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arabic textbook courses

Institute of the Language of the Quran Toronto Logo

Summary

LQToronto.com is the official website of the Institute of the Language of the Quran in Toronto. The website is not for profit, and offers all of the Madinah Arabic courses for free as downloads of the texts and viewing of the videos.

There is an amazing amount of material available for free on this website. It is enough to allow an individual learner to learn to read, write and speak the Arabic of the Qu'ran without any further materials - truly amazing!

Also on the website is a shop where you can purchase the texts at cost, with no additional fees. Finally, you may want have a look at and participate in the site's nascent forum.

From Website

V. Abdur Rahim was born in the small town of Vaniyambadi in the state of Tamil Nadu, India in 1933. After finishing his secondary school studies, he joined Presidency College, University of Madras where he majored in English Language and Literature. He graduated in 1957. In 1964, he joined al-Azhar University, Cairo, where he did his M.Phil. and Ph.D. in Arabic Philology.

LQToronto Logo

It is to be noted that Abdur Rahim learnt Arabic by himself. The school where he did his secondary school studies offered Arabic, but the lessons it offered consisted of only memorizing the conjugation tables. Abdur Rahim detested this method. He thought that it was the most unnatural way of learning a language. Only dead languages like Latin, Syriac, etc. are taught this way. Living languages teach sentences straightaway. He decided to design a curriculum to teach Arabic to non-native speakers of Arabic.

In 1969, he joined the Islamic University of Madinah to teach Arabic Philology. Here, he was also associated with the Programme of teaching Arabic as a foreign language. The course he designed for this purpose is now known as Durûs al-Lughaħ al-‘Arabiyya ħ li-Ghair al-Nâtiqîna Bihâ. (Now these books are popularly known throughout the world as “MADINA BOOKS”.)

When he was learning Arabic by himself, Abdur Rahim studied the many problems that beset the non-native students of Arabic, and tried to solve them. He discovered that all these problems can easily be solved by applying the principle of taqdîm al- usûl ‘ala al-furû‘, i.e. teaching the primary elements before the secondary elements. The following are some of the manifestations of the application of this principle:

1. Teaching the primary case-endings before the secondary endings, so you teach the masrûf noun before the mamnû‘ min al-sarf, and the al-af‘âl al-arba‘aħ before the al-af‘âl al-khamsaħ.
2. Teaching the sâlim verb before the other categories.
3. Teaching the al-mudâri‘ al-marfû‘ before the al-mudâri‘ al-mansûb or al-mudâri‘ al-majzûm.
4. Teaching the plural of intelligent nouns before that of non-intelligent nouns.

Learn the Arabic of the Quran for Muslims

Another principle Abdur Rahim advocates is that rules of waqfshould not be applied during the teaching stage, for in that case the student cannot learn the correct ending of the last word in the sentence as, ma smu-ka and ma smu-ki, for example, are both reduced to ma smu-k.

The following are the books Dr. Abdur Rahim has written in field of teaching Arabic as a foreign language:

1. Durûs al-Lughaħ al-‘Arabiyyaħ (3 parts).
2. Key To Durûs al-Lughaħ al-‘Arabiyyaħ (3 parts).
3. Key To Exercises of Durûs al-Lughaħ al-‘Arabiyyaħ (3 parts).
4. Teachers' Guide To Durûs al-Lughaħ al-‘Arabiyyaħ (3 parts).
5. A Glossary of Words used in Durûs al-Lughaħ al-‘Arabiyyaħ.
6. Ahadith Sahlaħ.
7. Nusûs min al-Hadîth al-Nabawyyi al-Sharîf.
8. Nusûs Islâmiyyaħ.
9. From Esfahan To Madinah.
10. Al-Bâhith ‘an al-Haqq.
11. Innahumâ min Mishkâħ Wahidaħ.
12. Fi Balât Hiraql.
13. Abshir bi-Khayri Yawm.
14. Arba‘ûna Hadîthan.
15. Al-Mus‘if fî Lughati wa I‘râbi Suraħi Yûsuf.

Currently, Dr V. Abdur Rahim is Director, Translation Centre, King Fahd Qur'an Printing Complex, Madinah Munawwarah.

Visit www.lqtoronto.com

Your rating: None Average: 4.1 (57 votes)

FSI Arabic Language Courses Logo

Summary

FSI is an acronym for the Foreign Service Institute, "the (US) Federal Government's primary training institution for officers and support personnel of the U.S. foreign affairs community".

Over the years, the FSI has researched, designed and taught language courses to Foreign Service staff and diplomats. These courses are now available and licensed to the Public Domain.

FSI-Language-Courses.org is a sweet and simple website that provides users with the ability to view and download the Foreign Service Institute's courses for 31+ languages. The content is provided by individuals donating time and resources in an overall effort to provide quality languages-learning materials for free worldwide.

Sounds good to me. :)

In the Arabic section of the site, there are currently 5 courses available for download:

  • Classical Arabic: The Writing System
  • From Eastern To Western Arabic
  • Levantine Arabic: Introduction to Pronunciation
  • Levantine and Egyptian Arabic Comparative Study
  • Saudi Arabic Basic Course (Urban Hijazi Dialect)

From Website

Welcome to fsi-language-courses.com, the home for language courses developed by the Foreign Service Institute. These courses were developed by the United States government and are in the public domain.

This site is dedicated to making these language courses freely available in an electronic format. This site is not affiliated in any way with any government entity; it is an independent, non-profit effort to foster the learning of worldwide languages. Courses here are made available through the private efforts of individuals who are donating their time and resources to provide quality materials for language learning.

Visit FSI-Language-Courses.org

Your rating: None Average: 3.6 (7 votes)

DILAP Logo

Summary

DILAP is a publishing company and offers books for student of the Arabic language. They have a cool web tools for Arabic learners: animated Arabic script with simultaneous audio.

They also have some general information for Arabic learners of the beginning level, as well as an RSS feed for site updates.

From Website

The gates of the Arabic language

The reasons why we feel attracted to a foreign language are always quite personal; they depend on our own story and on our own background. Learning a language may at first sight look complex, demanding and time consuming.

That is why Dilap has come up with the idea of having several points of entry to the language, called gates.

make it possible to learn the language in different ways, none of them necessarily being a full approach to it but still remaining both fast and concrete ways to apprehend it. In that way the Great Gate to the Arabic language for a beginner would be our comprehensive teaching method called "Al-Manhaj" which will teach the learner the basics in grammar, spelling, phonetics, writing and vocabulary. Yet for those attracted to the mysteries of Arabic writing...

Our handbook entitled "Kitaba or the correct writing of Arabic" would be the ideal gate. Besides being a thorough collection of letter spellings, this book, which goes with a 65-minute audio cd, is a real phonetic gold mine to help the beginner become familiar with and absorb the accent, the pronunciation and the music of the Arabic language.

The appeal for the language may come from a desire to be able to exchange immediately in the oral, dialectal Arabic. If so, the best gate would be our handbook called "dialectal Al-Manhaj", which has been devised in relation to our book dealing with litteral Arabic, namely "Al-Manhaj". It tackles the learning of the oral, North African dialect in much the same thorough and methodological way. Each word or phrase is given its equivalent in written Arabic as well as its variants in the Moroccan, Tunisian and Algerian dialects.

Last of all, for intermediate learners who want to get a better grasp of part of the Arabic literature and culture, our book called "Sufis, Lovers and Eyes", which introduces many illustrated, handwritten texts, and goes with an Arabic/French lexicon, will be the appropriate gate to rapid, cursory reading.

Visit DILAP.

Syrian Arabic Logo

Summary

This resource offers a free chapter with audio and illustrations of their textbook for learning the colloquial Syrian Arabic spoken in Syria, Lebanon and Jordan.

From Website

Free Syrian Colloquial Arabic Course

Syrian Colloquial Arabic, a Functional Course by Mary-Jane Liddicoat, Richard Lennane and Dr Iman Abdul Rahim, 1998 ISBN 0-646-36958-X

Syrian Colloquial Arabic, a Functional Course is a 400-page illustrated and fully indexed textbook, accompanied by 180 minutes of authentic recorded conversations.

Your rating: None Average: 4.1 (9 votes)
Breaking the Arabic Code: 10 Books Reveal the Secrets to Learning the Arabic Language