It has two genders: male and female. It has three number classes: singular, dual and plural Words are marked for number, gender, and inclination. Although not commonly practised, word order is almost irrelevant, and doesn't affect the meaning nor adds ambiguity. Almost every native word can be traced to a three-letter root which conveys an abstract meaning. this meaning is born in different shades in all derivatives of that root. It has primarily three tenses. For most uses a dictionary isn't needed to understand a 'new word'
similarities between Arabic language and english
Arabic is the language or culture. Arab is a member of the Arabian race.
Yusuf K. Hitti has written: 'Hitti's medical dictionary, English-Arabic' -- subject(s): Arabic, Arabic language, Dictionaries, English, English language, Medicine 'Hitti's pocket medical dictionary, English-Arabic' -- subject(s): Arabic, Dictionaries, English language, Medicine
Depends where u are.
Farsi is the official language of Iran and belongs to the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European languages, while Arabic is the official language of many countries in the Middle East and North Africa and belongs to the Semitic branch of languages. Farsi is written in the Persian script, whereas Arabic is written in the Arabic script.
There is no such language as Eastern Arabic. Even if you meant to say Iraqi Arabic, there are fundamental differences between Arabic and Turkish. The only commonality between them is that between 5-10% of Turkish is made of Arabic loanwords. Everything from basic phrases, verb conijugations, declensions, etc. are different.
One of my teachers said that many English words were originated from the arabic language such as vitamine , medicie , ................., and of course I didn't believe him . What do you think of this ?
Go to Settings then click on Phone and then you will have a menu choose Language -- change your settings by changing your phone language from Arabic to English.
Walt Taylor has written: 'Waging Peace for a Living' 'Doughty's English' -- subject- s -: Arabic, English language, Foreign elements, Language 'Arabic words in English' -- subject- s -: Arabic, English language, Etymology, Foreign words and phrases
Ibrahim Ismail Wahab has written: 'Law dictionary, English-Arabic' -- subject(s): Arabic, Arabic language, Dictionaries, English, English language, Law 'The Swedish institution of ombudsman'
Merrill Y. Van Wagoner has written: 'Spoken Arabic (Saudi)' -- subject(s): Arabic language, Dialects 'English-Arabic vocabulary' -- subject(s): Arabic, Dictionaries, English language
Arabic is the mane language, but alot of people know English and french, but still mainly Arabic