Тёмный

How the Arabic Language Works 

Historical Method Man
Подписаться 1,1 тыс.
Просмотров 10 тыс.
50% 1

Curious about how the Arabic language works? In this video, we'll dive into the fascinating world of Arabic, or al-arabiyya, spoken by over 380 million people globally! Discover how Arabic's unique grammar is intricately woven into its letters and explore the similarities and differences between Arabic and English.
📚 What You'll Learn:
The structure and significance of the Arabic alphabet
The role of root letters in Arabic word formation
The unique features of Arabic grammar, including gender and the dual form
Examples of common Arabic loanwords in English
Whether you're an aspiring Arabic learner or a linguistics enthusiast, this video offers an insightful overview of Modern Standard Arabic (al-arabiyya fusHa) and its grammar.
Inspired by Nanjec’s video on Chinese languages: • is it so different?
Alf Shukran wa Ma’salama!
#LearnArabic #ArabicGrammar #ArabicLanguage #Linguistics #LanguageLearning #ArabicAlphabet #ModernStandardArabic #ArabicForBeginners #languagetutorial
هل أنت فضولي لمعرفة كيفية عمل اللغة العربية؟ في هذا الفيديو، سنغوص في العالم الرائع للغة العربية، أو "العربية"، التي يتحدث بها أكثر من 380 مليون شخص حول العالم! اكتشف كيف تم نسج القواعد الفريدة للغة العربية بشكل معقد في حروفها واستكشف أوجه التشابه والاختلاف بين العربية والإنجليزية.
📚 ما ستتعلمه:
- هيكل وأهمية الأبجدية العربية
- دور الحروف الجذرية في تشكيل الكلمات العربية
- الميزات الفريدة لقواعد اللغة العربية، بما في ذلك الجنس وصيغة المثنى
- أمثلة على الكلمات العربية المستعارة الشائعة في الإنجليزية
سواء كنت مبتدئًا في تعلم اللغة العربية أو شغوفًا بعلم اللغة، يقدم هذا الفيديو نظرة عامة ثاقبة على اللغة العربية الفصحى الحديثة (العربية الفصحى) وقواعدها.

Опубликовано:

 

5 июн 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 66   
@crazyspider17
@crazyspider17 9 дней назад
i'm a native Hebrew speaker and I've been learning Arabic for a while now. i always feel a bit smug when English speakers mention how hard Arabic grammar is, because for me it was the most intuitive part. it's remarkable how similar Hebrew and Arabic grammar are.
@user-es2bq2bf1b
@user-es2bq2bf1b 5 дней назад
have you eve heared the concepte of reviving hebrew from arabic based gramar
@user-gd7te8ir5p
@user-gd7te8ir5p 8 дней назад
ماشاء الله تبارك الله خطك أفضل من خطي 😅
@AyaAr-sd6rd
@AyaAr-sd6rd 3 дня назад
خطك في غاية الجمال ماشاء الله و نطقك كذلك 😄👌
@humanaccount2754
@humanaccount2754 День назад
ههه مبالغة هذا. لكنه جيد جدا. إذا استمر فبإذن الله يتقرب للإتقان، ولكن صراحة حتى العرب اليوم ليس عندهم الاتقان. هذا شيء يختص غااالبا عند طلاب وعلماء علم تجريد القرآن
@Adambenhmida0000
@Adambenhmida0000 7 дней назад
شكرا جزيلا، أنا أتعلم العربية لأن عائلتي تتحدث بها, لكن لم أتعلم ذلك
@originals3155
@originals3155 7 дней назад
this video is really useful.
@rhollister9029
@rhollister9029 Месяц назад
It would be cool if you also talked about the Haraket vowel markings
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan Месяц назад
Perhaps in a 101 series we could chef something up to talk about the haraket
@AliMusllam
@AliMusllam 4 дня назад
Amazing work :)
@MarkyNomad
@MarkyNomad Месяц назад
Best resource to learn Arabic in your opinion? I speak lower-intermediate Swahili and fluent Spanish and noticed how much Arabic existed in these languages and think they can compliment each other
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan Месяц назад
Hey @MarkyNomad, Nice of you to drop by. Arabic and Swahili are closely related, especially because of the Omani empire and historical Indian Ocean trade. The first resource that I'd recommend is the textbook/workbook called Alif Baa: Introduction to Arabic Letters and Sounds. www.amazon.com/Alif-Baa-Introduction-Arabic-Letters/dp/1589016327 The alphabet is the first place to start, as the grammar is in the letters. Be well, Reese
@AWSMcube
@AWSMcube 8 дней назад
​@@HistoricalMethodMan Arabic and Swahili are only related in terms of sharing vocabulary. At its core, Swahili is still a Bantu language
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 8 дней назад
@@AWSMcube this is an oversight that I didn’t think about, thank you for the correction
@AWSMcube
@AWSMcube 8 дней назад
@@HistoricalMethodMan 🫶
@AnasandAjmal
@AnasandAjmal 9 дней назад
He has made Arabic language a complicated its very easy guys I am an Indian and I learned it quicker than english. If you ask me it is the most easiest language that I have learned because I am a multilingual and I know Arabic, English, Hindi, and Malayalam(a dravidian language used in south india). I bet you guys its easy
@AnasandAjmal
@AnasandAjmal 9 дней назад
If any one of you want to learn arabic online you can use the videos of the youtube channel Arabic 101 or use the app Arabic Unlocked
@Arabic1Academy
@Arabic1Academy 9 дней назад
صح ✔️
@AnasandAjmal
@AnasandAjmal 9 дней назад
@@Arabic1Academy jazakallah khaira na'am hadha sahih
@Gaxi2
@Gaxi2 5 дней назад
​@@AnasandAjmal How many years did it take you to learn Arabic? Also how good are you at it? Beginner or intermediate? Can you understand books or papers written in Arabic?
@muruj1
@muruj1 3 дня назад
@@Gaxi2 if really to learn Arabic go to Arabic people ... and say to them I want to learn Arabic this for speaking ... If it is to read you should learn with القاعدة نورانية you'll find it on youtube .. for level as Arabic person I can read this ڡراٮ الكٮاٮ with out dot ..... أسلوٮ حدٮد ٮم اٮٮكاره ٮواسطه مسٮحدمي مواٯع الٮواصل الاحٮماعى لىحٮٮ اٮٮهاك المعاٮٮر.. هل ٮمكٮكم ٯرائٮه واسٮحدامه؟ هل ٮعرٯوں ٯصه هده الطرٮٯه؟ this for really can speak Arabic ......
@Ibn_jala
@Ibn_jala 6 дней назад
خطك جميل 👍👍
@diemattekanzlei9124
@diemattekanzlei9124 4 дня назад
Well done
@geebereal
@geebereal 4 дня назад
how many cardboards did you have bro
@rajahosh1261
@rajahosh1261 4 дня назад
خطك أحلى من خطي 😅🤣
@nomeneamsa1920
@nomeneamsa1920 Месяц назад
ريس راك واعر
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan Месяц назад
لا أفهم oops
@nomeneamsa1920
@nomeneamsa1920 Месяц назад
@@HistoricalMethodMan you are wow
@Am-merengue
@Am-merengue 18 дней назад
It’s a North African Arabic dialect
@dracuii1582
@dracuii1582 7 дней назад
​@HistoricalMethodMan I'm a native arabic speaker and I didn't understand any word he said
@orangotango9231
@orangotango9231 5 дней назад
Wa3r means very good in darija​@@HistoricalMethodMan
@LeekyKale
@LeekyKale 3 дня назад
Arabic has an abjad not an alphabet, abjad’s only have constants.
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 2 дня назад
Alif is a vowel, Waaw is a vowel, Yaa is a vowel. This seems incorrect. Abjad (أبجد) translates to alphabet because it’s like abcd in English. It’s just the first letter of each letter family.
@omegaflames8964
@omegaflames8964 2 дня назад
It’s an impure abjad. It does have vowels, they just aren’t mandatory.
@Rhythm412
@Rhythm412 Месяц назад
Hi friend! You're Arabic is good as a foreigner. Can you suggest some tips to learn to read Arabic script fast?
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan Месяц назад
Hey, I personally believe that reading is the hardest skill in Arabic, especially to read quickly I have much trouble with. My advice is to start the workbook Alif Baa (third edition) and do all the exercises within it
@Rhythm412
@Rhythm412 Месяц назад
@@HistoricalMethodMan ohh ok. Thanks for replying
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan Месяц назад
My advice for reading is different whether you’re at the word level, sentence level, or paragraph level. For the word level, Alif Baa is the best place to look. On the sentence and paragraph levels, I recommend finding collections online of short stories for children.
@Rhythm412
@Rhythm412 Месяц назад
@@HistoricalMethodMan how and why did you learn Arabic isn't it so hard so many exceptions, complicated script and such a big vocabulary! How did you memorize it all???
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan Месяц назад
Little by little. I've been in the game for about three years.
@HusseinAbbas-wb4mq
@HusseinAbbas-wb4mq 7 дней назад
❤❤❤❤
@miguelvillalta2435
@miguelvillalta2435 3 дня назад
الْعَرَبِيَّةَ
@miguelvillalta2435
@miguelvillalta2435 3 дня назад
✝️ ☪️
@miguelvillalta2435
@miguelvillalta2435 3 дня назад
🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸
@orangotango9231
@orangotango9231 5 дней назад
Thdr darija? How did you manage ana ns maghribi w m3arf kifach nt3llm
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 5 дней назад
I lived in Morocco for nine months on a Fulbright research scholarship, where I spent many months intensively learning Darija from MSA.
@Jay_HY
@Jay_HY 8 дней назад
thanks for the video but i believe theres a mistake here 0:07 arabic dialects cannot be classified as different languages at all. the primary reason why arabs cant understand some dialects is because they pronounces words a bit differently. for example this phrase "أَيْشٍ معك" (what do you have) "'ayshin ma'aak" - in egyptian dialect: ايش معك ('ish ma'aak) - gulf dialect: وش معك (wsh ma'aak) - levantine dialect: شو معك (sho ma'aak) - moroccan dialect: شني معاك (shni m'aak) which is obviously not enough to make them separate languages. its as if youre saying that the english spoken on tristan da cunha islands is a whole separate language. cuz their dialect has a bit different pronunciation. for example they add the sound /h/ with some words such as (happle = apple), (hafter = after), (highland = island). it also has more simplified grammar: - "she sing real good" (no "-s" in "sing") - "they never eat much them days" ("them" instead of "these")
@AsalamAlaykum-rz4lf
@AsalamAlaykum-rz4lf 6 дней назад
You made a mistake too. These modern dialects are not arabic. How can you call these dialects that don't have the same words, sentences structure, different grammar and new letters and also different uses of words and compositions, expression... Etc arabic ? It is obviously not arabic. In addition, arabic in the time of native arabs or the prophet's Muhammad time had dialects. Like for example some tribes were pronouncing the hamza (ء) in some words and some tribes did not مومنون/مؤمنون المؤتفكة/موتفكة توضأت/توضيت سأل/سال Peace
@Jay_HY
@Jay_HY 6 дней назад
@@AsalamAlaykum-rz4lf sorry but no. arabic dialects do have the same words as msa (my previous example "what do you have" contains 100% arabic words from msa) with new additional words from other languages after europe colonized the world in the past. also it doesnt work like that. mexican spanish uses the pronoun "ustedes" (which means "you plural" in a formal way) instead of "vosotros" which simply means "you plural". in some specific countries in south america they use "vos" instead of "tú". does that mean that latin american spanish is a different language? there are variation in each region in the indonesian language. for example ppl say "saya" (which means "i" in polite form), but people on papua island and other islands may pronounce it as “sa" with the same meaning. in the betawi dialect (jakarta region) the pronoun "i" is "gue/gua" according to you all of these are their own separate independent languages. another example. in american english they say "break a leg (good luck)" "lowkey (something you dont want emphasized)" "wassup? / ‘sup? (how are you)". these are not commonly used or almost entirely dont exist in some other dialects. so we should say then that american and british english are different languages just because dialects use different words, local expressions and tons of slangs... that doesnt make them separate languages at all. that's how dialects work the dialects also use the same grammar but easier. for example in american english collective nouns are considered singular (the band is playing). while in british english they can be either singular or plural (the band are playing). in moroccan arabic, they use for example masculine plural (one form), feminine plural and broken plural. which is literally msa just with the loss of the second form of the masculine plural. the only new letter they have is /g/. while /p/ and /v/ are used in words that are not originally arabic. if you dont know, no single human being on earth speaks their 100% formal standard version of their native language. dialects always exist. in all ages. i dont see your point in "in the time of muhammad they had dialects" the arabic dialects arent various enough to make them their own languages.
@AsalamAlaykum-rz4lf
@AsalamAlaykum-rz4lf 6 дней назад
@@Jay_HY Sadly, you started your argument with a wrong beginning. The only true and correct arabic is Fusha ( فصحى ) Arabic. And it had dialects like other languages had and as you mentioned about the other languages. And these dialects developed so much that it became closer to English i.e and other languages ( in expressions, words/sentences structures, words meanings...etc than arabic. You're giving examples from other languages, it can be different for Arabic language and as Wikipedia website published, there are 0 native speakers of Arabic and that's true because none speaks the arabic our ancestors spoke. I highly recommend you reading العرنجية للدكتور أحمد الغامدي It talks about how modern Arabic becomes far away from real arabic and gives examples and comparisons about that topic.
@AsalamAlaykum-rz4lf
@AsalamAlaykum-rz4lf 6 дней назад
@@Jay_HY Sadly, you started your argument with a wrong beginning. The only true and correct arabic is Fusha ( فصحى ) Arabic. And it had dialects like other languages had and as you mentioned about the other languages. And these dialects developed so much that it became closer to English i.e and other languages ( in expressions, words/sentences structures, words meanings...etc than arabic. You're giving examples from other languages, it can be different for Arabic language and as Wikipedia website published, there are 0 native speakers of Arabic and that's true because none speaks the arabic our ancestors spoke. I highly recommend you reading العرنجية للدكتور أحمد الغامدي It talks about how modern Arabic becomes far away from real arabic and gives examples and comparisons about that topic.
@Jay_HY
@Jay_HY 6 дней назад
@@AsalamAlaykum-rz4lf i know its called الفصحى. msa stands for modern standard arabic which is also fusha. it only attempts to use more simplified way of talking compared to the quranic fusha. cuz humans want everything to be easy. anyway, doesnt matter. how are the arabic dialects closer to english than arabic itself? they only use a very small amount of english vocabulary like in any other dialect in the world. when two people from different cultures and languages interact, they will affect each other. this has nothing to do with english and arabic specially for example japanese borrowed some vocabulary from french cuz both cultures have interacted in the past. マント (manto) --> manteau (coat) レストラン (resutoran) --> restaurant etc... can you at least provide examples of arabic dialects being closer to english than arabic? im giving examples from different languages cuz arabic itself is a language lol? why wouldnt i? im using the same reasons you said about arabic. so... you should then say every dialect in the world is a language. languages in the world have 0 native speakers because people do not speak in the formal way. you're also using a very old version of arabic. that's like saying there's 0 native english speakers because ppl no longer speak old or middle english. which is way different than modern english and barley understandable languages evolve over time. that's natural. it has nothing to do with arabic specifically. go ahead and compare todays languages to their old versions.
@Crip_61
@Crip_61 5 дней назад
I think this is a very informational but you need to work on your pronunciation some words you pronounce very different then what they should sound and also the letters
@ShakerTamari
@ShakerTamari 3 дня назад
You are doing great🤍
@nomeneamsa1920
@nomeneamsa1920 Месяц назад
Allez ssi Yassine
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan Месяц назад
We love Yassine!
@nekokimo8036
@nekokimo8036 12 дней назад
so the british english and american english are not the same language ?? Arabic is Arabic dialects doesn't matter we are not divided like that we Arabs can understand any dialect from any Arab country
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan 12 дней назад
Arabic dialects function differently than English’s own variations. Moroccan darija is the dialect that I know, and it has different conjugations and grammatical mechanics than others in Egypt, for example. While they are often mutually intelligible, there is much more variation. Arabic is not Arabic. Arabic is Arabics (plural). It is a large language family. Just because the languages are linguistically diverse does not mean that Arabs are divided. I don’t understand what part of the video made you think that the linguistic diversity of Arabic meant I claimed that Arabs are divided. Linguistic diversity doesn’t mean divisiveness. If I misunderstood your assumptions please elaborate on them. Learn to embrace the diversity in this beautiful language.
@crbgo9854
@crbgo9854 8 дней назад
Sounds like esperanto 😊
@dbuc4671
@dbuc4671 7 дней назад
arabic is just like Chinese in that its just an umbrella term encompassing a bunch of geographically-distant but related dialects lol
@miguelvillalta2435
@miguelvillalta2435 3 дня назад
ت
@user-do8bi5bo4e
@user-do8bi5bo4e 3 дня назад
كعربي انصح في سماع القران و الشعر الشعر في صوت اسامة الوعظ و اسامة النهاري و القران هناك الكثير من القراء لاكني انصح في ياسر الدوسري
@nomeneamsa1920
@nomeneamsa1920 Месяц назад
هاي هاي هاي هاي هاي
@HistoricalMethodMan
@HistoricalMethodMan Месяц назад
Hay hay hay hay hay
@nomeneamsa1920
@nomeneamsa1920 Месяц назад
@@HistoricalMethodMan 😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣
Далее
The ARABIC Language (Its Amazing History and Features)
18:30
Flo Rida - Whistle НА РУССКОМ 😂🔥
00:29
13 Languages with HARDEST Pronunciation
22:32
Просмотров 70 тыс.
These lost Cyrillic letters are... INTERESTING
4:43
Просмотров 184 тыс.
The Arabic alphabet is absurdly difficult...
5:05
Просмотров 70 тыс.
Arabic Alphabet Explained by an American
5:48
Просмотров 1,9 млн
How to Learn Arabic from Scratch - A Roadmap
13:55
Просмотров 35 тыс.