Instant Immersion Arabic - Eastern Colloquial - 8 Audio CDs
Brand New : . 8
CDs
Whether on a diplomatic mission, military deployment, or perhaps a
leisurely tour of Middle Eastern cities, join the conversation with Instant
Immersion™ Arabic, the dynamic sound product on 8 compact discs. Providing
efficient, progressive training in every the fundamentals of structure, syntax and
grammar, Instant Immersion™ Arabic concentrates found on the Eastern Colloquial dialect,
the dialect many common in Arabic-speaking nations, and the nearest to
Classical Arabic. From introductory verbs to territorial variations, this
comprehensive CD collection ensures detailed code understanding, all set to a
lively lesson program of useful Arabic vocabulary.
We at TOPICS Entertainment are confident that these
Instant Immersion™ sound recordings offer the quickest, simplest method to
conversational fluency. With its focus on spoken code training, the
hear to discover approach of Instant Immersion™ English Grammar &
Pronunciation yields results swiftly!
• Developed by a respected Arabic translator and
college instructor
• Designed for all non-native speakers of Eastern Colloquial Arabic
Developed particularly for all non-native speakers of the
code, Instant Immersion™ Arabic is the painless, useful path to
correct Eastern Colloquial Arabic. With its focus found on the building blocks of
right speech, this 8-audio-CD collection delivers comprehensive, self-paced
training in standard grammar, sentence formation, and conversational
skill-building, from directions to doctor visits. Perfect for company,
touring, or government service, Instant Immersion™ Arabic is made to
heighten your code conÞdence, loud and well-defined!
Lesson Plan includes:
CD 1: Grammar introduction, Asking questions
CD 2: Meeting folks, Getting acquainted
CD 3: Around town, Street directions
CD 4: Accommodations, Dining out
CD 5: Clothing, Parts of the body, Shopping
CD 6: Visiting the doctor, Weather, Travel
CD 7: Tourism, Family, Schooling
CD 8: Higher knowledge, Employment
About the Arabic Language
Arabic rabī) is the biggest living member of the Semitic code family in terms of speakers. Classified as Central Semitic, it happens to be carefully connected to Hebrew and Aramaic, and has its origins in a Proto-Semitic widespread ancestor. Modern Arabic is classified as a macrolanguage with 27 sub-languages in ISO 639-3. These types are spoken throughout the Arab globe, and Standard Arabic is commonly studied and recognized throughout the Islamic planet.
Modern Standard Arabic derives from Classical Arabic, truly the only surviving member of the Old North Arabian dialect group, attested epigraphically since the 6th century, that has been a literary code and the liturgical code of Islam since the 7th century.
Arabic has lent several words to different languages of the Islamic globe, as Latin has provided to many European languages. And subsequently, it has furthermore borrowed from those languages, plus Persian and Sanskrit from early contacts with their affiliated parts. During the Middle Ages, Arabic was a main car of culture, particularly in research, mathematics and strategy, with all the outcome that countless European languages have furthermore borrowed many words from it specifically Spanish and Portuguese, nations it ruled for 700 years (see Al-Andalus).
"Colloquial Arabic" is a collective expression for the spoken types of Arabic utilized throughout the Arab globe, which, as stated, vary radically within the literary code. The primary dialectal division is amongst the North African dialects and those of the Middle East, followed by that between sedentary dialects and the more conservative Bedouin dialects. Speakers of a few of these dialects cannot converse with speakers of another dialect of Arabic; in certain, while Middle Easterners will usually recognize 1 another, they usually have trouble learning North Africans (although the converse is not true, due to the popularity of Middle Eastern—especially Egyptian—films and different media).
One element in the differentiation of the dialects is influence within the languages earlier spoken in the regions, that have usually provided a noticeable amount of fresh words, and have often moreover influenced pronunciation or word order; but, a more noticeable element for many dialects is, as among Romance languages, retention (or change of meaning) of different classical types. Thus Iraqi aku, Levantine fīh, and North African kayən all mean "there is", and all come from classical Arabic types (yakūn, fīhi, kā'in respectively), but today sound rather different. |