John Kerlagon
If I wanted to learn Arabic, should I start with MSA or a dialect? I don’t have plans to travel to the Arabic speaking world but I’d like to communicate to a wide variety of Arabic speakers. How weird is it for a foreigner to speak MSA? Would I be given weird looks or would people appreciate me learning any Arabic?
29 nov. 2020 18:40
Antwoorden · 23
1
Hello john! In my opinion i think you should learn MSA first then if you want to learn the dialects you will find them easier
29 november 2020
1
I can help u
30 november 2020
1
I can help you
29 november 2020
1
Both are fine! Learning MSA is even better for you, you won't be weird or anything actually a lot of us would want to speak MSA in our daily life dialogues if we could but we live with our dialects unfortunately 💔😆
29 november 2020
If you learn MSA and speak it fluently, Arabs would actually respect you (although a lot of them would find it quite amusing, as you would be speaking in a “Shakespearean” form of Arabic.). You will have no trouble with regards to getting your point across in MSA, since it’s the lingua franca of the Arab world, BUT you will find that sometimes, when an Arab is speaking to you, you won’t have a clue what he’s on about (especially when talking to Moroccans). That’s because Arabs don’t speak MSA in their daily lives, they tend to only use it for reading and writing. As for speaking it, well, if the person is in a formal environment, he will use MSA (news broadcasts, religious sermons etc). I know this because I only know how to communicate in MSA, not in any of the dialects (although, to be fair, some of the “dialects” are so incomprehensible that in my humble opinion, they shouldn’t even be considered as part of the Arabic language). Learn MSA. Trust me, you won’t regret it.
1 december 2020
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