Three Secrets of Learning Arabic
Arabic, the Middle East’s most widespread language has a unfamiliar alphabet, a fiendishly complex grammar, and a vocabulary enriched by 1400 years of literary culture. According to the U.S. State Department, only Japanese, Korean, Mandarin, and Cantonese are as hard for native English speakers to learn.
Still, maybe you’re undaunted. Maybe you need to learn Arabic for your career. Or maybe you’re one of those travelers who long to step off the tourist trails and immerse themselves in a fascinating new culture.
If you’ve had some experience with foreign languages, you already have an idea of what it takes — above all, an appetite for hard work. But Arabic has special features that make it a different challenge from, say, Spanish or French. Here are few tips to make your journey easier.
Practice your ‘ayns. Unfortunately, Arabic has several consonants that don’t exist in English or any other Western language. The king of these is the ‘ayn (Arabic ?)—a perfectly ordinary sound for native speakers, but a major challenge for most novice learners, since it’s pronounced with muscles English speakers rarely use in speech. With diligent practice, though, even the ‘ayn can become second nature. If you put in the time and effort to master it and other difficult sounds at the outset, you’ll spare yourself a lot of trouble in the future (and perhaps impress new friends abroad with your accent).
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Get to the root of the problem.One reason why consonants are so key is that the majority of Arabic words are based on a so-called triliteral root — that is, a cluster of three specific consonants. A single root can be manipulated to produce many different words, all related in meaning. For instance, the root k-t-b is related to writing. The verb kataba means “to write”, the noun kit?b means “book”, a k?tib is a writer, and so on. As long as you know a word’s root, it’s often possible to guess its meaning, even if you’ve never seen it before. Learn as many roots and their meanings as you can, and you will be on your way to cracking Arabic’s immense vocabulary.
Learn a dialect — or two, or three. In a way, it’s misleading to say that “Arabic” is just one language. There’s classical Arabic, the language of the Qur’an. There’s its cousin, Modern Standard Arabic: the language of books, magazines and TV news. And then there are the numerous dialects that people actually speak at home, at work, and almost everywhere else outside of school. With Modern Standar
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