The pronouncation of words differ, but a person who speaks one of them fluently would understand the other one clearly.
"Iraqi" is pronounced almost the same in Arabic and is spelled like this: عراقي
In Iraqi Arabic, you can say "Shlonak" (شلونك) to ask "How are you" to a male, or "Shlonich" (شلونچ) to ask a female. Both phrases are informal.
Iraqi isn't a language, The primary languages in Iraq is Arabic and Kurdish. "Anna bee hebak" is the phonetic way to say, "I love you", in Arabic though.
Iraqi-Kurdish-Arabic- all Mesopotamians.
yes,u could find many iraqi resturants that sell many arabic food.
It was designed to protect Saudi Arabia from an invasion of Iraqi forces. It was designed to protect Saudi Arabia from an invasion of Iraq forces
There is no such language as Eastern Arabic. Even if you meant to say Iraqi Arabic, there are fundamental differences between Arabic and Turkish. The only commonality between them is that between 5-10% of Turkish is made of Arabic loanwords. Everything from basic phrases, verb conijugations, declensions, etc. are different.
The writing on the Iraqi flag means 'God is great'(Allahu Akbar) in Arabic.
Even someone who speaks Arabic will need more information in order to answer this question. There are hundreds of ways to say I love you in this language, all of them with a distinct meaning, and it might be embarrassing if you say the wrong one.
Iraqis speak different languages depending on what part of the country a person is from (Arabic or Kurdish or regional languages). In Iraqi Arabic, the word for grandmother is "jodda" (جدة) - pronounced with an English "j" sound.
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.
shukran = means thank you .. and in Arabic you write it like this : شكرا