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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.

Simple nominal sentence | الجُمْلَةُ الاسْمِيَّة

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al-dirassa
Sunday, 13 December 2020 / Published in Arabic language free courses
Simple nominal sentence - Arabic free courses
Introduction A nominal sentence generally comprises two components. The subject of the sentence is called: اَلْمُبْتَدَأُ and the predicate is called : اَلْخَبَرُ For example: مُحَمَّدٌ  رَشُولٌ Muhammad is a messenger. مُحَمَّدٌ is the subject – اَلْمُبْتَدَأُ and رَسُوْلٌ is the predicate اَلْخَبَرُ وَاللَّـهُ سَمِيعٌ عَلِيمٌ  And Allah is Hearing and Knowing. (2:224) Here اللَّـهُ
Simple nominal sentence

Descriptive phrase | الْمُركَّبُ التَّوْصِيْفِي

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al-dirassa
Saturday, 12 December 2020 / Published in Arabic language free courses

Possessive phrase | اَلْمُرَّكَبُ الإِضافِي

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al-dirassa
Thursday, 10 December 2020 / Published in Arabic language free courses
the possessive phrase in Arabic
Introduction – the possessive phrase – اَلْمُرَّكَبُ الإِضافِي The possessive phrase is a combination of two nouns in which the first noun is owned by or in possession of the second noun. Examples: نَارُ اللَّهِ Allah’s fire/fire of Allah رَسُولُ اللَّهِ Allah’s Prophet نَصْرُ اللَّهِ Allah’s help حَدِيْثُ الجُنُودِ The story of the armies حِزْبُ
possessive phrase in arabic

Interrogative pronouns | اِسْمُ الإِسْتِفْهِامِ

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al-dirassa
Thursday, 10 December 2020 / Published in Arabic language free courses
the interrogative pronouns in Arabic
Introduction to the interrogative pronouns – اِسْمُ الإِسْتِفْهِامِ Words used at the beginning of the sentence to ask a question are called interrogative pronouns in Arabic. What  مَاذَا / مَا Why لِمَاذَا / لِمَ Who مَنْ For who / for which لِمَنْ What ءَ Did هَلْ When مَتَى Since مُنْذُ Where أَيْنَ In what فِيْمَا

Relative pronouns | اِسْمُ الْمَوْصُول

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al-dirassa
Wednesday, 09 December 2020 / Published in Arabic language free courses
relative pronouns in arabic
Introduction to the relative pronouns   Relative pronouns relate to or depend on the word before or after them. They indicate a particular thing but do not make complete sense.   Masculine   Singular Dual Plural اَلَّذِي    اَلَّذَيْنِ – اَلَّذَانِ اَلَّذِيْنَ That one who/ that one which Those two who/ those two which Those

Demonstrative pronouns | اِسْمُ الْإِشارَةِ

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al-dirassa
Wednesday, 09 December 2020 / Published in Arabic language free courses
demonstrative pronouns
Introduction to the demonstrative pronouns Words that are used to point at something are known as Demonstrative pronouns – اِسْمُ الْإِشارَةِ   For example:   هَذَا كِتَابٌ This is a book (complete sentence) كِتَابٌ = مُشارٌ إِلَيْهِ هَذا = اِسْمُ الإِشارَةِ ذَلِكَ الْكِتَابُ That book (incomplete sentence) الْكِتَابُ= مُشارٌ إِلَيْهِ ذَلِكَ = اِسْمُ الإِشارَةِ In

Adverbs of time and place | ظَرْفُ الزَّمَنِ و المَكَانِ

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al-dirassa
Wednesday, 09 December 2020 / Published in Arabic language free courses
adverbs of time and place in arabic
Introduction to adverbs Some words have the same effect on the nouns and pronouns as the prepositions, although they are not prepositions. These kinds of words are used as adverbs of time and place.   Adverbs of time and place used in the Noble Quran   The following are examples of such words used in
adverbs in Arabic

Prepositions | الْحُرُوفُ الجَرِّ

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al-dirassa
Tuesday, 08 December 2020 / Published in Arabic language free courses
      Introduction Words that combine with a noun or pronoun to form a phrase are called prepositions.   They have a meaning of their own and affect nouns and pronouns.   Thus, their effect on the noun is that they will change the vowel of the last letter of the noun from dammah,
prepositions in arabic

Pronouns in Arabic | الضَّمَائِرُ

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al-dirassa
Monday, 07 December 2020 / Published in Arabic language free courses
the pronouns in Arabic
Introduction Pronouns are used as a substitute for a noun like he, her, his, her, their, them, I, etc. There are basically two types of pronouns:   Attached pronouns – الضَّمِيْرُ الْمُتَّصِلُ which come attached to a noun, verb, or particle. Detached pronouns – الضَّمِيْرُ الْمُنْفَصِلُ which comes separatly without attaching itself to a verb,
pronouns in arabic

The plural in Arabic | الْجَمْعُ

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al-dirassa
Sunday, 06 December 2020 / Published in Arabic language free courses
The plural in arabic
Introduction There are two types of plurals in Arabic:   Sound plural اَلْجَمْعُ السَّالِمُ Broken plural اَلْجَمْعُ الْمُكَسَّرُ The sound Plural – اَلْجَمْعُ السَّالِمُ   Masculine sound plural   In the formation of sound plural, the original form of the noun does not change. It has different masculine and feminine forms and is formed by
plural in arabic
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