Mike Still I know you too! Nice to see you here! I was just remembering the other day your beautiful guitar rendition when you sang and played ما بلاش.
When I hear sound of Lebenese Arabic than sparrow sing a song in heaven garden in Beirut or I feel cloud of mediterranean from "Cornishe'' in Beirut my face and eyes Thank you and Greetings from Turkey
İ can not understand why such an interesting staff has just 254 views...while the otherl lessons for beginners have much more...What do you personally think? People dont want to study further? Any ideas? Btw, keep uploading.
Natusek Natusek ahhh😊Thank you for your sweet comment... I guess it takes so much time for people to discover my channel. I don't immediately show on keyword search when people write "learn Arabic". But I will remain patient and keep trying my best😊🙏💚
@@GlobetrotwithArabic I use a good amount of channels for Levantine Arabic learning and yours is seriously the best! The time you take to go through everything and the things you mention for pronunciation notes are really incredible. For natives of languages that are really different, like English, these things are soooo important and really overlooked by a lot of teachers. So often after a lesson from most channels, I have to spend time going back and replaying at a slower speed just to try and understand vowel sounds or why they are pronounced a certain way. You save us so much time by being thorough. Everything about the way you organize your lessons is really wonderful. Please keep going and continue teaching!
Jeremy Swint My heart bursts with happiness when I read a message like yours😊💚🙏Thank you from all my heart. I'm happy that you're benefitting from this😊you made my day!
I know this is two years late. But for ma elé jléédé, in English you can safely translate that to "I can't be bothered". In case you wanna use that in the future when teaching someone.
@@GlobetrotwithArabic @gobiscout8596 I will add a comment a long time after you! Many expressions have exact equivalents in Arabic and Spanish, surely from Arabic influence in Spanish centuries ago. The expression "ma ele jleede" matches the Spanish expression "no tengo ganas", literally "maa 3andi jleede" (ganas is plural, like jleede, meaning will / appetite / desire). I suppose in English it's "I don't feel like it", and in French "je n'ai pas envie"
I cant ever read with the transliteration. I find it easier to read Arabic in the actual Arabic script. My question is in the education system in Lebanon, is Lebanese taught with English transliteration from the very beginning? not arabic?
Lebanese is never taught in schools (to be written). It’s just spoken. Schools teach Modern Standard Arabic. And the Lebanese dialect is simply spoken and learned in daily life. ☺️ Theres no single class devoted to teaching the spoken language in schools.
@@GlobetrotwithArabic So how does one comprehend the English transliteration and read like you? sometimes reading transliteration is not accurate and thus someone sounds very foreign. By the way how do you charge for 1 2 1?s
@@gladtidingstothestrangers7333 Again its a language created not in a standard way but in a spontaneous way when people started to text each other and wanted to speak their spoken arabic and found themselves unable to write it and its very weird to communicate in MSA☺️So there is no “right” or “wrong” way to write it, whether you use the Arabic or latin script. People write the way they hear.
@@gladtidingstothestrangers7333 At the moment I only run group lessons of 30 day challenges. Heres my email for more info: chaghig@globetrotwitharabic.com
Then logically would you say, it's all really to do with listening... comprehending the meaning... then repeating? i mean, is that basically how it will have to be learnt?
So simplified, you change the way we perceive the Arabic language 😀👍
AsiKD 43 Thank you🙏🙏😊😊
You sure have a gift to explain things. Thank you for this lesson.
Vincent Darnis Thank you very much🙏
Hi Chaghig thank you for these lessons they are so helpful and enjoyable.
Hope to watch you live soon.
Mike Still Ohhh Mine you😁 I know you from your videos! Thank you😊You out a smile to my face!
Mike Still I know you too! Nice to see you here! I was just remembering the other day your beautiful guitar rendition when you sang and played ما بلاش.
When I hear sound of Lebenese Arabic than sparrow sing a song in heaven garden in Beirut or I feel cloud of mediterranean from "Cornishe'' in Beirut my face and eyes Thank you and Greetings from Turkey
Marcello Mastroianni 😊😊😊Thank you🙏🙏🙏Greeting from London🇬🇧
حبيت هاي الدرس، خصوصا عبارة "بيك شي"
This is so helpful - I listen to these videos of yours when I go for a run and they really help me with my Arabic. Thank you!
Thank you soooo much☺️☺️
Best teacher i enjoy all of your Videos so much
Thank you soooo much!!☺️🙏
Thank you for this lesson. I love your explanations ☺️
Thank you so much🥰🥰
Thanks alot. Very useful lessons. Perfect.
Thank you🙏
Thank you so much, love the way you explain the lessons, make it so much easier for me to understand :)
Rosy Carrillo ♥️♥️
Best I have ever seen
🥰🥰Thank you.
Thank you for the lesson this is very good I watched your videos and learned so much thank you
MyPink75 Thank you😁
really useful videos thank youuu
Thank you!!
Thank you!!! This is everything!!!
Giovanna Vega ThNk you😊😊
İ can not understand why such an interesting staff has just 254 views...while the otherl lessons for beginners have much more...What do you personally think? People dont want to study further? Any ideas? Btw, keep uploading.
Natusek Natusek ahhh😊Thank you for your sweet comment... I guess it takes so much time for people to discover my channel. I don't immediately show on keyword search when people write "learn Arabic". But I will remain patient and keep trying my best😊🙏💚
@@GlobetrotwithArabic İ guess so, cs İ filtered my search Lebanese arabic wlthin last month or last week n so İ found you
Natusek Natusek yes😊
@@GlobetrotwithArabic I use a good amount of channels for Levantine Arabic learning and yours is seriously the best! The time you take to go through everything and the things you mention for pronunciation notes are really incredible. For natives of languages that are really different, like English, these things are soooo important and really overlooked by a lot of teachers. So often after a lesson from most channels, I have to spend time going back and replaying at a slower speed just to try and understand vowel sounds or why they are pronounced a certain way. You save us so much time by being thorough. Everything about the way you organize your lessons is really wonderful. Please keep going and continue teaching!
Jeremy Swint My heart bursts with happiness when I read a message like yours😊💚🙏Thank you from all my heart. I'm happy that you're benefitting from this😊you made my day!
Good morning
Does "ooDa (room)" mean the same as "ghurfe"?
I know this is two years late. But for ma elé jléédé, in English you can safely translate that to "I can't be bothered". In case you wanna use that in the future when teaching someone.
Thank you very much☺️
@@GlobetrotwithArabic @gobiscout8596 I will add a comment a long time after you! Many expressions have exact equivalents in Arabic and Spanish, surely from Arabic influence in Spanish centuries ago. The expression "ma ele jleede" matches the Spanish expression "no tengo ganas", literally "maa 3andi jleede" (ganas is plural, like jleede, meaning will / appetite / desire). I suppose in English it's "I don't feel like it", and in French "je n'ai pas envie"
İts written that am biruuh kill nhaarak, so we can also say that kill nhaarak am biruuh diaan ? İts ok ?
Ive heard ppl say "Ishbak shii?" is that the same thing as "beek shii?"
nafeesa abbas Yes :)
Why, in lebanese, the equivalent of fusha suffix كم can be كن or كو ? Can we use both indifferently ?
Vincent Darnis Just kon Vincent. Why did you think it's koo?
ما الي جلادة نفس الشي ما الي مزاج ؟
Julianna Lin yes😊
I cant ever read with the transliteration.
I find it easier to read Arabic in the actual Arabic script.
My question is in the education system in Lebanon, is Lebanese taught with English transliteration from the very beginning?
not arabic?
Lebanese is never taught in schools (to be written). It’s just spoken. Schools teach Modern Standard Arabic. And the Lebanese dialect is simply spoken and learned in daily life. ☺️ Theres no single class devoted to teaching the spoken language in schools.
@@GlobetrotwithArabic
So how does one comprehend the English transliteration and read like you?
sometimes reading transliteration is not accurate and thus someone sounds very foreign.
By the way how do you charge for 1 2 1?s
@@gladtidingstothestrangers7333 Again its a language created not in a standard way but in a spontaneous way when people started to text each other and wanted to speak their spoken arabic and found themselves unable to write it and its very weird to communicate in MSA☺️So there is no “right” or “wrong” way to write it, whether you use the Arabic or latin script. People write the way they hear.
@@gladtidingstothestrangers7333 At the moment I only run group lessons of 30 day challenges. Heres my email for more info: chaghig@globetrotwitharabic.com
Then logically would you say, it's all really to do with listening... comprehending the meaning... then repeating?
i mean, is that basically how it will have to be learnt?
Volume so low
How to say they will call you in arabic
Raj kumar Timilsina ra7 ytalfnoulak 😁