Hello in Arabic - Rocket Languages.
BBC Languages - Learn in your own time and have fun with Quick Fix Arabic. Learn useful holiday phrases in Arabic with audio. Download these essential phrases to take with you on your mp3 player.
Arabic for kids is a great tool for teachers to use in their classrooms or to introduce to homeschoolers curriculum. The easy to follow lesson plans, quizzes, worksheets and daily reports are ideal for preschools, elementary, primary and middle schools.
Arabic Script Writing. This page allows you to write your name or a text in English and have it transliterated into Arabic. Simply write in English, once you press SPACE or hit ENTER you will see the phonetics of what you wrote in Arabic. Also don't forget to check the main page for more lessons here: Learn Languages. Bookmark this page!
Moroccan Arabic is the main spoken language of Morocco. It is not written down nor used for official speeches or news programs; only Standard Arabic is used for those purposes. Moroccan Arabic is, however, the main language used at home and in the streets of Morocco for everyday conversation.
Useful Phrases in Arabic. Here are some key useful phrases from the award-winning ArabicOnline. They show that normal everyday greetings hold a wealth of cultural information. First listen to the Arabic greetings and the expressions. Then read more about the meaning of the phrases below. For more useful phrases, press here.
These should help you get a feel for the language, and help you get some simple dialogue going with potential conversation partners and teachers helping you learn Arabic. For more, consider checking out this course on how to read and write the Arabic language.
A couple of my own suggestions beyond your article: (1) get Arabic writing capability on your computer so you get away from transliteration sooner than later, (2) learn how to write in Arabic by writing English words using Arabic letters (by reading back English words with Arabic phonics rules, you'll develop an Arabic accent much faster that way), (3) think in triliteral roots (same as in.