English has a strong tradition of borrowing words that it can use. Those similar words are Arabic; English just happens to be using them as well.
Sometimes Arabic and English meanings can be the same but I think it would be Zara, Here are some spellings, Zara, Zarah, Zahra, Zaara, Zaraa, Thes are some of the spellings.
It is not appropriate to recite Holy Qur'an in English due to some pronunciation difference among English writings Arabic word and actual Arabic pronounced words. You can recite it, however, with a teacher who instruct you with proper pronunciation.
· Jirja is a city in Egypt It is important to note that the letter "jim" in Arabic which roughly corresponds to the English "j" in most dialects is actually pronounced like the English "g" in Egypt, leading to there being almost no words (except foreign loan words) in Egyptian Arabic that have the "j" sound. The above "Jirja" is the proper Arabic reading of the Egyptian "Girga".
Some examples of words that are the same in English and Italian include: pizza, pasta, espresso, gelato, and cappuccino.
Cognates are words which are the same in English and French.
English has borrowed some words from Turkish and Arabic words such as Caravan or galosh are Turkish words, of course it pronunciation sometimes changes when we transfer it from one language to another.
Try amazon.com they have some that you could order. LIke this children's book that is in Arabic and English. http://www.amazon.com/Guess-Much-Love-Arabic-English/dp/1854309889 yes you can get it
I think Taylor in Arabic is : Taymoor . not sure about it but I'm from Jordan and I have some informations about English names in Arabic :)
cognates- (dessert is dessert, plus is plus) They are not necessarily pronounced the same.
alcohol admiral algebra
Some words do not translate from English to Korean (or from Korean to English). Those words would appear in the native language, for instance, a word in English will be the same in a Korean sentence. For example: Microsoft is cool Microsoft는 멋지다
Muslims praise Allah (God in English); the same God of the Jews and the Christians. Arabic Christians read 'Allah' as God in their Arabic Bibles. Some Arabic Christians say 'Allah Al Ab' in Arabic that means 'God the father'.