Let's Chat in Arabic

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Let's chat in Arabic
Ahmed Hassanein, Mon Kamel, Let's Chat in Arabic: A Practical Introduction to the Spoken Arabic of Cairo
Publisher: Amer Univ in Cairo Pr | ISBN 9774241037 | english | 1986 | DJVU | 2 MB | 254 pages
This book deals with the basics of Egyptian colloquial Arabic in a simplified way, which follows the most modern methods of teaching a second language.It includes 650 basic words of the Egyptian colloquial Arabic which enable the learner to understand and communicate with ease.
  • Arabic (????? ??????? al-lu?atu l-?arabiyyah or just ???? ?arabÄ«) is the largest living member of the Semitic language family in terms of speakers.
  • Classified as Central Semitic, it is closely related to Hebrew and Aramaic, and has its roots in a Proto-Semitic common ancestor.
  • Modern Arabic is classified as a macrolanguage with 27 sub-languages in ISO 639-3(an international standard for language codes, published by ISO on 5 February 2007). These varieties are spoken throughout the Arab world, and Standard Arabic is widely studied and known throughout the Islamic world.
  • Modern Standard Arabic derives from Classical Arabic, the only surviving member of the Old North Arabian dialect group, attested epigraphically since the 6th century, which has been a literary language and the liturgical language of Islam since the 7th century.
  • Arabic has lent many words to other languages of the Islamic world, akin to the role Latin has in most European languages. During the Middle Ages Arabic was also a major vehicle of culture, especially in science, mathematics and philosophy, with the result that many European languages have also borrowed numerous words from it.


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NO MIRRORS ID130624 130624
pardety 20 Jul 2007 09:21 The photo is taken in the Cordoba's Cathedral in Spain!!!!
ID:583097 583097
anjer 20 Jul 2007 11:43 Yes pardety,it is believed that when the Moorish architects created this truly celestial device, they were inspired by the undulating, multi-tiered design of a Roman aqueduct they had seen in western Spain. But however practical may have been the purpose, or prosaic the source, of these upwardly rippling waves of masonry, they are admired today as the Mezquita's universally recognized symbol, and its most dazzling effect. ID:583155 583155
pardety 20 Jul 2007 15:30 I thought that the arcs was like the palms, or at least that was that I learned in the School. ID:583229 583229
Astor 21 Jul 2007 00:22 In deed pardety, it is the Cathedral of Cordoba. It was before a Moshee and the spanish architects built the cathedral preserving part of it. The intension of the initial arabic architects was realy to "simulate" an oasis with palm trees.
ID:583319 583319
miquito 21 Jul 2007 01:11 La fotografia es de la Mezquita-Catedral de Córdoba ID:583327 583327

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