Good day readers.
It seems like I had a lot of rest from my previous post and therefore I am prepared to key in my next lesson.
In today's lesson we are going to have a look at, or rather, my readers are going to have a look at the various forms or shapes the Arabic alphabets take when they are used in writing. This is similar to the upper case and lower case in terms of the English letters though it is like the Arabic letters are more complex. So here we go.....
Unlike the English letters where you have upper case and lower case for each letter, the Arabic letters change forms or shapes depending on their position in a word. Thus, the shape a letter will take in the beginning of a word will be different from the shape it will take when it occurs in the middle of the word - middle means any position after the first letter and before the last letter - and another shape for the last position in the word.
Below is a diagram depicting how the Arabic letters look like when joined to form words:
I hope I have explained somewhere that the Arabic language is written from right-to-left unlike English which is written from left-to-right.
Yes sir, I copied the table from somewhere on the net. So what? I have acknowledged the source and therefore it is not plagiarism. No, sir.
See you in my next post....... It will not take eternity, no.
It seems like I had a lot of rest from my previous post and therefore I am prepared to key in my next lesson.
In today's lesson we are going to have a look at, or rather, my readers are going to have a look at the various forms or shapes the Arabic alphabets take when they are used in writing. This is similar to the upper case and lower case in terms of the English letters though it is like the Arabic letters are more complex. So here we go.....
Unlike the English letters where you have upper case and lower case for each letter, the Arabic letters change forms or shapes depending on their position in a word. Thus, the shape a letter will take in the beginning of a word will be different from the shape it will take when it occurs in the middle of the word - middle means any position after the first letter and before the last letter - and another shape for the last position in the word.
Below is a diagram depicting how the Arabic letters look like when joined to form words:
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Source:https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/564x/7e/5f/fa/7e5ffaa9ba4db6d362bd90ef245ec4e7.jpg |
Yes sir, I copied the table from somewhere on the net. So what? I have acknowledged the source and therefore it is not plagiarism. No, sir.
See you in my next post....... It will not take eternity, no.
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