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AR15.COM
10/20/2011 9:02:44 AM EDT
I am thinking of learning a new language.   I took 3 years of french in high school, but since I haven't been using it I have forgotten a lot of it.  I figure I should learn a language that will be useful.   At my current job I interact with Arabic people all the time.  I am considering learning Arabic.  So I have a few questions.

I imagine it is far more difficult than french to learn, I attribute this to the fact that many English words were formerly french words or very close to them.  So How hard is it to learn arabic?

What is the best way to learn a second language?  I have heard great things about Rosetta Stone?
10/20/2011 9:03:12 AM EDT
[#1]
Chinese

or

Spanish
10/20/2011 9:06:03 AM EDT
[#2]
find a school that teaches it near you






my local community college has classes.... that way you can learn grammar and sentence structure plus the alphabet
10/20/2011 9:34:15 AM EDT
[#3]
Is Arabic more common than Farsi?  Or is it the other way around?
10/20/2011 9:40:55 AM EDT
[#4]
Quoted:
Is Arabic more common than Farsi?  Or is it the other way around?


Arabic is more Common.
10/20/2011 9:41:29 AM EDT
[#5]
Arabic is more common. Farsi is persian, spoken in Iran, Iraq and some other areas, similar to Dari spoken in AFG. Although they use the same alphabet arabic is quite different. Farsi has a indo- european background.
10/20/2011 9:46:02 AM EDT
[#6]
Allahu Akbar translated means:



"She's gonna blow!"
10/20/2011 9:48:21 AM EDT
[#7]
Arabic is pretty hard, and I'm a language guy.  Chinese is surprisingly easy and will be much more useful in the future as we decline.
10/20/2011 9:48:27 AM EDT
[#8]
Quoted:
Allahu Akbar translated means:

"She's gonna blow!"


I thought it meant, "Shoot me before I hurt someone!"
10/20/2011 9:55:08 AM EDT
[#9]
Quoted:
Arabic is pretty hard, and I'm a language guy.  Chinese is surprisingly easy and will be much more useful in the future as we decline.


Is Chinese different than Mandarin? I've always heard Mandarin was difficult for English speakers to learn.
10/20/2011 9:55:12 AM EDT
[#10]
Go for it. I HIGHLY recommend getting a native speaker of Arabic as your teacher, or better yet, go to an Arabic-speaking country to study. I'm studying Russian language. Look at my flag icon I struggled like hell with French in high school but am doing very well with Russian. Arabic is in the highest level of difficulty for a native of speaker of English to learn...so it'll probably be pretty hard and you'll have to be driven/persistent.


10/20/2011 10:05:38 AM EDT
[#11]
In what commercial application is non-native Arabic, and no clearance, economically viable?  Not being a smartass, I'd REALLY like to know.
10/20/2011 2:23:02 PM EDT
[#12]
Quoted:
In what commercial application is non-native Arabic, and no clearance, economically viable?  Not being a smartass, I'd REALLY like to know.


Ever had to explain to an arabic woman why you (an infidel) have to stick your hand up her gooch to deliver a baby behind a pizza place?   Plus i imagine it could open up a few contract jobs.