Arabic (العربية) is a
Semitic language, closely related to
Hebrew and Aramaic. It is spoken throughout the
Arab world and is widely known throughout the Islamic world. Arabic has been a
literary language since at least the
6th century, and is the liturgical language of
Islam.
The expression "Arabic" may refer either to literary Arabic or to the many
spoken varieties of Arabic; Arabs consider literary Arabic as the standard language and tend to view everything else as mere dialects. Literary Arabic,
al-luġatu-l-ʿarabīyatu-l-fuṣḥā (Literally:
the most eloquent Arabic language—اللغة العربية الفصحى) refers both to the language of present-day media across North Africa and the
Middle East (from
Morocco to
Iraq) and to the language of the
Qur'an. (The expression
media here includes most television and radio, and all written matter, including all books, newspapers, magazines, documents of every kind, and reading primers for small children.) "Colloquial" or "dialectal" Arabic refers to the many national or regional
dialects/languages derived from Classical Arabic, spoken daily across
North Africa and the
Middle East, which constitute the everyday spoken language. These sometimes differ enough to be mutually incomprehensible. These dialects are not frequently written, although a certain amount of literature (particularly plays and poetry) exists in many of them, notably Egypt and Lebanon. They are often used to varying degrees in informal spoken media, such as
soap operas and chat shows.
Since the written Arabic of today differs substantially from the written Arabic of the
Qur'anic era, it has become customary in western scholarship to refer to the language of the Qur'an as
Classical Arabic and the modern language of the media and of formal speeches as
Modern Standard Arabic. Arabs, on the other hand, often use the term
Fuṣḥa to refer to both forms, thus placing greater emphasis on the similarities between the two.
It is sometimes difficult to translate
Islamic concepts, and concepts specific to Arab culture, without using the original Arabic terminology. The
Qur'an is expressed in Arabic and traditionally
Muslims deem it impossible to translate in a way that would adequately reflect its exact meaning—indeed, until recently, some schools of thought maintained that it should not be translated at all. A
list of Islamic terms in Arabic covers those terms which are too specific to translate in one phrase. While Arabic is strongly associated with
Islam (and is the language of
salah), it is also spoken by Arab
Christians, Oriental
Jews, and indeed Iraqi Mandaeans; and, of course, the vast majority of the world's Muslims do not actually speak it; they only know some fixed phrases of Arabic, as used in Islamic prayer.
Quite a few English words are ultimately derived from Arabic, often through other European languages, among them every-day vocabulary like
sugar,
cotton or
magazine. More recognizable are words like
algorithm,
algebra,
alchemy,
alcohol,
azimuth,
nadir, and
zenith (See
List of English words of Arabic origin). The
Maltese language is the only surviving European language to derive primarily from Arabic, though it contains a large number of Italian and English borrowings.
Dialects
See Varieties of Arabic for a fuller overview.
"Colloquial Arabic" is a collective term for the spoken languages or dialects of people throughout the Arab world, which, as mentioned, differ radically from the
literary language. The main dialectal division is between the
Maghreb dialects and those of the
Middle East, followed by that between sedentary dialects and the much more conservative
Bedouin dialects.
Maltese, though descended from Arabic, is considered a separate language. Speakers of some of these dialects are unable to converse with speakers of another dialect of Arabic; in particular, while Middle Easterners can generally understand one another, they often have trouble understanding Maghrebis (although the converse is not true, due to the popularity of Middle Eastern—especially Egyptian—films and other media).
One factor in the differentiation of the dialects is influence from the languages previously spoken in the areas, which have typically provided a significant number of new words, and have sometimes also influenced pronunciation or word order; however, a much more significant factor for most dialects is, as among
Romance languages, retention (or change of meaning) of different classical forms. Thus Iraqi
aku, Levantine
fiih, and North African
kayen all mean "there is", and all come from Arabic (''yakuun'',
fiihi,
kaa'in respectively), but now sound very different.
The major groups are:
- Egyptian Arabic (Egypt) Considered the most widely understood and used "second dialect"
- Maghreb Arabic (Tunisian, Algerian, Moroccan, and western Libyan)
- Hassaniya (in Mauritania and Western Sahara)
- Andalusi Arabic (extinct, but important role in literary history)
- Maltese
- Sudanese Arabic (with a dialect continuum into Chad)
- Levantine Arabic (Syrian, Lebanese, Palestinian, and western Jordanian)
- Iraqi Arabic (Iraqi,Syrian,Kuwaiti,Saudi Arabain)
- Gulf Arabic (Gulf coast from Iraq to Oman, and minorities on the other side)
- Hijazi Arabic (West Cost of Saudi Arabia, Northern Saudi Arabia, eastern Jordan, Western Iraq)
- Najdi Arabic (Najd region of central Saudi Arabia)
- Yemeni Arabic (Yemen to southern Saudi Arabia)
Grammar
See Arabic grammar
Phonology
Standard Arabic has only three
vowels, in long and short variants, namely /i, a, u/. Naturally, considerable
allophony occurs.
See
Arabic alphabet for the IPA phonetic symbols that belong in this chart.
# is [g] for some speakers, i.e. a plosive. This is especially characteristic of the Egyptian dialect. In many parts of North Africa and in Lebanon, it is (ie not affricated).
# [l] becomes only in , the name of God, i.e.
Allah.
is used to indicate velarization and pharyngalization (=emphatic consonants).
In the dialects there are more phonemes, one occurs in the Maghreb as well in the written language mostly for names: [v].
Vowels and consonants can be (phonologically) short or long.
Alphabet
Main article: Arabic alphabet
The Arabic alphabet derives from the
Aramaic script (which variety - Nabataean or Syriac - is a matter of scholarly dispute), to which it bears a loose resemblance like that of
Coptic or
Cyrillic script to
Greek script. Traditionally, there were several differences between the Western (Maghrebi) and Eastern version of the alphabet—in particular, the
fa and
qaf had a dot underneath and a single dot above respectively in the
Maghreb, and the order of the letters was slightly different (at least when they were used as numerals). However, the old Maghrebi variant has been abandoned except for calligraphic purposes in the Maghreb itself, and remains in use mainly in the Quranic schools (
zaouias) of West Africa. Arabic, like other
Semitic languages, is written from right to left.
Calligraphy
See Arabic calligraphy for a fuller overview.
After the definitive fixing of the Arabic script around 786, by Khalil ibn Ahmad al Farahidi, many styles were developed, both for the writing down of the Qur'an and other books, and for inscriptions on monuments as decoration.
Kufic font
Naskh font
Arabic calligraphy has not fallen out of use as in the Western world, and is still considered by Arabs as a major art form; calligraphers are held in great esteem. Being cursive by nature, unlike the
Latin alphabet, Arabic script is used to write down a
verse of the Qur'an, a
Hadith, or simply a
proverb, in a spectacular composition that is often indecipherable. The composition is often abstract, but sometimes the writing is shaped into an actual form such as that of an animal. Two of the current masters of the genre are
Hassan Massoudy and
Khaled Al Saa’i.
See also
External links
Web references and examples:
Arabic Sample Languages:
af:Arabies
ang:Arabisc sprǽc
ar:عربية
cs:Arabština
da:Arabisk
de:Arabische Sprache
et:Araabia keel
es:Idioma árabe
eo:Araba lingvo
fr:Langue arabe
fy:Arabysk
ko:아랍어
haw:ʻŌlelo ʻAlapia
hi:अरबी भाषा
id:Bahasa Arab
is:Arabíska
he:ערבית
la:Lingua Arabica
lt:Arabų kalba
li:Arabisch
hu:Arab nyelv
ms:Bahasa Arab
nl:Arabisch
nds:Araabsche Spraak
ja:アラビア語
no:Arabisk språk
pl:Język arabski
pt:Língua árabe
ro:Limba arabă
ru:Арабский язык
sk:Arabčina
sl:Arabščina
sr:Арапски језик
fi:Arabian kieli
sv:Arabiska
tt:Ğäräp tele
th:ภาษาอาหรับ
zh:阿拉伯语