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Leslie McLoughlin . University of Exeter. WELCOME TO ARABIC!!. تعلموا اللغة العربية، فإنها تثبت القلوب، وتزيد في المروءة Abu Muslim Al-Basri,quoting the Caliph Umar,7 th century AD “Learn the Arabic language since it gives hearts endurance and increases [manly] virtue.”.
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Leslie McLoughlin University of Exeter
WELCOME TO ARABIC!! تعلموا اللغة العربية، فإنها تثبت القلوب، وتزيد في المروءة Abu Muslim Al-Basri,quoting the Caliph Umar,7th century AD “Learn the Arabic language since it gives hearts endurance and increases [manly] virtue.”
Wisdom has alighted on three things:the brain of the Franks,the hands of the Chinese and the tongue of the Arabs(P.K.Hitti,History of the Arabs,10th ed.,p. 91)
Arabic and Islam • In the name of the Most Compassionate, the Most Merciful
Arabic in the Modern World • Arabic is spoken as the first or second language by some 325 million people • Modern Written Arabic is the direct descendant of Classical Arabic,of which the first model was the Holy Koran: both versions use practically the same grammar,vocabulary and writing system • Arabic is one of the 6 working languages of the United Nations • Written Arabic is uniform in all countries of the Arab League • The language of radio and television is simply the spoken form of Written Arabic • This media language is sometimes called Modern Standard Arabic and is also used widely in teaching in schools and universities • It can be used conversationally between Arabs from widely separated areas,for instance between a Moroccan and a Kuwaiti • Spoken Standard Arabic can also be of use for non-Arabs coming to an area whose dialect is unfamiliar to them • Arabs normally speak the dialect they grew up with and have no complexes such as are found in British English (Think of “My Fair Lady”,Pygmalion and Professor Higgins…..) • Dialect or colloquial Arabic is never written ,except for comic effect.
Arabic at Exeter • You will become familiar with • Classical Arabic • Modern Written Arabic • Standard Spoken Arabic • One or more dialects • The Year Abroad is spent in one of several dialect areas,e.g. Syria,Egypt,Yemen
All you need to know about Arabic before you start • Arabic is a Semitic language,i.e. of the family of Hebrew and Aramaic but not of the same familiy as Farsi,Turkish or Kurdish • The main feature of Semitic languages is the 3-letter root system: i.e. s-l-m means “peace” in Arabic (salaam) and sh-l-m means “peace” in Hebrew(shalom) • Arabic’s main feature is the root-and-pattern system where a pattern is imposed on the basic root: thus sa/ll/ama means : “to say “Peace” to someone” • Patterns have a predictable meaning:the pattern /aa-/i means “the person doing the action”.And so..if k/t/b has to do with “writing”, k/aa/ti/b must mean: “author,writer,scribe,clerk manuensis,writer,notary,scrivener” etc. • This also shows that Arabic is very economical in its vocabulary • You will find that your Arabic vocabulary will grow very rapidly once you understand the root-and-pattern system • The grammar of Arabic is based on logic ,economy and consistency • All of the above applies to both spoken and written Arabic
So….why does everyone think that Arabic is uniquely difficult? • Arabic is entirely surrounded by myths • You must clear your mind of these before starting • What are these myths?
Myths about Arabic • The script is impossibly difficult,like hieroglyphics. Nonsense: it is a cursive alphabet of 28 letters,written right to left,which for many is easier than left to right as it involves pushing the pen ,not pullling it. • Arabic has too many exotic sounds,impossible for foreigners. Garbage: there are only 2 or 3 which are not found in English and these can be learned through imitation. • Arabic has a terribly rich vocabulary,400 words for the camel,200 for the lion etc. Rubbish: that is true only of ancient poetry.English vocabulary is in many ways much richer.(Remember “writer,scribe etc.” in Slide 9 • Arabic grammar is fiendishly complicated. Piffle: its verb system is far easier than English.Just two tenses – past and non-past. • You will now learn how to count in Arabic and how to write Arabic.