We already do. English is a language that has borrowed words from many cultures and languages, and that includes words from the Arabic language: for example: algebra, assassin, coffee, alcohol, and lemon are among the words derived from Arabic. If you are referring to religious words, the word for The Bible used by Muslims is often spelled Koran, but the Arabic transliteration is Quran (which can mean Book, Reading, or Recitation).
I'm not sure I understand the question, but if you learn the language you can speak it just as you can speak German, Spanish, French, etc.
jayyid jiddan جيّد جدّا
al-youm
نعم na-am
No, "talbat" is not a standard Arabic word. It may be a term specific to a certain dialect or context.
Yes in Arabic is written: نعم
Yes.
Yes. The word Arabic (or Arab) is from the proper noun Arabia.
Issa is the Arabic word for Jesus Christ. Yes, and the whole name is almasih eisaa.
Are you sure it's an Arabic word. cause it doesn't sound familiar at all. Yes it is an Arabic word. The name of the prophet was fanhash bin haroon
The Arabic word for 'cars' is saiarat and the Arabic spelling is سيارات.
(Defenition: Yes) Roman: Mwāfq Arabic: حسنا English: OK (Defenition: Fine) Roman: Ḩsnā Arabic: تمام English: Okay
the arabic word for mall is veishnou
the Arabic word for bread is khubz.
The word for digging in arabic is حفر
The Arabic word for maize is 'الذرة'