Kazakh
| Cyrillic | Ж, ж (J, j) |
|---|
| Arabic | ? |
Arabic Alphabet Chart
| pronunciation | Transliterated | Transcription |
|---|
| ???? | hā? | h |
| ???? | wāw | W(aw, au, u) |
| ???? | yā? | Y (ay, ai, ?) |
| ?????? | hamza | ? |
Arabic Alphabet Chart
| pronunciation | Transliterated | Transcription |
|---|
| ???? | lām | l |
| ???? | mim | m |
| ???? | nun | n |
| ???? | hā? | h |
Letter. ? / ?? / ??? / ?? • (kāf) The twenty-second letter of the Arabic alphabet.
Arabic is a phonetic language, which means letters correspond to sounds. English, in contrast, has many spellings that don't correspond to individual letter sounds, as in the word "rough." For this reason, Arabic spelling might be considered easier than that of many languages, including English.
The Arabic alphabet contains 28 letters.
However, unlike English, the Arabic letters are always pronounced in the same way. In English the letter "c" is sometimes pronounced like an "s" (ceasar) and sometimes like a "k" (cucumber).Arabic is another language with a non-Latin alphabet. Its 28 script letters are easier for English speakers to comprehend than the thousands of Chinese characters, but it's still an adjustment to become familiar with a new writing system. There are also characteristics of spoken Arabic that make it hard to learn.
The Hindu-Arabic or Indo-Arabic numerals were invented by mathematicians in India. Perso-Arabic mathematicians called them "Hindu numerals" (where "Hindu" meant Indian). Later they came to be called "Arabic numerals" in Europe because they were introduced to the West by Arab merchants.
Four is arba'a (ahr-uh-bah-ah) (????).
Five is hamsa (hahm-sah) (????). Note that the h has a guttural
pronunciation.
Move on to the words for numbers 6 through 10.
- Six is sitta (siht-tah) (???).
- Seven is sab'a (sehb-uh-ah) (????).
- Eight is tamaniya (theh-mah-nee-yuh) (??????).
Four is arba'a (ahr-uh-bah-ah) (????). Five is hamsa (hahm-sah) (????). Note that the h has a guttural
pronunciation.
Move on to the words for numbers 6 through 10.
- Six is sitta (siht-tah) (???).
- Seven is sab'a (sehb-uh-ah) (????).
- Eight is tamaniya (theh-mah-nee-yuh) (??????).
Arabic numerals are the ten digits: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9. The term often implies a decimal number written using these digits, which is the most common system for the symbolic representation of numbers in the world today, and is also called Hindu–Arabic numerals.
Most of the numeral symbols we use do look like Arabic numbers. In Arabic script, 1 is a vertical stroke, 2 and 3 are like 2 and 3 on their sides, and 7 is a V-shaped symbol; like 2 and 3, our 7 is the Arabic symbol rotated anti-clockwise through 90 degrees.
The Roman numerals are used to symbolize the Arabic letters which don't exist, or rather, the ones that have no phonetic equivalent in English. For e.g., the Arabic letter “?” (Haa) can't be accurately represented with Latin characters and it is, therefore, represented by the number “7”.
Arabic numerals are the ten digits: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9. The Oxford English Dictionary uses lowercase Arabic numerals to refer to these digits, and capitalized Arabic Numerals to refer to the Eastern digits.
Numbers 1-10( ? ??????-?)
| Arabic Numeral | Transcription | English Numeral |
|---|
| ? | sitta | 6 |
| ? | sab3a | 7 |
| ? | thamaaniya | 8 |
| ? | tis3a | 9 |
So, they used numerals and other characters to express their Arabic letters, e.g. number “3″ is used to stand for the Arabic letter “?“ (Ayn) as they look a like. Franco Arabic writing features: (7) Stands for the Arabic letter (?) /h/. (7′/5/kh) can be used instead of (?) /x/. (d) Stands for (?) /d/.
Arabic numerals are the ten digits: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9. The term often implies a decimal number written using these digits, which is the most common system for the symbolic representation of numbers in the world today, and is also called Hindu–Arabic numerals.
Part 1of 3:Counting to 10 in Modern Standard Arabic
- One is wahid (waah-heet) (????).
- Two is itnan (ihth-naan) (?????).
- Three is talata (theh-lah-theh) (?????).
- Four is arba'a (ahr-uh-bah-ah) (????).
- Five is hamsa (hahm-sah) (????). Note that the h has a guttural pronunciation.
Move on to the words for numbers 6 through 10.
- Six is sitta (siht-tah) (???).
- Seven is sab'a (sehb-uh-ah) (????). Note that this sounds somewhat similar to the English word "seven."
- Eight is tamaniya (theh-mah-nee-yuh) (??????).
- Nine is tis'a (tihs-anh) (????).
- Ten is ashra (ahsh-ahr-rah) (????).
How to convert the Arabic number 2,020?2,019 = ?2,021 = ?
- Break the number (decompose it) into place value subgroups: 2,020 = 2,000 + 20;
- Convert each subgroup: 2,000 = 1,000 + 1,000 = M + M = MM; 20 = 10 + 10 = X + X = XX;
- Wrap up the Roman numeral: 2,020 = 2,000 + 20 = MM + XX = MMXX;
300: ???? ??? (thalāth miʾah) or ??? 400: ???? ??? (arbaʿ miʾah) or ??? 500: ??? ??? (khams miʾah) or ???
Though Arabic words are written and read in RTL (right-to-left) directionality, numbers are read left-to-right (LTR), just as they are in English. In Example 2 below, the circled numbers are read in the exact same direction and order as you would in English: 107, 68, and 236.
It's five o'
clock. It's half past ten. It's five to six.
Telling the Time in Arabic Posted by aziza on Sep 29, 2009 in Culture, Vocabulary.
| One O'clock | ?????? ??????? |
|---|
| Eight O'clock | ?????? ??????? |
| Nine O'clock | ?????? ??????? |
| Ten O'clock | ?????? ??????? |
| Eleven O'clock | ?????? ??????? ???? |
200: ????? (miʾatān — dual form of ???) or ??? 300: ???? ??? (thalāth miʾah) or ??? 400: ???? ??? (arbaʿ miʾah) or ???
Go to File > Options > Advanced. Scroll down to the Show document content section - you will find the Numeral option. Set it to Context.
Official: “what's your name?” is “?? ?? ?????”
Type "language" (without the quotes) into the search form, and then select "Settings." Click "Language" to open the language control panel options. Press "Add a language," select "Arabic," and then click "Open." Choose the Arabic dialect you would like to use, and then press "Add."
The following video gives the
numbers in a sound file with the
writing. Please note that the youtube clip includes nunation (?????) at the end of each
number, but not the table.
Arabic Numbers 1-100 Posted by aziza on Mar 25, 2010 in Vocabulary.
| 0 | ??? | Sifr |
|---|
| 80 | ?????? | thamaanoun |
| 90 | ????? | tis3oun |
| 100 | ??? / ???? | mi'a |
The arabic letter ? has absolutely no equivalent pronunciation sound in the English alphabet, therefore we use the number 3 to represent it. For example, the Arabic word for 'eye' is ????, and this is written as '3ayn' using an English keyboard. The following chart shows the mapping between the Latin script and Arabic.