الليبي جدا قريب من لهجة الخليجيين مخارج الحروف عندهم واضحه
@malak3229 Жыл бұрын
البنوته اليمنيه سكره الله يحفظها
@genesis2936 Жыл бұрын
The Iraqi dialect has a lot of Turkish and some Persian influence for obvious geographical reasons. Iraq was part of the Ottoman Empire until 1919 when it was ceded to Great Britain p. WWI, so a mere century old as “Iraq” and to this day no one has a credible or concrete evidence as to why is called iraq! Some suggest or hypothesize from the old “Uruk” of ancient times, but nothing set in stone. Hugely different accents/dialects within mere kilometers. سلام للجميع اخواننا العرب مهما كان مسكنهم Peace ✌️ to all !
@rawafedsaba1968 Жыл бұрын
I noticed the Yemeni dialect is the closest to classical Arabic
@user-ps4sr7tj7e Жыл бұрын
That one is not pure Syrian .. most probably bedwin Iraqi of Der-ezzor
@cheikhsalek7695 Жыл бұрын
All the words are synonyms and all are mutually intelligible.
@miraculous1151 Жыл бұрын
omg at the first i think he is iraqi not Syrian
@giveitashot1788 Жыл бұрын
Cuz his city دير الزور is so close to Iraq so they kind of speak Iraqi haha
@ArabicLanguageofProphets Жыл бұрын
فلسطين عربية وتحيا الجمهورية العربية السورية
@CorntwallLipstickQueen Жыл бұрын
Gross get out of Ireland
@Manal11111 Жыл бұрын
Don't be racist
@nabilahmedkhan8052 Жыл бұрын
Wow! Yemeni is so close to Saudi. Had no idea about that!
@shathaak6362 Жыл бұрын
No it different
@sepranashari7147 Жыл бұрын
can they understand each other if they were talking in their own dialect?
@OP_Tempest Жыл бұрын
Yes, aside from morocco and algerian (they can understand us but we can't, but we can still communicate with fus'ha dialect as everyone understands it)
@themuslimmorisco17 Жыл бұрын
An amazing video on Arabic dialects! Thank you for creating and uploading
@Chlrintruc Жыл бұрын
Whenever he laughed I laughed.. I like his laughed.
@studentnotes34 Жыл бұрын
www.youtube.com/@studentnotes34
@user-xr3rs5if2u Жыл бұрын
😊
@AhmedAbughadeer Жыл бұрын
The most beautiful thing is that all these different words are mostly synonyms or variations from Arabic origin, but each region has its own common words for each meaning. That why all Arabs still understand each other, even if they speak differently.
@AhmedAbughadeer Жыл бұрын
Some are of European origins from the colonial era, though.
@5Gazto Жыл бұрын
Not really, in what today is called Syria, there were a lot of languages in Classic and Ancient times, just to mention a few: Akkadian, Assyrian, Aramaic, Hurrian. In Ancient Palestine: Aramaic, Hebrew, Arabic.
@AhmedAbughadeer Жыл бұрын
@@5Gazto You're wrong. Even though some of these ancient languages had enriching effect on the Classic Arabic, they're all almost dead now, since no one now speaks any of them exclusively. However some words of them are used in some regional colloquial Arabic, that doesn't cancel that most (not all) of differences between Arabic dialects are variations of derivations of the Classic Arabic itself, which is obvious to any one with a little education or knowledge in Arabic lexicology.
@abedbbb7083 Жыл бұрын
@@5Gazto all what you have mentionned as languages first they are semetic languages and share with arabic the alphabet the root system and many roots so when you find some similar words that is just natural they used to be one language, second they are all dead except of Hebrew which was revived through the German Yiddish but was modified from the original hebrew and there is Aramaic which is almost dead but still little bit spoken in some few villages in Syria and North of Iraq or found in ancient Christian documents, Akkadian evolved into Assyrian and Babylonian and finally they were taken down by Aramaic a long time ago when the Assyrian empire integrated all of the Levant and underwent a demographic changes which estranged Assyrian language which was the elite language and the religion language but not the people language, Aramaic later lost it to Greek, and when the Arabs took over Syria and Iraq the original languages of the levant and mesopotamia were almost lost to Greek and Persian.
@TheJbeatsProductions Жыл бұрын
The range of words is frustrating.
@lunadavid553 Жыл бұрын
اللهجة الديرية ... محافظة دير الزور في الشمال الشرقي من سوريا 💟 قريبة من العراق وتشبه اللهجة العراقية كثيرا
@morfeus7237 Жыл бұрын
Orange is the same in Greek with the Syrian "Portokali" ouaou!!
@zakariazaki7513 Жыл бұрын
I like this video keep going 🤠 greeting from Morocco
@Legend-jv7nd Жыл бұрын
😩 p̴r̴o̴m̴o̴s̴m̴
@ayeshah8424 Жыл бұрын
How amazing to hear your story Cida!
@ayeshah8424 Жыл бұрын
Hope to hear more from Zeinab!
@ammarfattal671 Жыл бұрын
Nice
@memobrflowers108 Жыл бұрын
ياريت تنزلو فيديو الدبكة كامل
@memobrflowers108 Жыл бұрын
اجواء حلوة كتير انبسطنا
@jamilfattal8221 Жыл бұрын
We want long videos please
@jamilfattal8221 Жыл бұрын
أتمنى أن تعرضوا فيديوهات الحفل من فضلك
@jamilfattal8221 Жыл бұрын
لقد استمتعت كثيراً في هذا الحفل الرائع أتمنى دائما أن يكون لدينا مثل هذه الحفلات شكراً لكِ رفيقة
@nananour97532 жыл бұрын
بالتوفيق الدائم طبيبنا الفنان ان شاء الله 🌹🌺🥀🌷💐
@horcac2 жыл бұрын
Great interview Rafika and Abood, hugs from Caro in Bray!
@Mimi-ui4fg2 жыл бұрын
I love my Libyan Arabic dialect, especially that u brought a girl from my lovely city Benghazi 🇱🇾 لهجتنا الليبية بلذات البنغازية تهبل واجد 🇱🇾 و كل لهجة لها حلاوتها الخاصة 🌹
@timseidl88503 жыл бұрын
Awesome Video! Really Inspiring 💯
@AhmadAlTashi3 жыл бұрын
Thank you 😊
@cutecat63793 жыл бұрын
Hello.. l need to speak with you about important theme it's about music
@erinknightingale2513 жыл бұрын
we use qorfe, sarir, qamri and dirshad in somali
@mustafasamil4773 жыл бұрын
فهمت الفلسطينية وما فهمت السوري مع إني من سوريا من دمشق😂
@abdullabintalib41183 жыл бұрын
They're all understandable, it's just a different choice of words
@seleldjdfmn2213 жыл бұрын
Nice vid. Who's watching in 2055? I really want To Be friends =O
Пікірлер
Legend
A traitor to her own people.
Free Palestine ❤❤
She's one off the best
She is a legend
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
الواد المصري قرفان ليه كده
Omani accent ❤❤❤
❤
Yemen dialect is the closest one to fusha😊
الليبي جدا قريب من لهجة الخليجيين مخارج الحروف عندهم واضحه
البنوته اليمنيه سكره الله يحفظها
The Iraqi dialect has a lot of Turkish and some Persian influence for obvious geographical reasons. Iraq was part of the Ottoman Empire until 1919 when it was ceded to Great Britain p. WWI, so a mere century old as “Iraq” and to this day no one has a credible or concrete evidence as to why is called iraq! Some suggest or hypothesize from the old “Uruk” of ancient times, but nothing set in stone. Hugely different accents/dialects within mere kilometers. سلام للجميع اخواننا العرب مهما كان مسكنهم Peace ✌️ to all !
I noticed the Yemeni dialect is the closest to classical Arabic
That one is not pure Syrian .. most probably bedwin Iraqi of Der-ezzor
All the words are synonyms and all are mutually intelligible.
omg at the first i think he is iraqi not Syrian
Cuz his city دير الزور is so close to Iraq so they kind of speak Iraqi haha
فلسطين عربية وتحيا الجمهورية العربية السورية
Gross get out of Ireland
Don't be racist
Wow! Yemeni is so close to Saudi. Had no idea about that!
No it different
can they understand each other if they were talking in their own dialect?
Yes, aside from morocco and algerian (they can understand us but we can't, but we can still communicate with fus'ha dialect as everyone understands it)
An amazing video on Arabic dialects! Thank you for creating and uploading
Whenever he laughed I laughed.. I like his laughed.
www.youtube.com/@studentnotes34
😊
The most beautiful thing is that all these different words are mostly synonyms or variations from Arabic origin, but each region has its own common words for each meaning. That why all Arabs still understand each other, even if they speak differently.
Some are of European origins from the colonial era, though.
Not really, in what today is called Syria, there were a lot of languages in Classic and Ancient times, just to mention a few: Akkadian, Assyrian, Aramaic, Hurrian. In Ancient Palestine: Aramaic, Hebrew, Arabic.
@@5Gazto You're wrong. Even though some of these ancient languages had enriching effect on the Classic Arabic, they're all almost dead now, since no one now speaks any of them exclusively. However some words of them are used in some regional colloquial Arabic, that doesn't cancel that most (not all) of differences between Arabic dialects are variations of derivations of the Classic Arabic itself, which is obvious to any one with a little education or knowledge in Arabic lexicology.
@@5Gazto all what you have mentionned as languages first they are semetic languages and share with arabic the alphabet the root system and many roots so when you find some similar words that is just natural they used to be one language, second they are all dead except of Hebrew which was revived through the German Yiddish but was modified from the original hebrew and there is Aramaic which is almost dead but still little bit spoken in some few villages in Syria and North of Iraq or found in ancient Christian documents, Akkadian evolved into Assyrian and Babylonian and finally they were taken down by Aramaic a long time ago when the Assyrian empire integrated all of the Levant and underwent a demographic changes which estranged Assyrian language which was the elite language and the religion language but not the people language, Aramaic later lost it to Greek, and when the Arabs took over Syria and Iraq the original languages of the levant and mesopotamia were almost lost to Greek and Persian.
The range of words is frustrating.
اللهجة الديرية ... محافظة دير الزور في الشمال الشرقي من سوريا 💟 قريبة من العراق وتشبه اللهجة العراقية كثيرا
Orange is the same in Greek with the Syrian "Portokali" ouaou!!
I like this video keep going 🤠 greeting from Morocco
😩 p̴r̴o̴m̴o̴s̴m̴
How amazing to hear your story Cida!
Hope to hear more from Zeinab!
Nice
ياريت تنزلو فيديو الدبكة كامل
اجواء حلوة كتير انبسطنا
We want long videos please
أتمنى أن تعرضوا فيديوهات الحفل من فضلك
لقد استمتعت كثيراً في هذا الحفل الرائع أتمنى دائما أن يكون لدينا مثل هذه الحفلات شكراً لكِ رفيقة
بالتوفيق الدائم طبيبنا الفنان ان شاء الله 🌹🌺🥀🌷💐
Great interview Rafika and Abood, hugs from Caro in Bray!
I love my Libyan Arabic dialect, especially that u brought a girl from my lovely city Benghazi 🇱🇾 لهجتنا الليبية بلذات البنغازية تهبل واجد 🇱🇾 و كل لهجة لها حلاوتها الخاصة 🌹
Awesome Video! Really Inspiring 💯
Thank you 😊
Hello.. l need to speak with you about important theme it's about music
we use qorfe, sarir, qamri and dirshad in somali
فهمت الفلسطينية وما فهمت السوري مع إني من سوريا من دمشق😂
They're all understandable, it's just a different choice of words
Nice vid. Who's watching in 2055? I really want To Be friends =O
I want to hear the first girls Irish accent