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My Touch And Feel Alif Baa Taa

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While most letters are happy to sit next to the letter that follows it, a select six are more ‘anti-social’. Through fun Arabic flash cards– Help your little ones learn their Alif Baa Taa in a fun and engaging way while increasing their Arabic word vocabulary! Teach Arabic alphabet using books

Here are the six Arabic letters that don’t join up with the letter following them. Instead, they form a break in the middle of a word. The isolated form is how a letter is written when by itself, mostly for instructional purposes (the exceptions to this rule are unfriendly letters – but we’re covering those next.

While eating – Make eating a learning experience for your kids with Arabic alphabet feeding set. You can keep your child engaged while he/she is busy reciting each Arabic Letter and learn while feeding. Makes it so much fun and easier to feed. The initial form is how the letter appears when at the start of a word (remember, this is at the far right). But here’s the good news: it’s a phonetic language that follows very consistent pronunciation rules.

b (The letter p doesn’t really exist in Arabic, so ‘p’ is also pronounced as ‘b’ by Arabic speakers.) If you've got a terrible teacher for the course, you're not going to enjoy it. My prof for this course (Afifa Haddad) was one of the two funniest of my teachers this semester (although my English prof was pretty cool too). Unlike the unfriendly letters, the smiley letters don’t disrupt the ‘flow’ – these letters follow the same rules as most of the other letters. The only thing that changes is the placement of the dots, from over or under the “smiley mouth” to over or under the vertical line.

Arabic uses a system called Abjad, where each letter stands for a consonant (i.e., there are no vowel letters). Teaching the Arabic alphabets is foundational for reading the Quran. No matter where you are from, as a Muslim parent and caregiver, teaching the Arabic alphabets to the kids are of utmost importance. Ultimately, learning to read in Arabic just means you need to ‘un-learn’ a few habits that are second nature to English speakers. Reading any book is great for learning letters but if you are a non-Arabic speaking household, books that just focus on letters and their sounds are great aids.

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