It depends on what you mean:
1) Separate (in the sense of independent): Mustaqqil (مستقل)
2) Separate (in the sense of unique): Mutamayyiz (متميز)
3) Separate (in the sense of alone): Mun3azil (منعزل)
4) Separate (in the sense of divided): Mutafaraq (متفرق)
5) Separate (in the sense of distant): Mutaba3id (متباعد)
French "les" means "the" (plural) in English. Ask a separate question for Arabic.
In Arabic, "stone" is written as "_______'. This is pronounced as "Jandal." "Precious stone" is written as "_____ ______," and is pronounced as "Hajar karim." There does not appear to be a separate word for "rock."
Assuming these are two separate numbers...cc = 200 and xcvii = 97
(Muslims are members of Islam, which is a religion, not a separate language.) Asalamu Aleikum is the Muslim greeting, which is similar in Arabic and Pashto.
Joshua =جوشواKinda. This would be a literal phonetic translation. However, the name does exist in Arabic. Since Arabic is a semetic language with close ties to Hebrew and Aramaic, there is a separate version of the name in Arabic.The Arabic name is Yoshu3a (يشوع).
Well if you mean the Arabic language, it has many sister languages. I'm Greek and I've been learning Arabic for a long time. Arabic is a language of the Semitic languages family and has many sister languages of which most are extent now. Sister lanugages of Arabic may include (Hebrew, Coptic, Ancient Egyptian, Aramaic, Syrian, Phoenician, Canaanite, Ancient Brazilian (not much know about it), Somali, Sawahili, Modern Egyptian language (so near to Arabic, even Arabs think it's Arabic, well, if you are an Arab or an Egyptian reading this, EGYPTIAN IS NOT ARABIC it has always been a separate language.)
There is no god, but only ONE Almighty God (called Allah in Arabic) and the Muslims worship only Him. The Jews and the Christians also worship the same God.
It is the Hindu-Arabic numeral system.
Men in Arabic is "رجال" Women in Arabic is "نساء" Man in Arabic is "رجل" Woman in Arabic is "امراة"
The best place to find definitions of Arabic words in Arabic is in an Arabic dictionary, either in book form or online.
If you want to say Arabic in Arabic this is how you say it=Arabi
Arabic Translation : " حكمة " Arabic Phonetically : " Hekma "