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Marhaba - WellcomeSpoken Languages in Syria:

Arabic is the official and most widely spoken language. Kurdish is widely spoken in the Kurdish regions of Syria (northeastern regions), Kurds are less than 10% of Syria's population. Aramaic, the lingua franca of the region before the advent of Islam and Arabic, is spoken among certain ethnic groups: Syriac, it is used as the liturgical language of various Syriac denominations; modern Aramaic (particularly, Turoyo language and Assyrian Neo-Aramaic) is spoken in al Jezira region. Most remarkably, Western Neo-Aramaic is still spoken in the village of Maalula, and two neighboring villages, 35 miles (56 km) northeast of Damascus.

 

The Arabic Language:

Arabic (al Arabiya), a Semitic idiom, is the main language spoken in Syria. The Arabic language was adopted and spread over a large area of land in the 7th Century. This language has very old roots going back to the Assyrians in the 9th Century BC. Arabic was probably first written in the 2nd and 3rd Centuries AD under the rule of the Lakhmid tribe in Southern Mesopotamia. Other languages related to Arabic are Babylonian, Hittite (or Hurrian), Hebrew and Aramean. The Arabic alphabet has a few extra letters that do not exist in the normal Latin and Germanic languages.

The Arabic alphabet, written from Right to Left, was first used to write texts in Arabic - most importantly, the Koran, the holy book of Islam. With the spread of Islam, it came to be used to write many other languages, even outside of the Semitic family to which Arabic belongs. Examples of non-Semitic languages written with the Arabic alphabet include Persian, Urdu, Malay, Azerbaijani (in Iran) and Kurdish in Iraq and Iran. In order to accommodate the needs of these other languages, new letters and other symbols were added to the original alphabet.



The First Alphabet:

In the history of the world, man wrote the alphabet for the first time in Ugarit – Syria, locally known as "Ras Shamra", on the Syrian coast, that the genius of a scribe drew the first thirty letters on a small clay tablet. This little invention dates back to the 14th century BC. The tablet is exhibited at the museum of Damascus.

In this picture are some alphabetical symbols compared to the first alphabet of Ugarit (the second row from top):

Some Arabic Key Words:

English

Arabic

 English

Arabic

My name is

Esmi

God wiling

Inch'Allah

Where?

Fenn

Thanks God

El Hamdul Allah

Here

Houna

Tips

Bakhshish

There

Hounak

Welcome

Ahlan Wa Sahlan

Up/Down

Fok/Tahet

Thank You

Shokran

Left/Right

Shamal/Yamin

Good Morning.

Sabah El Kher

How Much Does It Cost?

Adesh Be Yeswa?

Good Evening

Masaa El Kher

 It's Expensiv!

Ghali

How Are You?

Kifak?

0

Zero/Sefr

Good Bye

Maa al Salame

1

Wahed

tomorrow

Bokra

2

Nein

Money

Masari

3

Thalatha

Please

Law Samaht

4

Arbaa

Me/you

Ana/Anta

5

Khamsa

Tea

Shay

6

Setta

Coffee

Kahwa

7

Sabaa

Milk

Halib

8

Thamania

Beautiful

Jamila

9

Tsaa

Yes/ No

Naam/Kalla

10

Ashara

Ok

Tamam


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