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you know typing characters on your keyboard so they will appear as a picture

2006-11-28 03:48:25 · 3 answers · asked by the one and only robertc1985 4 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Other - Visual Arts

3 answers

you mean ascii art.. they have ascii art generator nowadays, just select the picture and it converts it, even does color text if you want. but in respond to your question there is no easy way and i'm sure it requires artistic attributes

2006-11-28 03:57:43 · answer #1 · answered by blur b 3 · 0 0

Farsi is not related to Hebrew and Arabic. Farsi is an Indo-European language, and Hebrew and Arabic are Semitic languages. Hebrew and Arabic are not closely related. Learning one might help you learn the other *if* you learn a bunch of rules (like "sh" in Hebrew is often related to "t" or "th" in Arabic). But you wouldn't be able to understand one by learning the other. The alphabets are completely different, and the sounds of the language are different, too. The grammar has certain similarities, but there are lots of grammatical differences, as well. Which is more valuable depends on when, where, and why you would be using it. If you want to be able to speak to a larger part of the world's population, Arabic is the most widely spoken. Just be sure to learn *classical* Arabic; it is understood everywhere (there are *many* different dialects that are *not* mutually intelligible). Hebrew is useful only in Israel and a few Jewish communities (and for Jewish prayer). Farsi is only spoken by people in (and from) Iran. It is, however, supposedly closely related to some of the languages of Afghanistan and neighboring countries. Hebrew is easier to pronounce than Arabic. (I don't know enough about Farsi to comment, but I *think* it has some of the more difficult Arabic sounds--things like the "Q" sound in "Iraq".) It is also easier to learn to read. The Arabic alphabet (and the Farsi alphabet is a variation of the Arabic) is beautiful, but it *only* has a script form, so you need to learn how to recognize the border between letters at the same time you are still figuring *anything* out. And each letter can have up to 4 different forms (depending on whether it is attached to another letter at the beginning, end, both, or neither). All 3 languages are written from right to left--one more thing that will drive you crazy when you're first getting started. Hebrew sentence structure is kind of similar to English. Subjects go before the verb (in *Modern* Hebrew), then the object. Arabic puts the verb in the front of the sentence. (Again, I don't know enough about Farsi.) In addition to the sounds that are hard to pronounce, Arabic has double vowels and consonants (pronounce the word "bookkeeper" in English--it's one of the only words with a double consonant in the pronunciation). Arabic has more verb conjugations than Hebrew, too. If you only speak English, Hebrew would probably be the easiest to learn for all of the above reasons. But if you speak another language, that may not be the case...

2016-03-28 22:51:50 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There really is no easy way. All you can do is practice, practice, practice...

Practice doesn't make perfect. It only makes better.

2006-12-05 19:03:16 · answer #3 · answered by craftyvioleteer 2 · 0 0

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