Search Results - arab sound

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  1. 1

    The structure of Arabic from sound to sentences by Nasr, Raja Tewfik 1929-

    Published 1979
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  3. 3

    Learning Arabic for beginners speaking, reading & writing by book & cassettes by Anbar, Taghrid al-Sayyid

    Published 1991
    Subjects:
  4. 4

    Writing Arabic, a linguistic approach from sounds to script by Hanna, Sami A., Greis, Naguib 1924-

    Published 1972
  5. 5

    Phonetics in early Islam the speech-sounds by Semaan, Khalil Ibrahim Hana

    Published 1961
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    Mastering Arabic by Wightwick, Jane, Gaafar, Mahmoud

    Published 1990
  7. 7

    Arabic phrase book

    Published 1989
  8. 8

    Colloquial Arabic (Levantine) by McLoughlin, Leslie J. 1935-

    Published 1993
  9. 9

    Colloquial Arabic of the gulf and Saudi Arabia by Holes, Clive 1948-

    Published 1992
  10. 10

    Historical fact and fiction by Al-Attas, Syed Muhammad Naquib , 1931-

    Published 2011
    Table of Contents: “…New light on the Parameswara; when and why he acquired the Javanese title Parameswara; what his Malay royal title was when he rebelled against Majapahit; and the meaning of that title; when his convertion to Islam took place and where, and the name of the great missionary who converted him; his original Muslim name; his device role, rather than Adityawarman's, in establishing the basis for development of a new Malay kingdom; the founding of Malacca and her original name and it's meaning; the fictitious story of the Melaka tree in the founding of Malacca; the meaning of sejarah and the great man idea of the history -- 3. On Arab identity being based on genealogy and not on ethnicity; the pioneers who brought and spread Islam in the Malay Archipelago in the early as well as the later centuries were Arabs of noble origin chiefly from descendents of 'Ali bin Abi Talib through his son al-Husayn,the grandson of the Holy Prophet; their names and genealogies in Malay, Javanese, Sulu, Moro and Arab (Hadrami) sources; solutions to unsolved problems in the history of Sulu and Mindanao: the true identity of Tuan Masha'ika and Tuhan Maqbalu, and the date of Kabungsuan's arrival in Mindanao; self-evidence and other historical facts that demonstrate South Arabian (Hadramaut) provenance of Islam in the Archipelago; the great missionaries of Islam in the Archipelago in the 12th-16th centuries; the creation of the Malayo-Arabic alphabet and the Jawi script based on the Arab (Hadrami) sound (vocal) system…”