Publisher:British Museum Press, 2002. 29 p. The first stroke-by-stroke guide ever produced for learning to write Naskh, one of the six major cursive Arabic scripts. Its origins can be traced back to the late eighth century AD and it is still in use today, over 1300 years later. The Ottoman Turks considered Naskh the script most suited for copying the Qur'an and today more Qur'ans are copied in Naskh throughout the Islamic world than in all other Arabic scripts combined. This introductory workbook makes it possible for everyone to learn and enjoy the beauty of Arabic calligraphy. Based on his experience of running workshops and demonstrations at The British Museum and other cultural institutions around the UK, Mustafa Ja'far has created an easy-to-follow, teach-yourself guide.
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Saqi Books, 1986. - 95 p. Target language: Arabic. Source languages: English. Possibly the best beginner book for learning the Arabic alphabet, according to reviews on Amazon. Ever greater numbers of people are learning Arabic and/or coming into some kind of contact with the Arab world. Anyone who wishes to learn the language faces a hitherto formidable initial challenge: the...
Fun with Arabic, 2004. - 120 p. - ISBN: 978-0973051216. Quality: Scanned pages (good). Language: English. Quote: Write it in Arabic is an alphabet guide and workbook which offers a hands-on approach to learning Arabic. The book covers the 28 letters of the Arabic alphabet, numbers, vowel marks and handwriting. This workbook includes plenty of examples that teach how to read and...
Edinburgh University Press, 2009. - 197 p. - ISBN: 978 0 7486 3587 0 (hardback), ISBN: 978 0 7486 3588 7 (paperback). How to Write in Arabic helps students at all levels develop and refine their writing skills, focusing on the structure of Arabic sentences and paragraphs and their cohesive links. The book contains a variety of phrases and idiomatic expressions and places great...
Lulu.com, 2010. 160 p. The book offers an introduction to all the major styles of calligraphy present in in the Arab East: Naskh, Thuluth, Ruq'a, Nasta'liq, Diwani. Unfortunately, no Maghrebi scripts represented, and no Kufic either. Those scripts are Ottoman and post-Ottoman in nature, so people studying Ottoman (and to some extent Persian, because of Nasta'liq) can profit...
Palgrave Macmillan, 2005. - 117 p. - ISBN10: 1-4039-4110-6, ISBN13: 978-1-4039-4110-7. Quality: good: scanned book Mastering Arabic Script: A Guide to Handwriting teaches Arabic handwriting in the form universally used by adult native speakers (riq'a) and compares it with naskh, the usual printed form. There are three parts to the book covering: the basic letter shapes,...
CreateSpace, 2011. - 108 p. Language: arabic/english This book is considered the faster, easier way to learn the Arabic script. Illustrates - in an invented way- how to read, write the basic shapes of the letter and how to join letters to form words. Offers plenty of exercises and examples, and introduces readers to his first commonly used Arabic words and how to pronounce them...