The Key to Unlocking Arabic (م ث ل)
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- čas přidán 28. 05. 2024
- Arabic has a uniquely engineered linguistic system, and students must know it well to move to the higher levels. This system is reflected in what we'll touch on today, the Arabic root مثل . Let's go!
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CGE Jordan is a premier institute for Arabic Studies, located in Amman, Jordan since 2005.
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The Arabic language is so amazing ; it's mathematical, logical.
I love these lessons, and couldnt find anything like that on yt. This is prime content on a niche! Pure gold . Thanks for this free and high quality content
Thanks for having returned to making videos. Please keep on doing those. Just as a fun trivia, the Arabic word "fulaan" has entered Portuguese as "fulano" and it means exactly the same thing.
Which is?
@@bluegarson
It's like X in math
But we say fulaan from the people
It means near : the average Joe
@@thetruth8295 JAK! Thanks.
Such a fun way to learn arabic, and This is what i love about arabic! Please Continue this series because this content is unique-only those who have a good grasp over arabic can explore those arabic dictionaries and guide us to the constellations of words whose roots are same. We don't want to know how to say hello in arabic; but we want to know the root of مرحبا or other. That's more deep.
بصراحة مجهود كبير جدا . أحييك
There is another key, because you are front another door : ) Each arabic letter is an archetyp, so the concept ث is the archetyp of the Relation, so to Relate, and thing in relation to another one, a bridge linking two element,s in time or space, then as sarf will modulate the meaning. The Lam is the achetyp of the dedication, and Mim is the space and time, the matter. MThL = something+in relation+producting, this is the semantical field. I'lm as sarf is the first step for going further deep.
Excellent.....BRAVO from Mexico City!
@@steveegallo3384 Estudiando eso, me dio cuenta que esos archetipos circulan tal cual en todos los idiomas europeos. Solo que esos idiomas perdieron la pronunciaccion correcta semitica de algunas lettras, como la diferencia entre el س y el ص que no significan la misma cosa. Y viviendo en España, oigo que el Z esta relationado con el ص. A la buscada del idioma de babel !
@@victoremman4639Do these archetypes embodied in arabic letters prove that arabic isn't a human invention but a revelation from God-just as Quran?
@@servantoftheexpander9688 Surah 2.31 The scholars said Aadam (as) learnt Names, I think now he learnt the archetyps. Then with them, we can built the A'lamin, the Universe, the names. There is a relation between the sound, each special vibration, and the cognition, and the R could come from imitation of a Lion sound, the threath, and the S could be from snake sound. I don't study the origin of the archetyps and their specific phone, just hypothesis. Anyway, it's Allah's will.
@@victoremman4639 where do i learn more about these archetypes? What topic does it come under?
Absolutely brilliant video and explanations, with so much interesting information on grammar, differences between fusHa and amiia, prononciation etc !
Very good Ustaz.Very interesting
Thanks for this ! 🇵🇸
FYI I will be buying 2 shirts!
Thank you!
You are a nice teacher.
Please keep on making videos like this
Wow 👍👍
Add anothe (tha) (ث )in the end of mathal word
You ll get 🔺️ triangle or muthallath مثلث 😉
that a different root, مثلث comes from ثلث
i jus fall in love
May I ask you, you Syrian or Lebanese or just lived there because your accent in Arabic very similar
I think he is American but studied in Jordan
Increadebele , I dont even imagen how Can a non Arabic speack that good , IS he 50 50 , IS he half arabe , perhaps a father or a mother arabe ,?
No Arab parents. He learned Arabic in Jordan.
Sir please add English words also as meanings
( مثَّل or maththal ) has other meaning but usually using in criminal things or like saying (مثَّل به ) means mutilate him or mutilate a corpse
احسنت
good yea
Vr
Aw.. the font is way too small... You do realize most of us are watching these from our phone screen and still scrolling other stuff or even typing comments while watching it, right?
I am too. Just zoom in with two finger pinch.
How you became interested in arabic language?
Answer??
@@isaacmonterrosa4657 It's a long story. Maybe he'll share it on a video in the future.
Interestingly, you wrote, _"Arabic has a uniquely engineered linguistic system..."_
So... *Who* and *Why* "uniquely engineered this linguistic system?"
It must have been humans who designed this linguistic system so as to render it, not only "unique" but also to be thoroughly CONFUSING!
As an example, study the reason why the world has "English English, American English, Australian English and pidgin English," and we can begin to understand, WHY?
At around the 12minute mark you mentioned "homosexuality" as one of the meanings of the root "Miim-Tha-Lam." It would be interesting, if at all possible, to find out WHEN it was appended with that meaning (etymology.)
Is it akin to the English "gay" or "pride?"
It is when humans try to insert their invented narrative into everyday speech that the world get _"the same word with opposite meanings"_ that defies common sense.
_peace_
It's very difficult to know the "when" and "why," especially for Arabic, as it does not have many manuscripts and more than likely developed out of another older Semitic language. All good questions but difficult to answer.
@@CGEJordan There is a lesson for the wise and knowledgeable whenever you find difficulty in understanding the "when" & "why" of anything... it must have been MAN-MADE... uniquely engineered to cause confusion, doubt and uncertainty.
_peace_
*The Quran is its own dictionary. It explains everything in detail.*