السلام عليكم صديقي، أنا أدرس اللغة العربية وأنا أحب هذه لغة. أنا أحب تقافة العربية أيضا.شكرا جزيلا، مع السلامة. I hope this makes sense, I've been studying it for just a couple of months
Thank you! Can you consider making a more advanced version of this? With MSA conversation starters that ask stuff like “How is your family?” “What do you work as?” “Do you live around here?” “What do you do for fun?” “The weather today is too hot!” “Traffic today was so heavy!” I hope you’ll consider making such a video! Your channel is great thank you! السلام عليكم!
@@Linguamid You should consider learning how to ask ANY question in Arabic. How, What, Where, When, Why. Then you should learn how to say pronouns like You, Your, You are, and I. I recommend evening classes online, you can study from your room with university.
Thank you so much for this, I'm currently learning arabic but become of change in dialects it was getting very difficult, I'm so happy to find your channel
وعليكم السلام ورحمة الله وبركاته I am very thankful Sir for your interest in this product - I updated the product description page to include the required sample collection and more - Kindly recheck the online shop
I am most familiar with the Egyptian dialect.I also have Egyptian dialect and MSA books. I'm not used to hearing the 'ol' in Sabah-OL-Kahir, etc. I find it usually sounds more like "EL' and is printed more frequently like this. I realize the Arabic dialects even within Egyptian itself, has a range of how things are pronounced. For people who don't know, colloquial (informal) Arabic for these greetings are similar, they are just simpler to say.
I work in Portugal in a service area, I don't know as is this process in your country, but is very common in Europe this kind of service. The service area is a place where you fill up your car with petroil and you can go in the store for have a breakfast and others things. Sometimes I receive some arabics people, but I don't know how expresse in this topics as "fill up the gas tank", how pay in cash or card, check the air pression in the pneu and other common questions in the gas pumbs. I looked for in the internet, but I did not find anything about it.
@@meistroo3475 in this case is not only a gas station. the gas station is only a part of the service, it is full service that involves other things as store and restaurant.
i have a dream... to find a video with MSA just like one that teaches the full 10 hour+ basic arabic language. I speak a mixture between dialet and msa/fusha... I get understood like 70% of the time and other times arabic people don't know what I'm saying, so I have to ask them how to say it properly... there really is not good video that I can rely on for this ... just a bunch of short videos. edit: I've studied for 1½ months. I'm a swedish guy trying to learn, but can't find no good lessons for the whole basic language on youtube that is reliable. usualy it's dialect or doesn't say anything about what it is, so it confuses the hell out of me who to learn from
السلام عليكم حميد! In 2:55 for "How are you?" you first say "Kaifa h'aalok?", then, when addressing men, you add the suffix "-a" and when addressing women, you add "-i" to the phrase, but never use it again in its first form. Is it because it is a non-gender form that can be used for both genders or none,? Or it can be used for men interchangibly with the "-a" added variant? Sorry if I am not clear enough, hopefully you got the point. Thank you.
عليكم السلام جوخن adding a or i at the end of the phrase is a movement on the last letter ك - we use to indicate either masculine (a) or feminine (i) - so this movement always come in context كيف حالكَ vs كيف حالكِ
thanks for this remark - I will consider responses in future videos For Sabah el khair صباح الخير we respond> Sabah el noor صباح النور (morning of light)
When you demonstrated male & female versions...you said, if you're a female say "kaifa h'aaloka" if you're a male. I thought you said it that way, only if you are speaking to a male...regardless of the speakers gender. If you're speaking to a female, you use the "I" ending. Will you please clarify, as I heard it differently from another teacher.
I am a little confused about the usage of 'afwan'. I hear people saying 'afwan' for saying sorry instead of a substitute for you're welcome. Can someone explain this? Thank you.
Sure - that happens sometimes - typically, 'afwan' is a reply to 'shokran (thanks)' but some Egyptians say it to mean something like ' Iam sorry or excuse me' this is not very common, but happens - so don't be surprised :D
i wanna someone reply on me?؛ are you english from us or uk? i wanna find someone to practice english with him. and i will learn him arabic. i am serious, we can use imo and whatsup or any avialable app .
Enroll now in my free course MSA 101 www.arabicwithhamid.com/msa101
السلام عليكم صديقي، أنا أدرس اللغة العربية وأنا أحب هذه لغة. أنا أحب تقافة العربية أيضا.شكرا جزيلا، مع السلامة.
I hope this makes sense, I've been studying it for just a couple of months
this is right - bravo and great work - keep it up Alberto - a small thing missing is the article for لغة
وأنا أحب هذه اللغة
Shukran!
Hope you will continue uploading for this beautiful language
You've inspired me so much ❤
Happy to know this :)
I find them easy and useful. This is my firts lesson in MSD. Thank you
Thank you! Can you consider making a more advanced version of this? With MSA conversation starters that ask stuff like
“How is your family?”
“What do you work as?”
“Do you live around here?”
“What do you do for fun?”
“The weather today is too hot!”
“Traffic today was so heavy!”
I hope you’ll consider making such a video! Your channel is great thank you!
السلام عليكم!
I will sure consider this
@@Linguamid You should consider learning how to ask ANY question in Arabic. How, What, Where, When, Why. Then you should learn how to say pronouns like You, Your, You are, and I. I recommend evening classes online, you can study from your room with university.
Thank you so much for this, I'm currently learning arabic but become of change in dialects it was getting very difficult, I'm so happy to find your channel
Glad it was helpful! - it takes some time but you will eventually find it easy and practical than standard language, especially for communication
which dialect you learning?
Where ae u from inam also learning arabic and preparing for phd can you speak arabic with me
Nice Lesson brother Masha Allah Shukran From, England, UK
My pleasure
I am Arabic and my mother tongue is classical Arabic
Hamid, sabah el kheir.
Do you recommend learning MSA before Egytpian Dialect?? Shokran
You are the best.
Great lesson... Thanks.
السلام عليكم و رحمته الله وبركاته
Hi sir I am from India.
I want to buy this product .
I will very thankful to you , if you can provide pdf of this.
وعليكم السلام ورحمة الله وبركاته
I am very thankful Sir for your interest in this product - I updated the product description page to include the required sample collection and more - Kindly recheck the online shop
I am most familiar with the Egyptian dialect.I also have Egyptian dialect and MSA books. I'm not used to hearing the 'ol' in Sabah-OL-Kahir, etc. I find it usually sounds more like "EL' and is printed more frequently like this. I realize the Arabic dialects even within Egyptian itself, has a range of how things are pronounced. For people who don't know, colloquial (informal) Arabic for these greetings are similar, they are just simpler to say.
وعليكم السلام ورحمة الله وبركاته
Loved this!! Can you make videos on Qatari Arabic and Emirati Arabic too? Thanks!!
I will try! The dialects there are a bit hard for Egyptians though 😊
thank u so much
Assalamualaikum. I'm new in your channel, subscribed👍 . I am learning Arabic but not easy.
I work in Portugal in a service area, I don't know as is this process in your country, but is very common in Europe this kind of service. The service area is a place where you fill up your car with petroil and you can go in the store for have a breakfast and others things. Sometimes I receive some arabics people, but I don't know how expresse in this topics as "fill up the gas tank", how pay in cash or card, check the air pression in the pneu and other common questions in the gas pumbs. I looked for in the internet, but I did not find anything about it.
@cosmeelias Thanks for your interest & this valuable request - I will plan a video to cover this specific topic 🙂
@@Linguamid Thank you. I hope that you have success in your channel.
its called a gas station ^^
@@meistroo3475 in this case is not only a gas station. the gas station is only a part of the service, it is full service that involves other things as store and restaurant.
@@cosmeelias some gas stations have a store and a restaurant in sweden at least and we still call it a gas station
Content starts at 1:54
Right but I usually make an intro before I dive to the phrases to highlight some information or to lay a background info 😉
@@Linguamid Not a complaint. Just a helpful link. Thanks for vid!
i have a dream... to find a video with MSA just like one that teaches the full 10 hour+ basic arabic language. I speak a mixture between dialet and msa/fusha... I get understood like 70% of the time and other times arabic people don't know what I'm saying, so I have to ask them how to say it properly... there really is not good video that I can rely on for this ... just a bunch of short videos.
edit: I've studied for 1½ months. I'm a swedish guy trying to learn, but can't find no good lessons for the whole basic language on youtube that is reliable. usualy it's dialect or doesn't say anything about what it is, so it confuses the hell out of me who to learn from
I am thinking to prepare something like this soon - unfortunately Arabic teaching videos of this type is very rare
@@Linguamid I understand. Thanks for the reply though. I have learned a bit from you :)
@@Linguamid Did you already made some?
I'm Swedish to and begun learn through friends. My MSA class starts tomorrow!
السلام عليكم حميد!
In 2:55 for "How are you?" you first say "Kaifa h'aalok?", then, when addressing men, you add the suffix "-a" and when addressing women, you add "-i" to the phrase, but never use it again in its first form. Is it because it is a non-gender form that can be used for both genders or none,? Or it can be used for men interchangibly with the "-a" added variant? Sorry if I am not clear enough, hopefully you got the point.
Thank you.
عليكم السلام جوخن
adding a or i at the end of the phrase is a movement on the last letter ك - we use to indicate either masculine (a) or feminine (i) - so this movement always come in context كيف حالكَ vs كيف حالكِ
It would be good to also add responses to the phrases . For example if some said صباح الخير what would be the response
thanks for this remark - I will consider responses in future videos
For Sabah el khair صباح الخير we respond> Sabah el noor صباح النور (morning of light)
Msa is 101 fusha
Yes exactly
Fusha or Egiptian Arabic what to choose ?
I have an episode about this issue 😉
Nice video but needs some work with the coordination between the pronounciation and the image of the written word appearing.
Thanks a lot for the feedback - I am working on this
When you demonstrated male & female versions...you said, if you're a female say "kaifa h'aaloka" if you're a male. I thought you said it that way, only if you are speaking to a male...regardless of the speakers gender. If you're speaking to a female, you use the "I" ending. Will you please clarify, as I heard it differently from another teacher.
In MSA you say
Kaifa haaloka: if you speak to a male
Kaifa haaloki: if you speak to a female
@@Linguamid Shukran
3:09
when do you use ahlan
We use it all the time to mean 'welcome'. We often add 'wa Sahlan' as well
I am a little confused about the usage of 'afwan'. I hear people saying 'afwan' for saying sorry instead of a substitute for you're welcome. Can someone explain this?
Thank you.
Sure - that happens sometimes - typically, 'afwan' is a reply to 'shokran (thanks)' but some Egyptians say it to mean something like ' Iam sorry or excuse me' this is not very common, but happens - so don't be surprised :D
Hi, "I am sorry" for female is "Ana asifa"?
Yes exactly 👍
@@Linguamid Chokran jazilan!
0 dislike 👍
i wanna someone reply on me?؛
are you english from us or uk?
i wanna find someone to practice english with him. and i will learn him arabic.
i am serious, we can use imo and whatsup or any avialable app .
No I am Egyptian أنا مصري يا محمد 😁
اهلا اخي
فقط انا حفظت الرسالة وارسلتها الى اكثر من واحد في التعليقات.
@@Linguamid 😊
Assalamualaikum is for only Muslims
Muslims don't say it to non muslims
How do you know someone is not a Muslim??
@@sbaumgartner9848 Don't know
@@sbaumgartner9848 That's why muslims should have Beard and wear hijab
i don't think this is Fusha... What is your name is translated to 'Maa Ismak or Maa Ismiek (for a girl'