- Learn Arabic         
Learn Arabic Learn Spanish Learn French Learn Italian Learn Russian Learn German Learn Japanese

This page contains a video (audio) and a lesson about the following: Arabic alphabet, reading, pronunciation, and Arabic vowels.




Learn Arabic اللغة العربية

Arabic Translation

Arabic Calligraphy

Alphabet (Audio) new!

Vowels

Arabic Phrases (Audio) new!

Articles

Numbers

Pronouns

Feminine & Plural

Verbs

Present Tense

Adjectives

Comparison

Prepositions

Questions & Negation

Arabic Reading

Writing Letters

Test your Arabic!

How to Learn Arabic

3 Tips for Learning Arabic

Intro to Arabic Pronouns

Important Arabic Phrases

Arabic Job Opportunities

Reading Arabic Script

Dialects of Arabic

Arabic Business Culture

Arabic Keyboard

Install Arabic

Vocabulary List

- Adjectives

- Animals

- Body

- Food & House

- Occupations & School

- Places & Sport

- Time & Weather

- Verbs

- By Alphabet (A-B) (new)

- By Alphabet (C-D) (new)

- By Alphabet (E-F) (new)

- Join Our Mailing List

Islam

- How to Pray

- How to make Wudu

- Memorize Quran

- Islamic Expressions

- Muslims Activities


 

 

The Arabic alphabet is written and read from right to left and horizontally. There are 28 letters in the Arabic alphabet, first let’s watch the video below:

 

 

Now examine the table below

As you may have noticed, some of the letters in Arabic don’t exist in English and vice versa. We will first go through the letters that exist in English, the table below shows the letters that you may not have any problem learning or pronouncing: 

 

Now we will go through the Arabic letters that are either hard to pronounce or are pronounced a little bit differently, you shouldn’t worry if you can’t pronounce them the right way, because there are always close pronunciations in Arabic, and you still can be understood.


If you are looking for a more extensive Arabic course, we recommend Breaking The Arabic Code

 

Reading Arabic:

 

Now that you know how to pronounce the Arabic letters, we will go through reading them, Arabic letters should be written connected to each other, you can simply think of it as if you’re writing in cursive in English, like in the example below you can see how the first WELCOME is written, then the second WELCOME which has all letters connected to each other, Unlike English, Arabic in most cases cannot be written with its letters separated from each other like the way we wrote the word WELCOME. Most letters should be connected like the way the second Welcome  is written. There are some exceptions which we will go through in this lesson.

To read Arabic you should know that the Arabic alphabet letters have up to 3 forms, each letter takes a form depending on its position in the word, look at the example below and you will notice that a letter has a form at the beginning of the word, in the middle of the word and at the end of the word, some letters however can keep the same form in one or two positions. Compare the m in the two examples below, the M of come has a longer tail than the M of the room because of the position of m, the same thing happens in Arabic. The form that a letter takes depends on its position in a given word, and the difference most of the time is very small, like a longer tail to allow it connect with another letter following it.

The table below shows the three forms that a letter can take, a letter in a blue font shows a letter starting a word, the red font shows a letter in the middle of the word, and the black font shows a letter at the end of the word, as you may have noticed, there is no big different between the three forms.

Just a tip for you: most of the time the letter at the end looks exactly like the letter when it’s alone.

 

Arabic Alphabet List:

 

 

**: letters having stars next to them can only connect with other letters placed before them and not after, which means that if a letter is placed after them, that letter should take a form as if it was placed in the beginning of the word.

Note also that the letters I marked with stars in the table above never connect with other letters marked with stars either before or after.

So you have to be careful with these starred letters, because sometimes they may make you think that they’re the last letter of a word because they have that form of an ending letter, while in the reality they may not be the last letter of the word. The table below may explain it better:

 

 

 

Learning how to read Arabic characters and how to pronounce it will make it very easy for you to learn the language, and avoid counting on transliterations that are not really reliable.

 

Please click here for Arabic Vowels

 

If you are looking for a more extensive Arabic course, we recommend Breaking The Arabic Code

 

Speak7 2005-2006 © speak7.com   [email protected]

Speak7.com receives advertising revenue from products featured on this website.
All Rights Reserved - Contact Us

Privacy Policy