DLI - Syrian Arabic Course - Module 11
We made using the DLI - Syrian Arabic Course - Module 11 material easier to use and more effective. You can now read the ebook (in the pane on the left), listen to the audio (pane to the right) and practice your pronunciation (use on the Pronunciation Tool tab on right) all at the same time.
The DLI - Syrian Arabic Course - Module 11 material can be used both as a self-guided course or with the Skype Arabic lessons of a qualified Arabic tutor.
NOTE: Some of these ebooks are quite large and may take a minute to fully load.Pronunciation Tool
NOTE: To read the file, listen to the audios and use the pronunciation tab on your computer or device you need to have a PDF reader and a modern browser.
Audios
Syrian Arabic- 60- Module- 11 - Lessons 41-42Syrian Arabic- 61- Module- 11 - Lessons 43-44
Syrian Arabic- 62- Module- 11 - Lessons 41-42 Evaluation
Syrian Arabic- 63- Module- 11 - Lessons 43-44 Evaluation
Syrian Arabic- 64- Module- 11 - Lessons 41-44 Vocabulary
Syrian Arabic- 65- Module- 11 - Self Evaluation
Upon successful completion of this module, the student will be able to understand and carry out conversations in the Syrian dialect including the grammatical features and vocabulary of Module 11, and based on the following topics or situations:
Lesson 41: The Press
Lesson 42: Broadcasting
Lesson 43: Literature
Lesson 44: Performing Arts
Syrian Arabic is the a dialect of Levantine Arabic (Arabic: al-lahjah as-samiyyah), is a broad dialect of Arabic spoken in the 100 to 200 km-wide Eastern Mediterranean coastal strip. It is considered one of the five major varieties of Arabic. In the frame of the general diglossia status of the Arab world, Levantine Arabic is used for daily spoken use, while most of the written and official documents and media use Modern Standard Arabic. It is part of Eastern Arabic that includes Mesopotamian Arabic and peninsular Arabic along with Levantine. On the basis of the criterion of mutual intelligibility, Levantine Arabic could be regarded as a self-standing language, as distinct from other members of the Arabic language family such as Egyptian Arabic, Maghrebi Arabic or Peninsular Arabic, in the same way as French, Spanish, Italian and Romanian are all descended from Latin but are separate languages within the family of Romance languages.?
Arabic (Syrian) is spoken in: Syria
Arabic (Syrian) has no known alternate names.