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Discover our last blog posts about the Arabic language.

Al-dirassa centre has developed a series of free courses to learn easily and quickly the Arabic language.  It is an easy language, and there are no difficulties to learn it online with the al-dirassa centre.

Dialectal Arabic

Dialectal or vernacular Arabic results from the fragmentation of 7th century Arabic and the fusion of the dialects resulting from military conquests and the mixing of populations of the South Arabian, Berber, African etc. languages. These dialectal varieties are extremely numerous today and persist throughout the Arab world. Dialectal Arabic is the language that each of the 290 million Arabic speakers uses throughout their lives, which conveys a whole popular, traditional, and contemporary culture. He is greatly devalued socially and is often perceived as “vulgar” or “bastardized”. It is therefore, an almost exclusively spoken language whose varieties are rarely incomprehensible among Arabic speakers.

Classical Arabic language

Classical Arabic, for its part, is a language diffused in all Arab countries, and it is this language that is taught all over the world. It is, therefore, a prestigious language associated with religion and writing, that is to say, literary culture, science and technology and administrative functions. Classical Arabic is also called Quranic Arabic, Modern Standard Arabic, Grammatical Arabic, or Eloquent Arabic. Very few Arabs in the world speak this variety of Arabic as their mother tongue. Thus, only 120 million people know classical Arabic as a second language. However, classical Arabic does not correspond to the language in which the Quran was written fourteen centuries ago, although the basic rules have not changed since that time. The Arabic language was born several centuries before the appearance of Islam.

Nonetheless, the modern classical Arabic used today has undergone certain modifications that began in the last decades of the 19th century, called the “Nahda period”, meaning “Renaissance”, a renaissance in the late 19th century. Political, cultural and religious. This movement was mainly the work of a group of intellectuals from Lebanon, then from Egypt and also from Syria and Palestine. These reformers set out to modernize the Arabic language by modifying and somewhat simplifying the original syntax of the 7th century, but above all by adding modern words such as “train”, “company”, “democracy”, “socialism”, etc. To do this, it was necessary to draw on the grammatical resources of Arabic, in particular, by resorting to the process of analogy (al-qiyas). Today, nearly 60% of modern vocabulary comes from this Reformed Arabic.

Classical Arabic has nevertheless retained its essential eloquent characteristics, which allow skilled speakers to indulge in true stylistic creations, hence the expression “eloquent Arabic”. While some very religious Arabs believe that, of all the languages, Arabic is the one with the vastest resources and the richest lexicon, others see it only as filler, verbosity or vain display. Perhaps this is why it is almost impossible to write and speak classical Arabic completely flawlessly. As much as dialect or vernacular Arabic can be a simple language to practice, classical Arabic can seem complex and difficult. This is what explains why no Arabic-speaking population has adopted it as their mother tongue.

All attempts to change and reform the classical Arabic language have failed due to protests from the tradition’s protectors. There is a certain mainstream in the Muslim world that recognizes that, of all the languages ​​in the world, only Arabic, “the sacred language of the Quran”, cannot be subject to revision. For some Arabs, touching the Arabic language would amount to undermining the Holy Quran. How, in fact, still understand the Holy Quran and the Sunnah of the prophet if we change grammar and syntax rules? For some, calls for removing the current rules of Arabic grammar are “signs of the existence of the imperial-Zionist plot”.

Despite the controversies over the two major forms of Arabic – Vernacular Arabic and Classical Arabic – there are powerful historical and ideological ties between the two and many linguistic similarities. Thus, the alphabet letters are often the same, as is the order of the words or the syntax. However, the words and pronunciation can be very different as Classical Arabic loses all local dialect traces. This is why Arab communities have always considered that there is only one Arabic language. One writes only in classical Arabic, although the vernacular Arabic can theoretically be written. It is estimated that the illiteracy rate in the Arab world is around 50%, but it varies by country.

Imperfect passive tense | الْمُضّارِعُ الْمَجْهُول

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al-dirassa
Thursday, 21 January 2021 / Published in Arabic language free courses
Imperfect passive tense - Arabic free courses
The imperfect passive tense is formed by giving dammah -ُ to the sign of the imperfect tense, and fatha -َ on the second radical.   1. Imperfect passive tense of the passive verb of consonants – الصَحِيْحُ   Example: يُفْعَلُ = يُفْعَلُ     Table passive verb of consonants يُرْفَعُ   3rd person masculine  
Imperfect passive tensePassive Verb of consonants

The passive verb in Arabic | الْفِعْلُ الماضِي المَجْهُولُ

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al-dirassa
Sunday, 17 January 2021 / Published in Arabic language free courses
The passive verb in Arabic | Arabic free course
Introduction to the passive verb   The known verb اَلْفِعْلُ الْمَعْرُوْفُ is the active voice of the verb. Here we know the subject, i.e., the doer of the verb is specified. Also, we have discussed these kinds of verbs in all the preceding chapters on the pattern of فَعَلَ – فَعِلَ – فَعُلَ. Nevertheless,  in
passive verbThe passive verb of consonants

Transitive and intransitive verb | الْفِعْلُ المُتَعَدِّي و اللازِم

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al-dirassa
Saturday, 16 January 2021 / Published in Arabic language free courses
Transitive and intransitive verb - Arabic free courses
Verbs are of two types in Arabic, transitive and intransitive verb: Intransitive verb – اَلْفِعْلُ اللَّازِمُ Transitive verb – اَلْفِعْلُ الْمُتَعَدَّى   1. Intransitive verb   When an intransitive verb is used in a sentence, there is no need for an object. The verb, along with the subject, gives complete meaning to the sentence.  
Transitive and intransitive verb

The imperative verb in Arabic | الْفِعْلُ الأَمْرُ

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al-dirassa
Tuesday, 05 January 2021 / Published in Arabic language free courses
the imperative verb - Arabic free courses
Introduction   The imperative is the command form of a verb. The imperative is of two kinds: Direct command Indirect command The direct command is given to the second person. Examples: اِضْرِبْ (you) hit اُنْظُرْ (you) look اِشْرَبْ (you) drink   Sometimes the command is given to the third and the first person. In such
imperative verb

Moods of the imperfect tense |صِيَغُ الْمُضَارِع

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al-dirassa
Saturday, 02 January 2021 / Published in Arabic language free courses
Moods of the imperfect tense - Arabic free course
Introduction The subjunctive mood  – اَلْمُضارِعُ الْمَنْصُوبُ and the jussive moods – الْمُضارِعُ المَجْزُومُ changes the imperfect tense. When a particle such as انْ (that) precedes the simple, imperfect tense يَفْعَلُ (he does/will do), it changes the case ending of the imperfect verb to fatha or nasab. The meaning differs from what it has in
Moods of the Imperfect tenseThe subjunctive mood

Past continuous in Arabic | الْفِعْلُ الماضِي الاِسْتِمْرَارِي

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al-dirassa
Thursday, 31 December 2020 / Published in Arabic language free courses
past continuous - Arabic free courses
Introduction Past continuous in Arabic is when كَانَ as a helping verb meaning “was/were”, comes before the imperfect tense.     For example:   كانَ يَفْعَلُ He was doing   Past continuous conjugation of كانَ يَفْعَلُ :   3rd person masculine   Singular Dual Plural كَانَ يَفْعَلُ كَنَا يَفْعَلانِ كانُوْا يَفْعَلُونَ He was doing They
past continuous

The imperfect tense | الْفِعْلُ الْمُضَارِعُ

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al-dirassa
Wednesday, 23 December 2020 / Published in Arabic language free courses
The imperfect tense - Arabic free courses
Introduction   The imperfect tense denotes both present and future tense in which an action is unfinished. The conjugation of the imperfect tense is made by adding prefixes and suffixes to the past tense. Example: يَفْعَلُ He does or he will do   1. The consonant verbs at the imperfect tense   The imperfect tense
Consonant VerbsThe imperfect tense

Verbs with fixed prepositions | Arabic free courses

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al-dirassa
Tuesday, 22 December 2020 / Published in Arabic language free courses
Introduction Verbs with fixed prepositions are some verbs which are found with prepositions attached to their object. Verbs with such prepositions sometimes convey different meanings. For example: Verbs with fixed prepositions – قَضَ قَضَ means “to judge, to fulfill, to decree,” but when it comes with the proposition عَلَى, it means “to bring to an

Verbal sentence | Arabic free courses

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al-dirassa
Tuesday, 15 December 2020 / Published in Arabic language free courses
verbal sentence - Arabic free courses
Introduction In a verbal sentence, the sentence begins with a verb. For example: وَقَتَلَ دَاوُودُ جَالُوتَ and David killed Goliath (2:251)   A verbal sentence comprises a verb, subject, and object. Usually, the verb comes first, followed by the subject and then the object. جَالُوتَ دَاوُودُ وَقَتَلَ Object Subject Verb   The subject and the
verbal sentence

Past tense Verb | اَلْفِعْلُ الْمَاضِي

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al-dirassa
Monday, 14 December 2020 / Published in Arabic language free courses
The verb | past tense
Introduction The verb is an action word with the time that is past, present, and future. According to tense, the verbs can be divided into: Past tense – اَلْفِعْلُ الْمَاضِي: here the action has been completed. Therefore it is past tense. Present tense – اِلْفِعْلُ الْمُضارِعُ: it is also called imperfect tense because the action
past tensethe verbthe verb at the past tense in Arabic
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