
Learn modern standard Arabic from zero to high level using grammar, listening, and vocabulary through camera lessons and slides. Begin with msa before exploring dialects, with an updated, engaging format.
Introduction , please look at this video before registering the course !
Explore why learning Arabic matters—from culture and language interest to religion, travel, and career benefits—while preparing you to join Arabic-speaking communities around 21 countries.
Discover how the Arabic course is structured into multiple curriculums and sectors, starting with curriculum 1.0, covering alphabet, pronunciation, letter connections, basic vocab, grammar, and more.
Explore curriculum 1.0, its sectors and sub sectors, and start with the alphabet, pronunciation, letter connections, basic vocabulary, and axillary signs to build foundational Arabic skills.
this lecture introduces the arabic alphabet with a printable sheet for at-home practice and focuses on pronunciation by reading lips and mouth movements, starting with alif and humza variants.
Learn the Arabic alphabet from right to left, practice each letter and its name, and distinguish similar sounds to build a solid foundation for reading and speaking.
Master the Arabic alphabet through two rounds: names and pronunciation, then spelling; repeat to build mastery, focus on the alphabet, and ask questions; try spelling your name with Arabic letters.
Install the Arabic keyboard on Windows via language settings, choose a Syrian, Lebanese, or UAE layout, and practice typing right-to-left Arabic; complete the first typing task to start homework.
Learn to connect Arabic letters to read words correctly by mastering beginning, middle, and end positions. Identify which letters connect or do not, with alif, lam, and other examples.
Learn to connect Arabic letters in part 2 by practicing standard and dashed connections, distinguishing filled vs empty circles, and applying linking rules.
Practice Arabic pronunciation with letter-by-letter word examples, focusing on correct sounds rather than translation, while using uploaded examples and English translations for reference.
Practice connecting Arabic letters by applying rules that some letters do not connect after them. Use pen and paper to write three-letter words and learn how alif with hamza behaves.
Explore humza, an additional Arabic letter, and its pronunciation with alif. See how humza appears below or above alif and how it connects.
Explore a basic Arabic conversation using transliteration in English letters, learning essential greetings and self introductions such as hello, how are you, my name is, and I am a student.
Learn daily arabic greetings: good morning, good evening, and good night, with explanations of al as 'the' and hamza placement, plus masculine vs feminine forms and pronunciation notes.
Learn to read and recognize Arabic words through simple examples and memorize them for use in conversation. Practice greetings and phrases like good morning, good evening, and goodbye.
This video guides students in practicing Arabic sentence reading by demonstrating letter connections and non-connections, emphasizes reading from right to left, and cautions against literal English translation.
Learn how to write Arabic letters and connect them within words, including starting and ending forms, with examples of the alphabet and connectors for proper handwriting.
Practice Arabic handwriting by connecting letters on the board with a mouse, forming words like sabbar alkire (good morning) and masalha (good evening), and anticipate vowels in the next video.
Improve Arabic speaking skills with a slow-motion video guide that emphasizes talking and practical conversation in modern Arabic.
Practice translating three Arabic sentences to English, then write three self-referential sentences in Arabic about yourself for the video-based language exercise.
the lecture introduces arabic vowels and their six plus one forms, fatha, kasra, damma, sukun, shaddah, maddah, and explains their placement and impact on meaning.
Explore how Arabic vowels (fatha, damma, kasra) and marks like sukūn, shaddah, and maddah modify letters, with practical examples on noon and alef to practice reading.
Explore how to place arabic vowels with letters, placing kasra below and damma or fatha above, and use shadda above the letter to carry vowels above or below.
Understand double fatḥa above the letter alif and how it changes pronunciation, shown with examples like shukran, shukrallah, and shukhrat, and learn to distinguish words with and without double fatḥa.
Explore Arabic vowels and diacritics, called harakat, and how fatḥa, ḍamma, kasra, sukun, and shadda among eight accents shape tone and meaning, including spelling with accents.
Learn to introduce yourself in Arabic, stating your name, where you work and live, and common phrases like good morning and nice to meet you, with emphasis on vowels.
Learn the most essential Arabic pronouns: me, you (masc and fem), he, she, we, you all, and they, along with how accents affect meaning and upcoming verb conjugation.
Learn Arabic personal pronouns, differentiate male and female forms for singular and plural usage, and practice everyday sentences with common pronouns and examples.
Learn Arabic personal pronouns with practical examples, including I am faddy, you are faddy (masc and fem), he is faddy, and we or they are here.
Learn Arabic personal pronouns with examples that illustrate male, female, and plural usage. Practice distinguishing subjects using names and everyday phrases.
This lecture teaches beginners to distinguish male and female in Arabic, noting there is no neutral and that feminine endings indicate female words, with practical examples.
Explore how Arabic nouns mark gender, with female examples like nafisa and zahera and male examples like kitab and jihād, showing how endings signal gender.
Learn essential Arabic greetings and basic phrases for everyday conversations, including good morning, good evening, good night, how are you, I am fine, thank you.
Learn how the definite article al attaches to Arabic nouns, with examples like al kitab and al bab, and note how the l is dropped or merged in pronunciation.
Master essential Arabic day-to-day phrases, such as I am looking for, wait a moment, and how much is it, with masculine and feminine noun forms and pronunciation tips.
Explore demonstrative pronouns in modern standard Arabic, focusing on singular masculine and feminine forms, dual for two objects, and plural usage with examples like apples and a book.
Identify Arabic nouns as masculine or feminine, then determine singular or plural and show how endings convert singular to plural with examples like kitab and sa’a.
Explore Arabic singular to plural rules, including masculine plurals formed with wow plus noon and feminine plurals by removing ta marbuta and adding alif, with examples like educated person.
Discover broken plurals in Arabic, formed by adding or removing letters or changing vowels, and practice pronunciation to memorize plural patterns using practical word examples.
Learn to conjugate Arabic verbs across present, past, and subjunctive tenses using pronouns and patterns, with examples like to say and to write for daily usage.
Master Arabic numbers from one to ten, learn how to place vowels and diacritics, and practice writing numerals, including patterns for two, six, and ten.
Master basics of Arabic numbers by learning the first ten numbers, writing from right to left, using commas instead of points, and recognizing zero as a dot.
Learn to spell Arabic numbers, from one to a million, including irregular 11–12 forms, tens and units joined with wa (and), and gender-based spelling rules.
Learn practical Arabic phrases for daily life, including greetings, asking how you are (male or female), saying you are learning Arabic, expressing thanks, and asking for help.
Learn essential arabic phrases for everyday conversation, including wait, how much is that, please, excuse me, and what's your name. Practice asking where you come from and you are beautiful.
Explore practical Arabic sentences for celebrations, meals, and daily interactions, including milad syeed for birthdays, mabrouk for congratulations, sahawa after meals, and layla sayeeda for good night.
Learn essential Arabic house vocabulary, including furniture and rooms, with practical examples such as the book is in the library and open the window.
Learn practical Arabic vocabulary for the house by naming everyday items like misbah (lamp), bulb, computer, tabulam (table), nafisa (window), door, balcony, camera, tv, wall, floor, bed, kitchen, and bath.
Learn essential Arabic restaurant vocabulary, including how to ask for the menu and discuss food and utensils, and name items like table, chair, plate, spoon, fork, knife, and the bill.
Learn Arabic vocabulary for vegetables and fruits, including banana, kiwi, tomato, orange, ananas, lemon, with strawberry variants. The lesson covers transliterations and country differences, plus examples like tabouli and malaria.
Learn practical Arabic street vocabulary, identify the gender of nouns, and use situational phrases for directions, signs, and conversations from street scenes such as traffic lights, sidewalks, and bridges.
learn essential arabic street vocabulary, including market, grocery store, bakery, taxi, car, bicycle, and motorcycle, with notes on gendered nouns and weather phrases like the sky is raining and snow.
Practice Arabic pronunciation by repeating a long list of street-related words, then form and match Arabic and English sentences, connecting phrases and practicing directions and traffic signals.
Learn Arabic street vocabulary, including sharia (street), shara (address), signs, traffic lights, and directions like go right or left. Identify cars, buses, bicycles, sidewalks, bridges, and buildings.
Learn to navigate an Arabic airport by reading signs in Arabic, and using essential terms for gate, ticket numbers, luggage, passport control, check-in, and foreign exchange.
Review Arabic airport vocabulary by spelling words with English letters and revising terms learned earlier, then match Arabic and English translations for airport phrases.
Practice essential arabic street phrases, such as I'm lost and stop at a red light, and learn to match sentences with masculine or feminine forms.
Learn seven Arabic wh questions with clear explanations and practice, covering what is this, who are you, where, why, when, how, and what time, with downloadable notes.
Explore Arabic interrogative pronouns and how to form gendered questions for masculine and feminine nouns. Learn key questions like what is this and how the definite article shapes meaning.
Master Arabic wh- questions with practical examples that cover what, where, and how, including conjugation, gender, and vowels. Learn to use ayna, ma, kaifa, and sawf for near-future actions.
Engage in practical Arabic conversation to learn core verbs, naming, ownership, and country references, with practice quizzes and clear explanations from basic to intermediate levels.
This mini conversation teaches arabic pronunciation of vowels, introduces essential phrases like do you speak english, and explains negation with la and gendered verb forms.
Master the present and past conjugations of regular Arabic verbs, using katiba (to write) as the running example, and learn how endings and prefixes change with pronouns in the subjunctive.
Practice the verb to go in Arabic by reading aloud, pausing the video to study harbor and hub phrases, and carefully reviewing the hub home patterns.
Practice verbs and their present tense in Arabic, and review past tense. Complete homework by writing about you using the verbs, and note that the lesson introduces ownership and pronouns.
Master possessive pronouns part 1 in Arabic by learning to mark ownership with noun endings for my, your, his, her, and our or their forms.
Learn how to form Arabic possessive pronouns by adding endings to a noun like kitab (book), and see forms for mine, yours, his, hers, ours, and yours plural.
Explore important country names in Arabic, from the gulf states and North Africa to Europe and the Americas, with Arabic terms and translations for global geography.
Explore how to spell country names in Arabic, noting right-to-left spelling and varying forms for places like Canada, the United States (Al Wilayat Al Muttahida), and Norway.
Explore the Arab world and Asia through country names in Arabic, learning how to say Syria, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, India, Japan, Nigeria, and more in modern Arabic.
Learn to express the four cardinal directions in Arabic—north, south, east, and west—using El-prefixed terms and country examples.
Launches curriculum 1.4 of the Arabic language course, teaching family members, personal information in Arabic, basic grammar with prepositions, verbs and conjugation, and communication skills including so far usage.
Explore the Arabic family tree with terms for mother, father, siblings, grandparents, and relatives, and learn gender and plural patterns through practical examples.
Master Arabic family vocabulary by learning possessive forms for relatives and gender-based variations, with hands-on examples for my grandpa, your sister, and their brother.
This mini conversation lesson revises material and introduces new Arabic words and sentences, including hello and where you come from, plus learning the verb to speak and see you later.
Learn essential personal information in Arabic forms, including first name, family name, company name, email, landline, and mobile numbers, with Arabic and English translations.
This lecture teaches how to present personal information in Arabic, including street name, building or apartment number, city and country. It covers profession, email, and phone details with practice forms.
Learn to fill a personal information form in Arabic, covering names, emails, phones, addresses, city and country, with notes on Arabic grammar and gendered student forms.
Master the basics of essential Arabic prepositions in Basix, focusing on the most used prepositions such as from, to, about, and with or in.
Explore basic Arabic prepositions, including on and in, with examples like the book is on the table and belongs to you, and learn after-preposition endings and name exceptions.
Explore Arabic prepositions basics, including by, in, to, and with ma, with clear examples on traveling by car, being in the car, and going to a madrassa.
Continue the mini conversation by reviewing prior vocabulary and practicing 'where are you from' and 'i am from syria,' plus 'how do you go to school' with the bus.
Explore arabic verb conjugation with a focus on irregular verbs, especially the verb to eat (akala), learn pronunciation of hamza and elif changes, and practice regular conjugations across subjects.
Learn the Arabic verb to drink, focusing on present-tense conjugation with same beginning and ending. Use water as ma plus al to form alma, and practice pronouns anti and hum.
Learn how to use the verb to sleep in modern arabic, with examples featuring the pronoun huwa, time phrases around 10:00, noon, and forms like tanami and namin.
Learn how to conjugate the verb to speak (kalama) in present tense with vowel and pronunciation notes, and how past tense changes endings for regular verbs.
Explore Arabic near-future using sawfa at the start of sentences with no conjugation. Practice examples show I will talk to you, I will sleep tonight, I will write a letter.
Source: http://www.uaeinteract.com/uaeint_misc/pdf_2007/English_2007/eyb3.pdf
Advance from basic to intermediate Arabic by learning new words, essential verbs including to be, and core grammar with gender, adjectives, and colors, plus practice questions and a mini conversation.
Please add the PDF from "resources"
Learn practical Arabic vocabulary for shopping, including how to ask prices, discuss gendered nouns like alaba and kitab, use numbers, and express your favorite items.
Learn to express favorites in Arabic for female and male celebrities, and master the word for enough, yuxi, with examples of counting money and everyday use.
Discover how Arabic expresses near and far demonstratives using gendered forms, with four options for male and four for female, illustrated by objects like the chair and the table.
Explore practical Arabic adjectives and gender forms, using this vs that examples to compare tall, short, big, and small nouns with masculine and feminine endings.
Learn to describe big, small, and medium in arabic, with masculine and feminine forms using kabeer and kabira, and see examples like a small cup of tea.
Explore pro level Arabic prepositions, including above, under, in front of, behind, and next to. See examples like the book above the table and practice using vowels and preposition forms.
Master Arabic prepositions through practical examples such as next to, on the side of, above, below, and in front of. Practice by writing your own sentences to reinforce meaning.
Learn the Arabic verb arada (to want) and four to five daily-use verbs, focusing on memorization, present-tense conjugation by changing the first letter, and pronunciation.
Explore the Arabic verb to buy, highlighting alif without hamza and when not to pronounce it; explain switching the ending elif to e and practice present forms.
Learn the Arabic verb fana, meaning to do, its pronunciation, and why this verb is very important due to frequent use in sentences.
Master the Arabic verb can, tackle pronunciation challenges, and practice forming phrases like I can do it, with guidance to avoid common mistakes and say it easily.
Explore the Arabic verb to be as a central tense, with past and present forms using kuntu, and see examples like I was playing, I was writing, I was reading.
Master Arabic color basics by learning masculine and feminine color forms and noun–color agreement. See how colors are placed after the noun with examples like the book.
Explore female color usage in Arabic through practical noun examples. Practice selecting one male and one female noun, then assign four colors across two sections to reinforce learning.
Learn negation in Arabic by placing la before the verb to say I don't, with masculine and feminine forms and examples like I don't speak Arabic.
Source: https://www.uaeinteract.com/uaeint_misc/pdf_2006/English_2006/eyb4.pdf
Begin curriculum one point six by conjugating verbs across slide-based prompts, practicing a one-minute conversation, reinforcing grammar, and adding new words, sentences, and their opposites.
Explore a mini conversation in Arabic, learn new words, study gender-based forms, and see translations to build practical dialogue and greetings skills.
Learn how to say numbers in Arabic, including forty and forty-five, with gendered forms for friend (sadika) and using yallah to mean let's go and go, forget, and bring.
Engage with mini conversation part 3 to learn practical Arabic phrases, anticipate learning verbs later, and practice sentences about don't be late, today is my birthday, and waiting for you.
Students revise and memorize new arabic words covered in the conversation, reinforcing prior terms; explore usage in shopping, fabric, let's go, street, sidewalk, garden, and birthday vocabulary with pronoun conjugations.
Explain Arabic possessive grammar, showing how masculine and feminine nouns take suffixes to indicate his book, her book, and complete four-example homework to practice all possessive relations.
Learn the second part of Arabic grammar, here and there with huna and over there, and practice gendered possession like this book is mine.
Learn how to ask 'how do you say ... in Arabic?' and practice translating these words with examples and homework, using translators or Arabic-speaking peers to understand meanings.
In this collection 1 module, learners practice conjugating multiple Arabic verbs in present and past, study origins and three-letter roots, and complete related homework.
Engage with new words through a translation-matching exercise, learning gendered noun forms and opposites while testing yourself with six items and a dictionary update.
Explore the opposites of Arabic words with practical examples, learning pairs like open versus closed and healthy versus fine, while memorizing new words and creativity.
Explore how Arabic uses a conjunction between two verbs to express intention, with examples like I want to read and study, and explain the use of because with lamb.
Source: http://www.uaeinteract.com/uaeint_misc/pdf_2008/English_2008/eyb3.pdf
Learn the four seasons and time concepts—minute, hour, day, month, and year. Explore gender-aware grammar where adjectives follow nouns, and practice new verb conjugations to improve communication skills.
Learn a mini conversation in Arabic, including do you know forms, gendered verb conjugation, weather phrases, and travel vocabulary such as tickets and seasons.
Learn the four seasons in Arabic — winter, spring (Rabiya), summer, and autumn (Karif) — and explore using season terms to describe colors, including gold.
Explore seasonal Arabic vocabulary, covering winter and summer terms, rain, snow, wind, and cloud, plus beach, vacation, umbrella, ice cream, and swimming pool.
This lecture teaches random Arabic objects, notes noun gender (bayt masculine; qayyarah and tawila feminine; maktab feminine; jamiah feminine), and covers pronunciation and spelling of kitab and kata'ib.
Learn the basics of telling date and time in Arabic, including days, weeks, months, and years, and how to say hours, minutes, seconds, with conjugated numbers and gendered nouns.
Explore how Arabic adjectives follow the noun and reflect gender, with masculine and feminine forms and practical examples, including color adjectives and vowel endings.
Learn to conjugate a collection of Arabic verbs in present and past tenses, with examples like to work, to take, to move, to love, and to wash, plus conjugation hints.
Review Arabic noun–adjective agreement, with adjectives matching masculine or feminine gender after nouns. Practice shows how prepositions trigger kasra endings on the following word, affecting the adjective as well.
Source: https://www.cpc.gov.ae/sitecollectiondocuments/40%20years%20book%20english.pdf
focus on dialogue and conversations in Arabic, teach hobby vocabulary, and explain gender endings and verbs to build practical sentence skills.
Learn to read and derive meaning from Arabic phrases using the English alphabet for pronunciation and spelling, with examples about hobbies and daily life.
Learn to order drinks in Arabic by naming beverages or saying 'I want' phrases, covering tea, coffee, orange juice, other juices, cola, cocktails, and wine.
Explore dialogue two to identify buildings around them, naming a grocery shop, an ice cream shop, a famous hotel, and the library of the college.
Practice reading an Arabic dialogue with slow repetition, first in Arabic and then in English transliteration, following along with the instructor.
Explore how to use Arabic demonstratives this and that to indicate nearby versus distant objects, and practice gender agreement in adjectives with masculine and feminine nouns.
Practice pronunciation with male and female forms using example phrases, read aloud names and nouns, and review gender rules for words like child and book with translations.
The lecture presents dialogue three on asking where the train station is in Arabic, using polite phrases and specifying the Dubai Mall with train number and gate.
Explore Arabic language plural formation with examples from kitab to qutub, and examine how endings signal plural forms across nouns.
We are on facebook now =) keep in touch and share your thoughts and feedback, also your questions with other students and get promotion codes and discounts!
Facebook page: Modern Standard Arabic
Welcome to the bestseller Arabic complete course on Udemy! This course is for absolute beginners to intermediate level+ (B1+)
1250+ minutes of contents to teach you Arabic language perfectly!
I have announced this course proudly years ago, and proudly sharing now with you, this is the bestseller Arabic course you find on Udemy and online! This course is going to give you the ability to learn Arabic language smoothly and easily, with a lot of new features that makes learning easier and more efficient. We never use boring teaching methodologies, but fun, interesting and attractive ones.
This course includes both PowerPoint recorded videos, in order to make sure that i can deliver the best way of teaching to you
This course includes the easy part, which is good for beginners and the part where things become serious, and it becomes even more difficult, such as level 2 Grammar and vocabulary, then to level 3 and so on. Afterwards you will be ready to start reading intermediate Arabic books, newspapers, and much more.
It is time to learn verbs , and make perfect sentences with no grammar mistakes, so we arranged slides to start with random words, small conversations and discussions. We made sure that we are able to move forward and start making the process of having conversations with other smooth.
English letters/alphabet is one factor that will help you to learn Arabic better, so therefore we have decided to record these videos using both Arabic and English alphabet ( check the free preview for more information ). You would be able to pronounce the words easily especially at the beginning of the course.
Introducing:
Vocabulary
Grammar
Conversations
Writing skills would be added also as self-test
Tests
Questions and more
Who should take this course?
People who are seeking to learn new language, who are thirsty for more knowledge and experience?
Want to work in any Arabic country such as United Arab of Emirates, Qatar, or Egypt for example? You are in the right place then
Want to improve their Arabic skills?
Who have learned Arabic years ago and have forgotten the language already, but still want to recover!
Is this course cheap?
Why wasting money on expensive courses and traveling while you can learn online and save/download the videos for lifetime + materials on your computer! You can watch it anytime you want and in any place you prefer. You also got an awesome teacher who will support you anytime you ask a question or send a message ;)
I would love also to communicate with all students, who have questions or anything in mind, we can share ideas on forms and we might be able to do Live discussions sometimes , beside that you can reach me always via e-mail or by Udemy messages, so i would reply to any questions directly through my phone.
I hope that you will enjoy this course , and i wish you all the best in your life and career!
Enjoy learning.
Sincerely yours,
Fadi G. C.