How To Master The Arabic Alphabet Painlessly
Learning the Arabic alphabet can be tough, but using the tips below you’ll be able to read and write Arabic very soon. After reading this you will realize that learning the Arabic script need not be hard with the right method.
- The main reason why Arabic learners struggle with the script is that the letters of the Arabic alphabet do not look like our letters. We have not been exposed to the complicated forms of the Arabic alphabet, so there is nothing stored in our brains that helps us associate the letters. Many Arabic students who are just starting to learn the language get more and more demotivated as they try to commit to memory a new Arabic letter only to realize that have already forgot the last letter.
- In the Arabic script short vowels (“u” not “i” and “a”) are generally not written. So a word like “should” would be written simply as “SHD”. This can be difficult, especially early on if you still do not know many Arabic words.
- The Arabic letters change their shape depending on whether they are connected to adjacent letters. Sometimes the changes are so striking that it hardly seems that there’s a relation between the two forms. This can be very confusing.
Solution: You need some familiar element that you can associate the new forms and sounds with. My book The Magic Key To The Arabic Alphabet contains a memory image for all of the 28 Arabic letters that will enable you to remember accurately their shapes and sounds.
Solution: Begin with familiar words first. Using the unique method in my book you are writing English words using the Arabic alphabet letters first until you’re completely comfortable with the Arabic script. Only then will I teach you how to write Arabic words. This way you will learn the Arabic alphabet much faster than with traditional methods.
Solution: The key is to understand why the Arabic letters change their form when they are connected to adjacent letters. And contrary to what many Arabic teachers will tell you, there really are logical reasons why the forms change. For example, the letter “meem” (م) has a very long “tail”. However, it would be difficult to connect “meem” with another letter to the left with its tail. So it is logical that the tail is reduced to facilitate the joinign to the next letter. In my book I show you exactly how the shapes of the letters of the Arabic alphabet to change and why.
I am convinced that with the right method anyone can learn to read and write Arabic fast.
The Magic Key To The Arabic Alphabet comes as a digital download, which means that you can have it on your desktop in just a few minutes. This digital book can be yours for only $27 – much less than what you’d pay for even a single private Arabic lesson.
Click below to get instant access now.
I wish you every success with your Arabic studies!
Best Wishes,
Max Maddocks
P.S.: The book comes with a 30-day money back guarantee.
P.P.S.:Want to find out more before buying? Check out the detailed description of the book here.