no its doesnt have a vowel
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Arabic is written and read from right to left. Each letter in the Arabic script has different forms depending on its position in a word, and vowels are usually not written.
There are many differences. Here are a few: Arabic letters are connected. Latin letters are not. Arabic is written right-to-left. Latin is written left-to-write. The Arabic alphabet has no vowels. Latin does.
Examples are Hind and Hafsah. Both names does not contain Arabic vowels.
There's no direct translation because the vowels o and e don't exist in Arabic- but this is how it would look: جصلين Hope this helps. :)
Israel = إِسْرَائِيل (with vowels) or إسرائيل (without vowels)
The Arabic alphabet has 28 consonants (29 if you include Hamza). There are also numerous "accent" marks that are sometimes included to indicate vowels and other information.
Similarities: gender specification Differences: Arabic: Verb + Subject is the normal structure 14 inflectional froms for verbs Some vowels, especially the short vowels are not spelled. English: Subject + Verb is the normal structure. 2 inflectional froms for verbs in the simple present and 1 in the simple past. Almost all vowels, including the short vowels are spelled.
* They're two different languages. * They also have different alphabets. The English alphabet has 26 letters while the Arabic alphabet has 28 letters. * English is written/read from left to right while Arabic is written/read from right to left. * Some Arabic letters/sounds are not found in English: ح خ ص ض ط ظ ع غ ق * The English sounds /p/ and /v/ are not found in Arabic. * The Arabic sentence may not contain a verb. * The usual word order in English is SVO (subject then verb then object), while the usual word order in Arabic is VSO. * Most words in Arabic have different forms for male/female and singular/plural.
MY is water in Arabic it sounds just like the English word 'my' [i should know Arabic is my main language] MY is water in Arabic it sounds just like the English word 'my' [i should know Arabic is my main language]
long vowels and short vowels are both just vowels they can't have more or less of themselves
(stylized characters) Hebrew uses the Hebrew alphabet, a block-letter alphabet, which consists of 22 consonants and no vowels. Arabic uses the Arabic alphabet, a cursive-style alphabet, which consists of 28 consonants (29 if you include Hamza), and no vowels. Most of the letters of of the Hebrew alphabet have similar names to their Arabic equivalents. Some of the emphatic letters of Arabic are missing in Hebrew, and the Hebrew letter Samech (ס) is missing from Arabic.