arabic / ˈær ə bɪk /

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arabic2 个定义

adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. of, belonging to, or derived from the language or literature of the Arabs.
  2. noting, pertaining to, or in the alphabetical script used for the writing of Arabic probably since about the fourth century a.d., and adopted with modifications by Persian, Urdu, and many other languages. A distinguishing feature of this script is the fact that etymologically short vowels are not normally represented.
  3. Arab.
  4. Arabian.
n. 名词 noun
  1. a Semitic language that developed out of the language of the Arabians of the time of Muhammad, now spoken in countries of the Middle East and North Africa. Abbreviations: Ar, Ar.
  2. the standard literary and classical language as established by the Koran.

arabic 近义词

arabic

等同于 digit

arabic 的近义词 8
arabic 的反义词 1

更多arabic例句

  1. The characters speak Hausa, Fulani, and Arabic and could be in Nigeria, Mali or Burkina Faso, where Boko Haram has made headway of late.
  2. See, by then, I had spent two months learning Darija, the Moroccan dialect of Arabic, in addition to the four years of Modern Standard Arabic that I took in college.
  3. The stories are based in the Middle East and North Africa and resemble a tray of assorted Arabic sweets.
  4. The future for Yemi, a Nigerian former student, was laid out in a contract written in Arabic which she signed in an office in Lagos in June 2019 to enable a recruitment agency bring her to work in Lebanon.
  5. The Israeli Foreign Ministry, on the other hand, operates an Arabic-language Facebook profile to reach people in Iraq, where Facebook is popular.
  6. His discourse is now more detailed: submission, which is the meaning of islam in Arabic, gives him a kind of enjoyment.
  7. Even for Arabic dance no one wears a long dress, just a scarf around the hips.
  8. She attends hip-hop and belly dance classes (known as Arabic dance in Iran) just to shine more at parties.
  9. The group puts out most of its statements—on its Twitter feed, or its numerous websites—in Arabic, as opposed to Baluchi or Farsi.
  10. The outlets giving these pronouncements the most airtime are Arabic news stations in the Gulf.
  11. There is something pleasant in this monk's having had both a Latin and an Arabic name.
  12. Have ready some very clear and weak gum-arabic water, or some thin starch, or rice-water.
  13. The princess may love the gems in his turban, his Arabic verses; but not even here in Sicily will she wed an infidel.
  14. From the benches came countless curses and jeers—Frankish and Arabic; he heeded none.
  15. It was about this time, too, that the encouragement of the study of Arabic in the university began.