Language/Moroccan-arabic
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Welcome to the Moroccan Arabic learning page!
You will find below many free resources to learn and practice this language.
Enjoy your learning journey with Polyglot Club! 😊
Facts about Moroccan Arabic[edit | edit source]
- Language code (ISO 639-3):
ary
- Autonyms (how to write "Moroccan Arabic" in Moroccan Arabic):
الدارجة
- Other names for "Moroccan Arabic":
Colloquial Arabic, Maghrebi Arabic, Maghribi, Moroccan Arabic, Moroccan Colloquial Arabic, Moroccan Dareja, Moroccan Darija, Moroccan Dereja
- The Moroccan Arabic language is spoken in:
Morocco
The Moroccan Arabic dialect, called in Morocco darija (ar) الدارجة (/dæɾiʒæ/) resembles several varieties of Arabic dialect spoken in Morocco. It belongs to the group of Maghrebi dialects. The word darija therefore specifically designates the dialects used by the Arabic-speaking Moroccan population, while in the Middle East the term arabia 'ammia (fluent Arabic) is used. Moroccan Arabic, as a mother tongue or serving as a lingua franca for communication between Arabic speakers and Berber speakers, is spoken by more than 30 million people in Morocco and by several hundred thousand in countries of Moroccan emigration.
Videos[edit | edit source]
Learn Moroccan Arabic / Lesson 1: GREETINGS ![edit | edit source]
Moroccan Arabic : very important How to greet people[edit | edit source]
Moroccan Arabic: 20 most common phrases[edit | edit source]
Free Moroccan Arabic Lessons[edit | edit source]
Language Exchange[edit | edit source]
Forum[edit | edit source]
Tools[edit | edit source]
Marketplace[edit | edit source]
Last Lessons[edit | edit source]
Seasons and Climate — Describing the Weather — Indirect Questions — Reported Speech — Language Use and Social Context — Darija and Other Dialects — Uses of the Conditional — Formation of the Conditional — Ramadan — Eid Al Fitr and Eid Al Adha — Sports and Activities — Music and Dance — Uses of the Passive — Formation of Passive Constructions — Emergencies and First Aid — At the Hospital — Relative Pronouns — Direct and Indirect Object Clauses — Kasbahs — The Medina — Bargaining and Haggling — At the Market — Shopping for Clothes — Negative Imperative — Affirmative Imperative — Public Transportation — Taking a Taxi — Temporal Prepositions — Directional Prepositions — Greetings and Etiquette