Washington, D.C.: 1969. 122 p.+75 p. Audio: 48 kb/s This intermediate-level reader in Moroccan Arabic is designed to provide (1) a text which will be articulatable with a basic course, (2) natural language in "advanced colloquial" rather than a literary style, and (3) material which is culturally insightful. The cultural aspects represented are those of inter-personal relationships, portraying a typical generation-gap situation. Each lesson consists of pre-drill sentences, text, notes, and questions and other drills. Translations of the pre-drills are at the back of the book. All Arabic material is written in phonemic transcription. The first seven texts of this volume are given in Arabic script in the beginning of the companion volume, "Moroccan Arabic Intermediate Reader, Part II.
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Center for Near Eastern and North African Studies, 1974. 255 p. Languages: english/arabic This five-part work is based on the author's "An Introduction to Moroccan Arabic." The thirty-eight texts of this book serve as an introduction to Moroccan ethnology, culture, history, folklore, and literature, in addition to giving the reader a more sophisticated exposure to the syntax of...
Center for Near Eastern and North African Studies, 1973. 438 p. This textbook introduces beginning students to Moroccan Arabic. Consists of three sections: phonology, essential grammar, and conversations. Includes twenty pronunciation drills. Consists of ten units of grammar and ten units of conversations. Concludes with two appendices (one is a verb table, the other a glossary...
Peace Corps Morocco, 2011. - 200 p. Languages: english/arabic Audio: 128 kb/s Moroccan Arabic (Darija) Textbook. Peace Corps/Morocco, led by Training Manager Abderrahmane Boujenab, substantially revised in 2004 lessons from the Peace Corps’ 1994 Moroccan Arabic book by Abdelghani Lamnanouar, rewrote some lessons completely and added new material to arrive at the 2004 edition....
The American University in Cairo Press, 2007. 411 p. Language: arabic Audio: 320 kb/s Drawing on her years of experience as an Arabic instructor and course developer, Samia Louis has used a functional approach to create a bright, innovative coursebook for the study of Egyptian colloquial Arabic - the spoken dialect most frequently studied and most widely understood in the Arab...
Learning Moroccan Arabic ( Textbook ) Author: Peace Corps Training Publisher: Peace Corps training Publication date: 2009 Number of pages: 217 Format / Quality: PDF-zipped Size: 11MB
Georgetown University Press, 2005. 400 p. Originally published under the title Jerusalem Arabic, "Eastern Arabic" is the gold standard for anyone beginning to learn the Arabic spoken by the Palestinians, or those who live in Syria or Lebanon. The "Levantine" Arabic, or Jerusalem dialect, is a central Middle Eastern dialect and recognized by Arabs virtually anywhere - in large...