Search:
International
UK US
Browse Categories

A BASIC COURSE IN IRAQI ARABIC (Georgetown Classics in Arabic Language and Linguistics)

BUY FROM AMAZON.COM
Price: $34.30

Usually ships in 24 hours

By: Wallace M. Erwin
(4 customer reviews)
RRP: $39.95
Buy New: $34.30
You Save: $5.65 (14%)


Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

EDITORIAL REVIEW

For those beginning their study, this volume is a comprehensive introduction to the Arabic language as spoken by educated Muslim Baghdad residents. It does not assume prior knowledge of Arabic. Transcribed and not in Arabic script, it is further enhanced by the inclusion of Iraqi–English and English–Iraqi glossaries.

The text, A BASIC COURSE IN IRAQI ARABIC, contains ten chapters of phonology, the study and identification of the meaningful sounds of Iraqi Arabic, and thirty more chapters deal with grammar and vocabulary. The phonology chapters all contain extensive drills, and the grammar chapters start with a dialogue or brief narrative, then explain the new vocabulary, points of grammar, and also conclude with drills.

Accompanying the text and drills is a bound-in CD containing audio MP3 files that aid in pronunciation and practice. As the English-speaking world has become increasingly aware of the lands and cultures where Arabic is spoken, books augmented with audio material such as A BASIC COURSE IN IRAQI ARABIC WITH MP3 AUDIO FILES have become more important and necessary--there can be no peace or concord without understanding.

PRODUCT DETAILS

Publisher: Georgetown University Press
Pub. Date: 29th February 2004
Catalog: Book
Media: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 389
Ean: 9781589010116
Isbn: 1589010116

ABOUT THIS BOOK

USER REVIEWS

Excellent foreign language materials
~ Written on Mar 22, 2007. 5 out of 5 users found this review helpful.

This is an absolutely wonderful text and audio files. I have learned so much about Iraqi Arabic from these materials. The main thing is the excellent presentation of verb forms so that the learner becomes completely familiar with both perfect and imperfect verb forms. I have seen so many Arabic language books and materials where the imperfect "tense" (essentially the present tense) is "shied away from" (for some unknown reason,) or as if the imperfect tense were "too difficult" for the beginning learner. Here, the author is completely upfront about it, and one learns these forms right away. This is exactly what is needed! I gave up on "Modern Standard Arabic" because the authors in all the books on the subject that I read refused to discuss the imperfect tense!

Other positive aspects of these materials are: the audio files are extremely professional, and most, if not all of the exercises are not only interesting, but very useful for the learner. I originally began my study of Iraqi Arabic just to learn enough to satisfy my curiosity about the language, but I have found that once into the materials, I could not stop learning! I have been a lifelong foreign language learner, and these are some of the best language materials I have ever encountered for ANY language.

I like to write out the dialogues and exercises on big sheets of paper to help reinforce my learning, and I found the romanized Arabic system that the author uses to be excellent. There are only some slight variations in the script that I use. For example, instead of the author's more "linguistic" use of "x" for the gutteral sound, I always transpose this into "kh" which to me is a better representation of the sound. But aside from certain minor variations that I prefer, the romanization is a great asset to helping the learner learn the aural-oral aspects of the language without being encumbered by the Arabic writing system at the beginning. I feel the writing system, because it is basically phonetic, can be learned later, or separately, if need be. But for the learner, studying the language at the beginning, in particular, in a familiar orthography ensures faster progress.

I highly recommend Iraqi, in general, as a dialect choice for Arabic, and to a great extent, I owe that to these great materials.

Less accessible
~ Written on Apr 4, 2006. 9 out of 9 users found this review helpful.

I purchased both this book and the Alkalesi book and found the Alkalesi book to be much more straightforward and accessible. This book is good for doing lots of drills, but it is not an easy way to learn the basics of Iraqi Arabic.

Great Resource and Starter for an English Speaker
~ Written on Jul 2, 2005. 31 out of 31 users found this review helpful.

I am a US army Captain intent on teaching myself Arabic....What I quickly found out through discovery learning is there are many dialects. I started with several other MSA resources, but Iraqi is very different. If you are going to Iraq, you need this book or at least a book that solely focuses on the Iraqi dialect. I have a Syrian interpreter and sometimes he has difficulty with some words and phrases here. He can communicate very clearly with the Iraqi people, but even I can notice the dialectal differences. There are a lot of ways to say things in Arabic and although they can understand each they simply say things differently. It may not be that confusing for a native non-Iraqi speaker to communicate, but for the non-native speaker who is just learning, it can sound like a different language sometimes. I am currently in Iraq, 6 months into my tour and I am about half way through the book. Already I am able to have very basic conversations and I can pick out a lot of words in any conversation. The outstanding drills do eventually take hold. I'll hear a conjugation of a word and I'll know what it means. Its my lack of vocabulary that is holding me back, but that should come with some more time. The drills must be listened to, not read. You have to train you brain to hear and comprehend it. The MP3s that come with the book really make it a complete package. It takes a while to understand, but you'll start to understand it. It makes it worthwhile when you can pick up even a few words out of a conversation.

Don't expect to learn the script with this book. It isn't in it. The intent of this book is listening and understanding and responding, not reading and writing. The phonics section is outstanding, it tells you exactly how to hold you tongue to make all the sounds. BTW there are 31 consanants in Iraqi Arabic, a couple more than MSA. Not a big deal, the book will have you pronouncing the sounds almost like a native.

An outstanding learning resource.
~ Written on Jul 23, 2004. 24 out of 24 users found this review helpful.

Ten chapters, 77 pages, just on the phonology of the Iraqi dialect! The author is very gifted at explaining in exquisite detail how each consonant, vowel and diphthong is to be produced, and strangely enough he actually made this subject interesting and comprehensible, something no one else has done in my lifetime. No highbrow "linguist only" babble, but all of that detail in a pleasant straight forward style. A CD with 665 Megs of MP3 files covers the entire text. The grammar notes on each new pattern are extensive. All in all, this course seems far superior to others I have bought. No introduction to the Arabic script in this text.

SIMILAR ITEMS: