bushra21
does anyone listen to 5aleji or arabic music?
if you do...could yall post up names of new songs that are out?
Bleakus
5aleeji all the way
but all the songs i listen too are pretty old skool
mema
anything by aljasmi, nawal & mohd 3abdo
Galactico
how about writing down some song names and the singer of the latest ones ?
I cant speak arabic just some words which I learnt from the songs :wink:
but I like some of the songs specially raghab's songs are quite good
bushra21
- Galactico wrote:
how about writing down some song names and the singer of the latest ones ?
I cant speak arabic just some words which I learnt from the songs :wink:
but I like some of the songs specially raghab's songs are quite good
thats what i was asking :oops:
Galactico
- bushra21 wrote:
- Galactico wrote:
how about writing down some song names and the singer of the latest ones ?
I cant speak arabic just some words which I learnt from the songs :wink:
but I like some of the songs specially raghab's songs are quite good
thats what i was asking :oops:
I guess we have to wait then
dont you have a website like we do here with the latest single releases ?
mema
^^ yup go to
the songs listing mmm wait for it 8)
Galactico
^^^Thanks but its in arabic I cant speak it or unnderstand it :cry:
^ian^
I don't get why you use numbers to compensate for supposed missing English letters. In the English language, we combine letters to make the necessary sounds, and every letter is not individual in it's own right.
Kh aleeji.
Bleakus
- ^ian^ wrote:
I don't get why you use numbers to compensate for supposed missing English letters. In the English language, we combine letters to make the necessary sounds, and every letter is not individual in it's own right.
Kh aleeji.
Low level Encryption dude
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^ian^
- Bleakus wrote:
- ^ian^ wrote:
I don't get why you use numbers to compensate for supposed missing English letters. In the English language, we combine letters to make the necessary sounds, and every letter is not individual in it's own right.
Kh aleeji.
Low level Encryption dude
I think you mean compression.
Bleakus
- ^ian^ wrote:
- Bleakus wrote:
- ^ian^ wrote:
I don't get why you use numbers to compensate for supposed missing English letters. In the English language, we combine letters to make the necessary sounds, and every letter is not individual in it's own right.
Kh aleeji.
Low level Encryption dude
I think you mean compression.
yeah that one
bushra21
- ^ian^ wrote:
- Bleakus wrote:
- ^ian^ wrote:
I don't get why you use numbers to compensate for supposed missing English letters. In the English language, we combine letters to make the necessary sounds, and every letter is not individual in it's own right.
Kh aleeji.
Low level Encryption dude
I think you mean compression.
or it could be the fact that it isn't an english language to begin with...
how do we make the letters ص ض ق ط ظ in english...there are no letters that, combined would make the same sounds...
:oops:
^ian^
- bushra21 wrote:
- ^ian^ wrote:
- Bleakus wrote:
- ^ian^ wrote:
I don't get why you use numbers to compensate for supposed missing English letters. In the English language, we combine letters to make the necessary sounds, and every letter is not individual in it's own right.
Kh aleeji.
Low level Encryption dude
I think you mean compression.
or it could be the fact that it isn't an english language to begin with...
how do we make the letters ص ض ق ط ظ in english...there are no letters that, combined would make the same sounds...
:oops:
Of course there is, you can make pretty much any sound with the alphabet, and we have extended characters too that can change the pronunciation of a letter.
For instance:
Resume - to return to something.
Resumé - a history of one's work.
bushra21
ok so what letters would we combine to make the arabic letters i had mentioned earlier?
^ian^
- bushra21 wrote:
ok so what letters would we combine to make the arabic letters i had mentioned earlier?
I will check with Siwash, it's do-able.
English is like mathematics, you just have to combine the right bits to get the result.
I understand now why I have trouble pronouncing some romanisation of Arabic words, because when written, each letter stands alone, not conjunctive.
Phoenix
- ^ian^ wrote:
I don't get why you use numbers to compensate for supposed missing English letters. In the English language, we combine letters to make the necessary sounds, and every letter is not individual in it's own right.
Kh aleeji.
So if, 5 implies Kh - what do, 7, 6 and 3 mean? Are there any more numbers used in the romanization of Arabic?
sauron
- ^ian^ wrote:
I don't get why you use numbers to compensate for supposed missing English letters. In the English language, we combine letters to make the necessary sounds, and every letter is not individual in it's own right.
Kh aleeji.
But we do it in English too, m8.
bushra21
- Phoenix wrote:
- ^ian^ wrote:
I don't get why you use numbers to compensate for supposed missing English letters. In the English language, we combine letters to make the necessary sounds, and every letter is not individual in it's own right.
Kh aleeji.
So if, 5 implies Kh - what do, 7, 6 and 3 mean? Are there any more numbers used in the romanization of Arabic?
those numbers are letters that i have yet to figure out how they can be correctly written in english so that the pronuciation turns out to be the same... ian will let us know once he's done consulting his friend. :D
^ian^
- sauron wrote:
- ^ian^ wrote:
I don't get why you use numbers to compensate for supposed missing English letters. In the English language, we combine letters to make the necessary sounds, and every letter is not individual in it's own right.
Kh aleeji.
But we do it in English too, m8.
Only if you're a retard. I personally find SMS speak to be an abuse of the language punishable by having termites trapped in a glass jar over someone's eyes.
sauron
Guess the numbers are faster, and a bit like using phonemics.
How ya doin, Bushy Baby? :hello2:
sauron
- ^ian^ wrote:
- sauron wrote:
- ^ian^ wrote:
I don't get why you use numbers to compensate for supposed missing English letters. In the English language, we combine letters to make the necessary sounds, and every letter is not individual in it's own right.
Kh aleeji.
But we do it in English too, m8.
Only if you're a retard. I personally find SMS speak to be an abuse of the language punishable by having termites trapped in a glass jar over someone's eyes.
Oh dear! Someone forgot to take his hormone tablets again.
^ian^
- sauron wrote:
- ^ian^ wrote:
- sauron wrote:
- ^ian^ wrote:
I don't get why you use numbers to compensate for supposed missing English letters. In the English language, we combine letters to make the necessary sounds, and every letter is not individual in it's own right.
Kh aleeji.
But we do it in English too, m8.
Only if you're a retard. I personally find SMS speak to be an abuse of the language punishable by having termites trapped in a glass jar over someone's eyes.
Oh dear! Someone forgot to take his hormone tablets again.
Perhaps it's because of my interrupted sleep last night :?
sauron
- ^ian^ wrote:
- sauron wrote:
- ^ian^ wrote:
I don't get why you use numbers to compensate for supposed missing English letters. In the English language, we combine letters to make the necessary sounds, and every letter is not individual in it's own right.
Kh aleeji.
But we do it in English too, m8.
Only if you're a retard. I personally find SMS speak to be an abuse of the language punishable by having termites trapped in a glass jar over someone's eyes.
Oh dear! Someone forgot to take his hormone tablets again.
sauron
^^^ Sorry, double post. What's caused your insomnia? Termite problem?