BelArabi
Your daily Arabic dose �
Speak like a local ���
New words every day
31/05/2026
🇦🇪 Useful Emirati Arabic Phrase
On a phone call with a bad connection?
Say:
"ما أسمع زين."
(Ma asmaʿ zayn.)
It means:
"I can't hear well."
A very useful everyday phrase when the sound isn't clear or the connection is weak. 📱
Save this phrase—you'll probably need it sooner than you think!
31/05/2026
🇪🇬 Useful Egyptian Arabic Sentence
Not sure yet?
Say:
"خلّينا نشوف."
(Khallina nshoof.)
It means:
"Let's see."
Egyptians use this phrase all the time when they're thinking about something, making plans, or aren't ready to give a final answer yet. 👀
A short phrase you'll hear in everyday conversations across Egypt!
31/05/2026
🇪🇬 Useful Egyptian Arabic Sentence
Ending a conversation?
Say:
"أشوفك بكرة."
(Ashofak bokra.)
It means:
"See you tomorrow."
A simple phrase you'll hear every day in Egyptian Arabic when saying goodbye to friends, classmates, or coworkers. 👋
Save it and try using it in your next Arabic conversation!
30/05/2026
📚 Grammar Bite: Arabic Plurals
One of the most interesting things about Arabic is that plurals don't always follow a simple rule!
كتاب → كتب
Kitāb → Kutub
ولد → أولاد
Walad → Awlād
بنت → بنات
Bint → Banāt
The more Arabic vocabulary you learn, the more plural patterns you'll discover.
💬 Which Arabic word would you like to know the plural of?
30/05/2026
🐱 Learning Arabic? Start with the words you use every day!
Where is the cat?
فوق — On / Above
تحت — Under
أمام — In front of
خلف — Behind
Mastering these simple place words will help you describe the world around you in Arabic from day one.
💬 Can you make a sentence using one of these words?
30/05/2026
🌍 Arabic isn't just one language—it's a world of dialects!
How do you say "I want" in your dialect?
🇪🇬 عايز (3ayez)
🇸🇾 بدي (baddi)
🇸🇦 أبغى (abgha)
🇲🇦 بغيت (bghit)
Different words, same meaning. That's what makes Arabic so fascinating!
💬 Which dialect are you learning?
30/05/2026
✨Arabic expressions can be surprisingly funny when translated literally.
🇪🇬 في المشمش (Fil Mishmish)
Literal meaning: “In the apricots”
Real meaning: “Never gonna happen.”
Learning Arabic means learning the culture behind the words.
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