Moderator:eskandar
voron wrote:Maha is good. و هي جميلة جدا. E basta!
Babelfish wrote:رَدِيئاً, as it seems (I found an expression in the dictionary with بريئًا)
Meera wrote:Hey everyone! I know this question has been asked before. But before I start my classes my teacher emailed and said to make sure I get a dictionary. Is this oxford one any good? I'm trying to go small because I will have to carry it around all day
http://www.amazon.com/Oxford-Essential- ... dictionary
księżycowy wrote:Meera wrote:Hey everyone! I know this question has been asked before. But before I start my classes my teacher emailed and said to make sure I get a dictionary. Is this oxford one any good? I'm trying to go small because I will have to carry it around all day
http://www.amazon.com/Oxford-Essential- ... dictionary
It looks like a good dictionary to me, but I don't actually have a copy.
I know that many consider the best Arabic - English dictionary to be The Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic by Hans Wehr. I don't know how portable it is though.
Link: http://www.amazon.com/Arabic-English-Di ... 879500034/
księżycowy wrote:I know I plan on picking up a copy of both soon.
Meera wrote:Yeah if I don't get that one now I will deffintly get it in the future. I don't think you can have too many dictionaries lol
eskandar wrote:Don't forget that all the adjectives should agree with the noun, not just the last one. (Just like Italian!) Therefore, if it's feminine, it should be الکلبة المریضة عطشانة .
voron wrote:And curiously enough, just like in Italian (or Russian) the feminine ending is "a" (if you ignore the prescriptivist rule of pronouncing the "ta marbuta" ending as "atu" or "atun" in a non-stop position).
Massimiliano B wrote:Is there someone who pronounce the ta marbuta actually as "atu", "atun", "ata", "atan", etc..?? I've read the everyone says just "a".
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