My experience learning Arabic, Persian and Turkish: tips and pitfalls
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- Опубліковано 6 чер 2024
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A couple of years ago, I decided to learn Arabic, Turkish, and Persian at the same time. In this video, I talk about what that was like, give some useful tips, and point out a few pitfalls to watch out for.
⏲️ TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 Intro
0:15 Why I decided to learn Arabic, Persian and Turkish
3:18 My biggest mistakes
6:59 What keeps me motivated
9:05 Why I consider learning Arabic, Persian and Turkish important
📺 WATCH NEXT:
• Exit Video in Arabic
• Exit Video in Persian
• Exit Video in Turkish
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Türkiye is in center of world.
Turkish is not a middle eastern language.
Linguists' opinions on Turkish Grammar
Prof. David Cuthell : “I know many foreign languages. Among these languages, Turkish is such a different language that it is as if a hundred high mathematics professors came together to make Turkish. A dozen words are produced from one root. Turkish is such a language that it is a language of emotion, thought, logic and philosophy in itself.”
Paul Roux: "Turkish is a mathematical language full of thought and intellect."
*Moliere: "Turkish is language to be admired; you can express a great deal by a few words."
*French Turcologist Jean Deny : "The Turkish language suggests that it was formed as a result of the consultation and discussion of an elite committee of scholars. Turkish verbs have such a peculiarity that they cannot be found in any of the Arian languages. This feature is the power to form new words with affixes”. Jean Deny
*Herbert W. Duda:“Turkish, which expresses all thoughts and feelings in the most perfect way, has such a rich vocabulary that everyone admires this language and accepts it as the most perfect scientific language.'”.
*Herbert Jansky: “Turkish language is an extremely rich and easy-to-understand, easy-to-learn scientific language in terms of vocabulary, phonetics, orthography, syntax and vocabulary.”
Prof. Dr. Johan Vandewalle;, now I have learned about 50 languages . After learning languages with very different systems, the language that I still admire the most, the language that I find most logical and mathematical is Turkish.”
Receiving the Babylonian World Award, Belgium's Ghent University Center for Eastern Languages and Cultures, Dr. Johann Van De Walle explains why he is interested in Turkish today: “Turkish can be learned in a very short time. The rules in chess are logical, simple and few in number. Even a seven-year-old can learn to play chess. Despite this convenience, the person playing chess does not get bored throughout his life. The game possibilities are endless. It is a very magical feature that the same situation exists in the Turkish grammar system. Turkish grammar is a language that has a regular and unexceptional character almost as much as mathematics.
johan Vandewalle (The text is written by him. It is written by him in Turkish.) “…
I think that a native Turkish speaker thinks in short sentences, and when speaking, he builds complex structures by connecting these short sentences in various ways. This "tendency to connect sentences" can be weak in some speakers, and strong in others, almost to the extent of a disease. The linguistic structures that emerged in this last situation reflect the superior possibilities of the human mind in the best way. Although I have studied many languages belonging to different language groups, I can say that I have never come across a structure that fascinates me as much as complex sentence structures in Turkish. If you let me be a little sentimental, I sometimes say to myself, “I wish Chomsky had learned Turkish when he was younger too…”. I'm sure then modern linguistics would have been shaped according to Turkish, not English…”
page 257 in book (The Science of Language by Max Müller in 1861)
It is a real pleasure to read a Turkish grammar, even though one may have no wish to acquire it practically. The ingenious manner in which the numerous grammatical forms are brought out, the regularity which pervades the system of declension and conjugation, the transparency and intelligibility of the whole structure, must strike all who have a sense of that wonderful power of the human mind which has displayed itself in language. Given so small a number of graphic and demonstrative roots as would hardly suffice to express the commonest wants of human beings, to produce an instrument that shall render the faintest shades of feeling and thought;-given a vague infinitive or a stern imperative, to derive from it such moods as an optative or subjunctive, and tenses as an aorist or paulo-post future;-given incoherent utterances, to arrange them into a system where all is uniform and regular, all combined and harmonious;-such is the work of the human mind which we see realized in “language.”
But in most languages nothing of this early process remains visible. They stand before us like solid rocks, and the microscope of the philologist alone can reveal the remains of organic life with which they are built up. In the grammar of the Turkic languages, on the contrary, we have before us a language of perfectly transparent structure, and a grammar the inner workings of which we can study, as if watching the building of cells in a crystal bee-hive. An eminent orientalist remarked “we might imagine Turkish to be the result of the deliberations of some eminent society of learned men;” but no such society could have devised what the mind of man produced, left to itself in the steppes, and guided only by its innate laws, or by an instinctive power as wonderful as any within the realm of nature.
Mr. Steve - One a ur techniques seems to be to git urself a hot female tutor (seen u talking with a hot turkish tutor female, seen u wit nelly avec french, now this farsi lady). Can u speak on that in one a yo videos and would u recommend that les eleves de l'apprentissage des langues git theyselves some hot tutor chicks to spice up they apprentissage des langues? Des femmes chaudes . Some might even say that the area a the brain that be dealing with langue learning is the same area a the brain dont s'agit le sexy time talkin wit the ladies. Danke schon pour tes conseils. Du bist der starkste und der ehrlichsten sur youtube en ce qui concerne l'apprentissage des langues, dont je suis tres reconnaissant
@@PimsleurTurkishLessons YOU KNOW The earth is spherical right?
thank you steve. I am an arab and currently learning persian. your videos about arabic and persian motivates me. wish you enjoyable journey with these two languages.
Interesting! What motivated you to learn Persian?
I've learnt Arabic at school in Iran and although I'm unable to speak, I know loads of words, their roots and derivatives and a great deal of grammar.
Good luck with your language learning journey ❤
Good luck from Iran 💚
Glad to see your comment
Trying to learn Arabic, Persian and Turkish simultaneously is basically trying to learn three different languages from *three entirely different language families* .
I've only been learning Italian for over a year but learning three different languages at once just doesn't seem realistic. Then again I'm totally new to this and he's learned over 20 languages so maybe that isn't too High of an expectation.
and languages of entirely different people
Why basically?
@@noamtocause it is very similar to trying to learn romanian and english at the same time thinking both of them in Europe. Persian belongs to Indo European language family arabic belongs to central semitic and Turkish belongs to Turkic
I was thinking the same thing
I love the editing on your newer videos, very enjoyable content. You are my language hero Mr. Kaufmann!
😊I love these retrospective videos. A lot of value to extract. Thanks Steve!
it is not Israel is Palestine
Its israel
israel my a** whats that
It's Israel 🇮🇷🇮🇱
Its Palestine ,geet looost from Palestine you theefts
Go and read the Bible
Regardless of the media attacks, our trip to Iran was the best and most interesting trip of our life. Iran was a safe, beautiful country with a rich culture and kind people with wonderful tourist attractions. Iran is a place that has no equivalent anywhere in the world. On our part, I am grateful to the dear people of Iran.
Are you a woman by any chance? Or a man? really different perspectives for the two out thete
Always so interesting and always a pleasure to hear you, Steve. Thank you.
Thank you for sharing clips of you struggling to speak the language. It shows two realities of language learning that are sometimes ignored.
1) Achieving fluency is a really hard goal. An initial dose of beginner's motivation will not get you there. It takes years of honing your language skills and finding other deeper reasons and motivation to continue this practice to really achieve fluency.
2) Achieving fluency is not the only worthwhile goal in language learning. There is value in every stage. Knowing the writing system will make your trip to the country much more meaningful. Speaking some of the language will help you connect with people on a deeper level. Learning about the history will help you understand the culture and see the connections with other cultures. There is definitely a lot of value in knowing some of the language.
This is immensely helpful. Thank you Steve
Simultaneously learning Turkish, Persian and Arabic is a fabulously ambitious idea. I thought immediately of Ottoman
Turkish and its variation of the Arabic alphabet. I tried this myself; I won't say I was very successful, but pursuing the loan
words, borrowings and correspondences among these languages is fascinating.
See V. H. Hagopian's 'Ottoman-Turkish Conversation-Grammar' if this interests you,
it comes with a key to the exercises and was published in 1907.
Thank you for the reference! That's special.
@@seenonyt2210 This volume is available (free) on Google Books. A sort of linguistic time machine.
Do have a look at it, it's a world from yesteryear.
The Ottoman language was formed entirely in line with the understanding of art. Persian and Arabic were considered superior languages, and Turkish poets competed to see who could use Persian more. Then the Ottoman language was born
Thank you for your videos and your hard work Steve! So insightful and so cool to hear your language learning processes and journeys 😊
Steve, you are awesome! Another very big mistake people make when learning the script, is learning lots of letters at once, thereby always consuming the similar ones with each other - imagine learning b, d, p, q all together, which look very similar and are just right or left or up and down reflections of one another. The best way is to learn maybe three or four different looking letters at first, practice plenty with them, and then learn a new letter every two or three days. That way you learn all the letters in a couple months, but won’t mix them up and get confused. 😊🙏🏼
I envy this man for being such an awe-inspiring polyglot and here I'm struggling with my 4th language (Japanese) on my own.
Mantente constante bro, sobre todo en los abecedarios y como se forman. Mucha suerte!
Me too. It's just my second language, though.
Thats incredible! Good luck with Japanese, wishing you success 🌸
And me ? I can't barely speak english 😂
What are the other two? Just curious.
Very useful tips, thanks for sharing your experience in language learning 🙌🏻
Never give up Steven! You are a fascinating person.
Dear teacher as an Iranian-Canadian person I really adore your training and method of your research of languages. I hope best wishes for you and always I follow your new researches.🙏🙏🙏🙏🌹🌹🌹🇨🇦🇮🇷🇸🇪
Oh, you are ambitious ! I've been living in Yokohama, Japan for just over a year. I'm taking a Nihongo course at the Kohoku International Lounge for about three months, plus I'm learning online. It's nearly taken over my life. I live with painful medical conditions that make it difficult to concentrate - so that's a problem. Still, I carry on.
Thanks for this enjoying and informative video.
Even we, the Persians that are familiar with Arabic script, have our struggle with Arabic language because of its vast and complex grammar system.
I wish you will have a good journey and success with these languages.
If you traveled to USA, you can practice your Persian in Loss Angeles which has over 100k Persian speakers.
Wish you best.
the grammar in spoken dialectical Arabic is simple. Much easier than most European languages. You must be learning Koranic Arabic.
Grazie Steve! tuoi canale me aiuta molto!
Good to know about your experiences Steve! I'm in my first language yet: English. However, it's cool to know about your mistakes and pitfalls. I'm thinking about to start a new romance language (I'm a Portuguese speaker), maybe French...
Very nice editing Steve
thank you Steve ❤❤😊
Hi Steve, I did the same thing that you did: tried to study three languages at the same time (German, Italian and English) because I'm about to travel to those places, but I'm exhausted!!! I don't regret it but I think that I will stop two of them after my travel and focus on English and then come back with the others. I found this experience extremely HARD; sometimes I did some lessons on Lingq but fell asleep :D at least, I understand some German and a lot of Italian ( I loved Pinocchio)
I'm inspired by your honesty and earnestness in sharing your mistakes to help us. You make language learning feel real and down to earth, and less of a perfect process if that makes sense.
Thanks a lot, Steve! You're my language hero!
(p.s. do you have any warm messages to young learners? Or, if you were 19, what would you like to tell yourself about life overall and its dynamic with language learning? Thank you :D)
turkçenin lehçesi çinde dahi konuşulurken nasıl ortadogu dili oldu 😂
ayrıca Türkiye dünyanın merkezidir.
Eğer kasıtlı söylenmiş bir bilgi değilse, internet çağında doğru bilgiye ulaşamamış zavallı bir dil uzmanı 😂😂😂
I have really enjoyed your last few videos covering your learning problems with Arabic, Persian and Turkish and what you have learnt from them. Many thanks. One of the issues I have is maintaining motivation on a language when I don't have a particular need for it. I do read around the history and culture but sometimes I find it difficult when I have no plans to visit the country where the language is spoken. I do wonder if part of your motivation to try out new languages comes from your involvement with LingQ.
muchas gracias por las recomendaciones
Steve good evening watching ur channel on trucish it takes time u learned Japanese and Chinese ur a pro at language s good luck with the new language thank you good luck
Good thing about learning them all is that they all have multiple connections
موفق باشی محترم از افغانستان ❤
Listening to you while speaking Turkish is very nice. Greetings from Türkiye 😊 (Seni Türkçe konuşurken dinlemek çok hoş. Türkiye'den selamlar)
Please jeep us posted on your experience with this. I want to follow your progress as i too have struggled very much with arabic.
استیو عزیز شما فوقالعاده هستید. با آرزوی موفقیتهای بیشتر و بیشتر. 😍❤
I've been learning Russian for a long time (on and off). Recently it has been almost exclusively through Lingq. Having reached a plateau I am really not progressing at all. SK is 100% right about the need to supplement other methods with speaking.
Hi Steve, thank you for this video. I have been studying Arabic since 2018. I have now dropped Arabic and am concentrating on Spanish (I live in Madrid), French, Russian and Japanese. My mistake with Arabic is starting with the alphabet. I now am learning languages like babies do; lots of listening (I apply this to Russian and Japanese). Have you considered visiting Morocco and just spending time in the cafes talking to people? All Moroccans speak a mixture of Arabic, French, Spanish and Berber. Good luck!
I'm sure Mr Kaufman visited Morocco years ago - check his playlists.
After 7 years of casual study by myself, I'm finally speaking Arabic fairly confidently. But I still have trouble understanding a lot of speakers owing to their speed of talking and dialectical variations. I'll go from 90 percent comprehension in one sentence to 30 percent a minute later. Frustrating, but I don't want to give up.
Hi Steve,
You inspire us by learning different languages.
Turkish language loaned a variety of words from Arabic and Persian during the Ottoman Empire. Learning Arabic and Persian will help you to understand words. But on the other hand, Turkish language is a Central Asian language. Structure is smiliar to Hungarian, Finnish and Japanese. In the light of aforementioned information, you can learn Turkish, Japanese and Hungarian at the same time. If you learn Turkey's Turkish, it will help you to learn other Turkish dialects such as Kazakh, Uzbek, Krygyz, Turkmen and Uighur. Azerbayjani Turkish is very smiliar to Turkey's Turkish. Turkish is a little bit difficult for English speaking person. Good news, Turkish has logical and mathematic structure. Good luck. Başarılar dilerim.
Turkiye is EuroAsia country,Yes also part of Middle East.But also Mediterrenian country. Also Thracia side is Part of Europe.And Turkiye is Caucausus country.On the other hand, Turkish is part of Turkic Language group from Central Asia.So best way is describe of Turkiye ,say to EuroAsia country.
*Eurasian
Found the kemalist who suffers from inferiority complex
@@agressivepizza49All your past comments are about Turks, are you obsessed with Turks??? stay away from us
@@Altuntaa why are you checking my comments? are you obsessed with us? stay away from europe.
@@agressivepizza49 We're not European at all, we're Asian and why do you share Turkish content on your account? There isn't even a European ethnic group in Turkey, why do you call yourself European? Lol
Bonjour Steve ! Je ne manque aucune de vos vidéos qui sont toutes pleines de bons conseils et m'encouragent dans mon apprentissage des langues. Je me suis lancé (à bientôt 70 ans) dans l'étude du Russe avec LingQ qui me donne entière satisfaction. Je vais suivre vos conseils concernant le fait de s'entraîner à écrire avec un alphabet différent. Concernant le grec, j'ai passé trois mois à Athènes et dans le Péloponnèse pour essayer d''apprendre la langue puis j'ai fini par abandonner pour 3 raisons :
1) beaucoup de grecs y compris des séniors parlement anglais ;
2) on peut s'intéresser à la culture aux us et coutumes d'un pays sans en parler la langue ;
et enfin, la plus importante à mes yeux :
3) quel intérêt d'apprendre une langue difficile qui n'est pratiquement pas parlée dès que l'on sort du pays ?
Je me suis fait la même réflexion pour le hongrois malgré des séjours réguliers à Budapest.
Bonne continuation
Steave ...I'm curious.How many books have you read in Japanese or chinese? cuz I've read 82 novels in Japanese and there are still so many words that I don't know...thanks
Please, talk about how you learned the chinese characters in japanese and if it is the best way in your opinion, and how you would do if it was nowadays. Tips to learn how to read japanese without furigana, I am tired of flashcards and when I go back to japanese I want some easier way to learn, should I go to material explaining them or just read and repeat a lot?
My level of reading in Spanish is about a C1; my level of speaking is like a B1 at best 😂 however I learned Spanish in order to read and listen to Spanish novels, so I really don't mind. And because I have such a large passive vocab, now that I actually want to work on my speaking skills, it's easier for me to find the words, even if it remains hard.
In Ukrainian and Arabic, my speaking level and reading level remains mostly equal, though I still prioritize reading ever so slightly (can't help it, i'm a book nerd lol). This is because I'm learning those languages with the intention of speaking them, so I'm mixing input and output more equally.
Input and output are very different beasts and BOTH need to be worked on if you wanna do both, but there's nothing wrong with prioritizing one over the other if you're just learning for fun! I'm not sure I could say more than ten phrases in Welsh but I LOVE reading Welsh books, and it doesn't bother me because I'm not going to be speaking with anyone who exclusively speaks Welsh anytime soon 😂
You are amazing 👏
Steve, if you haven't run across CGE Jordan for levantine Arabic, I highly suggest you get their 101 verbs book with audio. You'll never get anywhere without learning the verbs, and it's a great course and a non profit as well.
Do they have other languages? I'm trying to learn Russian.
@@meirabalderas9193 no, they are a physical school in Jordan teaching the local dialect. I know Steve is learning levantine Arabic, the local dialect in Jordan.
What resources did you use to learn Persian? How did you find Persian resources compared to other languages? I am native Persian speaker so I never had the experience of learning it as a second language.
Steve, I don't know if you know this, but if we write something by hand (using pencil and paper), our brain will remember it much better than just reading it and that way I guess we will learn better and faster. Don't know. what you think about that. That was also my mistake when learning languages, not writing anything in my target language.
Should we expect new writing functionality on LingQ?
Hey Steve. Sir. Can i ask you? You think if i take your strategy that writing first i can improve my japanese faster like you did to your chinese? Does it make sense my question?😅
Merci !
استیو نازنین، امیدوارم از این سفر پرماجرا که در مسیر یادگیری زبانهای مختلف داری، نهایت لذّت را ببری! با آرزوی بهترین ها برای شما. 💚
alla who act bar
@@candidfellow 😂😂😂 bro, its not Arabic btw
@farhang-n but it's funny like ziad fazah trying to read farsi in arabic, as long as the script is alla who act bar
@@candidfellow we are Iranian and don't like your Allah
@@candidfellow تو با این خط به فکر تروریست ها میروی منم با خط انگلیسی به همجنسگرا ها😂
There is an app for learning kanji with a portion where you write the kanji with the touch screen, I should get back to using it
Turkish is NOT a Middle Eastern language. It is a Northern Eurasian language, spoken in ancient Greco-Roman land of Anatolia, Thrace, Balkans, etc
it's Asian
I don't understand all these comments about Turkish not being from the Middle East. Turkish originated in Central Asia but has been present in Anatolia, the Caucasus, and northern Iran for at least 1,000 years. There were Turkish rulers in Baghdad, in Cairo, long ago, and the Ottoman Empire covered the Middle East as well as the Balkans. All three languages have a history of interacting and influencing each other and share about 15% vocabulary. Arabic originated in the Arabic peninsula before spreading north and west. Persian is an Indo-European language, Arabic is Semitic, and Turkish is an Altaic language. However all three have intermingled in the Middle East for over 1,000 years.
@@Thelinguist middle east term was created by white colonialists so better not use it in general and Turkish is an Asian language.
I am only starting back into Turkish but Middle East is term used all the time on Arabic and Persian language media and I have never heard it questioned. .الشرق الأوسط خاورمیانه
Maybe Turkish is different. I will soon find ou
@@Thelinguist❤🌷
Have you tried tajiki? It’s Persian with the crylic writing system
Can we get Southern Dialect Vietnamese on Lingq? 😁🙏🏼
Thanks for an interesting video, Steve. :)
Wouldn't it be easier if you didn't have to learn both the new alphabet and the new language at the same time? Have you tried writing English in one of those different alphabets? :)
I've been learning Greek for about 2 years now and then started in Arabic and messed around with some Chinese and Hindi too and noticed that even though many words are shorter than Greek, it was a lot harder to gain vocabulary like it was much harder to remember even though many Greek words have an entirely different sound than English they are still much easier to stick in my brain. Maybe that is partly due to just getting used to the language though as I've been reading in it for awhile now.
Wow,i'm trying to improve my english and i'm learning french,i made the same mistake trying to learn three languages because i wanted to learn arabic using busuu,but i abandoned the arabic and i decided to continue with the french,now i can understand a documentary in french,when i finish the course of french i'll try to learn turkish or arabic...
As a Hindi learner it was interesting to notice the Arabic loan words in Hindi that I could understand during your Arabic speaking.
Interested to follow your upcoming Hindi journey
Steve can you recommend any good original Arabic TV shows besides that UAE show Justice?
I took Persian and Arabic at the same time, it was not a problem as both have similar scripts and the courses emphasized writing in the beginning. The languages are different enough, so it is easy to keep them compartmentalized. Also, Persian has a few loan words from Arabic so it makes vocabulary a little easier.
It seems like you are learning Middle Eastern languages for the same reason that I'm learning Korean. I lived in East Asia (Japan) for a couple of years, studied some Japanese, but I wanted to see what Korean was all about since it seems like Korean culture is becoming very popular around the world.
I hope to still be learning languages when I'm your age!
Türkiye is not middle east country. Do you know what is middle east in fact? Who is fabricated this fake term?
İs this middle east
ua-cam.com/video/USv3yDTq9JI/v-deo.html
Or this
ua-cam.com/video/eo-VC5ZwBBQ/v-deo.html
I have become fluent in languages which are spoken in countries that I've never visited. For example, English, German, French, and now I'm becoming fluent in Hebrew.
I think that speaking with people does help, especially in the beginning, but not as much as reading and listening to content.
Also, I've noticed that teaching English and French has helped me to improve my own level in these languages.
Native English speaker (Ireland) here.
Your English writing is perfect here. 😊
@@wolfthequarrelsome504 Thank you! I really appreciate that.
Any recommendations on learning Hebrew? I heard it's very hard
Açıkıladığınız için çok teşekkür ederim. Steve bey, siz tüm dünyadki dilleri derin derin araştılıyorsunuz. Ben aslında Japonum ama sizi çok merak ediyorum. Her zaman islerek mutlu olurum. Görüşmek üzere.
türkçen harika
@@throwaway2161 Sağ olun, bey effendi.
Dear Steve, thank you for sharing your experience, however, may I respectfuly take your atention to the largest group of people of about 70 m inthe Middle East with no official country known as Kurds? Thank you.
Hello . I am old now . Nevertheless I love to learn languages on YT by listening ! Then I do my phonetic exercices like a parrot would do ! ☀️☀️ Greetings from France .
Bonjour ! Cela veut dire quoi "vieux" ? 🤔
Thanks you for this video Steve. I am Turkish and I am trying to teach Turkish to my foreign friend and this video will help them so much. Sevgiler🌸🙏🏼
Turkish is a very nice language to learn because Turks are nice! I have been to TK about 10 times 🙂 so I think I know!
I speak 8 languages and will never learn a language where their native speakers hate Westerners. But Turkish…. 🇹🇷🥰❤
@@alfonsohshk8998 you can speak basic level Turkish in a month by listening 1 lesson per day from my first list. each lesson is 30 minutues.
I ve learned turkish i learn actually arabic and i will start learning persian in the near future inşallah ❤
I'm thinking of learning some Turkish just for getting around on vacation. "Vacation-Turkish", if you will.
My experience is (German) that it's important to have at the beginning entertaining content like the Arabic course (assimil). I don't know if it's on linq. Get it anywhere and just go though the lessons from unit 20 or so. It's got sound files CD. I hope it's available in english ...
I share the opinion that Farsi is easier for its parallel Indo-Germanic structure.
شكرا لك استاذ
لغته العربية سيئة جدا
My brain is focused on Korean right now - after I took some time to learn the letters, I have started to copy the LingQ Mini-stories in a notebook. Writing by hand and listening and trying to decipher my own handwriting has worked really well for me!
Doing the same for Chinese - I think it started with a short story on UA-cam and I wanted to to translate it and work on it more intensely - copying was the only way to go at that time :P
Wow! such a nice idea.
I have to try this method. I am also learning Korean I am struggling with the dictation of words
I'm also on korean right now as of this week, I'm currently watching a guy on UA-cam who makes comprehensive input in the form of him playing games while he narrates his actions and the game. He has playlists from complete beginner to advanced, what have you found helpful in terms of beginner content (if you dont mind me asking)
@@shanarkhanlou right now I am not worrying about spelling :D but in the future it might good as a dictation practice!
I hope it works for you!
Verbs are the key to Arabic. Learn sound and script, but the Verbs conjugations are the secret sauce.
Would you say that is the general rule with learning most languages?
If you're keen on Arabic, consider using effective tools such as DeepL and Immersive Translate to help you grasp the essence.
Steve, your suggestion to WRITE early is more than intriguing. I think there is a lot to recommend that alongside oral exercises.
Coming from someone who doesn't speak Arabic. That is so true though. I couldn't understand my own handwriting at first in Arabic. I always typed everything. (I'm now faster at typing Arabic than many of those natives in the language. But one though, spoken Arabic is vastly different from written unless it is formal. I started speaking much later then writing and reading. The words were often three wrong ones. Despite having similar translations.
Hi Steve, honestly with reading and writing Arabic - the Quran would be a big help, even to non-Muslims I believe (perhaps you may find the historical realm interesting) . It probably would be unconventional etc, but there are so many readings of it word by word and even letter by letter, and it's very accessible. Every variation of the script, cursive and non-cursive, is available on there. I am already a Muslim but couldn't read Arabic, and it sped up the process for me - there are so many resources on it too. probably worth looking into it if that is your current struggle
Also pronunciation is highly looked at in that retrospect- tajweed classes is how I got my pronunciation at a high level. You read the script and someone corrects your pronunciation (it's pretty cheap too).
Love your recommendation! Any online koran with transliteration and pronunciation available?
here is something true: we often don't know what we did that worked or didn't work. All we can do is as precisely as possible recount what we did to others. It is up to science to disentangle our personal experience into general rules we can leverage.
I think that learning the writing system likely is very important, because it gives you access to a really important activity: free recall and meaningful use of the language. Another likely important factor is social motivation, outward pressures on you to use the language with people you must interact with. The science around just reading to improve is a bit sketchy. It obviously is an important component, but I'm not sure language becomes real to us until we have important reasons to use and master it. It may be impossible to becomes fluent just as a hobby, at least I think that will be a very painful hobby for most people. We only have that much time on this earth to spend by ourselves, and it's so hard to internalise something we never use.
I find myself discouraged in my 2nd language which is only a hobby. I am somewhere in b1 b2 hell and I think something would have to change for getting better to be possible or make sense. If I had something better to do I would certainly give up.
I don't have a problem with Arabic writing system -- _if_ I can see the letters. All the fonts seem to be too small, though, and it's hard for me see the letters, particularly the toothed letters.
There is a browser extension called wudooh which allows you to enlarge the arabic fonts. Very helpful!
Great,,,
This is interesting and it was my gut feeling as well. I started learning Hebrew using Lingq and I really struggled with it because I didn't understand the letters. I haven't got past the first page of the first lesson, for this reason. There was no point going past it, as I simply couldn't understand anything that was written and I couldn't match it up unlike when I'm studying Italian or have studied Norwegian, and that's because I understood the alphabet. I felt it was much better to go and get a grounding in the alphabet first and then start writing it down, just they way we do as children.
I always start by learning the alphabet. I learned the Arabic alphabet, I learned the Hebrew alphabet, and I also quickly learned the Cyrillic alphabet. I don't know much modern Hebrew, but I do not quite a few religious Hebrew words. Knowing the alphabet and vowel sounds was key.
Have you tried Duolingo for Hebrew?
I do mostly immersion with my Korean too - reading more than listening. I took a 3 week trip to Seoul a year and a half ago and it seemed to really help me get out of my rut because I was around people speaking the language. That effect eventually wore off I think but I at least I feel like I'm making slow progress now instead of zero progress - the notorious plateau. Anyway, a had a tutor on iTalki and she was very unsympathetic to my complaints of not having anyone to talk to. She kept insisting I can just talk to myself. She claims this is how she learned to speak English. I don't know how true this is because she also had an American boyfriend in Seoul who couldn't speak Korean. But she insists it's true. I've ramped up my efforts to self talk. I think have found I self talk or think in a language kind of naturally when I've recently been speaking the language. Which is why when I was in Japan I finally got to self talk in Japanese and start making progress towards fluency. I'm still convinced having a real speaking partner, even if you talk once a week, is a huge boon towards fluency. But I'm trying.
I love Arabic, my literacy in Arabic is good but not fluent.
I would like to know your opinion as my mother tongue is Tamil which is considered as ancient language.
First of all Turkish is not a middle eastern language, it’s an altaic language from Central Asia. You are giving wrong information to the people who watch this. Persian and Arabic are Middle Eastern languages.
hem turkcesi boktan
Bizde orta doğu devletiyiz. Haliyle ortodoğu dili oluyor
@@ahmetyigitbabayigitbilmeden yorum yazma ahmad
@@kapkarakoyun ne bilmeden , ülke nerede orta doğuda. Haliyle orta doğu da konuşulan dil oluyor Türkçe. Bununla beraber ortadoğu dili oluyor
😂😂😂😂😂😂
I hope no one feels intimidated by the Arabic script. It's very easy to learn as it's phonetic and consistent. I started learning the Arabic script less than a month ago and I'm reading "fluently" , meaning I can sound out and pronounce almost everything , even though I can't understand what I'm reading and pronouncing. Don't be intimidated in the least by the Arabic script. And definitely DO learn the Arabic script from the start. Almost every "good" dialect course consciously decided not to publish anything in transliteration because they feel it's too easy to learn the script, and you need it for proper pronunciation. And you really do. You cannot get the nuances of pronunciation from transliteration. And you need it to understand the root system , which is vital .
Steve, I am curious as to why you thought Hebrew would just take too much time. I have started with it, but surely it is not any harder than Arabic. However, I admit I know nothing of Arabic.
Not enough time to prepare for my trip, and there are just so many more Arabic speakers. I may get bak to it.
Being an ex-journalist, I have the habit of writing things down so in learning German, I also got into the habit of copying down huge quantities of German dialogues on MS Word, I just slow down the UA-cam video that has the dialogue with audio and text, and do it like dictation, writing out on the computer, then look up the words I don't know. I've also copied out the dialogues in the assimil textbooks. So hearing, writing, and reading, all at the same time. It can be time consuming though.
How could memorize a new language...?
تشکر بابت ساخت برنامه ای درباره زبان زیبای پارسی❤❤❤
Steve es una inspiración para mí para aprender español en este momento me parece que la conjugación español muy difícil 😢 me siento como si quisiera parar pero cada vez que veo el video de steve me motiva porque el idioma que estoy planeando dejar es solo el español pero steve no dejo de aprender idiomas el aprendio muchos idiomas
As a scots native speaker who learnt and speaks these 3 languages, the biggest mistake that people make while learning them is that they assume since these languages are spoken in the same region they are close languages and learning one would get them through the other two. there are so many common words amoung them especially amoung Arabic and Persian but even the natives of these languages find it hard to learn the other two as they each belong to a unique language family.
Wow your accent in Persian is great. You speak like natives
For some languages the beginner courses at LingQ are too difficult. It's not the vocabulary, but the length of the sentences, which makes it hard to really understand the sentence. I speak the sentences into GoogleTranslate. Of course my pronunciation is not always perfect, so I prefer shorter sentences, where I can play with the pronunciation.
Somemtimes I make mistakes which I don't understand. For example I wanted to say "earning" but it was recognized as "running". And I have absolutely no idea what's wrong with my pronunciation.
I agree. I've been learning Finnish on Duolingo for months and thought I'd try out the easiest lesson on Linq...but it's WAY too hard.
I deeply appreciate your content and can relate enormously, especially when dealing with learning many languages.
For myself, the hardest thing for me to do is when becoming familiar with a language, however seeing the lack of importance it would serve me, and choosing to abandon said language, I feel a looming sense of letting down the people whom speak the language, so it is quite a disheartening moment.
Although I have to remind myself that (especially in my lifetime) these languages are not going anywhere and will have plenty of time to learn them, with all that being said, thank you for your advice!
I wish I could get paid to learn Portuguese in Brazil. I have the advantage that I've already been learning for nearly 2 and a half years so I'd be far ahead compared to someone just starting off. Although I still struggle with many things I know if I was getting paid to learn I'd be fluent within the next couple months, I'm sure. Especially if I'm able to hear it and speak it all the time
I'm from iraq and I'm currently learning farsi too This man is an inspiration to me. I wish I had known him earlier, I've always loved language learning since I was a kid but didn't know how to achieve that and didn't know how to do it beside lacks of materials and resources.
Why learn farsi 👹👺 it’s mostly Arabic
@ArabianQuirkSA it has nothing to do with politics/religion. You can say: poetry, music, cinema, great history and culture, also the way it sounds and so on.
@@cctoycc8114 heloo from iran . use applicaion like chat gpt or giglish(for talking)
@@ArabianQuirkSAcouse Farsi is the best language in the world
@@cctoycc8114 i didn’t see your comment but Farsi is mostly Arabic
Your English is very fluent.😯
您好!初学西班牙语。您的网页小故事里有一句:Miguel se levanta a las seis todas las mañanas. Prepara el desayuno y se toma un café. 这里为什么用 se toma,一把不是使用 toma 就可以吗?期待您的解答!谢谢!
When I was a beginner learning English, I just take a challenge of doing 8 hours a day for 3 months and at least I understand somethings now.
Well done. Your writing is fairly good. We would say, "I undertook the challenge of..." and "at least I understand something". Keep up the good work!
In your opinion which language do you like and the best ❤