If understanding Quranic Arabic is your goal then do not waste time with dialects. Start learning classical arabic or Fusha. The one source I can recommend is from Ustadh Nouman Ali Khan. Just search in youtube 'Dream Big by Bayyinahtv' Insha Allah you may learn from there for free.
@@Musa_Nilالسلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته Akhi uns ist es nicht erlaubt inshaAllah nach einem dua zu sagen Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī 6338, Ṣaḥīḥ Muslim 2678
@@sarah..3000what does ikwahnis have to do with speaking amiyya? Fusha is only used in books and the news, outside of that literally no one speaks it Even if you studying from a sheikh In Arabic he’s going to revert back to amiyya when explaining the subject so learning a dialect is essential
@Clear4TheSincere Ameen Waiyyak JazakAllahu Khairan Akhi May Allah gather you and your beloved ones along with great companions on the Day of Judgment Ameen
If you call this a scholar Ur probably only started praying few weeks or months ago and most likely was a failed gangster Allah swt never guides you to a fake scholar unless you are sick who will end in jahanam with his likes May Allah destroy him and his paymasters who r plotting on Islam and spreading falsehood
As a child, i was taught to speak one dialect. Everyone else id come across would speak another dialect. i was unable to keep up conversation and discouraged to keep speaking arabic and since i was born in a western country even the arabic dialect i learned to speak was gone in favor of ease of communication in english. I am trying to learn proper fusha arabic now but this is all just to say that if all the nations were to speak one proper arabic we would be in true solidarity.
It was an important goal for the English and the French to dilute the language and render it less potent, well, at the English colonialism. The French wanted to completely erase the language. Im not saying it's not our fault, but rather that language is so important, that they really cared and directed resources just to hurt it.
I learned a trick to learn both spoken and fusha at the same time!basically you use words that are used in spoken but say them in a fusha way with proper grammer, for example Shami: اِبعتنی(ib3atni) call me fusha: اِبعثنی (ib3athni) Shami: قول('ool /gool) say/speak Fusha: قل(qol) shami: خود(khood) take fusha: خذ(khoth) levantine has habit of elongating vowels in imperatives I m using words that are actually spoken but use proper fusha grammitical ways to say them dont forget to learn fusha seriously aswell,i have learned bit of dailect but now i m trying to learn fusha seriously.
May Allah preserve you sheikh, I’m a revert and I’m learning fusha, and my only concern is to understand the Quran and the Hadith books or the books of the scholars, but many people who speak dialects, don’t like that non Arabs speak fusha. That might be pressuring some to adapt to the dialects of the countries they go to.
@@Honest_Question yes i think you are talking about saying "maratan okhra" as "marah okhra" right? or saying "jamilah" instead of jamilatun"? basically "tan" sound at the end is the formal tashkeel?
@@Honest_Question it feels bit odd because urdu also uses bit of arabic gammer,so in formal urdu i would say "lughat ulArabia" or "lughat alarabi" but now i have to drop the "t" when ACTUALLY speaking arabic,bit od not gonna lie,but what about "r" with a shadda? we say "marra" correctly in urdu but arabs trill r shadda as "maRRa" ,must i aslo use spoken trilled "R" or can i use the proper shadda?
@@TellTheShadows You can say the raa' either way. And it's true that generally the taa' marboutah is usually dropped, but the exception is when the word is mudaaf (not mudaaf ilayh) So we would either say: Al-lughal arabiyya Or: lughatil arabiyya Also in fus-ha it would be lughatul arabiyya, but in aammiyyah it's an unclear vowel somewhere between kasrah and dammah
What he said is true. Just like how most people speak the American English, it is a dialect from foreign people. Americans are foreigners to England and this is not their mother language
I speak the lebanese dialect, which is close to fousha but also deviates a lot due to french being used in practically every sentence and words from aramaic and turkish. Despite this we learn fousha during school and alhamdoulilah we can all read and write with it for seeking knowledge and reading Coran. Personally it is important to have both, and I refuse to leave either one of them.
Yes I agree both are very important. Dialect should be used in normal day to day stuff but professionally I believe fusha should be used as it is formal and beautiful way of speaking. I speak Egyptian with natives but I also learnt fusha quite well so I use that when i need to.
@@hxhtbd inchaallah, cheikh wasioullah abbas, a salafi scholar who teaches in madinah has given a statement regarding him, that he belongs to the deobandi sect
@@MenkIsAMubtadiiDeobandi I have heard several refutations of that person. I do not watch their content anymore. I stick to channels with straight aqeeda that adhere to Quran and Sunnah.
You usually get laughed at if you go to an Arab country and try to speak Fusha. This is why non-arab speakers rather learn the local dialect to avoid mockery by the locals
@@yossefgamerr3813I agree to a certain extent. I wouldn’t say mocking but you will definitely get funny looks and unless someone has had an Islamic or secular education, they wouldn’t be comfortable responding in fusha. Learn fusha to understand Quran and access religious texts, learn amiyya to speak in daily life. This is a good balance
Aren't the dialects natural, ancient in some respects and useful? I am not arguing just seriously considering. Didn't the ancient people of Arabia speak dialects; thus the Quran was revealed, recited and written containing elements of those dialects?
The quraan and sunnah are in fusha. The differences in dialects at the time are all from fusha. The dialects now are not. Meaning if you are a student of knowledge learning other than fusha arabic, you are holding your progress back
@@markward3981 ofcourse not. They are all rooted in fusha but have differences due to many factors. Mixing with different languages, simplification of the language for non arabs and languages naturally evolving through time. Take the english from 500 years ago and now and you will find great differences. Even now: in england say pants and people will understand underwear but in america it is the word for trousers etc.
@@Ibnmehmedit depends on your goals and on your environment . If your teacher is teaching in English then just learning fusha to understand Quran and access religious books will be enough Let’s say you are studying in an Arab country though, you will need amiyya to get through daily life, you will struggle with just fusha, also many teachers will even revert back to amiyya when teaching subjects so if you don’t understand amiyya you won’t understand what the teacher is even saying. Abu Taymiyyah had a similar experience when he went to Yemen to study
explanation to the simplest scheme of the Universe for humankind manusia di lahirkan di dalam diri mereka dengan 2 unsur. Air Mani yang hina dan Ruh. Air Mani yang hina ini datangnya dari Api. manakala Ruh datangnya dari sisi Allah. Air Mani - Syaitan Ruh - Malaikat. dan apabila tibanya kematian, masing masing Syaitan dan Malaikat akan kembali ke tempat asal mereka masing masing. membawa 'beban' yang mereka diami. maka di dalam The simplest explanation of the Universe for Mankind, ini Where would you like to be? salamun alaikum
Because no Arab countries really practice arabic fusha except in universities. And when foreign student speak fusha in social settings while they are studying there, all those Arabs will either dont understand or laugh at them. And now ask yourself O' Arab, the non-arab students came to your countries from thousands of miles away, spending tens of thousands of dollars just to seeks islamic knowledge and with already strong fusha arabic foundatiin back home but when arrived in Arabic countries, they are being laugh at by the Arabs JUST BECAUSE they speak fusha.
Sadly most Arab and Arabic teacher don't speak speak proper Arabic (fusha) , they speak their own dialect. They put off non arab to learn Arabic, no wonder many Muslim can't be bothered to learn Arabic. Unlike English language, whatever you learn, you will practise in conversation
The English language itself has numerous dialects, but the 'neutral' dialect used internationally is no doubt inspired by the Americans. In regards to speaking Arabic in Fusha, the best way is to find righteous Muslims who regularly speak Fusha Arabic and start from there. May Allah make it easy upon the beginner students of knowledge in this path.
The presence of Arabic dialects is natural, as the Arabic language is 1,400 years old, and had it not been for its connection to Islam and learning the Qur’an, it would have disappeared and Arabic dialects would have turned into local languages.... Whoever speaks English cannot understand an English text 100 years ago because their language changes and changes, while the Arabs understand a text that is 1,400 years old.. Yes, they do not use it in their daily lives, but they learn it in schools and use it in official matters
@@okflyaway99Because no Arab countries really practice arabic fusha except in universities. And when foreign student speak fusha in social settings while they.are studying there, all those Arabs will either dont understand or laugh at them. And now ask yourself O' Arab, the non-atab students caome to your countires from thousands of miles to seeks islamic knowledge with already strong fusha arabic but when arrived in Arabic countries, they are being laugh at by the Arab JUST BECAUSE they speak fusha.
It’s like speaking YOUR OWN language from 1400 years ago. You wouldn’t even be able to do that. Most people don’t. Go search up “Old English” that’s 1000 years old. It’s NOTHING compared to current modern english
Not arab can speak good English or other language... similarly non arab naturally can't speak good Arabic but instead of wasting time on dialect try to understand empathy & love for that language the other have and trying to communicate in easiest possible way to come on same level of understanding..his efforts r more important not dielect..
Assalam Alaykum wa rahmatullah. If a layman ask: Can I be a Salafi and then declare Palestinians Mushriks, be against anyone who disagrees with my views and declare them Kharij and new jahmiyah, because I'm a Noble Salafi brother who is upon Haqq?? And why?
@@ismaiilbozz6798 first, you didn't respond to the greeting of peace and no one has, second you haven't answered my 2 questions, third you provided a vague explanation. Follow up questions: What do you mean they? [Or are there any 'Salafis' who commit distortions] and are you implying that there are some statements that can be distorted to promote arrogance or massive Takfeeri??
@@Irfan__ Still no response in the greeting of peace. Nope Sheikh Ar-ruhayli (Hafidhahullah) didn't say that. This is an external question from the context, I Ask it because I know most of the watchers of this video are Salafis. What I'm asking are ideologies that are common within the Salafi circles, so I wanted to know what is your take on this as Salafis. That is my whole point.
I mean you really don’t have to speak Fusha, it’s amazing that we have preserved the original Arabic of when Rasulallah spoke it but language over time change anyway. So when learning Arabic it should only be done first to learn the Deen, understand and comprehend the Quran and Sunnah and not about speaking eloquently, so people think your an amazing speaker
Basically there are dialects and Fusha Arabic. Dialects are the way Arabs in different countries use arabic. Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Morocco etc. But Fusha is the classic and standart Arabic which is the language used in The Quran and the books of the scholars.
@@MenkIsAMubtadiiDeobandi reading Quran doesn’t mean you understand Quran even people who call themselves mufti and qazi or moulvi they are top jhahil who only wants to enjoy charity public donations and state government taxes exemption. They are responsible for sectarianism.
easy they learn msa but when they visit a place they use the living language of that place it more useful spain doesn't use latin anymore so are the arab countries fos'ha was never a spoken language it not a grimm depressing reality it how language work
I want to learn Arabic so I understand what is being said in prayer. Make dua for me. Jzk.
MashaAllah
If understanding Quranic Arabic is your goal then do not waste time with dialects. Start learning classical arabic or Fusha. The one source I can recommend is from Ustadh Nouman Ali Khan. Just search in youtube 'Dream Big by Bayyinahtv'
Insha Allah you may learn from there for free.
Please check video series of madina arabic book
Inshaa2Allah you'll become fluent in Arabic sooner rather than later
The best place to learn Arabic is Intensive one day one On TH-cam
I am learning fusha in Germany. It's been almost a year now. I need to keep practizing, for indeed it is very sophisticated.
Möge Allah dich erfolgreich machen
@@Fulaan7 Amin uns alle inshAllah.
@@Musa_Nilالسلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته
Akhi uns ist es nicht erlaubt inshaAllah nach einem dua zu sagen
Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī 6338, Ṣaḥīḥ Muslim 2678
@@msmn wa aleikum selam wa rahmstullahi wa barakatuh ich danke dir
This is true, I came to Egypt after studying fusha for 5 years, left speaking masri.
really, where? with Ikhwanis??? 🥴
@@sarah..3000what does ikwahnis have to do with speaking amiyya? Fusha is only used in books and the news, outside of that literally no one speaks it
Even if you studying from a sheikh In Arabic he’s going to revert back to amiyya when explaining the subject so learning a dialect is essential
@@sarah..3000only ikhwanis speak ammiya and all other egyptians speak fusha??? I have seen nothing but ikhwanis in egypt if thats the case!
May Allah Subhanahu Wa Ta'ala preserve this Shaykh and increase him in knowledge and all other Islamic scholars.
@Clear4TheSincere Ameen Waiyyak
JazakAllahu Khairan Akhi
May Allah gather you and your beloved ones along with great companions on the Day of Judgment Ameen
@@Clear4TheSincereyou are such a 🤡 May Allah hold you accountable for the bad mouthing you have for scholars of Islam. Shame on you
If you call this a scholar
Ur probably only started praying few weeks or months ago and most likely was a failed gangster
Allah swt never guides you to a fake scholar unless you are sick who will end in jahanam with his likes
May Allah destroy him and his paymasters who r plotting on Islam and spreading falsehood
As a child, i was taught to speak one dialect. Everyone else id come across would speak another dialect. i was unable to keep up conversation and discouraged to keep speaking arabic and since i was born in a western country even the arabic dialect i learned to speak was gone in favor of ease of communication in english. I am trying to learn proper fusha arabic now but this is all just to say that if all the nations were to speak one proper arabic we would be in true solidarity.
It was an important goal for the English and the French to dilute the language and render it less potent, well, at the English colonialism. The French wanted to completely erase the language.
Im not saying it's not our fault, but rather that language is so important, that they really cared and directed resources just to hurt it.
@abadran8174 this is really interesting, i agree. Btw what do you mean by resources ?
@@diamondsaf5064 to emplement such strategy, you must allocate resources to it, money to be precise.
@@diamondsaf5064 resources here means efforts
@@abadran8174Well, Mali is trying to reverse that.
thanks to sheikh i now learned alot of words,i m so proud i could understand everything at the begining even the alot of the middle.
Allah preserve the shaykh
nasheeds are also amazing to learn fusha with.
May Allah Subhanahu wa Taalaa reward you, brother, immensely for uploading these very beneficial videos . Aameen
I learned a trick to learn both spoken and fusha at the same time!basically you use words that are used in spoken but say them in a fusha way with proper grammer, for example
Shami:
اِبعتنی(ib3atni) call me
fusha:
اِبعثنی (ib3athni)
Shami:
قول('ool /gool) say/speak
Fusha:
قل(qol)
shami:
خود(khood) take
fusha:
خذ(khoth)
levantine has habit of elongating vowels in imperatives
I m using words that are actually spoken but use proper fusha grammitical ways to say them
dont forget to learn fusha seriously aswell,i have learned bit of dailect but now i m trying to learn fusha seriously.
May Allah preserve you sheikh, I’m a revert and I’m learning fusha, and my only concern is to understand the Quran and the Hadith books or the books of the scholars, but many people who speak dialects, don’t like that non Arabs speak fusha. That might be pressuring some to adapt to the dialects of the countries they go to.
generally you can speak to people in فصحى without sounding too weird if you just drop the proper tashkeel
@@Honest_Question yes i think you are talking about saying "maratan okhra" as "marah okhra" right? or saying "jamilah" instead of jamilatun"? basically "tan" sound at the end is the formal tashkeel?
@@TellTheShadows yep, exactly that
@@Honest_Question it feels bit odd because urdu also uses bit of arabic gammer,so in formal urdu i would say "lughat ulArabia" or "lughat alarabi" but now i have to drop the "t" when ACTUALLY speaking arabic,bit od not gonna lie,but what about "r" with a shadda? we say "marra" correctly in urdu but arabs trill r shadda as "maRRa" ,must i aslo use spoken trilled "R" or can i use the proper shadda?
@@TellTheShadows You can say the raa' either way.
And it's true that generally the taa' marboutah is usually dropped, but the exception is when the word is mudaaf (not mudaaf ilayh)
So we would either say:
Al-lughal arabiyya
Or: lughatil arabiyya
Also in fus-ha it would be lughatul arabiyya, but in aammiyyah it's an unclear vowel somewhere between kasrah and dammah
What he said is true. Just like how most people speak the American English, it is a dialect from foreign people. Americans are foreigners to England and this is not their mother language
و كثير من السعوديون يتكلمون أدنى من المثل الذي أعطى هذا الرجل
نعم
I’m learning Classical Moroccan
😂😂😂😂😂😂i know it's Egypt before completing the video subhanAllah .
Why are so many hating this sheikh?
I speak the lebanese dialect, which is close to fousha but also deviates a lot due to french being used in practically every sentence and words from aramaic and turkish. Despite this we learn fousha during school and alhamdoulilah we can all read and write with it for seeking knowledge and reading Coran. Personally it is important to have both, and I refuse to leave either one of them.
Yes I agree both are very important. Dialect should be used in normal day to day stuff but professionally I believe fusha should be used as it is formal and beautiful way of speaking. I speak Egyptian with natives but I also learnt fusha quite well so I use that when i need to.
what did mufti menk do brother? please explain so that I may be guided
@@hxhtbd inchaallah, cheikh wasioullah abbas, a salafi scholar who teaches in madinah has given a statement regarding him, that he belongs to the deobandi sect
@@MenkIsAMubtadiiDeobandi I have heard several refutations of that person. I do not watch their content anymore. I stick to channels with straight aqeeda that adhere to Quran and Sunnah.
@@BeardedGuy_Tawhid May Allah bless you, in arabic جزاك الله خيرا
Where can I find the original video?
0:42, I think the right word is praised or praise worthy (Madh) instead of commanded
Commended not commanded
BarakAllah feek.
"Commend" means praise
How did 6 people gave likes to this comment ?
Any free learning platform for Fusha Arabic?
youtube.com/@arabiclanguageacademy-dg?si=y0TizIJQy6GeivRF
youtube.com/@myarabicjourneywithmohammed?si=3txkmkiQKjcbKJ2u
AMAU institute but it’s paid
@@nlneth9then that’s not free
@@squidguard1 high quality things need money
You usually get laughed at if you go to an Arab country and try to speak Fusha. This is why non-arab speakers rather learn the local dialect to avoid mockery by the locals
Bro, no one is mocking you dude, especially since they know you aren't native.
Speaking Fusha Is the only way to speak to all Arabic speakers.
@@yossefgamerr3813I agree to a certain extent. I wouldn’t say mocking but you will definitely get funny looks and unless someone has had an Islamic or secular education, they wouldn’t be comfortable responding in fusha.
Learn fusha to understand Quran and access religious texts, learn amiyya to speak in daily life. This is a good balance
Aren't the dialects natural, ancient in some respects and useful? I am not arguing just seriously considering. Didn't the ancient people of Arabia speak dialects; thus the Quran was revealed, recited and written containing elements of those dialects?
yup they r but people love the drama
The quraan and sunnah are in fusha. The differences in dialects at the time are all from fusha. The dialects now are not.
Meaning if you are a student of knowledge learning other than fusha arabic, you are holding your progress back
@@Ibnmehmed
So Fusha has different dialects and the today's dialects are not from Fusha ....
So did they arise from thin air ?
@@markward3981 ofcourse not. They are all rooted in fusha but have differences due to many factors.
Mixing with different languages, simplification of the language for non arabs and languages naturally evolving through time.
Take the english from 500 years ago and now and you will find great differences. Even now: in england say pants and people will understand underwear but in america it is the word for trousers etc.
@@Ibnmehmedit depends on your goals and on your environment . If your teacher is teaching in English then just learning fusha to understand Quran and access religious books will be enough
Let’s say you are studying in an Arab country though, you will need amiyya to get through daily life, you will struggle with just fusha,
also many teachers will even revert back to amiyya when teaching subjects so if you don’t understand amiyya you won’t understand what the teacher is even saying. Abu Taymiyyah had a similar experience when he went to Yemen to study
explanation to the simplest scheme of the Universe for humankind
manusia di lahirkan
di dalam diri mereka dengan
2 unsur.
Air Mani yang hina
dan Ruh.
Air Mani yang hina ini
datangnya dari Api.
manakala Ruh
datangnya dari sisi Allah.
Air Mani - Syaitan
Ruh - Malaikat.
dan apabila tibanya kematian,
masing masing
Syaitan dan Malaikat
akan kembali ke tempat asal mereka masing masing.
membawa 'beban'
yang mereka diami.
maka di dalam
The simplest explanation of the Universe for Mankind, ini
Where would you like to be?
salamun alaikum
Because no Arab countries really practice arabic fusha except in universities. And when foreign student speak fusha in social settings while they are studying there, all those Arabs will either dont understand or laugh at them. And now ask yourself O' Arab, the non-arab students came to your countries from thousands of miles away, spending tens of thousands of dollars just to seeks islamic knowledge and with already strong fusha arabic foundatiin back home but when arrived in Arabic countries, they are being laugh at by the Arabs JUST BECAUSE they speak fusha.
😂😂 the accent
Sadly most Arab and Arabic teacher don't speak speak proper Arabic (fusha) , they speak their own dialect. They put off non arab to learn Arabic, no wonder many Muslim can't be bothered to learn Arabic. Unlike English language, whatever you learn, you will practise in conversation
The English language itself has numerous dialects, but the 'neutral' dialect used internationally is no doubt inspired by the Americans.
In regards to speaking Arabic in Fusha, the best way is to find righteous Muslims who regularly speak Fusha Arabic and start from there.
May Allah make it easy upon the beginner students of knowledge in this path.
The presence of Arabic dialects is natural, as the Arabic language is 1,400 years old, and had it not been for its connection to Islam and learning the Qur’an, it would have disappeared and Arabic dialects would have turned into local languages.... Whoever speaks English cannot understand an English text 100 years ago because their language changes and changes, while the Arabs understand a text that is 1,400 years old.. Yes, they do not use it in their daily lives, but they learn it in schools and use it in official matters
@@okflyaway99Because no Arab countries really practice arabic fusha except in universities. And when foreign student speak fusha in social settings while they.are studying there, all those Arabs will either dont understand or laugh at them. And now ask yourself O' Arab, the non-atab students caome to your countires from thousands of miles to seeks islamic knowledge with already strong fusha arabic but when arrived in Arabic countries, they are being laugh at by the Arab JUST BECAUSE they speak fusha.
It’s like speaking YOUR OWN language from 1400 years ago. You wouldn’t even be able to do that. Most people don’t. Go search up “Old English” that’s 1000 years old. It’s NOTHING compared to current modern english
@@HusXX then the Arab Sheikh should shut tf up instead of criticising the non-arab speaking amiyah, fix this within the arab community first.
Not arab can speak good English or other language... similarly non arab naturally can't speak good Arabic but instead of wasting time on dialect try to understand empathy & love for that language the other have and trying to communicate in easiest possible way to come on same level of understanding..his efforts r more important not dielect..
صحيحه الفصيحة . الفصحي يعني اكثر الفصيحة . لا يستطيع احد ان يتكلم العربية الفصحي يعني اكثر الفصيحة سوا رسول الله صلي الله عليه وسلم .
Dialects need to be preserved- many have features that stem from arabic dialects of the early islamic era . Learn FusHa but preserve your dialects
Why should I learn an Arabic language to get into ‘jannah’ this is Arab colonisation at its finest. I am fine wiht speakin my language
The Speech of Allah is in Arabic. Be careful of what you say.
May Allah guide you
@@salafguidance so allah only speaks arabic? this means arab language is superior to all others? lol, you just prove my point
You should learn Arabic to understand your religion in a better way.
The Qur'an is in Arabic and for that reason, Arabic is a sacred language. It is not the same.
Assalam Alaykum wa rahmatullah.
If a layman ask:
Can I be a Salafi and then declare Palestinians Mushriks, be against anyone who disagrees with my views and declare them Kharij and new jahmiyah, because I'm a Noble Salafi brother who is upon Haqq??
And why?
that would seem like they are distorting the statements of someone.
@@ismaiilbozz6798 first, you didn't respond to the greeting of peace and no one has, second you haven't answered my 2 questions, third you provided a vague explanation.
Follow up questions: What do you mean they? [Or are there any 'Salafis' who commit distortions] and are you implying that there are some statements that can be distorted to promote arrogance or massive Takfeeri??
what's your point? did ruhayli say that?
@@Irfan__ Still no response in the greeting of peace.
Nope Sheikh Ar-ruhayli (Hafidhahullah) didn't say that.
This is an external question from the context, I Ask it because I know most of the watchers of this video are Salafis. What I'm asking are ideologies that are common within the Salafi circles, so I wanted to know what is your take on this as Salafis.
That is my whole point.
Wa alaykum Salam Wa rahmatullahi Wa barakatuh. No you cannot. This is from khawarij.
I mean you really don’t have to speak Fusha, it’s amazing that we have preserved the original Arabic of when Rasulallah spoke it but language over time change anyway. So when learning Arabic it should only be done first to learn the Deen, understand and comprehend the Quran and Sunnah and not about speaking eloquently, so people think your an amazing speaker
Fusha is a flex though
You have to its an obligation to understand better the religion there is books in arabic that you will never find in any other language
@@naxxs I believe its not an Obligation for Hanafi's
What is Fushsa ?
Standard Arabic
Fusha Arabic that is used officially in educational institutions, and then you have the local dialects which are formal tone
Modern.standard arabic like the one in the quran and media
Basically there are dialects and Fusha Arabic. Dialects are the way Arabs in different countries use arabic. Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Morocco etc. But Fusha is the classic and standart Arabic which is the language used in The Quran and the books of the scholars.
No never being a Muslim doesn’t mean follow desert dress code and identity and culture.
brother just a correction learning arabic doesn't mean you become arab, it's important for reading coran and seeking knowledge
@@MenkIsAMubtadiiDeobandi reading Quran doesn’t mean you understand Quran even people who call themselves mufti and qazi or moulvi they are top jhahil who only wants to enjoy charity public donations and state government taxes exemption. They are responsible for sectarianism.
@@Goku65027 says the person speaking English and has an anime character’s name as their channel name.
@@acogjefe4769but he is right out side of few words for prayers u r not that obligated to learn it
@@acogjefe4769haha true
😂😂😂
easy they learn msa but when they visit a place they use the living language of that place it more useful spain doesn't use latin anymore so are the arab countries fos'ha was never a spoken language it not a grimm depressing reality it how language work
Free Palestine 🇵🇸🇵🇸💪💪💪