How To Learn Arabic According To The QURAN
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- čas přidán 22. 07. 2024
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0:00 - Introduction
Opening remarks and a brief overview of the subject matter, addressing the perceived complexity of learning Arabic and the importance of understanding the correct methodology in learning languages.
0:44 - Context of the Video
Providing background information and the inspiration behind the creation of the video, addressing the common misconceptions and the prevalent approach to learning Arabic, primarily focusing on grammar.
1:18 - What did Allah ﷻ say in the Quran about Learning Languages
Delving into the Quranic approach to learning languages, exploring how Allah ﷻ taught Adam all the names, emphasizing the importance of vocabulary in acquiring a language and understanding religious texts.
1:47 - Tafsir ibn Kathir
Examining the exegesis of Ibn Kathir to gain deeper insights into the Quranic verses related to language learning, understanding the significance of learning everyday words and terms in addition to religious terminology.
2:12 - Common Mistaken Methodology by Students of the Arabic Language
Discussing the prevalent but flawed approach by students, focusing excessively on grammar and neglecting vocabulary, leading to confusion and a perception of Arabic as a difficult language to learn.
3:00 - Ibn Khaldun about How to Learn the Arabic Language
Citing the renowned historian and scholar Ibn Khaldun, exploring his insights and advice on the effective methodology for learning Arabic, emphasizing the importance of vocabulary and practical usage of the language.
4:17 - Explanation of "Memorizing the Arabic Language"
Clarifying what it means to memorize the Arabic language, discussing the extensive efforts by scholars in memorizing dictionaries and poetry, and correlating the amount of vocabulary known to proficiency in Arabic.
4:55 - Siyar A'lam an-Nubala Biography of Abu Zayd Al-Ansari
Referencing the biography of Abu Zayd Al-Ansari from Siyar A'lam an-Nubala to illustrate the depth of knowledge and mastery of the Arabic language by renowned scholars and the importance of extensive vocabulary.
6:05 - Benefit from Al Mu'ujam al Mukhassas bil Muhdatheen by Al Imam Adhahabi
Drawing insights from Al Imam Adhahabi’s work, discussing the significance of vocabulary in understanding and conveying nuanced meanings and the role of extensive vocabulary in becoming eloquent in Arabic.
7:05 - Benefit about Memorizing Vocabulary from the Life of Malcolm X
Presenting Malcolm X as a modern example, illustrating how his dedication to learning vocabulary from the dictionary during his time in prison contributed to his eloquence and oratory skills, emphasizing the transformative power of vocabulary in language acquisition.
Totally agree. I recently realised the reason why I haven't made a lot of progress in my English and Japanese is because of my obsession on sounding grammatically perfect rather than expanding my vocabulary. I just started learning Arabic early this month and I'm taking the approach of memorising as much Arabic vocabulary as possible. JazakAllahu khair brother.
May Allah give you success
Nixe
Brother I also speak five languages and all of them I learned exactly the way you described in the video. I listened, memorized words and the more words I knew the more I tried to build sentences with them. Sometimes very weird sentences, because I just wanted to internalize the new word. At some point without even trying I started thinking in the language and developed what Germans call Sprachgefühl (feeling for the language).
I understand what you said about learning like a baby. It’s very important to make mistakes in a language. If you start with intensive grammer you’ll be confused and shy to open your mouth, fearing you’d make a mistake.
So to everyone watching this video I can confirm he is right.
Also, if you want to improve your language: read an interesting book out loud in that language. You tick the boxes of reading, listening, speaking (pronunciation). You’ll learn new words, expressions and also improve your pronunciation :)
Thank you for sharing, very interesting
MashAllah you are polyglotal.
@@MuhammadAlAndalusi
Brother, I have been trying to join your program via booking the meets. Every single time, it gets cancelled. Are there any issues?
I think it's my 5th try
Bist du Deutscher?
Brother i am Egyptian and native Arabic speaker but really i love yor videos many new ideas and information that is so useful and unique ❤❤
حبيبنا
I'm Algerian, native arabic speaker. And your advice is so beneficial for more enrichment in my own language, and learning other languages as well. Thank you for this ربي يجازيك🤍
Jazak Allah khairan akhi what a great video!! Super motivating and good citations
JazakAllah for this. It gave me a reminder that I'm doing more grammar n less vocab.
I'm inspired, allahuma barik lahu, great video brother!!
You videos are really good and you’ve captured a real niche here. Im on my second video, and enjoying them. Keep it up
JazakAllaahu Khayran
Jazak Allahu Khairan brother for this wonderful advices you gave.
Mashallah. Jzkl syukran..ive been struggling to know where to start and uve shed major light on this. Syukran hbb ❤
جزاك الله خير يا أخي
MashaAllah jazakAllah bro
Allahumma barik Great video mashallah May Allah reward you
جزاك الله خيرا
اروع من كثير ما قد سمعت ومن جانب مختلف. بارك الله لك
أحسنت جزاك الله خيرا
Thank you! May Allah bless you.
جزاك الله خيراً يا شيخ محمد إنني كعربي كنت احتاج لهذه المعلومة جدآ
One of the Greatest Academic Debates of History,,, Alhumdulilah this makes me so happy to see productive debating that is beneficial for our growth as sound Muslims.
May Allah make us accelerate and advance in both and give us the best understanding of the best and beneficial words and Grammar to Praise Him first and Foremost, Ameen!!!
Mashallah... Ready to join Alandalusinstitute soon in sha Allah
Hands down, learning Arabic from the Madina books is the best way. It follows an applied grammar style of learning from conversations. Each lesson presents a conversation and introduces systematically incrementally few rules.
Show me a link please
Actually the whole point of this video is showing how the madinah curriculum isn’t the way to go. They concentrate on way to much grammar from the beginning. You’re better of starting from a curriculum like arabiyah bayna ya dayk
i second that as a trained ESL teacher. i threw out of the window everything i was taught and tell people who want to start speaking english to watch cartoons for little kids.
I started with grammar about 6 years ago. Sorta been winging myself through it with CZcams and books. I can understand about 70% of what I read now. Lol I realize now I chose Islam and wanted to know the original words in the book and the I read the more I’m fearful of god.
Can you do me a favor telling me about how should i start learning arabic from basic? For reading, speaking, listening
Jazakallah khair akhi for this video may Allah reward you jannah al
Firduz
Akhi has a next level understanding MashaAllah ❤
Thank you for this precious advice
I home educate my son, this is really going to help me, help him!
In shaa Allaah
Glad it was helpful!
Jazakallahu khayr
Allahumma barik
Camera quality levelled up boss
Arabic is really amazing masha Allah brother may Allah reward you
I told a friend yesterday that I want to learn the Quran in Arabic by the time of Ramadan 2025.
inshallah bro
Mashaallah. Why wait? You should start now. I suggest Al bayyinah Tv/ Nouman Ali Khan to get you learning 😄
same I just reverted and Im studying Muslim Arabic that I found out is a bit different then egyptian arabic
@@maggiecrdv9610 Mashallah that’s amazing :)) May Allah make your journey easy
I agree for 100%.
شفاك الله
baaraka Allah fik :)
Shukran
Allahuma baarik
What’s your take on adopting and memorising the ‘Most Common Phrases’ method, can that be utilised as a means to fortify our approach to grasping and inaugurating a strong foundation? Or should the focus be entirely on acquiring a large lexical bank? Alternatively would a Thematic i.e.(Subjects,Interests,Everyday scenario and Travel etc) be more conducive in the building of a viable means.
The strategy you adopt in learning Arabic-or any language-is highly dependent on your ultimate objective. If your aim is extensive knowledge and perhaps mastery, wherein you could delve into scholarly pursuits, focusing solely on the most common phrases initially could be counterproductive.
Establishing a solid foundation from the beginning is crucial in such cases.
To analogize, it’s like someone aiming to attain overall athleticism but deciding to only start with achieving the ability to do 50 pushups. While it’s a beneficial start, it predominantly develops certain muscle groups, overlooking the holistic approach required to become a well-rounded athlete-strengthening every part of the body, developing stamina, power, and agility.
If, however, your goals are more modest, akin to just wanting to do 50 pushups-or, in terms of language learning, to hold basic conversations-then starting with the most common phrases is indeed a practical approach. This method aligns well with more immediate, everyday needs, rather than extensive, deep understanding of the language.
In a nutshell, aligning your learning strategies with your long-term goals is crucial. Whether it’s building a vast lexical bank, focusing on thematic learning, or memorizing common phrases, each approach has its place, and its effectiveness is determined by what you ultimately hope to achieve with the language.
Ma sha Allah, awsome video, Usually how much words should you learn on daily basis? and how long it took you to learn arabic completely?
It usually takes 5000 - 10.000 lexical items for you to become fluent in Arabic
سلام عليكم ورحمة الله
Should you start with memorising nouns only or verbs also
عليكم السلام ورحمة اللَّه وبركاته
Salamcalikum brother I would like to move Mauritania 🇲🇷 I need more information please. Thanks
Could anyone suggest me a good Arabic vocabulary book in English? Thanks!
I intuitively agree with you on this, but I guess the hesitancy comes from this idea that in arabic the grammar and context can change the meaning of words? So if you memorise from a dictionary the meaning of a particular word, it might mean something completely different to what you memorised depending on context and grammar when used in an actual sentence. I think you yourself say this in a few videos where you recommend a particular arabic dictionary over other translation apps (I can't quite remember which one).
can someone translate this saying,
" What goes around comes around " in Arabic, please
salam aleikum akhi do you understand najdi bedouin accents?
Assalamualaykum Ustadh I was visiting your website but I can't book a convenient time for a call
Assalamu Alaikum. What is the best Arabic dictionary for English speakers? Jazak’Allah Khair
ASALAMUALAIKUM BRO I want to learn from the beginning please guide me where to learn who can teach me
I got your a mail.
But I am from India so how can join your thias Arabic language course ?????
Can you help with the lebanese dialect
I think you all want to learning Arabic language but am i want learning English language , I dunno what I'll do , do you have any advice for me ?
To all those saying Arabic is hard. I won't deny if it is hard or easily but ya'll are probably thinking about it from an English POV. Perhaps the language you speak other then English gives you an upper hand.
Do you think it’s possible to do what Malcolm X did except with a small Arabic dictionary?
For sure it is you just have to commit In sha Allah
Love it.
where are you stationed?
❤
Brother we Pakistanis can speak out Arabic, meaning that we can recite Quran in Arabic but we don't understand it. So, my half job is done that I can speak Arabic in a good accent and now the only thing left is to learn a lot of vocab and sentence structures. Then I will start reading Quran like I read my books and that will be the best day of my life Inshallah.
Salam Alaikum, but which arabic dictionary has 12,000,000 words?
Wait so do I lose my original andalus institute access I bought before. Or is the new system just for specific people?
Yes I would also like to know this please, do we lose our original accounts? Do we need to pay again?
Aslam Walakium. Is this Quranic Arabic or modern standard?
❤❤❤
Aslam Alikum Sheikh I'm 69 tried learn Arabic many times but couldn't especially grammar of Arabic is very complicated (I think so). May be not in actually
You learn languages from listening reading speaking writing your 100% correct
Vocabularies
Structure (context)
Repitition
Native instinct
My opinion is that you have to strike a balance. If you know a bunch of words and you don't know how to properly put them together, you will never understand the Holy Quran. The Arabic language is a very structured language when it comes to word structure and sentence structure. Obtain vocabulary through reading.
What's the best way to learn Egyptian dialect of arabic?
By being around them
@@MuhammadAlAndalusi Masha'Allah, Barakallhu feek, jazakallah👍🏾
@@MuhammadAlAndalusiimpossible
Sunan an-Nasa'i 3205
Narrated 'Aishah:
It was narrated that 'Aishah said: "The Messenger of Allah did not die until Allah permitted him to marry whatever women he wanted.". Does the woman not feel shy of offering herself to a man? Then Allah the Exalted and Glorious revealed this verse:" You may defer any of them you wish and take to yourself any you wish." I ('A'isha said): It seems to me that your Lord hastens to satisfy your desire. Muslim 1664b
As salaamu A'laykum. Le verset 2.31 : d'abord le 1er verbe est la forme factitive donc Allah fait faire apprendre à Aadam (as), quoi ? Tu crois que ce sont les mots ? Le vocabulaire ? Bien sûr que non, Il lui apprend les Signes, A"alam. Sur un autre com, je t'ai parlé des archétypes, ce sont les Signes, les phones de l'abjad. Chaque lettre est signifiante, le Hamza, suivant sa position dans le mot aura le sens de Causalité lorsqu'il vient en début de racine, soit une rupture créant des unités quand il vient en fin de racine ; le B est l'archétype de l'accessibilité, comme pour Bab ou Abu, celui qui donne, ou Wahab ; le T est l'archétype de la réflexivité, d'où le pronom Anta, l'altérité ; ect, etc. Avec tous ces archétypes, alors Aadam peut élaborer des mots, des concepts composés, une langue. Ce sujet ontologique t'es encore inconnu. Cette approche linguistique est le meilleur outil pour comprendre l'arabe, et donc le traduire. Je comprends que tu ne puisses introduire cette méthode d'apprentissage dans tes cours d'arabe, par contre elle peut te permettre de plonger à des niveaux insoupçonné de compréhension de la langue du Qu'ran et son message, un tasawwuf. Tu pourrais comprendre alors pourquoi la langue arabe est la plus ancienne, celle d'Aadam. Il fait peu de doute que Sophie de Philosophie vient de la racine صفف, ranger, mettre en ordre, rendre la chose claire. Je ne suis pas soufi, mais chercheur en morphosémantique et étymologie.
Wesh pelo tu parles français ?
I don't know why this just discouraged me
Why your name is Al Andalusi? Andalusia is arab colonizators name for Spain.
While concentrating more on the vocabs is helpful but certainly it is not the correct way. Ofcourse you need to work on the vocabulary however more important is to understand the grammar behind it. Arabic is a very rich language and the style of Qur'an is mesmerizing, however one can appreciate the beauty of the Qur'an only after understanding the grammar. Otherwise just to know the meanings there are translations in many languages available.
Well I think that he’s quite right. Just look at how we learn languages when we are young. Babies starts learning isolated words (nouns and verbs ), then they start adding verbs into it by juxtaposition, is it grammatically correct ? No. Does making mistakes help them to know more in an effective way ? Absolutely.
When they know a certain amount of nouns and verbs, they then learn the grammar and over the span of their life they discover more words, more verbs and how to combine them into a sentence. But at first it’s all vocabulary. That’s how you learnt how to speak.
Well I think that he’s quite right. Just look at how we learn languages when we are young. Babies starts learning isolated words (nouns and verbs ), then they start adding verbs into it by juxtaposition, is it grammatically correct ? No. Does making mistakes help them to know more in an effective way ? Absolutely.
When they know a certain amount of nouns and verbs, they then learn the grammar and over the span of their life they discover more words, more verbs and how to combine them into a sentence. But at first it’s all vocabulary. That’s how you learnt how to speak.
Well I think that he’s quite right. Just look at how we learn languages when we are young. Babies starts learning isolated words (nouns and verbs ), then they start adding verbs into it by juxtaposition, is it grammatically correct ? No. Does making mistakes help them to know more in an effective way ? Absolutely.
When they know a certain amount of nouns and verbs, they then learn the grammar and over the span of their life they discover more words, more verbs and how to combine them into a sentence. But at first it’s all vocabulary. That’s how you learnt how to speak.
99 names
¿Hermano, eres Hispano? Detecto un accénto Hispano,
Tu sabe manin
@@MuhammadAlAndalusi ???
Yes, he is a native Spanish speaker
The sound affects are TOO MUCH!
Too loud
Very annoying and off putting
You lost me once you said 12 million 😳
It’s fine you got this Allah will make it easy for you
Native Arabic speakers use only a really really small number of words compared to how many words there are in arabic dictionary, similar to how native English speakers don't know or use most of the words in the English dictionary
I'll never make it
Arabic is absolutely one of the hardest to learn , telling people that it's the easiest is being disingenuous
Arabic Grammer is
It will be what you tell yourself to be.
Allah says:
وَلَقَدۡ یَسَّرۡنَا ٱلۡقُرۡءَانَ لِلذِّكۡرِ فَهَلۡ مِن مُّدَّكِرࣲ﴿ ١٧ ﴾
And We have certainly made the Qur’ān easy for remembrance, so is there any who will remember?
Al-Qamar, Ayah 17
Isn’t the Quran in Arabic?
Akhi, allah makes it easy for his believers.
It is quoted in the Quran that allah will make the Quran easy for us, so why would he not make Arabic easy for us?
@@fauzanbhat1451arabic grammer is the complex but not hard for the one who is not lazy and vocab might be difficult fir tounge of someone who doesn't
A non Arab teaching Arabic, what a joke 😂😂😂
I tried to join and was so interested and booked a Zoom call, I attended the time with a person named Hanif Adams, not only did he not show up after waiting for 15min , he didn’t reply to my email after as well. Then I sent an email to the support address and still no reply. I wish they were more professional, lost interest in this program now. So sad.