Added: 2 years ago
From: nwmusicman4ever
Views: 15,944
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  • Greetings from Lebanon :P

  • shurmoota ibn hatak

    whore son of a donkey

  • letz improve together :)

  • :)

  • @eliaschakkour calm down, if you don't say Al Hamdulilah or tamam doesn't mean ALL Lebanese doesn't say that

  • Why are you even doing is beyond me.

  • i loved the way u said fus7a and 3amiyya ^^ hhhh adorable !! ^^

  • in japanese there are dozens of accents in chinese there dozens of accents and students study japanese not kansai dialect or chinese and not hong kong dialect so i wonder why westerners instead of studying arabic they try to study dialect the bulk is arabic then dialects come with communication .

  • i appreciate your enthusiasm for lebanese arabic, but you're far from being at the level where you can teach others...there ought to be more native speakers doing this!

  • @cbet I totally agree. Please please please find someone who can fluently speak it make videos. I want to learn more myself.

  • @nwmusicman4ever you are an embarrsment to your mother land

  • @BassSurfer2 Well Atleast he tried

  • @nwmusicman4ever im arabic i might make videos

  • @cbet agreed...this is horrible lol 

  • Great recording, but the background static is distracting. Still favorited this video! 1/2 Lebanese myself and would love to learn the language.

  • Are u lebanese? i've been trying to learn and this was very helpful! thanx! u should do more.

  • shokran ktiir!!! My fenace is Lebanese and when I recently spent some time in Lebanon I realized I need to learn the language.... I came to this conclusion when I was excluded from many conversations because 1 or more people present didn't speak english.... looking off into space humming a tune in my head... I wanted nothing more then to be able to understand a little of what they were saying at least.... the website is great but it helps more to hear someone say the words...

  • Lebanese are Phoenicians and Mediterraneans ONLY and nothing else. Lebanese-Phoenicians can NEVER be related to Arabs (who didn't even exist), Israelis, nomadic Hebrews, Africans or barbaric Westerners.

    Lebanese people speak their own language and

    have their own culture, separate from the surrounding Middle Eastern countries. Lebanese are descended from Phoenician origins, and are NOT so-called Arab. Lebanese Arabic is NOT an Arabic dialect, but has become a language of its own.

  • sut the fuck up we are arab. Phoenicians are the fathers of all the arabs

  • @ripleereeves

    arabs are dirty khaliji semites from the southern deserts who imposed their language and culture on others. arabs are dark and ugly. arabic probably happened when semites from iraq and syria colonized the khalij, and the half-black half-semite mixture there adopted normal semitic languages and made that new nasty arabic language, and then they conquered and raped the middle east. this is why the middle east was so advanced, but after arabs, it is shit

  • @LebanonPhoenica yes and Moroccans have also Phoenicians heritage.. does it make us Phoenicians too? LOL

  • @bigdoul YES but its lost culture but yet remembered

  • @LebanonPhoenica Dude u are some funny retarded guy, most lebanese can easily undesrstand other arabic, maybe except fpr magrebi.

  • @LebanonPhoenica

    COMPLETELY AGREEE!!!!!!!!!!

    

  • -1-

    Edmond Rabbath, was foolish enough to argue in the late 70s that even Hebrew was an Arabic Dialect. Travesties and delusions of this sort would have us (on the credulous popular level) believe that common Lebanese expressions (such as Beyt, Kaff, Diin, 2iid, 3ayn, Mayy, cha77uu, dashshar, lakhbat, tghalbat, darkab, sharshar, Kharbash, Zamat, Za7at, Sharkhat, la3was, baakh, ba7wash, lawwash, latash, shammar, farfat, fashar, Shabat, fajam...) are all Arabic, when in fact they are ALLLebanese.

  • -2-

    They may have entered Arabic over the Arabs' many hundreds of years of contact with our culture; they may have been adopted, internalized, and Arabized

    by a parched desert idiom (lacking in many ways the prestige, the wealth, and the sophistication of the Phoenician idiom), but they remain Lebanese-Phoenician.

  • great =). thanks for reccomending the site as well

  • mersi kateer! I am trying to learn lebanese. =)

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