Mashallah, a helpful video for beginners as well as for teachers. I am a student of Darul ULOOM NADWATUL ULAMA, would like to have conversation with you personally. I also run an youtube channel mainly focusing on madrasa curriculum, looking forward to having a conversation with you. May Allah bless you.❤
Mawlana what would you recommend as tips to train the mind in thinking only in Arabic when reading as opposed to defaulting on translating in English in one’s head as you’re going? It seems there’s so much to process in an ibarah, meaning, grammar, comprehension all in a split second.
السلام عليكم It would be beneficial if you can give a list of intermediate texts for those who have already completed the books you mentioned, not to mention the transition from tashkeel/harakat to none tashkeel That’s the hardest part
I would recommend the following books which are excellent readings and helped me learn Arabic very quickly as the books come with audio which is an excellent way to learn vocabulary and ensure you are reading correctly. 1) Arabic novel Saaq al-Bambuu (The Bamboo Stalk), written by Saud al-Sanousi 2) Sayyidi wa Habibi (My Master and My Love) is a novel by acclaimed Lebanese author Hoda Barakat 3) Arabic short stories for language learners with audio by Hezi Brosh 4) Short Stories in Arabic by Olly Richards includes audio 5) A Reader of Modern Arabic Short Stories by Sabry Hafez 6) Kalila wa Dimna for Students of Arabic by Munther Younes which is a treasure of a book taught across the Arab world in high school.
Of course in English we're not doing a grammatical analysis because we don't care about English like that, there's no faaidah. I do look at this and actively want to know this in Arabic, all of the grammatical analyses.
@@angeljar2012 Yes and we aren't against grammatical analysis at all. We offer many courses dedicated to teaching grammatical analysis. However my point is related to a very specific topic which is the ability to read books naturally and understanding the language in a natural way as a native does. Grammatical knowledge should compliment that. That's why in our reading course 'Arabic Reading 101', we first teach grammatical analysis to lay a foundation then move onto reading texts in a more natural way and using that knowledge of grammar whenever it's needed.
Why always India and Pakistan ?why do Bangladeshis not get a mention there are many of them in the uk who are very advanced in the Arabic language Maash’Allah but for some reason you want to give all the credit to Indians and Pakistanis, to be honest here in the uk Iv not heard of any Arabic students from India they are mainly from Bangladesh and Pakistan
Very beneficial. I am learning Arabic nahw sarf. Next challenge is reading. Exactly what I needed and thinking about for sometime now.
Ma sha Allah.. very good advice brother
Thank you for the courage
Mashallah, a helpful video for beginners as well as for teachers.
I am a student of Darul ULOOM NADWATUL ULAMA, would like to have conversation with you personally.
I also run an youtube channel mainly focusing on madrasa curriculum, looking forward to having a conversation with you.
May Allah bless you.❤
@@studywithfarhanwaseem5979
Sure habibi, any time.
Mawlana what would you recommend as tips to train the mind in thinking only in Arabic when reading as opposed to defaulting on translating in English in one’s head as you’re going?
It seems there’s so much to process in an ibarah, meaning, grammar, comprehension all in a split second.
السلام عليكم
It would be beneficial if you can give a list of intermediate texts for those who have already completed the books you mentioned, not to mention the transition from tashkeel/harakat to none tashkeel
That’s the hardest part
I recommend going through:
1. Tarikh al-Adab al-Arabi by Zayyat
2. Nafhat al-Arab
3. Mukhtarat min Adab il Arab
4. al-Muntakhab Min Adab il Arab
I would recommend the following books which are excellent readings and helped me learn Arabic very quickly as the books come with audio which is an excellent way to learn vocabulary and ensure you are reading correctly.
1) Arabic novel Saaq al-Bambuu (The Bamboo Stalk), written by Saud al-Sanousi
2) Sayyidi wa Habibi (My Master and My Love) is a novel by acclaimed Lebanese author Hoda Barakat
3) Arabic short stories for language learners with audio by Hezi Brosh
4) Short Stories in Arabic by Olly Richards includes audio
5) A Reader of Modern Arabic Short Stories by Sabry Hafez
6) Kalila wa Dimna for Students of Arabic by Munther Younes which is a treasure of a book taught across the Arab world in high school.
@@طفيل12 Assalamou aleykoum, do you recommend them in this particular order?
I clicked the registration link here in the YT description and on the website. It says access needed. So I requested
You can register now. The issue has been fixed
forms.gle/tacgL2rLedsPPjar5
Of course in English we're not doing a grammatical analysis because we don't care about English like that, there's no faaidah. I do look at this and actively want to know this in Arabic, all of the grammatical analyses.
@@angeljar2012
Yes and we aren't against grammatical analysis at all. We offer many courses dedicated to teaching grammatical analysis.
However my point is related to a very specific topic which is the ability to read books naturally and understanding the language in a natural way as a native does.
Grammatical knowledge should compliment that.
That's why in our reading course 'Arabic Reading 101', we first teach grammatical analysis to lay a foundation then move onto reading texts in a more natural way and using that knowledge of grammar whenever it's needed.
@@angeljar2012 You can have a look at our courses:
www.the-arabic-school.com
Why always India and Pakistan ?why do Bangladeshis not get a mention there are many of them in the uk who are very advanced in the Arabic language Maash’Allah but for some reason you want to give all the credit to Indians and Pakistanis, to be honest here in the uk Iv not heard of any Arabic students from India they are mainly from Bangladesh and Pakistan
Bangladesh as well Akhi. I didn't mean to exclude Bangladesh, it was a part of the Indian subcontinent.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
It aint that deep bro.
@@mohammedkhaledhossain7374 it is THAT deep because Indians are NOT doing anything for Islam of any significance here. It is Bengalis and Pakistanis.
@@IbrahimAhsanFarooqui So was Pakistan so whats your point?