
Learn level 1 fuS-Haa classical Arabic through an interactive conversation, practicing pronunciation by repeating after the speaker to understand and respond in Arabic and English.
Practice basic Arabic conversation to ask if someone understands English or Arabic. Express I understand Arabic, I understand English, and I’m American, with daily practice.
FCA level 1 lesson 3 guides learners through practical Arabic conversation, pronunciation, and role-play scenarios, including asking about nationality, language ability, and greetings in classical Arabic.
Practice classical Arabic conversation, learning to ask for directions and say you speak Arabic or English, with polite phrases like please and I don’t understand.
Learn practical Arabic conversation in Syria, lesson five, including saying you speak Arabic well or a little, asking if someone speaks English, and ordering food or drink and directions.
Practice arabic conversation in FCA level 1 lesson 6, including asking if someone speaks English or Arabic, locating streets or stations, and saying I would like to eat or drink.
This lesson teaches Arabic phrases for planning meals with colleagues, choosing cafe, hotel, or restaurant settings, and asking what you’d like to eat or drink (coffee or tea) in context.
Practice a restaurant conversation in classical Arabic, learning how to order tea and sweets, ask who you are with, and discuss what you would like to do.
Practice classical Arabic conversations in lesson 9, focusing on asking time and ordering food and drinks at a cafe or restaurant, and expressing what you would like to do.
Develop practical classical arabic skills by practicing everyday conversations: asking what time it is, ordering tea, expressing what you would like to do, and saying you understood or didn't understand.
Build foundational Arabic time expressions through dialogues, practice asking what time it is, and saying not at, with meals and meetings across real-life Casablanca and Beirut scenarios.
Practice essential Arabic phrases for shopping and dining, including how much is this and ordering kebab and orange juice. Learn hours and currency in dinars through market conversations.
Practice Classical Arabic through a street vendor dialogue, learning time expressions, numbers, dinars and dollars, bargaining, and ordering kebab at a restaurant or hotel.
Explore practical classical Arabic through a Qatar shopping scenario, learning to ask prices, count dinars and dollars, and express hunger and thirst while buying a shirt.
Practice essential Arabic bargaining in a market, learning to ask prices in dinars and dollars and negotiate over coffee, shirts, and a necklace.
Practice classical Arabic through a market dialogue on gifts, prices, and dinars, including necklace, ring, and shirt with phrases like this is for you and how much.
Practice basic classical Arabic through everyday bargaining and shopping dialogues, including asking prices, offering dinars, and describing items like rings and necklaces, with gendered nouns and fast-speech notes.
Master essential spoken Arabic in a Beirut jewelry shop: negotiate dinars, describe jewelry, and practice listening and repeating with masculine and feminine adjective forms.
Practice essential classical Arabic conversations, including introductions, greetings, asking someone to repeat, asking where you live, and making small requests like ordering tea or water.
Master basic Arabic introductions, learn how to ask where you live and how many children you have, through university and family dialogue.
Explore FCA level 1 lesson 21: practice classical arabic through everyday conversations, including greetings, asking where people live, family vocabulary, and madrasah and school references in Beirut and beyond.
Fca level 1 lesson 22 teaches how to ask and answer about family size and children in Arabic, and how to discuss cars, taxis, buses, and travel in Lebanon.
Master beginner Arabic travel dialogues: ask about family size, request directions, ask road names, and plan trips to Baalbek and Byblos with mileage.
Master basic Classical Arabic travel dialogue: ask how many in your family, request a driver, and give directions to places like Byblos using left, right, and distance cues.
Master basic classical arabic through fca level 1 lesson 25, practicing how to ask for a driver, request directions, and discuss ramadan store hours in travel scenarios.
Learn practical classical Arabic phrases for directions, travel plans, and daily dialogue, including asking for a driver, visiting Casablanca, Rabat, and saying hours, days, and trips.
Practice basic Arabic dialogue for travel and daily tasks—ask for directions, visit Casablanca, discuss Ramadan hours, bank withdrawals, and stays or work plans.
Learn how to ask and answer basic questions in classical arabic about travel, work, and staying abroad, and explore core vocabulary such as kalima (word) and amreeka (american).
Learn essential Arabic vocabulary and phrases for daily conversation, including asking what someone did, what they bought or ate, and how to discuss plans and locations like Beirut.
Practice essential classical Arabic travel dialogues, including asking when you arrived and what you bought. Express meals and preferences, such as tea, grilled meats, and liking Egypt.
I start with the Name of 'Allaah the most Merciful to the believers and non-believers in this life, and to the believers only in the Hereafter, I praise 'Allaah the Lord of worlds, and I ask Him to raise the rank, honor, and prestige of our master and beloved Prophet and Messenger MuHammad, Sallallaahu ^alayhi wasallam, and his kind 'aal, his believing relatives, and companions.
Thereafter, if you are like most people who want to learn Arabic but need to work to earn a living for yourself and your family, and thus you don't have the luxury of leaving everything and devoting yourself to learning the Arabic language, then this course was meant for you! Now you too can learn proper classical Arabic on your own time, without having to quit your day job. With a mere 90 minutes a day, for just 100 days, you too can learn to speak Classical Arabic, properly and fluently. In this course you will learn all the essentials, from introducing yourself, to asking for and giving directions, common-day conversations and interactions, telling time and counting money, dining and ordering, travel and leisure, and much much more! Don't Wait! Enroll today!
My intention when working on this course was to make it as accessible and easy as possible as well as inexpensive as possible, while staying true to the level of Classical Arabic, helping beginners to speak using proper grammar, conjugation, pronunciation, as well as 'i^Raab (the proper endings and inflections), or what I like to call the essence of the Arabic language. I called it FCA (fuS-Haa "most eloquent" Classical Arabic).
And in the end, I ask 'Allaah to grant me the strength, patience, and correct intentions to continue with this endeavor. And I ask 'Allaah that the knowledge contained in this course will benefit many, and that those who benefit from this course spread said knowledge and benefit others, and so on until Judgement Day, so that this will be a recurring reward for me in my grave benefiting me until Judgement Day. 'Allaahumma 'aameen.