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To qualify for this list, a word must be reported in etymology dictionaries as having descended from Arabic. A handful of dictionaries have been used as the source for the list.[1] Words associated with the Islamic religion are omitted; for Islamic words, see Glossary of Islam. Archaic and rare words are also omitted. A bigger listing including words very rarely seen in English is at Wiktionary dictionary.


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The version of the dictionary which is made available on this page is a partial version of the overall dictionary (currently c. 31,000 entries). This online version attempts to cover the basic vocabulary of Sudanese Arabic, including almost all the vocabulary given in Rank frequency list: spoken English from Word frequencies in written and spoken English, by Geoffrey Leech, Paul Rayson and Andrew Wilson (Longman, 2001), pp. 144-180. This frequency list is also available on this webpage.

Transcription system and other symbols used for in the dictionary. The dictionary is in Excel spreadsheet format in both Arabic-English and English-Arabic versions. This spreadsheet format allows the reader to order the material in various ways (alphabetically on English entries, alphabetically on Arabic entries, by root, etc.). It also makes it possible for the reader to extract information; e.g. to look up all records (rows) in Column B (English entries) which contain the word 'clean'. I would be very pleased to receive comments on the dictionary, including information about mistakes.

I particularly thank the following for their work on the Sudanese Arabic dictionary: Elrayah Abdelgadir (dictionary consultant, 2005 and 2007), Ali Al-Rashid Al-Amin (dictionary consultant, 1985, 1986), Ashraf Abdelhay, Asjad Saeedm Awad Alhassan, Mohammed El Shazali, Taj Kandoura, Tarig Rahma, Yousif Elhindi, and Abd El Matallab Fahal.

No other dictionary matches M-W's accuracy and scholarship in defining word meanings. Our pronunciation help, synonyms, usage and grammar tips set the standard. Go beyond dictionary lookups with Word of the Day, facts and observations on language, lookup trends, and wordplay from the editors at Merriam-Webster Dictionary.

The Oxford Picture Dictionary Third Edition has been enhanced with new topics to prepare learners for work, academic study and citizenship. It is available as an American English dictionary or in 5 bilingual versions (Arabic, Chinese, French, Spanish and Vietnamese). The online Teacher Resource Center provides a one-stop-shop for busy teachers with access to a variety of classroom materials.

I thought only Tamils and other hindi speakers are the only ones who are obsessed with their language, but here i see many arabic speakers are became hardcore fanatics about their language. The fact is this

Hebrew is the oldest and richest language in the world. Arabic is not oldest but rich language. Tamil and sanskrit both are old languages may be similar to arabic. Stop brainwashed by tamil sanskrit or arabic illusion. I am a Tamil speaker from srilanka but i will never say tamil is oldest language of the world

Thanks, DS Aswai! Sanskrit is indeed a very old language, though not the oldest. The consensus is Tamil takes that title. -language. Thanks for reading and be sure to check out our follow up to this blog -arabic-the-richest-language-in-words/

Dear Hamza,

Sanskrit is the language with the most words. Not just in the Indo-European language family, but this is attested among all world languages. I understand Arabic has millions of words, but every Arabic language scholar I have asked says that if you were to make a dictionary of all the Arabic words founds in every single text over the last 1600 years, the number would not tally 6 million or more. It is in fact much lower. 10 million or 12 million are theoretical figures, not actual tallies.

Sanskrit however with all its words tallied (and even excluding nominal compounds) through the historical record has dozens of millions of words. And the grammatical algorithms developed in pre-Classical Sanskrit can help explain this.

Indeed, Chelsea! Thanks for reading! It is a fun exercise to examine each language and learn more about them. We are of the belief you should never stop learning and we will be examining other languages this way as well. You can check out our follow up to this blog here -arabic-the-richest-language-in-words/

Excuse me. This fascinating discussion should have been over a long time ago. Like right after someone mentioned the fact that the Dutch language has the largest dictionary in the world. Just so you know, our dictionaries are huge. I hate to brag here, but we are talking 400.000, 43 inch long, very thick words. And yet we still managed to be creative, and make each and every one of those 400.000 words sound like we are continuously throwing up. Just let that sink in, said another wise man before.

WordReference has two of its own dictionaries plus those of Collins. The French dictionary has over 250,000 translations and the Italian dictionary has nearly 200,000. These dictionaries continue to grow and improve as well. If you don't find what you are looking for in any of the dictionaries, search or ask in the forums.

The multi-dialect approach of Lughatana makes it a unique resource when it comes to Arabic-English dictionaries. Contents in the dictionary have been carefully crafted, reviewed and edited for accuracy and simplicity. In many cases, you get a lot more than simply the meaning of a given word.

Reverso offers you the best tool for learning English, the Arabic English dictionary containing commonly used words and expressions, along with thousands of Arabic entries and their English translation, added in the dictionary by our users. For the ones performing professional translations from Arabic to English, the specialized terms found in our dictionary are very helpful.

Get results from both the General dictionary and the Collaborative one through one single interface! As we try to make it easy for you to translate into English the Arabic words and expressions, you are given the possibility to see synonyms of a word, conjugate it and obtain the word pronunciation, or even add another meaning to the Arabic-English dictionary, all these in only one click on the word.

The creation of the dictionaries is, unfortunately, not an exact science. I have provided a script that, given a text file of sentences (in this case fromOpenSubtitles) it will generate a word frequency list based on the words found within the text. The script then attempts to *clean up* the word frequency by, for example, removing words with invalid characters (usually from other languages), removing low count terms (misspellings?) and attempts to enforce rules as available (no more than one accent per word in Spanish). Then it removes words from a list of known words that are to be removed. It then adds words into the dictionary that are known to be missing or were removed for being too low frequency.

You can correct spelling errors by using the context menu with Dynamic Spelling. Potentially misspelled words are underlined based on the dictionary of the text language. If you type text in different languages, select the text and assign the correct language. ff782bc1db

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