If you mean to read the word "brother" in ARABIC , it will be read as in ENGLISH but if you mean to translate the word "brother" into the Arabic it will be "أخ", and it will be spelled "akh"...
you reding it like this : ikra اقراء it's easy rigt
It is not obligatory for Muslim children to learn to read Arabic. however, it is preferred whenever possible for Muslim children to read Arabic to be able to read the Quran in its God revelation Arabic language which is better than reading Quran translations in other languages.
i think it has to be read in Arabic because it is written in Arabic.
Jewish people ... at least those who have learned to read ... read in the direction in which the material they're reading was printed. For example, when reading English, they read left to right. When reading Hebrew or Yiddish, they read right to left. When reading traditional Mandarin, they read vertically. Etc.
There is no "g" in Arabic, so this is not an Arabic word. The verb "to read" in Arabic is "qeraa'a" (قراءة) and the command "read" is "eqraa" (إقرأ).
The Quran should only be recited in Arabic and a person will gain no religious blessing reciting or reading the Quran in English. The English translation is only meant to help people who cant read Arabic. And Arabic is the original language in which the quran is written in.
The present perfect tense for "read" is "has/have read."
No, Arabic is read from right to left, opposite to the English language which reads from left to right. Each word is formed from right to left, and sentences are also written and read in that direction.
She is reading = هي تقرأ (hee taqra')
Iqra is an Arabic word that means 'read'.
Zains tatos says his name in his language I can read it and zain if u were reading this I want.u to know that I ❤ u!! ^ Okay dummy, we asked what it means not if you can read it. Obviously you can't read very well. :)
The past tense of the verb to read is read (pronounced red).The past form is "is reading" or "are reading" is was reading or were reading.(This is the past continuous tense.)
Get an Arabic Bible. Or look for an Arabic translation online. (One is linked below.)