The fact that the holy book was written in Arabic gives special significance to the Arabic language because it is seen as the language of divine revelation and is considered sacred by followers of the religion. This connection enhances the importance and reverence placed on the Arabic language in religious and cultural contexts.
Arabic-speaking countries use Arabic as their written language.
The special in Arabic means: Al-khaaas written as : الخاص
Yes, it is. Arabic is written from right to left for the same reason that English is written for left to right or Japanese from up to down. Those are different languages and they had there special styles.
The word "language" in Arabic is (لغة) logha. As for the actual method of writing in Arabic, Arabic is a language with an alphabet. It is written from right to left by scripting the letters together.
There are many forms of Arabic spoken in the Middle East, but Arabic as a written language does not vary at all from society to society: written Arabic is referred to as Classical Arabic and is not commonly spoken. In fact there is no written language for Arabic dialects, as they are only spoken and grammatically incorrect, these dialects are part of the Modern Standard Arabic languages. Classical Arabic has been a literary language and the liturgical language of Islam since its inception in the 7th century, and is no longer evolving or progressing in terms of invention of words, terminology or variation of grammar. The only reason Classical Arabic is not a dead language is because there is no proper way of writing the different Arabic dialects and because The Koran is written in Classical Arabic. So to answer your question: No, Arabic is not a modern language.
they speak Arabic but they have their special accent
Muhammad Ahmad Mazhar has written: 'Arabic' 'Arabic, the source of all the languages' -- subject(s): Origin, Arabic language, Language and languages
L. Malouf has written: 'Arabic dictionary [In Arabic]' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Arabic language
John Van Ess has written: 'The spoken Arabic of Iraq' -- subject(s): Arabic language, Grammar, Vocabularies 'An aid to practical written Arabic' -- subject(s): Arabic language, Dictionaries, Grammar
That was the language of the region where it was written.
Arabic
The official language of the sultanate was Arabic. It was used for official documents, communication, and in religious contexts, reflecting the significance of Arabic in Islamic societies.