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Talk like an Egyptian. Teach yourself Arabic!
With Teach Yourself it's possible for virtually anyone to learn and experience the languages of the world, from Afrikaans to Zulu; Ancient Greek to Modern Persian; Beginner's Latin to Biblical Hebrew. Follow any of the Teach Yourself Language Courses at your own pace or use them as a supplement to formal courses. These complete courses are professionally designed for self-guided study, making them one of the most enjoyable and easy to use language courses you can find.
Prepared by experts in the language, each course begins with the basics and gradually promotes the student to a level of smooth and confident communication, including:
- Step-by-step guide to pronunciation and grammar
- Regular and irregular verb tables
- Plenty of practice exercises and answers
- Practical vocabulary and a bilingual glossary
- Clear, uncluttered, and user-friendly layout
- An exploration of the culture
- And much more
- Sales Rank: #265205 in Books
- Published on: 2004-03-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 7.80" h x 1.05" w x 5.10" l, .77 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 409 pages
About the Author
Jack Smart has been teaching Arabic for 40 years .
Frances Altorfer is a modern language teacher .
Most helpful customer reviews
42 of 44 people found the following review helpful.
Make sure you understand which edition is which!
By A Customer
...For some unfortunate reason, the reviews for the EXCELLENT 2001 edition by Smart and Altorfer are lumped together on the same Amazon page as the reviews for the MUCH WORSE 1992 version (by Smart alone). The two books are TOTALLY different, so make sure you know what edition the reviewer is talking about!...
I stress this because I bought the 1992 version years ago, was so
annoyed by it, and was SO much happier with the 2001 edition... A few of the improvements in the 2001 edition:
(1) The old version had lots of readings about things like the oil trade and Islamic festivals. Interesting in principle, but the problem is, they make you learn words like "crude oil", "delegation", and "fasting" before you have even a basic vocabulary (they haven't given you the words for "foot", "eyeglasses", "throw", "kitchen", etc). These are words you will want to know someday to read a newspaper etc., but they're useless at an intro stage (and hard to memorize because of their comparative abstractness).
The vocabulary choices in the new version seem so much more reasonable, and the readings start off with things like "Sinbad the sailor", which are fun and encourage learning actually useful words like "sea" and "gate".
(2) The descriptions of some of the sounds is still basically wrong in some respects, but it now provides several new useful hints (for example that the letter Haa represents the sound people make when blowing on their glasses to clean them).
(3) In the old version, the pronunciation of a word was often not clear. Sometimes the short-vowel signs were missing or fuzzy (or some random blotch ended up looking like a vowel sign). The alif-maqsuura and yaa were not consistently distinguished (contrary to the author's claim). But in the 2001 edition, romanized transcriptions are provided for all the vocabulary. (Lack of transcriptions is a complaint that many of the reviewers raise, but remember, it only applies to the old edition!!)
(4) The old version had a Arabic-to-English glossary but infuriatingly lacked an English-to-Arabic glossary. The new edition repairs this glaring defect.
(5) The 2001 edition adds an index, albeit a very short one (1 page).
The only serious complaint I can make about the 2001 edition is that it seems to be make with the same binding method as the old edition, which fell apart in no time.
35 of 37 people found the following review helpful.
Excellent beginner's book
By magellan
I've looked at about a dozen beginning Arabic books so far, and this is one of the best I've seen for the complete novice. The introductory Arabic book by Youssif Haddad and Jack Ingle has a much more detailed treatment of the grammar and structure of the language, but you need more familiarity with written Arabic to benefit from it. I enjoy learning the formal grammar more than most people so although I think Ingle's book is a better book on the actual language, since I'm a rank beginner in Arabic I bought this one instead, and will supplement it with the Ingle book.
I also thought the Hippocrene book was good, and it would be my second choice for a [beginner.] About half-way through the book it started including many full paragraphs of material for translation. I have my doubts that the beginning reader would be that advanced by that time but I don't really know. I have the Hippocrene Spanish Grammar and it is the clearest, most concise, and overall best basic grammar I have, out of the four five that I own. One other main strength to this book is that it can accompany the tapes so you can get some idea of the spoken language too.
One thing I was pleased to see was that, although I had heard that Arabic was a difficult language, it is actually much simpler than Latin or Greek or even a contemporary Slavic language like Russian, as far as the grammar is concerned. It only has three cases, the nominative, accusative, and jussive, compared to Greek's eight, Latin and Russian's six (and the vocative case in Latin is hardly ever used), and German's four. The nouns are marked for the single, dual, and plural, which is different from English, which lost the dual inflection like many Indo-European languages many centuries ago. But the books make it clear that in modern spoken Arabic the three noun declensions are pretty much universally ignored, and you don't really learn them. The only time you need to know them is if you're reading classical literature or the Koran, or in academic discourse, where it might be used.
However, one difficult thing is that Arabic has many different ways of marking the plural, and here it resembles the complex rules in English for the use of the apostrophe, which causes almost as many problems for native speakers as for foreigners.
That having been said, verb conjugations in Arabic are not difficult and are quite regular, unlike Latin and many other languages. Here Arabic resembles Japanese, which also has a very regular verbal system, and you can count the number of irregular verbs in Japanese literally on the fingers of one hand, and also Chinese, which has no conjugation for gender, number, or anything else. In fact Arabic's is so regular that Arabic dictionaries can refer to the verbs by a number system (I-X). So it appears that the main difficulty in Arabic is learning the alphabet, which is more complex than in English since the individual letters alter their form depending on whether they're at the beginning or end of a word, or in the middle. Another similarity between Arabic and Japanese, oddly enough, is that they both lack a true future tense.
Overall, a good first grammar on a language that may not be as difficult to learn as I was first thinking. However, I'm about to find out!
91 of 95 people found the following review helpful.
Excellent conversational Arabic and a Reader Too
By Douglas Hendrick
There are several negative reviews of this book which refer to an earlier edition. The 2003 edition is excellent. It does have English Transliteration to aid with pronunciation but tries to wean you from it quickly by giving you small sections of Arabic text without transliteration. These are great for learning to read and often they are also dialogues covered on the CD's. The book doesn't stop with learning to read signs and newspapers but is a full-fledged primary reader with excerpts from literature.
Make sure you get the CD set with the book. I had to return my first copy (actually fortunate, since that was the earlier edition) when I found the references to a CD that I did not have. There are many exercises which are intended for use with the CD's. There is a key to the exercises in the back.
I don't know how this book would be for a self-study if I didn't have cause to use the language daily. But, I find the conversational phrases are realistic and useful in my regular interaction with native Arabic speakers. Of course, it is a big advantage being partially immersed, but my progress was nonetheless slow and haphazard until I got this book. I had made no serious prior attempts to learn the script, I'm now reading excerpts from the Qur'an, after less than one month of work. I have used a number of learning resources and this is by far the best I have found for all-around knowledge of Arabic. I recommend a dictionary, however, as the glossary is tiny.
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