How are you in Arabic:
Formal to a woman .......... Kief - hal - ick
Formal to a man .......... Kief - hal - ack
Casual to a woman .......... Kief - ic
Casual to a man .......... Kief - ac
This I am sure of, but the next part varies some.
You can respond to this, Mup - soo - ta (Joyful, merry, happy) or mnyeh heptier (very good), even just mnyeh, (good). I am sorry if my phonetics confuse you, but I am trying to make it easiest for all!
To ask "how are you?" in Arabic one must consider whether they are asking a male or a female. To ask a male it is "kaifa haloka" and to ask a female it is "kaifa haloki".
translation: كيف حالك in English you say kaif halak.
مرحبا كيف حالك
Say: Marhaban, Keefak(In the dialect spoken throughout middle east)
Egyptian dialect:
Ahlan, Izayek
"kaif 7alkom jamee3an?" = "كيف حالكم جميعاً؟"
In english :-
"Kaif halkom jamee'aan?"
Men in Arabic is "رجال" Women in Arabic is "نساء" Man in Arabic is "رجل" Woman in Arabic is "امراة"
I am = ana ( in Arabic ). And in Arabic you write it this way : أنا
Arabic Translation : " حكمة " Arabic Phonetically : " Hekma "
no it is not Arabic word,,,,we we also use it in Arabic for caravans :)
you start with the Arabic Alphabets , The Arabic Alphabets are 28 .
The best place to find definitions of Arabic words in Arabic is in an Arabic dictionary, either in book form or online.
If you want to say Arabic in Arabic this is how you say it=Arabi
It is the Hindu-Arabic numeral system.
Waclawa (polish)Wadiah (arabic)Wadidah (arabic)Wafa (arabic)Wafiyya (arabic)Wahiba (arabic)Wahida (arabic)WilhelminaWillowWendyWandaWillaWilhelminaWanda,Willow,Wilhelmina,Wilma,Winnie,WhitneyWendolineWinifredWrenWaldaWenona
The main language spoken by Arabic people is Modern Standard Arabic (MSA), which is used in formal settings, literature, and media. In addition to MSA, Arabic people also speak various dialects of Arabic that differ from country to country and region to region.
Arabic Translation : " أحلامنا " Arabic phonetically : " Ahlamana "
Arabic Translation : " اسم " Arabic Phonetically : " Esm "