- Flashcards
- What is Arabic?
- Core Vocabulary
- Essential Grammar
- Pronunciation & Script
- Common Mistakes
- Learning Resources
- Culture & Context
- Related Guides
1. Flashcards
2. What is Arabic?
Arabic (العربية) is a Semitic language with around 400 million speakers across the Middle East and North Africa, and the liturgical language of Islam. It is written right-to-left in the Arabic script.
A crucial fact for learners is diglossia: Modern Standard Arabic (MSA, fuṣḥā) is the shared written and formal language across the Arab world, while everyday speech uses regional dialects (Egyptian, Levantine, Gulf, Maghrebi…) that differ significantly. This guide teaches MSA — the key to reading, news, and pan-Arab communication — and you then add a spoken dialect for daily life.
Why learn Arabic?
- Vast reach — One written standard unlocks more than twenty countries and 400 million people.
- An elegant root system — Words are built from three-consonant roots — once you see it, vocabulary becomes patterned, not random.
- A great literary & sacred tradition — From the Quran to classical poetry to modern media.
- High value, real challenge — Arabic is demanding for English speakers but deeply rewarding.
3. Core Vocabulary (1–89)
Useful high-frequency Modern Standard Arabic words in the Arabic script (right-to-left) with a romanization and English translation. This is the exact deck used by the flashcard trainer above. Use the search box to filter.
| # | العربية | English |
|---|
4. Essential Grammar
Arabic grammar is organized around the triliteral root: most words come from a three-consonant root slotted into patterns. From k–t–b (writing): kataba (he wrote), kitāb (book), kātib (writer), maktab (office), maktaba (library).
Key features
| Feature | Notes |
|---|---|
| word order | MSA is often Verb–Subject–Object |
| the article al- | one definite article for all nouns: al-bayt (the house) |
| gender + dual | masculine/feminine, and a special dual for exactly two |
| broken plurals | many plurals change the word internally: kitāb → kutub |
Full MSA marks case with short-vowel endings that are usually left unwritten; beginners read mostly without them and add them with practice.
5. Pronunciation & Script
The Arabic script is an abjad (short vowels usually unwritten) and letters change shape by position. The hard part for English speakers is a set of throat and emphatic consonants with no English equivalent.
| Sound | Notes | Example |
|---|---|---|
| ع (ʿayn) | a voiced constriction deep in the throat | ʿarabī (Arabic) |
| ح (ḥ) | a sharp, breathy "h" from the throat | ḥubb (love) |
| ق (q) | a "k" made far back, near the uvula | qalb (heart) |
| خ (kh) / غ (gh) | like Scottish "loch" / a French "r" | khubz (bread) |
| emphatic ص ض ط ظ | "heavy" versions of s, d, t, z | ṣadīq (friend) |
6. Common Mistakes
- Learning only MSA (or only a dialect) — you need MSA to read and a spoken dialect to chat. Plan for both.
- Skipping the throat consonants — ʿayn (ع) and ḥ (ح) are real, distinct sounds; don't approximate them as "a" and "h."
- Fighting the root system — embrace it: learning roots and patterns makes vocabulary multiply quickly.
- Ignoring sun and moon letters — the l of al- assimilates before "sun letters": al-shams is pronounced ash-shams.
- Expecting written short vowels — they're usually omitted; you supply them from knowing the pattern.
7. Learning Resources
- "Al-Kitaab" (Brustad, Al-Batal, Al-Tonsi) intermediate — The standard university MSA course in the English-speaking world.
- Madinah Arabic books beginner — A free, classic, grammar-first route into MSA.
- Hans Wehr Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic all levels — The essential MSA reference; organized by root.
- Al Jazeera & Arabic news/series intermediate — Authentic MSA input; pick a dialect channel for spoken practice.
- iTalki all levels — Tutors for MSA and for specific dialects; say which you want.
8. Culture & Context
One language, many tongues
The fuṣḥā/dialect split means a Moroccan and an Iraqi may write the same Arabic but speak very differently. Choosing your dialect (often Egyptian for media reach, or Levantine) is part of planning your study.
The Quran and the classical tradition
Classical Arabic carries immense religious and literary weight; the script and language are objects of art in calligraphy and poetry across the Islamic world.
Hospitality and greetings
Greetings are warm and layered (as-salāmu ʿalaykum and its reply), and hospitality is a deep cultural value — a few courteous phrases go a long way.