArabic sir waiting for next lesson after possessive pronouns. Please upload video soon🤲🤲
I from punjab learning arabic....
@@dreamindream1234 i am from HR ambala
Hello,
Thank you for your splendid and helpful lesson.
After having watched this lesson 7, I've got some questions:
- When employing double fathah, must the symbol be always written over the alif or could it be written over the previous letter? For exemple, I find sometimes ثًا instead of ثاً. Is there a difference between them or both ways are accepted?
- In 9:27, I understand that لا comes from the combination of lām and alif. Since double fathah implicates the addition of alif, we obtain لاً. Nevertheless, when using double kasrah and double dammah, no alif is needed. Why do we observe لاٍ in 15:15 and لاٌ in 21:12 instead of لٍ and لٌ, respectively ?
- Why are some letters in green in 9:37, in 15:21 and in 21:21 ?
- Finally, in 21:50, in the word "father", should a fathah symbol be added over the أ?
Thank you so much and congratulations for your videos!
In Arabic script, the diacritical mark "fathah" ( ً ) is typically placed over the letter it affects, which means it should be written over the letter that carries the short vowel sound, not the previous letter. So, for example, you would write ثاً with the fathah over the letter "ث" to indicate the short vowel sound "a."
Writing ثًا with the fathah over the previous letter would not be standard practice in Arabic script. The first form, with the fathah over the letter it affects, is the correct and accepted way to represent short vowel sounds in Arabic writing.
Asalaamu alaykum waragmatulaahi wabarakatu
Shukran brother for your wonderful worm and I love all the videos I have seen so far ,
This was a really good video explaining the rules about tanween, thank you! :)
Alhamdulillah, Jazak Allah for your kind words and feedback
Very helpful . Thank you
Very helpful. I’m new in Arabic. Thanks
Thank you again for these great lessons! There is one thing, I am still not clear about.
I have read now several times, that spoken Arabic dialects have several grammatical simplifications like,
loss of case endings in nouns and adjectives
loss of the dual number in nouns, adjectives, and pronouns
loss of mood distinctions in the verb
Example words: Muslim (مسلم), Muslima (مسلمة), Muslimun (مسلمون), Muslimat (مسلمات)
If I understand that right, this means that in spoken Arabic for definite/indefinite in all three cases nominative/accusative/genitive there are just the words Muslim and AlMuslim for male and Muslima and AlMuslima for female; and for plural there are just the words Muslimun and AlMuslimun for male and Muslimat and AlMuslimat for female. (That is, no other phonetic variations at the end are added like un/an/in or u/a/i )
Am I right, and if so, is that also true for people speaking in cinema-movies, television-series, news-channels, which are meant to be understood in all Arab countries; or do they actually speak MSA, with all those variations at the end of the nouns?
Yes you are correct, you will find that arabic in films tends to be Amaiya or a specific dialect. Most the the Arabic is the same some minor differences.
Djazaka Allah, very clear explanation
Thank you very much for your presentation.
Congrats, Mr. Hussain. I'd like to know if this lesson is the 7th and how many lessons are there in your course.
I downloaded from lesson 01 to lesson 11 but lesson 07. I'm from Brazil. Thank you very much!
Thank you for answering.
THANK YOU, VERY CLEAR EXPRESSIONS. PLEASE ADD MORE LESSONS
Very helpful in learning Arabic Language.
At 6:24 : isn't it redundant that we need both the damma at the end and AL at the beggining to indicate a definite noun? is it not enough to just have AL before the noun? if i understand correctly from the chart, the damma also indicates a word being in the nominative case. also how does one read a text correctly if there is no written case marker at the end of words? for example, i don't really see case endings written in books or the news
The only time you need to pronounce the damma at the end is if there is another word after the noun. الكِتَابُ can be pronounced as al-kitaab but if its الكِتَابُ جَدِيدٌ then we would pronounce the damma as al-kitaabu jadeedun
@@EasyArabic thank you! i subscribed. great videos
جميلة . انشاءالله ترتيب لطب احازه عيد الفطر يومين 25:00
اكتب بدل كمبوتر
Excellent class..I have started to write little..
Beautiful explanation 👍👍
Very useful, thank you!
Glad it was helpful!
Easy to learn easy to easy this vid is the best
Thank you. Very clearly demonstrated.
Wow Masha Allah
شكرا 😊
Thanks a lot bro
May I know the difference between haleeb and haleeban?
This is a good demonstration ماشالا
Really well explained
Excellent!
Clear explanation! Thanks brother
السلام عليكم I have one question , I understand that arabic has different forms based on what country are you residing. My question, is written arabic are all the same? The Vowels most specially? Because im here in Dubai and they have this emirati arabic language. Again thank you so much and God bless you. 🌹
Yes i guess written Arabic would be the same, the slight change would be to the nouns.
@@EasyArabic Thank you so much
Thank you soo much for great work.
Thanks Jas for your kind feedback, regards Imtiaz
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Sir how can I join your group can I join
Could I get the soft copy of Arabic lesson along with video and pdf
What dialect are you using please? I didn’t recognise some of the vocabulary - for eg “family”
BusyBee262 fusha
Arabic language
Ok but what do Nominative, Genitive, and Accusative mean lol sorry if you already explained in another video. Native English speaker but I don't know what those mean.
Salaam Abdul, i am just doing another video which will explain this in more detail, Insha Allah with examples
Sir, please make video on marfoo, mansoob, and majroor
With examples
Hi Badrunnisa, thank you for your message, i will make a start on this tomorrow. Thank you for following my channel
@@EasyArabic thanks
i love this arabic info
Hi Ibrahim, thank you so much for your kind words, please share with others that may find this useful, regards Imtiaz
Very interesting
Awsome love you man
it might be an idea to join my Google Classroom, there are help files and an app that can help you to practice - class code is b7brsvv
great teaching
Best explanations
I cant print it out
THANKYOU A LOOOOT !!!!!!!
Yes sir
Pls next lesson
English words are showing plz. Arabic teaching
Great lesson, but your cursor constantly moving is annoying
wow
Shada qaida baqdadia
pin me please!!!!!!!!😭😭😭😭😭