First if the Muslim child is born for an Arabic family then he/she learns Arabic from the family and community as; e.g.; the French child learns French from his/her family and french community. If the Muslim child is from non Arabic family, then he/she may learn Arabic in a school or his/her parents bring a teacher home to learn him/her Arabic or they send him/her to an Islamic center or mosque to learn Arabic.
Arabic belongs to the Semitic language family, Farsi belongs to the Indo-European language family. So yes, Farsi has more in common with Russian, French, Irish, and English than it does with Arabic.
Arabic : Afro-Asiatic - Semitic - Central Semitic Farsi : Indo-European - Indo-Iranian - Irania Arabic
Palestine is Arabic and speaks the Arabic language. My family used to live there so I would know.
No, it isn't. Arabic language is an independent language by itself.
The dialect of Arabic used in Lebanon is a Semitic language like all other dialects of Arabic.
No, Arabic is not an Indo-European language. It belongs to the Semitic language family.
Yes, Arabic is a Semitic language belonging to the Afro-Asiatic language family, not the Indo-European language family. Arabic is spoken by millions of people primarily in the Middle East and North Africa.
It can be either Osra (أسرة) for nuclear family or 3a'ela (عائلة) for extended family.
Afro-asiatic, which is the same family that includes Amharic, Aramaic, and Hebrew.
No, there is not. Iraqi Arabic is a dialect of Arabic similar to Saudi Arabic, while the language spoken in Iran is called either Farsi or Persian. Arabic is part of the Semitic language family, Persian is part of the Indo-European language family--so the two are actually not related at all. Iran uses the Arabic script for religious reasons.
Ahli (أهلي) means "my family".