The Arabic language is one of several semitic languages (e.g. Hebrew, Aramaic, Moabite) that originated together thousands of years ago.
It was not "created"; it is not an artificial language like Esperanto, Klingon, Quenya, Sindarin, Wood Elven, Khuzdul, Adunaic, Westron, The Black Speech, or Entish.
Aldiwan Arabic Language Center was created in 1997.
San'a Institute for the Arabic Language was created in 1995.
Supreme Council of the Arabic language in Algeria was created in 1996.
Arabic wasn't created. Also there were and still are many widely spoken languages.
The Arabic language evolved over time from Proto-Semitic languages, with contributions from various civilizations in the Middle East. There isn't a single person or creator associated with the Arabic language.
Swahili is a language that was created with a mix of Bantu languages and Arabic influences. It originated in the African Great Lakes region and has become a lingua franca in East Africa.
The Arabic language is the dominate language of North Africa and Southwest Asia.
No, Arabic is not a Latin language. Arabic is a Semitic language that belongs to the Afro-Asiatic language family, while Latin is an Italic language that belongs to the Indo-European language family.
The etymology behind the algebra is a cognate from Arabic language. The word transliterated from its Arabic origin would be "al-jabr."
Yes, the majority of Syrians speak Arabic as their native language. Arabic is the official language of Syria and is spoken by most of the population.
The Swahili language has roots in Arabic and Bantu languages. Arabic influence is particularly significant due to historical trade connections along the East African coast.
The word "language" in Arabic is (لغة) logha. As for the actual method of writing in Arabic, Arabic is a language with an alphabet. It is written from right to left by scripting the letters together.