Do you think your language is harder than Arabic?

Do you think your language is harder than Arabic?

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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ʾIʿrab
effectivelanguagelearning.com/language-guide/language-difficulty
twitter.com/NSFWRedditVideo

Dunno lol
whats do you think makes arabic hard for non-native speakers in your opinion

Dialects most likely. Also, there is about 7 or 8 letters that have no real equivalent in english.

Standard Arabic is easy once you know the alphabet and it's very consistent - There's this system of "weights" where a root word changes in a uniform way to mean something else. For example, the root "Ktb" concerns writing:
Kataba = he wrote
Maktaba = library
Kitab = Book
Kateb = writer
Kotayeb = booklet
and so on.

id imagine that vowels wouldnt be too hard, if i recall, arabic has a very small vowel system.
its weird considering that semitic languages dont really distinguish vowels, yet by your example, it does show that the vowel shifts do affect the meaning of a word.
Is there at least a pattern when it comes to disinguishing verbs and nouns?

no, i studied arabic and your grammar are retarded to say the least

yes

every kuwaiti at uni that ive talked to has told me arabic grammar in school is impossible. what's so hard about it?

Your language is just messy and not even your people is able to speak it

>it does show that the vowel shifts do affect the meaning of a word.

Not exactly. The "a"s in the word "Kataba" represent a diacritic called fatha. كتب can be pronounced as "Koteba", means "Was written" and kataba.

>Is there at least a pattern when it comes to disinguishing verbs and nouns?
Kind of because certain suffixes and prefixes are added to the verb depending on the subject.

Doesn't Hebrew share a lot of similar grammar with arabic?

fuck no, arabic is a mess

>what's so hard about it?
It's very different compared to English. Literally speaking, if i wanted to say "i played football using the red ball", it will be something like "I played foot ball with the use The ball the red one".

But dialects are just the natural descendant of arabic. And it's messy cuz of the whole arabization thing.

It's very similar. We also have the whole three consonant root system, which is hard to learn for non-natives, but I think Arabic has more forms, and something with sun and moon letters which I never understood. Hebrew is much more simplified, even the biblical form.

It is difficult to answer because I do not know much about Arabic.
But Our letters are easier.

>It's very different compared to English
but these are native arabic speakers from Kuwait im talking about, how is the grammar difficult even for them?

But still though, hebrew's alphabet is EXTREMELY hard for me to grasp. It's just that the letters look really close to each other.

There's a thing called E'rab which doesn't exist in any other language. I am sure that's what he is talking about now.

Basically, it is this huge set of rules which govern how words are written and pronounced. I can't describe it very well to be honest.

Дa, Meхмeт, имeннo тaк я и дyмaю.

>Meхмeт

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looks like you found out about the أعرب

>rules
oh we don't have any of those in English

Maybe the same.

Da, Mechmet, imenno tak ya i dumayu.
Yes, mechmet, that's precisely what I think.
ez pz

What's the point of translating his post?

What's the point of your miserable existence on this green earth?

No idea.

Showing how easy it was to guess the meaning of it without actually having a good grasp of the Russian language myself. The same can not be said of Arabic.

>instant butthurt
nigga...
well, maybe your knowledge of russian isnt so poor as you think

if you speak arabic normally then i doubt you would be having much of an issue learning hebrew
most arabs i've encountered spoke it decent enough

I still think it's funny how you guys spam "kh" and "zz" sounds in hebrew a lot.

Yes

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literally how could a nonnative speaker learn this

They usually don't

Doubt it, though I'm learning moon which probably is.

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For many speakers of Aramaic, era-b (the way many English speakers say 'Arab') is the F word.

>many English speakers
*Americans

I meant this:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ʾIʿrab

One Macaco learned Finnish on his own and posted quite frequently in /mämmi/ while back.

My linguistics teacher whos german learned it by going abroad there
tuuli
tulli
tuli
tulii
tuulli
these words were on a slide. cant remember what they mean though

magrebi spoke their own dialect with french word, most don't know
literary arab

maybe

الله أكبر is all I know

this
who really gives a shit

Stop calling the language "Arab."

Literal translation would be "yes mehmet exactly that I and think"

Russian:6 cases
Arabic: 3 cases

Yes

Arabic seem to be ranked pretty high in terms of difficulty.
effectivelanguagelearning.com/language-guide/language-difficulty
but that's for English speakers.

Maybe idk