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Any Arabic Songs About Conquest

What are the best Arabic songs?

Here is the list of best Arab songs,1, Mal habibi Malou - saad lamjarred2, Lmallem - saad lamjarred3, Enty - saad lamjarred4, Ana Machi sahel - saad lamjarred5, Waadini - saad lamjarred6, Ana mali - saad lamjarred7, Salina Salina - saad lamjarred8, Jiti fi bali - saad lamjarred9, Ghaltana - saad lamjarred10, Nifsi aoulhalak - Myriam fares11, Ana mosh ananeya - Myriam fares12, Tamally maak - Amr Diab13, El alem allah - Amr Diab14, Naam enta - Mohammed Al salem15, Wafi - Mohamed Al salem16, Shams hobak - Mohammed Al shehi17, Kashf Al mohabbah - Mohammed Al shehi18, Halili - Cheb mami Ft Elissa19, Saharna ya Leila - Elissa20, Ah W boss - Nancy Ajram21, El Donia helwa - Nancy Ajram22, Abdul qadir - Khaled, Rachid Taha, Faudel23, Tsunami - Ahmed chawki24, Dawbony eineh - Ehab tawfik25, Tarti 3alleti - Hatim armor ft fahad26, Nzour Nabra - jalal El Hamdaoui27, Ghmorni W Shedd - Maya diab28, Ya Ghali - Guitara29, Blach - Jamila30, Yalla naeesh - Ahmed Gamal31, Mafi Ahad - Hamad AL kahtani32, Mohajaba - Shamma Hamdan33, Lama Teshofak Einy - Carmen Soliman34, Law bass fe ennalam - Cyrine abdelnour35, Cest la vie - Cheb Khaled36, Ainsi va la vie - Kenza Farah37, Habibi,I love you-Chawki Ft Kenza & Pitbull38, Nari Nari - Hisham Abbas

Does the "ق " in Persian come from Arabic?

Don't know much about Parsi “Qaf” but can tell you this: the entire Persian language has been influenced by Arabic.Needless to say it is, ever since the Islamic conquest, had been written in Arabic letters, and has adapted great number of Arabic vocabulary within.As for the Arabic ق below link for recitation of chapter 50 of Quran which is called (Qaf ق) is repeated over 50 times in 8 minutes.Almost all situations ie. at first, middle, and end of words, stressed, doubled, and tripped in one word (Kaf ك is also repeated.)The video is with both Arabic and English scripts and the pronunciation is superbeb. Go over it to hear it from an expert rather than just guessing.

What is the most beautiful Arabic song?

Some of my favorites:

Is the Arab occupation of the Levant the longest occupation in history?

@Petit
Jews and Christians have always remained in the Holy Land, only to be conquered by Muslims who would for years impose their majority on the population, the Palestinian Arabs of today are Arabs. There are descendants of Jews abd Christians interspersed but the region had indeed been Arabized for quite some time because of immigration.
You keep saying Palestine,
In 1937, the Arab leader Auni Bey Abdul Hadi told the Peel Commission: "There is no such country as Palestine. Palestine is a term the Zionists invented. Palestine is alien to us."
In 1946, Princeton's Arab professor of Middle East history, Philip Hitti, told the Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry: "It's common knowledge, there is no such thing as Palestine in history."
In March 1977, Zahir Muhsein, an executive member of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO), said in an interview to the Dutch newspaper Trouw: "The 'Palestinian people' does not exist. The creation of a Palestinian state is only a means for contin

Is the following a Arabic prayer or phrase OR Urdu prayer or phrase? Nasrun min Allahi wa fathun qareeb.?

It's arabic : نَصْرٌ مِن الله و فَتْحٌ قَرِيب
It means: A victory made by God and an upcoming conquest.

I myself don't know this ''aya'', but I'm pretty sure it's from the Quran.

Arabic Speakers--Jamil w Hana?

Yes your spelling is right. and no يا جميل و هناء يا ليل is not a double meaning it is just a phrase that says something like "O Jamil and Hana O night" but as the answer above night here in arabic doesn't literally mean night.

I'm sorry this is the only link I found on this series and I guess it's a different song.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eXvXqcPqu...

However try to youtube هناء وجميل as that was the name of the series and maybe u'll find something.

All the best

Which is harder: Hindi, Persian, or Arabic?

The hardest one is Arabic.

It's a lot more difficult in structure, phonology (sounds), etc., but mostly because of the fact that to be a well-rounded Arabic speaker, you have to learn a casual dialect for everyday conversation (your choice of Egyptian, Lebanese, Syrian (very similar to Lebanese), Gulf, Iraqi, Moroccan, Tunisian, etc.) and something called "Modern Standard Arabic" (MSA) which is the formal language used in books, magazines, newspapers, television/radio (news, documentaries, etc.), etc.


Hindi (Urdu is pretty much the same with Hindi when spoken) and Persian (in various forms: Iranian Farsi, Dari (Afghan Farsi), Tajik (Central Asian Persian)) are about the same as far as the level of difficulty is concerned: they're relatively easy. I mean, they're definitely harder than, let's say, Spanish or German but they're very very easy compared to Arabic or even English as some would argue. However, the script used in Hindi (of India) is pretty daunting, at least in the beginning stage. Urdu is mutually intelligible with Hindi but their script is based on the Arabic writing system. The Persian alphabet is also based on the Arabic writing system and it's a lot easier than Hindi (Devanagari) script.

Good luck! :)

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