
This course includes our updated coding exercises so you can practice your skills as you learn.
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Mastering Arabic (the basic course) introduces Arabic fundamentals through greetings like Assalamu alaikum, and explores local Arabia phrases and culturally rich references to frame beginners’ language learning.
Explore how basic Arabic letters are formed with lines, semicircles, dots and diacritics like Hamza, kaf, lam, and meem, showing variations where marks sit above or below the line.
Practice reading Arabic letters using fatiha as the first vowel. Distinguish soft and hard letters by pronouncing from the tip of the tongue, and read words and sentences aloud.
Mastering Arabic (the basic course) introduces Kasra, an under-the-letter vowel whose meaning is break; learn how Kasra shapes the sound of Arabic letters.
Practice reading kasra signs under letters, distinguish kasra from fatah sounds, and read mixed vowels tables and words to form sentences.
Practice Arabic shadda pronunciation, learn the three shadda types, read words with sukun and fatha, and post your video to practice your reading.
Master the difference between moon letters and sun letters in Arabic, learn the 14 letters in each group, and practice pronunciation with examples like al-kalam and assalamu alaikum.
Did you straggle with learning Arabic?
Do you want to start and you don’t know How?
Save your time and let me guide you with a good and easy method to upgrade your level fast from scratch to proficient.
In this course, you will learn :
Arabic letters
position position of letters
Hard & soft letters
Writing letters easily
short vowels
reading words & sentences with Fatha.
reading words & sentences with Kasra.
reading words & sentences with Damma.
reading words with Sakoun .
reading words with long vowels .
reading words with Shada.
reading words with Tanween.
Some tips to learn new language
Have you ever said, “I’m not good at learning new languages?” This is your brain making a prediction about your skill set. If you really explore the truth of this statement, you’ll likely have to admit that you haven’t given language learning much of a chance.
Perhaps your only experience trying to learn a language was in your high school . Maybe a one-on-one tutor could customize your learning experience and help you reach your goal.
Also, many language-learning apps employ features that align with the latest research about how our brains best learn new languages. It’s possible that techniques such as asking you to write, read, and listen during the same lesson will help you learn vocabulary more quickly, for example.
Keep in mind, though, while all the apps and virtual language tutorials available to us now remove one big barrier to learning a new language, if you doubt your own abilities, technology cannot help you. So find a way to shut down those negative thoughts and get prepared mentally.
Get rid of your negative thoughts and let’s start it NOW.