Learn Arabic for non-native speakers (for beginners)

- 23%

0
Certificate

Paid

Language

Level

Beginner

Last updated on April 29, 2025 1:32 am

Learn Arabic letters, pronouns, and important sentences in this comprehensive language course. Discover the rich history and widespread usage of Arabic, spoken by over 467 million people worldwide. Perfect for language learners seeking to master this Semitic language.

Add your review

What you’ll learn

  • Learn Arabic letters
  • How to read the letter
  • Connect the letter to a word that begins with it
  • Learn pronouns
  • Writing pronouns in a sentence
  • How to read some important sentences in our life
  • Introduce yourself in Arabic

Welcome to the Arabic language course

We will learn in this course

Arabic letters and how to pronounce them

We will learn the letter and some words that start with this letter

We will learn the pronouns

We will learn some important sentences in our life

We will learn how to define yourself

We will learn Arabic because

Arabic is the most spoken Semitic language and one of the most widely spoken languages ​​in the world, spoken by more than 467 million people.

Arabic is an official language in all countries of the Arab world, in addition to being an official language in Chad and Eritrea. and it is one of the six official languages ​​in United Nations Organization

The Arabic language belongs to the Semitic language family branching off from the Afro-Asiatic group of languages. The Semitic language group includes the ancient languages ​​of the Fertile Crescent civilization, such as Akkadian, Canaanite, Aramaic, Sihidian (southern Arabia), ancient northern Arabic languages ​​and some languages ​​of the Horn of Africa such as Amharic. Specifically, linguists place Arabic in the Central Semitic group of West Semitic languages.

Arabic is one of the most recent of these languages ​​in history and origin, but some believe that it is the closest to the mother Semitic language from which other Semitic languages ​​emerged, due to the Arabs being trapped in the Arabian Peninsula and not exposed to the mixing of the rest of the Semitic languages.

But there are those who disagree with this view among linguists.

As language change is a continuous process over time and geographical isolation may exacerbate this change as the emergence of any new language begins with the emergence of a new dialect in a geographically isolated area. In addition to assuming the existence of a Semitic language or not, its existence does not mean its existence in the understandable sense of a single language, but rather a figurative expression intended to reveal the convergence of a group of languages. Ethnic and has nothing to do with the Torah view of the sons of Shem, and the large number of rules of the Arabic language suggest that it was introduced to it in later periods and that it went through many phases, which weakens the hypothesis that this language is closer to what is technically known as this Semitic mother tongue

Who this course is for:

  • Who wants to learn Arabic?
  • language learners

User Reviews

0.0 out of 5
0
0
0
0
0
Write a review

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Learn Arabic for non-native speakers (for beginners)”

×

    Your Email (required)

    Report this page
    Learn Arabic for non-native speakers (for beginners)
    Learn Arabic for non-native speakers (for beginners)
    LiveTalent.org
    Logo
    LiveTalent.org
    Privacy Overview

    This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.