I have bought a Linguaphone course to learn Arabic and it is Egyption and confusing sometimes because I need standard Arabic. I need to be able to play a CD to learn to speak it or transfer it to my shuffle. Does anyone know of any other supplier please?
2007-02-14
01:16:14
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12 answers
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asked by
☆Lauren☆
5
in
Society & Culture
➔ Languages
So Maz are is the Rosetta Stone Egyption as well?
2007-02-14
03:28:50 ·
update #1
Thank you all for being so helpful - I have ordered a couple of your suggestions and will get back to you. Ta!
2007-02-15
04:34:22 ·
update #2
Hi Lauren
Egyptian is understood everywhere but I understand the Linguaphone course is mainly drills which become mechnical. I can recommend "Mastering Arabic" by Jane Wightwick, published by Palgrave. The textbook with cassettes or CD will cost around £30. This book also helps you learn to read handwritten Arabic. Jane Wightick has also published "Mastering Arabic Handwriting" and "Mastering Arabic Grammar" either of which you should not buy before completing the "Mastering Arabic" course.
May I also offer some help in learning because it is a difficult language for us because there are very few similar sounding words as you might find in German, French or Spanish.
Set a target of memorising the meanings of 10 new words a day. That way you will have around 1,000 words within 6 months and have broken the neck of the language.
Also try to master one rule of grammar a day and substitute previously learned words into new sentences as well as those in the chapter you are studying.
Tray to do something every day because it is easy to forget if you don't get very frequent refreshment of your learned items.
I wish you well as the language and culture are oceans. Try English translations of Khalil Gibran - some are available free on the Internet (Bartleby site).
Good luck and happy learning!
2007-02-14 04:30:31
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answer #1
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answered by halifaxed 5
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Rosetta Stone CDs is a Fantastic Choice ., My Native Language is Arabic & I speak Many arabic accents but the Egyptian Accent is the most Popular and understood all over the Arabic world , Also Standard Arabic is Very common if you going to speak in formal occasions ...
Good Luck
2007-02-14 01:49:52
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answer #2
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answered by MAZ 3
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you will desire to learn nicely-known Arabic in case you prefer to get into journalism and cope with the revealed be conscious. after think related to the basics, then you opt for a dialect. it would be plenty extra durable to do it any other way around. considering you plan to circulate in a foreign country, i'd focus on the nicely-known Arabic and as quickly as you're interior the middle East, you will desire to be waiting to %. up the dialect. Dialects do have different vocab, yet you apart from would learn how to do issues like dropping endings right here and there, including a suffix now and lower back, it relies upon on the dialect. I did a 4 twelve months Arabic degree. the 1st twelve months became in ordinary terms nicely-known Arabic, and we began Lebanese in our 2nd twelve months. it is not too complicated, i'd say. I lived in Oman too and did no longer discover it a good purchase different although there have been extremely some different words for issues (the girls persons have been very plenty extra durable to appreciate although). I do discover Egyptian would be extremely different, besides the indisputable fact that it is not something drastic. you may learn the variations with out having at a loss for words. i for my section prefer the Lebanese dialect ;)
2016-09-29 02:37:26
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answer #3
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answered by arieux 4
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There have already been some really good answers, so I thought I'd just supplement it with this: once you have a basic understanding of Arabic grammar, The Hans Wehr Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic. It's the best Arabic to English dictionary there is, hands down.
You can learn Arabic in the military, but I wouldn't suggest you do it. I did, and, well... if you really want to know, you can email me. Anyway. That dictionary is well worth the money. Ask anyone who has owned one.
2007-02-14 12:30:30
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answer #4
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answered by Sydney Bristow's Other Alias 1
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Try this link
http://www.arabicsp.com/webpages/moreinfo.html
No disrespect, but I beg to differ that the egyptian dialect is the most spoken dialect. If you tune into the arabic satallite channels they are speaking a more tradtional arabic that is understood and spoken in almost every middle eastern country.
2007-02-14 09:10:40
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answer #5
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answered by InquisitiveMind 4
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Rosetta Stone Courses online are always a good option!
2007-02-14 01:21:09
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answer #6
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answered by army_leads_the_way 2
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Well I don't know ,but don't learn arabic in Egyptian accent because most of Arabic speaking nations wont understand you!
2007-02-14 01:29:50
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answer #7
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answered by Battle Cry 1
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If you are a beginner who is aware of very little if any Spanish but you will like to discover a lot more then you have to take a program https://tr.im/ygdrd the on the web course of Spanish
2016-06-02 07:32:57
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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well i am a Muslim i know how to read the Koran which is in Arabic. but i dont understand it.
we can learn together if u wish
email me
2007-02-15 01:10:43
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answer #9
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answered by Frihah Anti-Milanist 4lyf! 6
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if you have a shuffle, then you have itunes right? go to the online store in itunes and go to the podcasts- theres lots of free language podcasts, maybe they have arabic!!
2007-02-14 01:24:58
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answer #10
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answered by cyanideprincess0008 3
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