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Has anyone taught themselves Arabic?!?

 Language Learning Forum : Language Programs, Books & Tapes Post Reply
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Mikael84
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Peru
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Speaks: French*, Finnish*, English, Spanish, Portuguese
Studies: Arabic (classical), German, Russian

 
 Message 25 of 70
06 January 2011 at 1:37am | IP Logged 
nebojats wrote:
Hey!

I have been studying Arabic here in Thailand on my own for about... two months now? I took a year of MSA back in college and my goal is to get MSA up as much as possible before I go abroad to pick up a dialect.

My program has been as follows:

First, I worked through Read and Speak Arabic for Beginners (with CDs)... 30 minutes to an hour a day or so (usually more like 30 minutes), skipping weekends of course! Awesome! Fun! Easy! Good way to get the feet wet and not get intimidated. I really loved this book. I even stole some of the activities ideas to use in my classroom (I'm an English teacher).

Since then, I have been working through Mastering Arabic. Same authors, similar style, also comes with CDs. The activities are pretty fun, it's not boring, but is definitely more advanced than Read and Speak Arabic for Beginners (although no way in hell would you end up being a "master"). At the same time, if I've had too much of Mastering Arabic, I'll work in Easy Arabic Grammar for a little bit (same authors, no CDs, similar style, although a little less fun and more information-packed.)

I've been doing maybe thirty minutes to an hour of activities in those books a day (again, closer to 30 minutes usually), and turning all the vocab lists into flash cards... about ten new words a day. Also, I've been falling asleep to cartoons in Arabic (Future Boy a.k.a. Adnan wa Lena is one of the coolest cartoons ever! Grendizer is also pretty fun. Bayti al Arabi by Aljazeera Kids is like Sesame Street... I feel like I learn the most when I watch this show.). If I'm feeling really feisty, I'll listen to an episode of ArabicPod (that podcast is awesome beyond words) or maybe zone out to the BBC Extra Arabic podcast (I usually reserve the podcasts for when I'm having my mind numbed in traffic).

I highly recommend all of these materials... they're effective, and almost importantly, they are fun!


Great suggestions Nebojats. I listened to Bayti al3arabi the other day and you're right, it's a pretty awesome source of MSA for students.

I'll add my own suggestion, which is not to be afraid of Al Jazeera programs, even if you feel that your Arabic isn't quite good enough yet. Some programs are kind of useless because they are like talk shows and everyone talks too quickly with a lot of dialect thrown in... but some programs, especially those featuring foreign interviewees with Arabic dubbing, provide excellent MSA material spoken very clearly and at a reasonably slow pace.

Actually I think those are even easier to listen to than programs for children, considering the vocabulary will consist of "easy" words for MSA students (United Nations, independence, nationalism, war, etc. eheh)
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KSAKSA
Groupie
Australia
Joined 5145 days ago

65 posts - 99 votes 
Speaks: English*
Studies: Arabic (Gulf)

 
 Message 26 of 70
07 January 2011 at 11:16am | IP Logged 
liddytime wrote:
KSAKSA wrote:
I think you could enjoy Michel Thomas as a 'refresher' since you studied previously...it'll dredge the cobwebs off the brain for the basics.


Isn't MT exclusively the Egyptian dialect or am I wrong about that??


Sorry, only checked back in to the board today - yeah, it is definitely Egyptian dialect but it goes over the standard rules of prefix and suffix, definitives etc etc.
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marmax001
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Studies: English*

 
 Message 27 of 70
09 January 2011 at 7:35am | IP Logged 
Most people seem to recommend not learning a dialect first but to learn MSA. I don't understand why that is- especially since no-one speaks MSA. Can someone please explain?
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Journeyer
Triglot
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United States
tristan85.blogspot.c
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Studies: Sign Language

 
 Message 28 of 70
09 January 2011 at 7:51am | IP Logged 
I don't speak Arabic yet, but I think the basis behind that logic is that MSA is understood across the Arabic-speaking world since it's the language of the media. I was always under the impression that newscasts are given in MSA, and that it is spoken as a mediating language between speakers of many dialects or in places like the UN. Correct me if I'm wrong on this. Essentially I think it's more bang for your buck, as it covers a large geographic area.

I've heard that MSA is the Arabic that has a standard writing system too, although I'm sure dialects have their own modified written system.

There's nothing wrong with learning a dialect if you know where it is you are going. If you are going to be working in say Iraq or with Jordanians, then learn their dialect. But for people thinking about learning Arabic yet are unfamiliar with concepts like diglossa (an official language and a regional variation spoken) or how varied the Arabic language is, it's dangerous to have them start out learning Gulf Arabic only to find out they've wasted their time because it's only understood in certain parts. However, I would imagine that even if the student set out believing this, they would soon find out for themselves the stickiness of the situation.

As I said: I've not yet studied Arabic, so if there is a clearer answer or if I've misspoken, please chime in.

Edited by Journeyer on 09 January 2011 at 7:51am

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nebojats
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Speaks: English*, Spanish, Thai
Studies: French, Arabic (Written), Mandarin, Italian

 
 Message 29 of 70
09 January 2011 at 8:06am | IP Logged 
@Mikael84:

I'll definitely give some of the more "grown-up" shwos a listen, now. Thanks for the suggestion.

@marmax001 and journeyer:

As far as I understand it, Journeyer's pretty spot on. This is the matephor (correct word?) I've come up with for the Arabic situation. Imagine that every English-speaking country speaks really distinct dialects or even types of patois. These variants are so different, that they're not very mutually intelligible (like a rural Jamaican talking to some Irish farmer talking to a Singporean with the most intense Singlish you can imagine). Yet nearly all the news and media is Standard English or at least heavily influenced by Standard English.
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Journeyer
Triglot
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United States
tristan85.blogspot.c
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946 posts - 1110 votes 
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Studies: Sign Language

 
 Message 30 of 70
09 January 2011 at 8:11am | IP Logged 
I think that's an apt metaphor. I don't think it's not that anyone *speaks* MSA in that it is not orally understood, which is what it sounds like one one says "no one speaks it." It's just that probably no one speaks it as the language they grew up with and learned from their parents. It is spoken, but just not in homes or among friends who speak a regional variation and so don't need to speak it with one another.
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liddytime
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United States
mainlymagyar.wordpre
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Speaks: English*, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Galician
Studies: Hungarian, Vietnamese, Modern Hebrew, Norwegian, Persian, Arabic (Written)

 
 Message 31 of 70
09 January 2011 at 3:05pm | IP Logged 
marmax001 wrote:
Most people seem to recommend not learning a dialect first but to learn MSA. I don't
understand why that is- especially since no-one speaks MSA. Can someone please explain?


This is a great article which can help clarify it for you!

http://how-to-learn-
any-language.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=15493&PN=39



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marmax001
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United States
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 Message 32 of 70
10 January 2011 at 5:01pm | IP Logged 
To me it seems more logical to learn the language of the place you intend to live in or of the people you intend to communicate with. It seems like a waste of time to learn MSA in lieu of the spoken language. I think it would be more beneficial to learn them together since they are not so different. Otherwise the argument that MSA is universal would fall flat.


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