Thursday, February 18, 2010

Arabic Basics

Here are some basic facts about Arabic you should know before starting these lessons:

 
  • Arabic is a semitic language and is related to Hebrew.
  • As a semitic language, it has a tri-literal (three-letter) root system.  These roots are generally three different consonants that convey a basic meaning or sense.  Verbs, nouns, adjectives, and adverbs are all derived from the tri-literal roots by adding vowels, prefixes, suffixes, and infixes.
  • Arabic is written from right to left.
  • Arabic has 28 letters in its alphabet.
  • Arabic is spoken in the Middle East and North Africa.
  • Arabic is also the language of the Qur'an - Islam's book of scripture.
  • Arabic is a Verb-Subject-Object (VSO, or Verb-first) language.  English is a Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) language.  Therefore, a sentence in English like "The boy hit the girl" would be in Arabic "Hit the boy the girl."
  • Arabic has three vowels that are roughly equivalent to the English "a", "i", and "u".

    Letter       Name         English Equivalent             
  1. ا    - Alif (vowel) - A (varies between apple and August)
  2. ب  - Baa             - B (boy)
  3. ت
  4. ث
  5. ج
  6. خ
  7. ح
  8. د
  9. ذ
  10. ر
  11. ز
  12. س
  13. ش
  14. ص
  15. ض
  16. ط
  17. ظ
  18. ع
  19. غ
  20. ف
  21. ق
  22. ك
  23. ل
  24. م
  25. ن
  26. ه
  27. و
  28. ي

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