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Exercise - : Read and Write

This document discusses practicing writing Arabic while learning the language. It provides sentences for the student to write without vowel marks. It explains that more experienced readers do not need vowel marks to read words. The sentences are about identifying common objects like a pencil, mosque, desk, and chair. It asks the student to write and read the sentences, and previews learning the phrase "Who is this?" in the next lesson.

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Ardian Cahyo P
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
29 views

Exercise - : Read and Write

This document discusses practicing writing Arabic while learning the language. It provides sentences for the student to write without vowel marks. It explains that more experienced readers do not need vowel marks to read words. The sentences are about identifying common objects like a pencil, mosque, desk, and chair. It asks the student to write and read the sentences, and previews learning the phrase "Who is this?" in the next lesson.

Uploaded by

Ardian Cahyo P
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Exercise

We have practiced reading words and learning phrases and grammar. However, it is very

important to learn how to write Arabic while you are learning the language. Please read

the sentences below and write them down on a piece of paper. You have already learnt

what the sentences below mean in the earlier parts of the lesson so try to remember what

they mean also.

In Arabic, more experienced readers do not require the vowel-marks or diacritical marks

to read the word. We have started lesson 1 showing all the vowel-marks, for
example ( house) where we can see the /fatah/, /sukn/ and /ammah/. However,
with experience, we know from a combination of the letters used and the context of the

sentence what the word actually means. Below, the words will appear without vowel-marks

or diacritical marks (e.g. /sukn/, /fatah/, /kasrah/ etc). Hence, the word will be written
in Arabic as .

Please click on the words to hear speech, i.e. how the words should be pronounced.

Read and Write


:
. . .
. .

.
.
In the next part of this lesson we will learn the phrase which means "Who is

this?" followed by some more sentences to revise what we have learnt in this lesson, In-

Sh-Allh (God willing).

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