Arabic Language | The Essential Arabic Course For All Levels | 4000+ Students | HAYTHAM IBRAHIM | Skillshare

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Arabic Language | The Essential Arabic Course For All Levels | 4000+ Students

teacher avatar HAYTHAM IBRAHIM, Instructor & Founder of AnyArabic.com

Watch this class and thousands more

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Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Lessons in This Class

    • 1.

      Introducing Arabic letters الحروف العربية

      7:21

    • 2.

      Lesson 03 Takeaways: The Key Learnings and Essential Insights from Lesson 03

      1:20

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About This Class

Learn practical Arabic the simple way. This class helps English speakers build real communication skills with high-frequency vocabulary, reusable sentence patterns, and short, focused drills. We start with sound and script, then move into everyday phrases, questions, and mini-conversations in Modern Standard Arabic, with quick notes on major dialect differences when helpful. Lessons are bite-size, confidence-building, and aligned with CEFR/ACTFL ideas (speak first; add grammar only when it clarifies meaning). Expect gentle repetition, clear pronunciation tips, and realistic prompts you can use for travel, study, work, or faith. No prior experience required.

Meet Your Teacher

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HAYTHAM IBRAHIM

Instructor & Founder of AnyArabic.com

Teacher

From Vision to Reality: The Story Behind AnyArabic

Hi, I'm Haytham Ibrahim -- instructor, founder, and lifelong Arabic enthusiast.

Back in 2021, I set out on a mission: to build a world-class Arabic learning platform that's accessible, engaging, and led by native Arab instructors.

After years of dedication, AnyArabic officially launched in 2023 -- and today, it's home to 150+ Arabic courses for English speakers covering Modern Standard Arabic, Classical Arabic, and over 17 Arabic dialects.

Every course is designed to help learners like you speak Arabic with confidence -- no apps, no stress, no subscriptions.

Thanks for being here -- and I wish you all the success in your Arabic journey.

Start learning now with a free guide ebook:
https://any... See full profile

Level: All Levels

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Transcripts

1. Introducing Arabic letters الحروف العربية: In this video, you will be introduced to the Arabic letters. The first thing you should know about Arabic is that we have 28 letters in Arabic. The first letter is the litter Elif. The last letter is the litter. One of the main features of Arabic language is that the way of writing as it is always written and read from right to left. As you can see from this table, we have 28 letters from right to left. As we said, the first letter here is alive. The last letter here is the letter. Let's read them first to be familiar with them. The first letter here is alive. She Lord in, in a P. As I mentioned, the letter here is the letter. The purpose of this list is just to make you to be familiar with the pronunciation of the Arabic letters. That's why I'm going now to read them again. And I want you to read and repeat after me. Alif, Alif Alif. But the, the sa, sa, sa, ha ha, the z, z, z, z, See. See. She she, she sd a Rhine. Rhine. Rhine. Fa, fa, fa a le le me, me, me, no, no, no. Where we we. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Thanks for watching and let's move to the next lesson. 2. Lesson 03 Takeaways: The Key Learnings and Essential Insights from Lesson 03: Similarity between Arabic and English sounds. As I have mentioned in the previous lesson, you might have noticed that a significant portion of Arabic sounds align with those in English. This similarity often facilitates the learning process. For in instance, the Arabic letter alif resembles the English sounds in the word acknowledge. The letter resembles the English sound as in the word bank. Likewise, the letter m resembles the English sound J as heard in the word Jack. This pattern extends to the remaining letters. However, it is noteworthy that Arabic contains three sounds that don't have direct equivalence in English, in and in. Despite their absence in English, these sounds exist in other western languages. With practice, you will find these sounds gradually becoming easier to pronounce.