I feel the same exact way! 'ayn hasn't actually been that difficult for me, but ghayn has thrown me off more. I'm glad this video explained it in better detail.
From what I've seen with Arabic phonetics so far, the main distinction is between consonants that resonate in the mouth and consonants that resonate in the throat, which often come in pairs (like seen and saad, the "s" pair, or kaaf and qaaf, the "k" pair). We don't have those throat sounds in English, we have all mouth sounds more or less. It seems like ghayn and ayn are pairs in this way, with ghayn being the mouth sound (maybe why it's easier for me) and ayn the throat sound
Thank you for this video! This explained it to me very well; for whatever reason, 'ayn hasn't been that difficult for me to pick up, but ghayn confuses me lol.
@@Linguamid This is the thing I always hear, that ghayn sounds like the French R. Thankfully I've been learning French for several months- it's basically my second language now- so I already got my French R's on pat :)
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Thank you your videos! This would be great to connect with other languages with partial sounds to this letter. It also help to use words that people might heR in the Bible or koran or the news or on a map. Topical, helpful, relatable without getting political or controversial. Gaza is a good example, right? Its in the news, in the religious texts and on on a map. It seems like most of the world calls it as it's written in a westernized way /g/. I noticed that Arabic speaking people use kind of a guttural /r/ with a /y/ or a /g/ sound. Hebrew speaking people say it with just basically a /yh/ sound or a /gh/ /yh/ sound (there is not hint of an /rh/ sound from Hebrew speakers). I like that you mentioned the /ayin/ that made sense to me.
Please, it would be so helpful to pronounce in the video with short and long vowel sounds, independently, as adding the vowel changes it very much for the non native speaker.
the ع and غ are typically the same in shape (only one dot extra for the غ) - their pronunciation is totally different. I would say the غ is much easier because it resembles the French pronunciation of letter R
To learn this language is not difficult, if someone explain in a good way. Arabic is the best language and the easiest language. This is also mentioned in the Qur'ân 👍🏼
I ask you to pronounce the letter Ghain correctly, because it is one of the most luxurious letters in Arabic Your content is great, but the pronunciation of the letters requires you to read and listen to the Qur’an (i used google to translate)
i've personally found it's the reverse for me, ayn felt very easy to pick up but i still struggle a lot to pronounce ghayn right at all!
This is totally normal.. It differs from one person to another 🙂 I know friends who struggle with other letters like h'aa
Being a pakistani i have problem with pronouncingض. In urdu we pronounce ض as z but its different in arabic
I feel the same exact way! 'ayn hasn't actually been that difficult for me, but ghayn has thrown me off more. I'm glad this video explained it in better detail.
Right? And it’s just an extra letter to it 😂
From what I've seen with Arabic phonetics so far, the main distinction is between consonants that resonate in the mouth and consonants that resonate in the throat, which often come in pairs (like seen and saad, the "s" pair, or kaaf and qaaf, the "k" pair). We don't have those throat sounds in English, we have all mouth sounds more or less. It seems like ghayn and ayn are pairs in this way, with ghayn being the mouth sound (maybe why it's easier for me) and ayn the throat sound
yes exactly - thanks a lot for sharing :)
Thank you Hamid. This video helped with both reading and pronunciation.
Great! I am very happy you find the video helpful - best of luck 🙂
I appreciate your lesson, sir!! I found it very helpful! 👍🙏🇵🇸
You are most welcome 😊
Thank you for this video! This explained it to me very well; for whatever reason, 'ayn hasn't been that difficult for me to pick up, but ghayn confuses me lol.
This is wonderful Jordan - practice the pronunciation of R in french (like in bonjour) many times. this is very close to the ghayn
@@Linguamid This is the thing I always hear, that ghayn sounds like the French R. Thankfully I've been learning French for several months- it's basically my second language now- so I already got my French R's on pat :)
Thanks
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I finished it and I found it very useful. Thank you so much. شكرا كتير يا مدرسي.
Why the music?
as a Greek I have no difficulty in pronouncing Γ غ
This is great
Thank you your videos!
This would be great to connect with other languages with partial sounds to this letter. It also help to use words that people might heR in the Bible or koran or the news or on a map. Topical, helpful, relatable without getting political or controversial.
Gaza is a good example, right? Its in the news, in the religious texts and on on a map.
It seems like most of the world calls it as it's written in a westernized way /g/.
I noticed that Arabic speaking people use kind of a guttural /r/ with a /y/ or a
/g/ sound. Hebrew speaking people say it with just basically a /yh/ sound or a /gh/ /yh/ sound (there is not hint of an /rh/ sound from Hebrew speakers). I like that you mentioned the
/ayin/ that made sense to me.
Is there a specific order in your videos to learn Egyptian? Where do you start?
Thank you for this video
شكرا
عفوا
I like how u taught me how to pronounce "sunset"
Is the word B'al written with ayin or ghayin in Arabic? Or can be both?
Can you tell me the word in English?
Excellent!
Please, it would be so helpful to pronounce in the video with short and long vowel sounds, independently, as adding the vowel changes it very much for the non native speaker.
Thanks a lot for the feedback. I will consider this in future videos
I only struggle with pronouncing غ when it’s not the first letter of a word :(
this is totally normal - things get better with training
Mashallah habib
Good
I confuse how to pronounce it in low voice (sirr) like in al fatihah, can you tell me how?
Just the same as in French r
Good job
alf shukr!
you are welcome
Someone know any weird little tricks to help me pronounce this
I got a good trick for you - the pronunciation of letter R in French, like Bonjour is almost the same as the غ in Arabic
Ghain, qof and kho are almost similar.
They are a bit difficult at the beginning but with practical you can identify and master the pronunciation
@@Linguamid thank you.
That was ǥħaın
yes ghayn - and we say 'gheen' in Egyptian
عيوني
Its hard to pronounce when it is silent, when you are praying and you don't want the person next to you heard it
yes I know - pronouncing this letter needs that you raise your voice slightly
I was so happy: 'So this is the Áyn and I'l get it' Then you reveal it's not it :( I mean I quite get the Áyn but can't pronounce it as comfortably
the ع and غ are typically the same in shape (only one dot extra for the غ) - their pronunciation is totally different. I would say the غ is much easier because it resembles the French pronunciation of letter R
Are you arabian? Or did you learn this language by yourself?
I am originally Egyptian
Thank you
Ghayn in my language means:
lahma (meat) 🤣
Lahma in my language sounds like what Bread means (pronounced:lekhem)
what language?
Hebrew
ارجو من حضرتك نطق حرف الغين بطريقة صحيحة لانه من الحروف المفخمة فى العربية
محتواك رائع لكن نطق الحروف محتاج من حضرتك قراءة وسماع قرآن
To learn this language is not difficult, if someone explain in a good way.
Arabic is the best language and the easiest language.
This is also mentioned in the Qur'ân 👍🏼
I ask you to pronounce the letter Ghain correctly, because it is one of the most luxurious letters in Arabic
Your content is great, but the pronunciation of the letters requires you to read and listen to the Qur’an
(i used google to translate)