Take a look at this crazy video of the tricks they can do =D
.....Hey, it's the desert - you can do this ....or go to the mall... ( =D )
Great, huh?? =D
....Did you notice they had their hazards flashing? "......Just in case you TRY to pass us....." ......=D
Well, I've been here maybe .....25 days?...Wow =D
It's been one of the best experiences of my life....of course =D
.....I went with J. =) to her language tutor's house.....she has a once per week lesson.....and hopefully I will be going from now on and learning some Arabic, as well =D
Very excited! It's such a beautiful language, and it will be fun to at least go beyond the memorized greeting =D .....which is .....
"As-salaamu alaykum" (Peace be unto you) ,
"Alaykum salaam; Kayfahlich?" (their reply ..."...(same thing, and ) how are you [female]?")
(my/your reply.....something that means, "I am well," ....[then, "Hu'umdu Allah" ] - "Praise be to God")
...And I/you repeat the same to them... =D
......It's a great way to greet people, huh? =D
Except you're not sure how people are REALLY doing..... =)
So here are my "notes" from being at J. 's language lesson ....I'm going to go over them again in a few months, and see what words I actually heard! =) I was just listening and writing down random things I heard the tutor say to J. =)
.....If you're reading the words, I wrote "wella-dich" .... J. said later that "well-ed" means boy .....or maybe it's baby? ...anyway - I put the female ending on boy [yeah, it must be boy] =D
[but the male ending is just "-ick" =D...so .....I was close =D ]
....And also, I wrote 'musa-allah" for what J. said was "help'....... but I know Musa is "Moses", and Allah is "God".....so it probably......just ......sounds like that?? =D
.....I looked in the Arabic textbook later, at the English translation of the conversation the tutor read from the Arabic script (and acted out with plastic Smurf people =) ) ......
and it went something along the lines of,
"hello, Fatima, how are you?"
"I am well! welcome!" * "Where is the book, Fatima?" "The book is not here."
I laughed when I saw how simple it was, and told J. it must be very funny for her her family in the house, to here her teach us baby words! =D =D
*(welcome is day-fal-thal-loo, or something that starts with dayfahlthal.. =D
I LOVE the way it sounds, for some reason! ;-)
....For the sake of time, I'm just copying and pasting something I emailed for some kindergarten-age kids..... =)
And it might look like a fancy house, because it's so different from our houses,
But part of the culture here – it's very, very important what people think of you, so even if you don't have a lot of money, the parts of your house that your friends will see when they come to visit, have to look very nice.
(It's important to us in America,too - but very important here....) =)
I only know how to say a few words in Arabic – this is how you say “thank you”:
.....Hey, it's the desert - you can do this ....or go to the mall... ( =D )
Great, huh?? =D
....Did you notice they had their hazards flashing? "......Just in case you TRY to pass us....." ......=D
Well, I've been here maybe .....25 days?...Wow =D
It's been one of the best experiences of my life....of course =D
.....I went with J. =) to her language tutor's house.....she has a once per week lesson.....and hopefully I will be going from now on and learning some Arabic, as well =D
Very excited! It's such a beautiful language, and it will be fun to at least go beyond the memorized greeting =D .....which is .....
"As-salaamu alaykum" (Peace be unto you) ,
"Alaykum salaam; Kayfahlich?" (their reply ..."...(same thing, and ) how are you [female]?")
(my/your reply.....something that means, "I am well," ....[then, "Hu'umdu Allah" ] - "Praise be to God")
...And I/you repeat the same to them... =D
......It's a great way to greet people, huh? =D
Except you're not sure how people are REALLY doing..... =)
So here are my "notes" from being at J. 's language lesson ....I'm going to go over them again in a few months, and see what words I actually heard! =) I was just listening and writing down random things I heard the tutor say to J. =)
.....If you're reading the words, I wrote "wella-dich" .... J. said later that "well-ed" means boy .....or maybe it's baby? ...anyway - I put the female ending on boy [yeah, it must be boy] =D
[but the male ending is just "-ick" =D...so .....I was close =D ]
....And also, I wrote 'musa-allah" for what J. said was "help'....... but I know Musa is "Moses", and Allah is "God".....so it probably......just ......sounds like that?? =D
.....I looked in the Arabic textbook later, at the English translation of the conversation the tutor read from the Arabic script (and acted out with plastic Smurf people =) ) ......
and it went something along the lines of,
"hello, Fatima, how are you?"
"I am well! welcome!" * "Where is the book, Fatima?" "The book is not here."
I laughed when I saw how simple it was, and told J. it must be very funny for her her family in the house, to here her teach us baby words! =D =D
*(welcome is day-fal-thal-loo, or something that starts with dayfahlthal.. =D
I LOVE the way it sounds, for some reason! ;-)
....For the sake of time, I'm just copying and pasting something I emailed for some kindergarten-age kids..... =)
Hi, guys!
I miss you all so much!....
Right now I am in an area of the
world called the Middle East; I have some friends here who are
teaching people how to speak English, and I am helping take care of
their two little boys; I have
a lot of fun with them! =D
....
The people here speak Arabic....
This is what their writing looks like! =D
… So this is what kids are learning
to write in school here =D
Another part of the culture here is
that everyone wears good clothes that cover your whole body … only
your hands and feet (and your face!) show =D so that people think
good thoughts when they look at you... =D
....
....a lot of the ladies here wear
something like this:
The men sometimes wear a white robe
with a turban on their head...
Or they will wear jeans and a button
down shirt, kind of like a shirt you would wear to school. But the
Arab men always wear long pants, even when it's hot outside! So some
of the men just wear the white robes, because they're much cooler
than pants! =D
I am living in a town in the desert,
and here are some of the mountains... =D
It gets very hot here – I think it
will be the hottest in July! … A few weeks ago, it was 113
degrees!! =D (Very hot! And I think one of my friends said it can
even get up to 130 degrees! You would die if you were outside very
long when it was that hot! )
This is a sweet and chewy fruit they
have here ….. but I can't remember what it's called! =D
It looks crazy, huh? =D
And this is some of the bread they
make – most people say it only tastes good for 30 minutes after it
comes out of the oven – but I think it's good all the time! You can
see that it's like a soft, puffy pizza crust ….and it tastes
amazing when it's fresh-baked! =D
This is the gate – it's very heavy
and sounds like a huge prison door when you pull it shut! =D
Here is my house – I mean, the
front door – these are what all the houses look like! They are made
out of concrete, and they have this big concrete wall around the
outside – it's called a courtyard. So your yard is very private,
and no one can see in!
Our doorbell sounds very funny! Guess
what? It's the sound of a very loud bird chirping!
The first time I heard it, I was pretty confused, because my little friend Izzy ran outside to try and open the
gate! And I thought it was just a bird singing! =D
… The
windows look golden because they have a special coating on the
outside so no one can see in during the day; but the wall is
very tall, so you would have to bounce really high to try to see in
anyone's house! =D
And it might look like a fancy house, because it's so different from our houses,
but ours is pretty plain inside...
But part of the culture here – it's very, very important what people think of you, so even if you don't have a lot of money, the parts of your house that your friends will see when they come to visit, have to look very nice.
(It's important to us in America,too - but very important here....) =)
This is called the MED-jool-lus (I
don't know how to spell it =D)
It's the room where you sit down with
all your guests and have coffee and tea =D
This is at an American friends' house
– and the Arab people here would say it needs to be much fancier =D
I only know how to say a few words in Arabic – this is how you say “thank you”:
“Shoo-KRAHNN” [and you
roll the “r” =) ]
So, “shukran” for reading and
looking at the pictures!
[end quote] =)
[end quote] =)
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