I want to give a very special thanks to everyone that has supported me on Patreon this entire time. I have not been posting resources on there for nearly a year, since the Learn Palestinian Arabic site eventually became the mother of all resources. If you’re still subscribed to the Patreon, check my page to get a code for a free year-long subscription to the site in exchange for your steadfast support. If you only recently unsubscribed, send me an email & I’ll provide you with the code as well. Y’all were the real MVPs.
Its really cool that despite all the work that obviously went into this project and the subscription theme, the content will still be for free. Well, not really "despite" because I really hope that people will support this in any way they can with subscriptions and stuff to make some contribution to all the work that was put in. Best of luck for the future of the channel and website!
I have found it so difficult to find Palestinian Arabic online. Everytime Levantive is mentioned, it is either Jordan dialect and not Palestinian. Would be great if vowels could be addes to the Arabic words for non-native speakers.
As an Israeli, I must say that apart from your opinions, with whom I sometimes disagree, I really appreciate your work for Palestinian Arabic learners. I study Palestinian Arabic as a hobby, and your contribution to Wiktionary has helped me a lot. I don't know what I would have done without this resource!
@@sleepytraveler369 I generally like learning languages, and at some point I realized that learning Arabic could be really useful, as it is spoken by many people in Israel. It is also important in many aspects, like politics and media. I began learning Palestinian Arabic because the workplace I worked at had like 75% Arab employees (Israeli-Arabs), and they spoke Arabic with each other, so I wanted to understand them and even communicate with them in Arabic (they were not hostile). There are also plenty of Arabs in universities and colleges, and I'll soon go to one.
@red-shark useful how? They can already communicate with you in Hebrew I'm assuming, what do you hope to gain from speaking to them in their native language?
in the dictionary the translation is missing, its a really cool website and i hope I can improve my Palestinian dialect are they some excel or word sheets with arabic Palestinian / English vocabulary
Hi Adrian. I saw your contributions on Wiktionary as I began editing Egyptian and MSA entries on English Wiktionary. (I'm learning them.) I don't know much about your project so please forgive me: - Is your dictionary completely separate from Wiktionary in the sense that there are currently no automated mass imports from Wiktionary? - If so, what are the advantages over Wiktionary? Easier navigation? - Are you considering parsing Wiktionary for automated imports? Thanks.
This is Shami Arabic, as in Bilad Al-Sham. Palestine isn't a real country or a real ethnicity. The Hashemite Dynasty ruled the Levant, and they are from Saudi Arabia. Palestinians are indigenous to the Levant, and they don't have a superior right to the Holy Land. Great content, nevertheless.
@colinreese I wonder why you felt it necessary to come on here to make dehumanising statements about Palestine and Palestinians. But since you are on topic - "Israeli" isn't an ethnicity and the country has been created by taking advantage of circumstances and chaos after WWII. Palestine didn't become a sovereign country after the end of the Roman and Ottoman rule (where it was called Syria Palestina) because of the games the British and French were playing when they wanted to partition the Middle East. The creation of the state of Israel was supported by the Zionist movement and the massive influence the trillionaire Rothschild family had by financing the British government in times of crisis. People with more money and influence than the Palestinians had ended up having the upper hand, so here we are. I don't think anyone is talking about "superior rights to the Holy Land". Jerusalem is a UNESCO site, so it is actually patrimony of humanity.
I want to give a very special thanks to everyone that has supported me on Patreon this entire time. I have not been posting resources on there for nearly a year, since the Learn Palestinian Arabic site eventually became the mother of all resources. If you’re still subscribed to the Patreon, check my page to get a code for a free year-long subscription to the site in exchange for your steadfast support. If you only recently unsubscribed, send me an email & I’ll provide you with the code as well. Y’all were the real MVPs.
Halas! I will finally learn my mother tongue! Shukran Akhi!!
Its really cool that despite all the work that obviously went into this project and the subscription theme, the content will still be for free. Well, not really "despite" because I really hope that people will support this in any way they can with subscriptions and stuff to make some contribution to all the work that was put in. Best of luck for the future of the channel and website!
You're pioneering the subject, keep doing what you're doing 👍👍👍
ألف شكر يا معلم
So excited! Signing up immediately
شكراً جزيلا
I have found it so difficult to find Palestinian Arabic online. Everytime Levantive is mentioned, it is either Jordan dialect and not Palestinian. Would be great if vowels could be addes to the Arabic words for non-native speakers.
Absolutely huge! I'll definitely be supporting this!
As an Israeli, I must say that apart from your opinions, with whom I sometimes disagree, I really appreciate your work for Palestinian Arabic learners. I study Palestinian Arabic as a hobby, and your contribution to Wiktionary has helped me a lot. I don't know what I would have done without this resource!
If I may, why does an Israeli want to learn Palestinian arabic?
@@sleepytraveler369 I generally like learning languages, and at some point I realized that learning Arabic could be really useful, as it is spoken by many people in Israel. It is also important in many aspects, like politics and media. I began learning Palestinian Arabic because the workplace I worked at had like 75% Arab employees (Israeli-Arabs), and they spoke Arabic with each other, so I wanted to understand them and even communicate with them in Arabic (they were not hostile). There are also plenty of Arabs in universities and colleges, and I'll soon go to one.
@red-shark useful how? They can already communicate with you in Hebrew I'm assuming, what do you hope to gain from speaking to them in their native language?
@@sleepytraveler369 Get a plum job for Mossad
glad to hear its here!! thank you for your work!
so cool!
this is really a work of art!
you are so gifted and your iniciative deserves much recognition
Been so looking forward to this, thanks man!
Been looking forward to this... thank you!
Subscribed to the website bro. I've been eagerly waiting on this wallah! You are the best Palestinian Arabic channel on youtube . Alf mabrook 🎉🎉🎉
تعلم اللهجة الفلسطينية 🇵🇸
حمد الله ع سلامتك يآدريان ! إلنا عم منفكر فيك و وين الغابة والخ.
I am so excited to learn with your website! Thank you for all the hard work!
amazing work!!
Thank you so much, this is amazing 🙏
pretty shock you're back
in the dictionary the translation is missing, its a really cool website and i hope I can improve my Palestinian dialect are they some excel or word sheets with arabic Palestinian / English vocabulary
Love this channel ❤
Hi, are there audio supplementals available for each word and/or curriculum?
yes, there are - i talk about this in my most recent video: ua-cam.com/video/kdeAGEAAK9w/v-deo.html
Hi Adrian. I saw your contributions on Wiktionary as I began editing Egyptian and MSA entries on English Wiktionary. (I'm learning them.) I don't know much about your project so please forgive me:
- Is your dictionary completely separate from Wiktionary in the sense that there are currently no automated mass imports from Wiktionary?
- If so, what are the advantages over Wiktionary? Easier navigation?
- Are you considering parsing Wiktionary for automated imports?
Thanks.
Amazinggg 🤩
Do you do online lessons through zoom?
yes !! my email is in the About section of the channel.
@@PalWebTV
شكراً جزيلاً
سأرسل رسالة لك
Messaged you and hoping to hear from you brother😇
❤
This is Shami Arabic, as in Bilad Al-Sham. Palestine isn't a real country or a real ethnicity. The Hashemite Dynasty ruled the Levant, and they are from Saudi Arabia. Palestinians are indigenous to the Levant, and they don't have a superior right to the Holy Land. Great content, nevertheless.
@colinreese I wonder why you felt it necessary to come on here to make dehumanising statements about Palestine and Palestinians. But since you are on topic - "Israeli" isn't an ethnicity and the country has been created by taking advantage of circumstances and chaos after WWII. Palestine didn't become a sovereign country after the end of the Roman and Ottoman rule (where it was called Syria Palestina) because of the games the British and French were playing when they wanted to partition the Middle East. The creation of the state of Israel was supported by the Zionist movement and the massive influence the trillionaire Rothschild family had by financing the British government in times of crisis. People with more money and influence than the Palestinians had ended up having the upper hand, so here we are. I don't think anyone is talking about "superior rights to the Holy Land". Jerusalem is a UNESCO site, so it is actually patrimony of humanity.