The caligraphy lettering is very stylized, but I belive it says Eid Mubaraak ( عيد موبراك ), the most common greeting for Eid al-Fitr, the conclusion of Ramadan - it means "Happy Eid"!
It will say forever on the stamp. If it doesn't, it may be one of the non-denominational issues that has a fixed price. See the link below.
Together forever : ma'aan lel abaaad ( in Arabic ). and it is written this way : معا للأبد
The postage stamp that had the word LOVE and a single pink rose on it, is a forever stamp. There was also one that had a value of .25 cents.
say : malek ulbi
Arabic writing: ثعلب
Forever stamps will have the word FOREVER printed on them. If the do not have a value and do not say forever, they have a fixed value.
Received (past) = "istalama" pronunciation: /ɪstələmə/ Arabic writing: استلمَ
In Arabic writing its أنها جميلة
earth = "urd" pronunciation: /ʌrd/ Arabic writing: أرض
its writin from right to left. &&" that's what people who speak Arabic say about English:P
Arabic - Arabic script: أنا ملك Arabic - Standard Transliteration: ʾanā malik(un) Arabic - Chat Alphabet: ana malek
"Julia" is written as "جوليا", from English to Arabic.