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Learn Arabic
Arabic Class in Los Angeles, San Fernando Valley, and Irvine, Orange County
LanguageDoor is our recommended Arabic language school in Los Angeles, offering Arabic classes and group lessons for all levels of Arabic students in Los Angeles.
The Arabic courses are taught at three locations of the language school in West Los Angeles, San Fernando Valley, and Irvine, Orange County. LanguageDoor offers top quality Arabic lessons using highly educated native-speaking Arabic teachers and textbooks.
Language School Locations
West Los Angeles: 11870 Santa Monica Blvd,
Suite 202, Los Angeles, CA 90025 (near Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, Bel Air,
Culver City)
San Fernando Valley: 17200 Ventura Blvd, Suite 305,
Encino, CA 91316 (near Sherman Oaks, Van Nuys, Reseda)
Orange County: 18004 Skypark Circle, Suite 100, Irvine,
CA 92614 (near Santa Ana, Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa, Newport
Beach)
Arabic Class Schedules and Language School Contact Information
Please contact us or register online for more information.
Students' Testimonials
"The class is very well structured, which makes it very easy to comprehend," Guerras.
"Excellent teacher - very energetic and patient. I'm learning so much in such short time," Amber.
"Interesting, challenging, I'm learning a lot. He [the teacher] is great and very patient," Beatrice.
"So far I only have positive feedback. Sam makes the complex seem simple, which is essential for a language like Arabic," Chris.
"I learned how to read, write and pronounce the entire Arabic alphabet in two and a half hours," Bryan.
"I am really enjoining the course!," Zahra.
Information about Arabic Language
Arabic is a Semitic language, fairly closely related to, for instance, the
Hebrew language and the Aramaic language, spoken throughout the Arab world and
widely known outside it. It has been a literary language for over 1500 years,
and is the liturgical language of Islam.
The expression "Arabic" may refer either to literary Arabic or to the many
spoken varieties of Arabic; Arabs tend to view the latter as dialects of the
former, and consider literary Arabic as the standard language. Literary Arabic,
(the pure Arabic language) is both the language of present-day media across
North Africa and the Middle East (from Morocco to Iraq) and the language of the
Qur'an. (The expression media here includes most television and radio, and all
written matter, including all books, newspapers, magazines, documents of every
kind, and reading primers for small children.) "Colloquial" or "dialectal"
Arabic refers to the many national or regional dialects/languages derived from
Classical Arabic, spoken daily across North Africa and the Middle East, which
constitute the everyday spoken language. These sometimes differ enough to be
mutually incomprehensible. These dialects are not frequently written, although a
certain amount of literature (particularly plays and poetry) exists in many of
them, notably Egypt and Lebanon. They are often used to varying degrees in
informal spoken media, such as soap operas and chat shows.
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