Please wait...
Icon error

Some required information is missing or incorrect. Please correct the fields marked in red:

    Modern Standard Arabic

    lessons · students enrolled · reviews
    • Icon star inactive
    • Icon star inactive
    • Icon star inactive
    • Icon star inactive
    • Icon star inactive

    Class Overview

    One of the most common questions asked by learners of Arabic is 'should I learn Modern Standard Arabic or a dialect first'?

    Dialect of course refers to any of the many local varieties of Arabic spoken across North Africa and the Middle East, and Modern Standard Arabic is the variety you see and hear when you turn on the news or read a newspaper.

    This question is often asked by people who want to be conversational in Arabic too. We're not talking about students of politics or religion here necessarily.

    Just people who want to travel and converse to people.

    10 Years old and above

    Nothing

    Curriculum for this class

    The Alphabet

    The Arabic alphabet has 28 letters, all representing consonants, and is written from right to left. Twenty-two of the letters are those of the Semitic alphabet from which it descended, modified only in letter form, and the remaining six letters represent sounds not used in the languages written in the earlier alphabet. The shape of each letter depends on its position in a word—initial, medial, and final. There is a fourth form of the letter when it is written alone. The letters alif, waw, and ya (standing for glottal stop, w, and y, respectively) are used to represent the long vowels a, u, and i. A set of diacritical marks developed in the 8th century ce are sometimes used to represent short vowels and certain grammatical endings otherwise left unmarked.

    Knowing every Arabic Alphabet

    Class location1

    Book this class

    Select a package

    Attendants

    Length

    Location

    Day & Time

    When would you like to start?

    Total payment

    Book this class

    Book this class /