
Explore Jordanian dialect fundamentals, including 28 letters, right-to-left writing, three long vowels, short vowels, and transliteration used to read and pronounce words like kaifa.
explain detailed pronunciation of difficult arabic letters, focusing on throat pressure, tongue position, and voice distinctions, with jordanian dialect examples like saba meaning morning and ain.
This lecture introduces Jordanian dialect personal pronouns, covering ana for i, anta/inti for you, huwa and hiya, plus groups hum/humma and hen/henna with pronunciation variations.
Learn to form questions in the Jordanian dialect using question articles. Explore mata for where, kam for how much, wahad for which one, and mean for who.
Learn the Jordanian dialect weekdays, including Saturday to Friday, with Arabic pronunciations and transliterations such as al ahad, al jumu'ah, and usbr.
Learn jordanian color vocabulary with masculine and feminine forms, listing red hamra, green akhdar, white abyad, yellow asfar, blue azraq, purple banafsheh, orange portocala, and gray ramadi; note pronunciation variations.
Master Arabic possessive adjectives for my, your, his, and her, with gender and number distinctions across nouns like kitab, sadiq, bait, and sarah, illustrated through numerous examples.
Explore present tense verbs in jordanian arabic part 2, focusing on the 'to go' verb, pronoun forms, sentence construction, and asking where someone is going with practical examples.
Learn present tense verbs in Jordanian dialect, featuring ai and b pronunciation variants across pronouns, with practical examples like say, return, and eat to illustrate conjugation.
Learn present tense verbs in Jordanian dialect through practical examples, focusing on the verb want and related forms, plus travel, read, and participate constructions in everyday speech.
If you are travelling to Jordan for a short or long stay, you will need to communicate with people there. The main language in Jordan is Arabic. People there use the Jordanian dialect (colloquial) in the day to day life. This course offers you the opportunity to learn - step by step – the most important and common Arabic words and phrases used in Jordan. This course will make it easy for you to learn lots of vocabularies, verbs in the present and in the past, adjectives (masculine and feminine), pronouns, the time, the weekdays, numbers and much more. Also, you will learn letters and pronunciation. You will learn all what you need to hold a basic conversation in Jordanian dialect. By learning the Jordanian dialect, you will be able to communicate with people from other Arabic countries.
As the first step in learning any language is to learn letters, several lectures in this course are dedicated to the pronunciation of all Arabic letters. Some letters in Arabic letters are hard to be pronounced by non Arabic people. Those letters have been identified and explained with examples and pronunciation. This will help the learners to pronounce the words correctly in Arabic (Jordanian dialect).