Short Arabic Lessons

  • Thread starter Thread starter Muhaba
  • Start date Start date
  • Replies Replies 2
  • Views Views 83

Muhaba

فصبرٌ ج&#1605
Messages
2,939
Reaction score
440
Gender
Female
Religion
Islam
Weekend evening coffee break? ☕ In Arabic Made Easy 2nd Ed.: القهوة لذيذة (al-qahwa ladhīdha – The coffee is delicious).
‎Supplement 10.2 idiom bonus: كلامك زي العسل (kalāmak zay il-ʿasal – Your words are like honey)!
‎Sweeten your Arabic! 📖☕
Arabic Made Easy 2nd Edition is available in ebook and paperback at Amazon and leading booksellers worldwide. Get your copy today. Also available with Kindle Unlimited.
Arabic Made Easy Mockups .jpeg
 
Arabic Lesson from Arabic Made Easy:

The Six Special Nouns (الأسماء الستة – are the irregular masculine nouns like أب, أخ, etc.) They take special case endings. I explain the grammar related to these in Arabic Made Easy 2nd Ed. Supplement 23: The Six Special Nouns.

Example: أبوك (abūka – your father) ends in the letter و -ū in rafʿ case instead of the damma.
‎From Arabic Made Easy 2nd Ed.: أبو محمد طويل (Abū Muḥammad ṭawīl – Muhammad’s father is tall).
‎Easy exceptions! 📖✨

Example 2: Say أخاك (akhāka – your brother) with an alif in the mansoob case instead of the regular fatha ending.
‎Sentence: أرى أخاك في المدرسة (Arā akhāka fī al-madrasa – I see your brother at school).
‎Master the six with Arabic Made Easy 2nd Edition! 🌟

Example 3: ذو علم (dhū ʿilm – possessor of knowledge) → ذا علم (dhā ʿilm in nasb).
Arabic Made Easy example: هو ذو مال (Huwa dhū māl – He is wealthy).
Irregular but useful! 💡 ‪#LearnArabic‬
IMG_0845.jpeg
‎Get your copy of Arabic Made Easy 2nd Edition and start learning Arabic today. Available in ebook & paperback through Amazon and leading booksellers worldwide. Also available with Kindle Unlimited.

‪#ArabicMadeEasy ‬⁩ #arabiclesson #ArabicLanguage #Arabic #learnArabic
 
Arabic Lesson: Using More Than One Verb in a Sentence

IMG_2044.jpeg

Want to make your Arabic sentences more natural and connected? One great way is to use أَنْ (an) + subjunctive verb for expressing intention or purpose, or لِـ (li-) for “to/in order to.”


From Arabic Made Easy – 2nd Edition:


  • أريد أن أتعلم (Urīd an ataʿallam)
    → I want to learn

Simple, powerful, and super common for beginners!


Another example for chaining actions:


  • ذهبت إلى السوق لأشتري (Dhahabtu ilā as-sūq li-ashtarī)
    → I went to the market to buy

Arabic Made Easy explains this structure smoothly with repetition so it sticks — no teacher needed!


Continue building strong sentences with the full book:
Arabic Made Easy – 2nd Edition
Beginners’ Guide to Learning the Arabic Language
By Kokab Rahman


Available in ebook (Kindle Unlimited eligible!), paperback, and more.


👉 Buy on Amazon UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Arabic-Made-Easy-Beginners-Development/dp/B0DPHQ4F7L
(US/International: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DPGGYGVC)


Happy learning — level up your Arabic one verb at a time! 📚🚀


#LearnArabic #ArabicLesson #ArabicLanguage #ArabicMadeEasy
 

Similar Threads

Back
Top