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A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic is an invaluable tool for all learners of Arabic, providing a list of the 5,000 most frequently used words in Modern Standard Arabjc (MSA) as well as several of the most widely spoken Arabic dialects . -• Based on a 30-million-word corpus of Arabic which includes written and spoken material from the entire Arab world, this dictionary provides the user with detailed information for each of the 5,000 entries, including English equivalents, a sample sentence, its English translation, usage statistics, an indication of genre variation , and usage distribution over several major Arabic dialects. Users can access the top 5,000 words either through the main frequency listing or through an alphabetical index arranged by Arabic roots. Throughout the frequency listing there are thematically-organized lists of the top words from a variety of key topics such as sports, weather, clothing, and family terms. An engaging and highly useful resource, A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic will enable students of all levels to get the most out of their study of modern Arabic vocabulary. Tim Buckwalter is Research Associate at the University of Maryland . Dilworth Parkinson is Professor of Arabic at Brigham Young University (Provo, Utah).
Routledge Frequency Dictionaries
General Editors
Pau l Rayson, Lancaster University, UK Mark Davies, Brigham Young University, USA Editorial Board
Michael Barlow, University of Auckland, New Zealand Geoffrey Leech, Lancaster University, UK Barbara Lewandowska-Tomaszczyk, University of Lodz, Poland Josef Schmied, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany Andrew Wi lson, Lancaster University, UK Adam Kilgarriff, Lexicography MasterCiass Ltd and University of Sussex, UK Hongying Tao, University of California at Los Angeles Chris Tribb le, King's College London, UK Other books in the series
A Frequency Dictionary of American English A Frequency Dictionary of Mandarin Chinese A Frequency Dictionary of French
A Frequency Dictionary of German A Frequency Dictionary of Portuguese A Frequency Dictionary of Spanish
A Frequency Dictionary of Czech (forthcoming)
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic Core vocabulary for learners Tim Buckwalter and Dilworth Parkinson
I~ ~~o~1~;n~f{~up LONDON AND NEW YO RK
First edition published 2011 by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, OX14 4RN Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge 270 Madison Ave, New York, NY 10016
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business © 2011 Tim Buckwalter and Dilworth Parkinson Typeset in Parisine by Graphicraft Limited, Hong Kong Printed and bound in Great Britain by TJ International Ltd, Padstow, Cornwall
All rights reserved . No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data A catalog record for this book has been requested
ISBN 13 978-0-415-59543-8 (hbk) ISBN 13: 978-0-415-44434-7 (pbk) ISBN 13: 978-0-203-88328-0 (ebk)
Contents
Thematic vocabulary list
I vii
Series preface
Acknowledgments Abbreviations Introduction References
I vi
I ix
Ix I1
I8
Frequency index
I9
Alphabetical index
I 433
Part of speech index
I 515
Thematic vocabulary list
1 Animals
I9
17 Movement
I 124
2 Body
I 16
18 Communication
3 Food
I 23
19 Health
I 30
4 Clothing
6 Family
8 Time 9 Sports
I 36
I 44
26 Religion
I 88
I 96
I 190
27 Verb Form I
I 198
28 Verb Forms II-X
I 103
15 Nationalities 16 Emotions
I 176
25 Arabic Speaking Cities*
I 80
14 Opposites
I 169
Regions*
10 Nature I 73
13 Colors
I 162
24 Arabic Speaking Countries/
I 66
12 Professions
I 155
23 Electronics, Computers, Phones, Web
I 58
11 Weather
I 144
21 Female Names 22 Male Names
I 51
7 Materials
I 138
20 Dialect Words
5 Transportation
I 131
I 110
I 208
29 War and Security 30 Politics
I 226
I 117
* includes countries where Arabic is co-official: Israel, Chad, and Somalia
I 218
I 183
Series preface
Frequency information has a central role to play in learning a language. Nation (1990) showed that the 4,000-5,000 most frequent words account for up to 95 percent of a written text and the 1,000 most frequent words account for 85 percent of speech. Although Nation 's results were only for English, they do provide clear evidence that, when employing frequency as a general guide for vocabulary learning, it is. possible to acquire a lexicon which will serve a learner well most of the time. There are two caveats to bear in mind here. First, counting words is not as straightforwarg as it might seem. Gardner (2007) highlights the problems that multiple word meanings, the presence of multiword items, and grouping words into families or lemmas, have on counting and analyzing words. Second, frequency data contained in frequency dictionaries should never act as the only information source to guide a learner. Frequency information is nonetheless a very good starting point, and one which may produce rapid benefits. It therefore seems rational to prioritize learning the words that you are likely to hear and read most often. That is the philosophy behind this series of dictionaries. Lists of words and their frequencies have long been available for teachers and learners of language. For example, Thorndike (1921, 1932) and Thorndike and Lorge (1944) produced word frequency books with counts of word occurrences in texts used in the education of American children. Michael West's General Service List of English Words (1953) was primarily aimed at foreign learners of Engli sh. More recently, with the aid of efficient computer software and very large bodies of language data (called corpora), researchers have been able to provide more sophisticated frequency counts from both written text and transcribed speech . One important feature of the resulting frequencies presented in this series is that they are derived from recently collected language data. The earlier lists for English included samples from, for example, Austen's Pride and Prejudice and Defoe's Robinson Crusoe, thus they could no longer represent present-day language in any sense. Frequency data derived from a large representative corpus of a language brings students closer to language as it is used in real life as opposed to textbook language (which often distorts the frequencies of features in a language, see Ljung, 1990). The information in these dictionaries is presented in a number of formats to allow users to access the data in different ways. So, if you would prefer not to simply drill down through the word frequency li st, but would rather focus on verbs for example, the part of speech index will allow you to focus on just the most frequent verbs . Given that verbs typically account for 20 percent of all words in a language, this may be a good strategy. Also, a focus on function words may be equally rewarding - 60 percent of speech in English is composed of a mere 50 function words. The series also provides information of use to the language teacher. The idea that frequency information may have a role to play in syllabus design is not new (see, for example, Sinclair and Renouf, 1988). However, to date it has been difficult for those teaching languages other than English to use frequency information in syllabus design because of a lack of data.
viii
Series preface
Frequency information should not be studied to the exclusion of other contextual and situational knowledge about language use and we may even doubt the validity of frequency information derived from large corpora. It is interesting to note that Alderson (2007) found that corpus frequencies may not match a native speaker's intuition about estimates of word frequency and that a set of estimates of word frequencies collected from language experts varied widely. Thus corpus-derived frequencies are still the best current estimate of a word's importance that a learner will come across. Around the time of the construction of the first machine-readable corpora, Halliday (1971 : 344) stated that "a rough indication of frequencies is often just what is needed'~ Our aim in this series is to provide as accurate as possible estimates of word frequencies. Paul Rayson and Mark Davies Lancaster and Provo, 2008
References Alderson, J.e. (2008) Judging the frequency of English words. Applied Linguistics, 28 (3): 383 -409. Gardner, D, (2007) Validating the construct of Word in applied corpus-based vocabulary research : a critical survey. Applied Linguistics, 28, pp. 241 - 265.
Halliday, M.A.K. (1971) Linguistic functions and literary style. In S. Chatman (ed.) Style: A Symposium. Oxford University Press, pp. 330-65.
Ljung, M. (1990) A Study of TEFL Vocabulary. Almqvist & Wiksell International, Stokholm . Nation, I.S,p. (1990) Teaching and Learning Vocabulary. Heinle & Heinle, Boston. Sinclair, J.M. and Renouf, A. (1988) 'A lexical syllabus for language learning', in R. Carter and M. McCarthy (eds) Vocabulary and Language Teaching. Longman , London, pp. 140-158.
Thorndike, E.L. (1921) Teacher 's Word Book. Columbia Teachers College, New York. Thorndike, E.L. (1932) A Teacher 's Word Book of 20,000 Words. Columbi a University Press, New York. Thorndike, E.L., and Lorge, I. (1944) The Teacher 's Word Book of 30,000 Words. Columbia University Press, New York.
West, M. (1953) A General Service List of English Words. Longman, London.
Acknowledgments
We are indebted to a number of research assistants who put in countless hours on this project, most notably Bashar Sadr, Muhammed Barakat, Amany Ezzat, and Najwa Ezzat. We are also indebted to a number of students from Brigham Young University who helped with this project: Jeff Smith, David Tensmeyer, Laila Lamani , Shereen Salah, Rana Derwy, Mira Ansari, Falah Alsiekh, and Mais Yahya. We are particularly indebted to Julie Vonwiller, Director of Appen Pty Limited , for providing us with the transcripts of an Algerian speech corpus col1Jpiled by Appen. The first author is indebted to Arabic language experts Elizabeth M. Bergman from Miami University (Ohio) and Jonathan Owens from the University of Bayreuth, who provided assistance in interpreting data from the Algerian speech corpus. He would also like to express his gratitude to the University of Maryland Center for Advanced Study of Language (CASL) staff for their encouragement and support, especially during the analysis of Arabic dialect data. He also wishes to acknowledge the valuable assistance he received from Arabic dialect experts associated with research at CASL: Peter Schultz provided advice on vocabulary items from numerous dialects and proofread an early draft, and Sana Smith helped with difficult Algerian and Levantine lexical items. And finally, the first author is extremely grateful to his supportive wife Crissie who also provided research and editing in the final and critical stages of this work. He dedicates this dictionary to his parents, Albert and Lois, former missionaries, Bible translators, and lexicographers among the Toba Indians of the Argentine Chaco. The second author would like to thank Brigham Young University and Dean John Rosenberg of the College of Humanities, as well as Prof Kirk Belnap of the National Middle East Language Resource Center, for significant financial support for this project. He dedicates this book to his wife, Laura Beth, who is always up for another 'adventure' in the Arab World, and to his students, from whom he derives continual inspiration and admiration from their intense desire to reach across cultures and connect with people.
Abbreviations
a.p.
active participle
i~li
acc.
accusative
ti
adv.
adverb
t;.;. adv.
coll.n.
collective noun
~ coll.n. fish, un.n. ~
dem.pron.
demonstrative pronoun
~1 dempron.
duo
dual
~I.wl
elat.
elative
~I elat.
fem.
feminine
"i9 fem
~ both of
fig.
figurative
GL!.
G1y!.
gen.
genitive
-'~ havi ng; gen. '-?~
imperat.
imperative
..1.>1 v. I (u) to take sth; (imperat.) ..1.>
imperf.
imperfect
:;\5 I (a)
interrog.
interrogative
~ interrog. how
invar.
invariable
.l:.ll. (Dia .) ad).
masc.
masculine
I~ dempron. this (masc.)
n.
noun
i y. n.
neg.
negative
'1 neg.part. no
nom.
nominative
,":",1 n. father; nom. yl
num.
number -
u.lI num
part.
particle
~ part. (with imperf) may, might
pass.
passive
~l v.
perf.
perfect
~ part. (with perf) has/have already
pers.
person
~! part. (with 2nd pers. pron.) 0'"/-' with, watch out for!
poss.adj.
possessive adjective
prep.
preposition
prep.phr.
prepositional phrase
ad). next, following; a.p. arriving, coming
brother; ace.
,
L>-I
here
that (masc.sg.)
rel.pron. (masc.du .) who, whom; which
pI.
better/best
street; (fig.)
Ul.!JI the
"" ... t
., ,
(with imperf) to almost do sth
pI.
(i nvar.) wrong
i~ day
.
""
0 ,....
public
~
pI.
J'11 thousand ....
OJ.
,
X pass. ~I to be martyred
~~! be careful
t.l::. pass. ad). (Egy.) belonging to; of J&. prep. on, above ~ prepphr. !UI ~ in the Name of God ... ,.. . . . ....
Abbreviations
pI.
plural
~;f n./adj. pI. -uun, 0~;f American
p.p.
passive participle
.J~ p.p.
pron.
pronoun
~f pron. you (masc.sg.)
reI.
relative
JI rel.pron. (femsg .) who, whom; which
sg.
singular
-L:;. pI. n. women (sg. of}1)
un.n.
unit noun
A
vn.
verbal noun
~ J vn. layi ng down
voc.
vocative
voc.part. (you)
Dialect and Regional Labels Aig. Bah. Dia. Egy. Gul. Irq. Jor. Kuw. Leb. Lev. Lib. MSA Magh. Mor. Pal. Qat. Sau. Sud. Syr. Tun. UAE Vern.
Algeria Bahrain Dialect Egypt Gulf Iraq Jordan Kuwait Lebanon Levant Libya Modern Standard Arabic Maghreb Morocco Palestine Qatar Saudi Arabia Sudan Syria Tunisia United Arab Emirates Yemen
, 4::l!/..J! .JL!.l1 the aforementioned
coll.n. eggs, un.n. ~
o... !
xi
Introduction
A freq uency dict ionary of Arabic
difficulty and usefulness of any proposed text or
Enrollments in university-level Arabic language
exercise that involves vocabulary.
programs in the United States have more than
Arabic is reputed to have a remarkably rich
doubled in the past decade and in many cases rival
vocabulary. Various statistical techniques have been
enrollments in what used to be considered more
devised to test this, all of which bave major problems,
commonly taught languages like German. High
but most scholars of Arabic still agree that Arabic
school Arabic programs are starting in almost every
seems to value the maintenance in the system of
state. There is no question that the study of Arabic
large numbers of synonyms, and that the overall
has become increasingly popular and widespread.
vocabulary of the language is relatively large. This, in
Because this change has happened so quickly, the
addition to the fact that Arabic has far fewer cognate
field of Arabic language teaching has been working
forms for English speaking learners than most
hard to provide high quality materials and resources.
European languages do, makes the above-mentioned
This book is a contribution to that effort.
arguments for the value of a frequency dictionary
What is the value of a frequency dictionary for Arabic language teachers and learners? Isn't it
even more salient in the Arabic case. The vocabulary acquisition task for students is both more extensive
enough to rely on the vocabulary lists in course text
and more difficult, making techniques to maximize
books and on regular dictionaries? The short answer
time spent learning vocabulary all the more important.
is that although text books provide vocabulary in each chapter, there is almost never any indication
As stated, the purpose of this book is to prepare students of Arabic for the words they are most likely
of which of these words the student is most likely
to encounter in the real world. In the case of Arabic,
to encounter in actual conversations or texts. For
this brings up the issue not only of how frequently
independent learners the situation is even more
words are used, but what variety of Arabic those
frustrating. They may pick up a work of fiction or
words come from. Students often complain that
a newspaper and begin to work through the text
Arabs do not speak the way they do "in the textbook:'
looking up unfamiliar words in a dictionary. But they
Today one could add that when Arabs communicate
often have an uncomfortable suspicion that their
by email or post messages on forums, blogs, and
time could be maximized if they could begin with
other social media, they do so in a language that is
the most common words in Arabic, using them as a
not entirely Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) or entirely
core vocabulary on which more extensive reading
dialect, but contains a mixture of both, often
could be based. Finally, frequency dictionaries can be
corresponding to the register, formal or informal,
a valuable tool for language teachers and materials
that the writer wishes to convey. It is often noted
developers. It is often the case that students enter
that even in high ly formal social situations few
into an intermediate language course with deficiencies
educated native speakers of Arabic are able to make
in terms of their vocabulary. In these cases the
exclusively and sustained use of MSA, without
teacher often feels frustrated because there doesn't
resorting to the vocabulary, especially the function
seem to be any systematic way to bri ng less advanced
words, of their native dialect. Furthermore, due to
students up to speed. With a frequency dictionary,
the popularity of satellite television in the Arab
however, the teacher could assign students to work
world, many Arabs are now exposed daily to speakers
through the list to fill in the gaps in their vocabulary
of dialects other than their own, thereby increasing
in a way that makes most effective use of their time.
their comprehension of the more frequently occurring
And when they develop materials for their students,
vocabulary items of these dialects. Therefore, one
the frequency dictionary can be a guide to the
of the purposes of this book is to identify those
2 Introduction
highly-frequent dialect words that often pop up in
frequency counts conformed to the language
the middle of a conversation, written or spoken, that
attitudes and pedagogical expectations of their day.
is otherwise in MSA, or a simplified form of MSA, or
The situation today, however, is quite different, as
a combination of MSA and dialect. At the same
the use of colloquial Arabic in the media, both
time, it is noted that for communication to take
written and spoken, is widespread and growing, and
place between Arabic-speakers from different dialect
Arabic textbooks for language learners have adjusted
regions, usage of a considerable amount of MSA
to this reality by including some vocabulary and
vocabulary is absolutely necessary. Furthermore, the
phraseology from the major dialects.
dominance of MSA in formal written media and
Currently available frequency dictionaries of
literature is undisputed, and it is certain that MSA
Arabic are seriously outdated and are based on
wi ll continue to occupy the center of most Arabic
corpora that are considered very small by today's
language curricula. In response to this sociolingui stic
standards. The following is a brief summary and
reality, this dictionary takes into account the current
description of previous frequency dictionaries of
usage status of both MSA and the dialects, and
Arabic, in order of publication:
attempts to provide an accurate record of the frequency of vocabu lary used in both varieties.
Brill's (1940) The Basic Ward List afthe Arabic
Daily Press, was based on a corpus of 136,000
What is in this dictionary?
words from the newspapers of Egypt and
The principal part of this book is the frequency
Palestine in the late 1930s;
dictionary proper, that is, the list of 5,000 most
Aqil's (1953) al-Mufradat al-Asasiyyyah lil-Qira'ah
frequently used Arabic lemmas, as determined by
al-Ibtida'iyyah (Basic vocabu lary for elementary
the process described below. This information is
reading) was based on a corpus of 180,000 words
arranged in four different formats : (i) a main frequency
taken from 18 elementary-level school readers
listing, which lists the lemmas (with their associated
used in six Arab countries;
information) in order of descending frequency; (ii)
Landau 's (1959) A Word Count of Modern Arabic
an alphabetical index of these words; (iii) a frequency
Prose, incorporated Brill 's frequency count of
listing of the words organized by part of speech; and
newspaper prose, and added a frequency count
(iv) thematic lists, or "call-out" boxes, listing groupings
obtained from a comparable corpus of 136,000
of these words into related semantic classes .
words consisting of essays and learned prose;
For pedagogical reasons we have chosen to use the traditional system of arranging entries by root,
Abduh's (1979) al-Mufradat al-Sha'i' ah fi al-
Lughah al-Arabiyyah (Frequently used Arabic
which highlights important aspects of Arabic
vocabulary) included the surveys of Brill, Aqil,
derivational morphology that play an important role
and Landau, to which he added the resu lts of a
in vocabulary development.
survey he made earlier (1955 -1957) of 255,000
Each of the entries in the )Tlain listing contains the word itself (its headword or citation form), its part(s) of speech (verb:
noun~adjective,
etc.), a
words from Jordanian newspapers and elementary school readers; Fromm's (1982) Hiiufigkeitsworterbuch der
sample sentence or context -reflecting actual usage,
modern en arabischen Zeitungspache (Frequency
an English translation of that context, and summary
dictionary of modern newspaper Arabic), was
statistical information about the usage of that word .
based on a corpus of 79,561 words derived
The dictionary is focused on Single words, so the
mainly from the editorial content of the leading
treatment of collocations and multiword expressions
government newspaper of Egypt, Syria,
falls outside its scope.
and Iraq;
Previous frequency dictionaries of Arabic
/'arabe standard moderne was based on a corpus
Kouloughli's (1991) Lexique fondamental de Previously publi shed frequency counts of Arabic have
of 200,000 words taken from newspapers and
focused exclusive ly on the formal written language,
magazines from all parts of the Arab world, and
Modern Standard Arabic (MSA), and have ignored
includes extracts from plays and short stories of
spoken and dialectal Arabic. To be fair, these
modern writers.
Introduction
In addition the above publications, there are two
3
of spontaneous (unscripted) speech data, consisting
surveys that focused exclusively on Arabic verb
mostly of informal conversations between individuals
frequencies:
from the same country or region in the Arab world. These conversations were conducted primarily in a
Bobzin's (1980) "Zur Haufigkeit von Verben in
single dialect, although in some cases there was some
Neuhocharabischen;' Zeitschrift fUr arabische
use of simplified MSA when the register or tone of
Linguistik (5:35-69) computed the frequencies
the conversations was more formal. The dialects and
of 43,543 verbs occuring in literature, cultural
dialect groups represented in this collection were
magazines, and scholarly publications in seven
Egyptian, Levantine, Iraqi, Gulf and Algerian.
Arab countries;
The remaining 90 percent of the corpus came from
Bobzin 's (1983) "On the Frequency of Verbs
written sources, divided into five different text or
in Modern Newspaper Arabic," al-Abhath
genre types of equal size, i.e. about 5.4 million words
(31:45 -63) surveyed 21,055 verb tokens from
each: (i) daily newswire,. (ii) newspaper editorials,
twelve different newspapers published from
opinion essays, regular column s; (iii) learned prose,
Baghdad to Algiers.
consisting mostly of artic les in academic and scientific journals, including " Islamic guidance"
Of the above frequency dictionaries only Kouloughli
essays, and popular but formal magazines and
(1991) is currently in print. 5ince the 1990s
publications; (iv) postings on Internet discussion
considerable progress has been made in corpus-based
forums; and (v) literature and fiction, made up of
computational linguistics, making it possible to survey
short stories, novels, and plays . Several aspects of
much larger amounts of data. In fact, computational
the written corpus are worth pointing out:
corpus-based lexicography of MSA was introduced
With the exception of the literature section, each
some years ago by lexicographers van Mol (2001)
of the five text types contained material originating
and Hoogland, Versteegh, and Woidich (2003), but
from al l regions of the Arabic-speaking world, from
corpus-based lexical statistics has not received adequate
Morocco to Oman, and from Syria to Yemen, from
attention. In the meantime, the amount of Arabic
a total of 90 different sources. Practically all of the
data published on the Web has increased dramatically.
texts were published in 2006-2007, with the
Because this new electronic medium provides great
exception of some academic, scientific and popular
freedom for self-expression, published material today
publications from the late 1990s, and some well-
covers not only MSA but also various forms of written
known works of fiction from the 1950s.
Arabic dialect that are undergoing a process of orthographic standardization though widespread use. In order to identify the most frequent 5,000 lexical items of Arabic one must develop a balanced corpus
The daily newswire section of the corpus was obtained from the official news agency of each country, and was supplemented by front page (head line) news items from one of the leading
that includes not only the familiar MSA of newswire
newspapers in the same country. In order to avoid
reports, newspaper editorials, academic and scientific
duplicate news items we limited selections to
publications, short stories, novels and other works of
different years: e.g. 2006 for the country's official
literature, but also the informal written Arabic and
news agency, and 2007 for headline news from the
dialectal Arabic that abounds today on Internet
leading newspaper of that country. The corpus
discussion forums and the personal websites of social
section of newspaper editorials, opinion essays, and
media. A frequency dictionary of Arabic wou ld not
regular columns came primarily from long-stand ing
be complete without a statistical survey of the daily
and wel l-known newspapers of major Arab capital
spoken language as well, most of which is also in
cities, as well as the leading pan-Arab newspapers in
dialect. We addressed all these issues in selecting the
London and Paris. Samples of academic, scientific,
corpus we would use for this frequency dictionary.
religious, and popular formal writing was obtained primarily from weekly magazines and monthly journals,
The corpus
although in-depth articles from newspaper publications,
Our dictionary was compiled from a corpus of
especially from the "Friday supplement," were also
30 million words of which 10 percent was made up
found to fit in well with this genre or text type.
4
Introduction
The corpus section containing postings on Internet discussion forums was our primary source for samples
frequency of these surface forms but also their distribution over the corpus . This was done in two
of informal written Arabic as well as written dialect.
separate processes, one for the written corpus and
The discussion forums are dominated by the interests
one for the spoken corpus . The purpose of this was
of youth culture (e.g. sports, technology, videos,
to determine the optimum number of unique
music, and pop stars) and the concerns of women
surface forms or types to analyze, disambiguate in
(e.g. child rearing, marital relations, soap operas, and
context, and tag for lemmatization . We determined
cooking), and have become an important venue for
that we would begin by processing the top 20,000
obtaining religious guidance and medical advice, and
word forms of the written corpus, after which we
for discussing personal and family issues. Although
would examine the yield of disambiguated and
many of these topics have received coverage over
tagged lemmas to determine if a larger selection of
the years in newspapers and magazines, in the forums
word forms was necessary. We used a simi lar approach
they are covered more informally, directly, and
with the spoken corpus, in which we tagged the
personally. The language of the forums is unedited,
most frequent 10,000 word forms, and then assessed
unevenly censored, and often quickly produced . It
the results in terms of lemmas covered . As it turned
abounds in first and second person discourse, and
out, the combination of both processes yielded some
imperative verb forms, and proved to be an excellent
9,900 unique lemmas, with sufficient statistical
source for the written forms of vocabulary associated
evidence to identify with confidence the top 5,000
primarily with spoken colloquial Arabic. In fact, many
lemmas for this frequency dictionary. Lemmas at the
of the most frequent words in the spoken corpus
very end of the frequency ranking display absolute
also appeared in the forums section of the corpus,
frequency figures of around 200 occurrences, with a
often with considerable orthographic variation .
distribution over 50 percent of the corpus.
Recording this orthographic variation is an important part of the lexicographic description of these words. The literature section of the corpus contained a
The top 20,000 word forms of the written corpus were processed using the Buckwalter (2004) morphological analyzer in order to assign one or
solid core of works by recognized authors such as
more possible lemma tags to each word form , as
Naguib Mahfouz, Tawfiq ai-Hakim, Ali Salim, Edwar
well as to identify all prefixes and suffixes that would
al-Kharrat, Tayeb Salih, Ghassan Kanafani , Elias
be listed in the frequency dictionary. The
Khoury, Khalil Gibran, Ahlam Mosteghanemi, Tahar
disambiguation and final tagging of each word form
Ouettar, Najwa Barakat, as well as authors of more
was done in an on line interactive concordance and
recent fame such as Rajaa Alsanea and Alaa AI
annotation tool developed at BYU and customized
Aswany. Supplementary works of fiction, especially
for this task. The core idea of the tool was that by
short stories and poems, were obtained from the
allowing the annotator to sort all the concordance
literary section of magazines and newspapers. The first four sections of the written corpus (i.e.
lines related to a single word form, either by the word before or the word after the word form, large
newswire, editorials, learned prose, and forums) were
numbers of similar items could quickly be coded at
subdivided into document units of 200,000 words
the same time, saving hundreds of hours of coding
each, so that we had
time . In this tool, the annotator selected from a
atota1 of 27 documents of
equal size in each of these four sections (200,000 x 27
= 5.4 million words). The literature section of the
corpus consisted of 72 documents of varying sizes,
menu of possible morphological analyses, applied the selection to the appropriate lines in the concordance, then clicked on a button to store that
and the spoken corpus consisted of eleven
selection in a database. In other words, the process
subsections, also of varying sizes.
of disambiguation and tagging of the written corpus
Annotating the data from the corpus
concordance lines. The same process was followed
involved the examination of 20,000 individual The first step in annotating the data was to generate
for tagging the 10,000 most frequent word forms in
a frequency count of all surface forms (i.e. Arabic
the spoken corpus. Items for which no acceptable
words as they are actually written, with prefixes and
morphological analysis was available were tagged for
suffixes) taking into account not only the raw
separate processing. Much of the dialectal data, both
Introduction
spoken and written, required manual analysis and
Although suffixes are normally not listed in Arabic
tagging before storing the results in the database.
dictionaries, we decided that the dialectal negative
S
marker -sh was sufficiently important for inclusion .
Organizing and categorizing the data the general organization of lemmas we were guided
Frequency, range, and adjusted frequency ("Selecting the top 5,000 words")
by the content and arrangement of entries in the
Obtaining the raw or absolute frequency of each
For determining the lemma status of words and for
leading comprehensive dictionaries of MsA, namely
lemma was a fairly straightforward computational
Wehr (1985), Kropfitsch (1996), and Hoogland,
process. However, for selecting the most frequent
Versteegh, and Woidich (2003), although some
5,000 lemmas we needed to compute an adjusted
differences among these were duly noted. For guidance
frequency figure that took into consideration the
in integrating dialectal lemmas within the larger
dispersion characteri~tis:s.of ea,cQ lemma, that is,
predominantly MsA lexicon we followed Bergman
how each lemma was dl;tributed over the different
(2005) for Algerian, Hinds and Badawi (1986) for
sections and document units of the entire corpus. A
Egyptian, Woodhead and Beene (1967) for Iraqi, and
dispersion figure of 1.00 meant a perfect distribution
Qafisheh (1997) and Holes (2001) for Gulf Arabic.
over all sections of the corpus . We identified 191
In addition to making use of standard part of
corpus sections, of which 108 were of regular and
speech labels such as "noun" and "adjective," we also
equal size (200,000 words each from the first four
used the sub-categories "verbal noun" as well as
sections of the written corpus: i.e. newswire, editorials,
"active participle" and "passive participle" when it
learned prose, and forums) and 83 sections of uneven
was felt that the lexicographic description warranted
size (from the literature and spoken corpus data),
such distinctions. Active and passive participles were
and adjustments were made to account for the
lemmatized with their adjectival counterparts, rather
re lative size differences. The final adjusted frequency
than counted as instances of the corresponding verb
was obtained by multiplying the raw frequency by
lemma. (A few exceptions were made for dialectal
the dispersion figure. For example, the dialectal word
active participles that had no adjectival counterpart).
1c5 had a raw frequency of 8,928, but because its
However, these lexical items were labeled as active or
usage was restricted to 54.28 percent of the corpus,
passive participles in order to differentiate them
its adjusted frequency was 4,846 (8,928 x 0.5428),
from adjectival uses of the same lemma, in cases
which placed it in rank position 768. Notice the raw
where this usage was attested. It was also observed
frequency and range count (distribution) of the
that in many cases, items that carry the primary
lemmas ranked directly before and after
label "adjective" could also function syntactically as
1c5 (Table 1).
Because the spoken corpus accounted for only
nouns. When such behavior was noted in the corpus
10 percent of the data, much of the high-frequency
data, it was also noted in the description, including
vocabulary of spoken colloquial Arabic did not make
any attested inflectional properties. It is important to
it into the top 5,000 list. Those words that did make
note that the plural forms listed in this frequency
it, however, were dialect vocabulary items that are
dictionary, both regular and irregular ("broken"), are
now also widely used in written media, and were
only those that were attested in the analyzed and
observed to have relatively high frequencies and
tagged corpus. Similarly, dialectal labels within MsA
good distribution especially in the "forums" section
lexical entries were applied only when such usage
of the corpus. In order to "rescue" some of these
was attested in the data. The morphology analysis and tagging process
high-frequency dialect words that are primarily spoken, but not written, we experimented briefly
provided detailed statistics on bound morphemes.
with adding weights to the spoken corpus. However,
We have included in this dictionary only those
it quickly became obvious that this process actually
bound morphemes that are traditionally listed in
"promoted" many more MsA words that it did dialect
Arabic lexicons, such as the definite article 01-, the
words. Also, a comparison of the lists of words "lost"
conjunctions wo- and (0-, the prepositions bi-, li-, and
and words "gained" showed that there was nothing
ko-, etc. These bound morphemes as listed along
intrinsically "spoken" about the MsA words in
with all the other entries in the alphabetical index.
the words "gained" list.
6 Introduction
Table 1 Frequency and dispersion
PaS
Lemma
Rank
Gloss
Dispersion
Raw
Adjusted
Frequency
Frequency
767
..... -::-;: JJ'
v. II
to decide
0.9660
5019
4848.6
768
01c5 (Egy. Lev.)
adv.
also
0.5428
8928
4845.8
769
~~
adj.
new; modern
0.9660
5014
4843.5
The main frequency index
section of the corpus. (Although we have computed
The main frequency index presents a rank-order
the individual raw frequencies of al l inflected forms,
listing of the top 5,000 lemmas in Arabic, from the
providing these additional statistical details in the
highest-scoring lemma to the lowest-scoring one.
current presentation format was not feasible).
Each entry contains the following information:
The part of speech rank frequency (1, 2, 3, ... ), headword, part(s)
Verbs were labeled with a part of speech code
of speech, English glosses (including any
accompanied by the traditional Roman numeral
additional part of speech tags and relevant
designation for the derived form measures, namely
dialect labels), sample sentence or context,
I through X for tri literal roots, and QI and QII for
English translation of sample sentence or
quadrilateral roots. (Quadriliterals of form III and IV
context, range count (dispersion), raw frequency
were not attested in the corpus). The part of speech
total, indication of register variation
tags of triliteral form I verbs also make note of the stem vowel of the Imperfect. All verbal nouns were
For example, here is the entry for the word
.i;i~.
lemmatized and counted separately from their respective verbs, and are often listed with thei r
3495
.a:i ~ n. pI. ~')I.:; spoon; (also Egy.Lev.) .iJ:~ ~I.:.r cY')\....!->~ e '-:"' y5 J -?l!J1 '-:"'.r; ~ 0J~J -
She drinks tea from a cup
corresponding nominalized forms. The distinction between noun and verbal noun was made explicit primarily when the data provided ready evidence of
with three spoonfuls of sugar and without
the noun's inflection for number, which was also
milk
noted in the entry. Gender labels were provided for
41 1873
unmarked feminine nouns (e.g. '-:"'? fem.n .) as well
I +for
as mascu line nouns with feminine suffixes (e.g. This entry shows that the word in rank position 3495 is
.i;i~, which is glossed as "spoon," and that
its plural form is also imply that it
~_')I.:;
(and by li sting the plural we
was attested In the corpus). The
~
masc.n.). Collective nouns were labeled as such
(e.g. JJJ coll.n.) and their unit nouns were also identified (e.g. ;jJJ u.n.), provided that they had been attested in the corpus.
entry goes on to say that in Egyptian and Levantine data the interesting variant form .;1:~ occurred. An
The English gloss
Arabic sentence from the corpus illustrates usage
The English glosses are not comprehensive, but
of the word-in this case the plural form-and is
attempt to capture the most important or frequent
followed by an English translation. The last line in
meanings of the lemma. (In the alphabetical index,
the entry presents the range count figure of 41,
the glosses were further reduced to what cou ld fit
meaning that usage of this word was distributed
on one line of text). When concordance data showed
over 41 percent of the corpus; the raw frequency
a specific high-frequency collocation or idiomatic
figure of 873, wh ich is the total number of occurrences
use whose meaning might not be deduced from the
for the singu lar and plural forms combi ned; and the
meaning of the lemma in isolation, an attempt was
"genre bias" tag +for, which indicates that a significant
made to include the coll ocation and its gloss within
majority of uses were attested in the "forums"
the entry. Dialectal use was also noted in the English
Introduction
gloss field, as well as any relevant pronunciation
7
specific to informal on-line written discourse (e.g. ,;~, !l1.?-, !I.J~' ~.?-, and 4L!..;1) as we ll as
information .
the computer-oriented vocabu lary of Arab Internet citizens (e.g. bl.; , ~ , .j1>-, jj, and ~!)
Dialect information Dialect labels were applied to lemmas that were exclusively dialectal, as well as lemmas that were
Thematic vocabulary ("call-out boxes")
primarily MSA but also manifested certain dialect-
Some 30 tables of thematically-related words have
influenced uses that showed up in the data.
been placed throughout the frequency index. Some
Sometimes it was simply a frequent dialectal or
of these tables include li sts of words related to
regional spelling, like .)~ (and .)~) for the ve rb .)\5,
specific semantic classes, such as food, clothing,
multiple pronunciations and spelling variations of
sports, colors, nationalities, and professions. Other
what can essentially be considered the same word
tables focus more on gl4mmati~-a1 aspects of Arabic,
(e.g.r-'" Ihuml "they," which in the various dialects
such as the derivational morphology system of base
can be pronounced Ih umma/,/hummel and Iham/,
and augmented verbs, or the vocabulary of the
and written V, V>, and meanings, such as
..f), or specific
J-:&-, ("life") which
dialectal
is "bread"
regional varieties or different dialects of Arabic. In order to be more complete, some of these tables li st
in Egyptian, and " rice" in Gulf dialects. We applied
vocabulary beyond the set of 5,000 described in the
dialectal labels on ly to describe what was observed
frequency index. Finally, although proper names are
and attested in the corpus.
often excluded from frequency dictionaries, names
Phrase in context and translation
because of the absence of capitalization in Arabic,
The sample sentences and usage contexts came from
and because many names are also used as common
in Arabic are especially chall enging for the learner
the corpus itself It should also be noted that for the
nouns and adjectives. Our tables show, for example,
sake of authenticity some common inconsistencies
that the most frequent female given name is •J'" j
in Arabic spelling regarding the use of hamza,
("flower"). Although names were not included in
particularly, and yaa' without the two dots at the
the list of top 5,000 lemmas, we obtained their
end of words, were left unchanged in the examples.
individual frequencies and separate ranking in the
These sample sentences also reflect real-world usage
process of disambiguating and tagging the data used
and certain ideological biases, and may not always
for selecting the top 5,000 lemmas.
be factual or politically correct. Their use in this dictionary does not imply any editorial endorsement
Alphabetical and part of speech indexes
of the ideas conveyed in these examples.
The alphabetical index lists all 5,000 lemmas
Statistical and register information
followed in most dictionaries and which facilitates
alphabetically according to the root system that is The last line of each entry contains two numbers
internalizing the root and pattern morphology
separated by a vertical bar. The number on the left
system of Arabic. The entries in the index are
is the range count or dispersion figure discussed
considerably abbreviated in order to fit on one line
above. The number on the right is the raw frequency
of text. Each entry provides the headword citation
total of all the variant and inflected forms of the
form, the part of speech, a basic English gloss, and
lemma represented by this entry. Some entries will
the lemma's score (rank frequency) in the dictionary.
contain additional register variation codes which
The full description of the lemma can be found by
record the observed "genre bias" of the lemma.
looking up the rank frequency number in the main
These codes indicate whether the lemma occurred
frequency listing.
primarily in spoken data (+spo), in newspaper material (+news), in literature (+Iit), or in informal
The part of speech index provides two sections: one li sting Function words (conjunctions,
written Arabic, i.e. the postings on Internet forums
interjections, interrogatives, numbers, particles,
(+for). Note that by definition, data marked as +spo
prepositions, and pronouns) and the other li sting
is almost all dialectal. Data marked as +for, however,
Lexical words (adjectives, adverbs, elatives, nouns,
contains a good balance of written dialect (e.g.
and verbs). Each part of speech category is li sted in
.)\..!s., ,-15, ...,.aJl>-, ~.;\:, and J~) and MSA that is
descending rank frequency order.
References
Abduh,
o. (1979)
Hoogland, J., Versteegh, K., and Woidich, M.
al·Mufradat al·Sha'i'ah fi al-Lughah al-Arabiyyah.
eds (2003)
[Frequently used Arabic vocabulary]. Riyadh:
Woordenboek Arabisch-Nederlands. Amsterdam :
University of Riyadh.
Bulaaq.
Bergman, E. (2005)
Kouloughli,
o. (1991)
Spoken Algerian Arabic. Springfield, VA:
Lexique fondamental de /'arabe standard
Dunwoody Press.
moderne. Paris: L'Harmattan .
Bobzin, H. (1980)
Kropfitsch, L. (1996)
"Zur Haufigkeit von Verben in Neuhocharabischen."
Langenscheidt Handworterbuch Arabisch-Deutsch .
Zeitschrift fUr arabische Linguistik S: 35-69.
Berlin: Langenscheidt.
Bobzin, H. (1983)
Landau, J.M. (1959)
"On the Frequency of Verbs in Modern
A Word Count of Modern Arabic Prose. New York:
Newspaper Arabic" AI-Abhath 31 : 45 -63.
ACLS.
Brill, M. (1940)
No author (c. 1979)
The Basic Word List of the Arabic Daily Press.
Qa'imat Makkah lil-Mufradat al-Sha 'i'ah.
Jerusalem: Hebrew University Press.
Mecca: AI-Wahda.
Buckwalter, T. (2004)
Qafisheh, H. (1997)
Buckwalter Arabic Morphological Analyzer.
NTC's Gulf Arabic-English dictionary. Lincolnwood,
Philadelphia: Linguistic Data Consortium.
III.: NTC Pub. Group.
Fromm, WoO. (1982)
van Mol, M . (2001)
Hiiufigkeitsworterbuch der modernen arabischen
Leerwoordenboek Arabisch-Nederlands.
Zeitungspache: ein Mindestwortschatz: arabisch,
Amsterdam: Bulaaq .
deutsch, englisch . Leipzig: Verlag Enzyklopadie. Hinds, M. and Badawi, 5. (1986)
A Dictionary of Egyptian Arabic. Arabic-English .
Beirut: Librairie du Liban. Holes, C. (2001)
Wehr, H. (1985)
Arabisches Worterbuch fur die Schriftsprache der Gegenwart. 5th ed. Wiesbaden : Harrassowitz. Woodhead, O.R. and Beene, W. eds (1967)
A Dictionary of Iraqi Arabic. Arabic-English .
Dialect. Culture, and Society in Eastern Arabia:
Washington, DC: Georgetown University
Vol. I, Glossary. Leiden: Brill.
Press.
Frequency index Format of entries rank frequency, headword, part of speech, English equivalent sample sentence -
English translation
range count I raw frequency total
I genre
bias tag
JI part. (definite article) the; (written
,-,l::5iJ U""li\ll'; ~I.j';l,> ~UI ~i -
J
after
~
4
prep. J)
~.k •L. ..:... '-:").;. .)i L.! ::,.ts I f •;l.~ .:riJ I
'&1 ~
Th e
L. ..:... ~
.)i -
Art is just a cup, we
can either use it to grink fresh water or we can
seller spent his life searching for diamonds 100 I 5004793
prep. from; (with f9"' verb or vn.) since
L.!J
I
use it to gulp down that which angers God (i.e. alcohol) 100 I 745190
2 j con}. and; prep. with ~ .:. 01
Lrl
She is crazy and not good
will turn into a battlefield
other, another; one more, additional; ).'il .:;.:.
~
Jl ~ -
for him at all, and if he marries her, their house
38 ;>1 adj. pI. -uun, ;>1 fern. LS':;>-I pI. v4.:;>-1 he also, LS'; '11
~L..
confused victims
I
100 I 52702
....,.;I J ~ t
~ Jljlo ~I ~1.r")'1 -
It is not clear
any more whether the two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is sti ll possible 98149360
I
J...>i 01 ~ 0\5 .;>\; - I had to arrive before
01,f>\I r')U:Jl J}.> jJ
~).JI
J..i'W
Q
nightfall because if I were late I wou ld lose my way 99143701
I
14
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
58
.)::l conj. (with pron . or following noun in acc.) however, but;
~
~
and
..:r...r.JI..:r.I •.J~ ~.J~I forty, but he looks twenty
J..:..s::J
90
I 45859
65
Jr -
d
adj. pI. )~ large; great, important, major;
adult, senior; pl.n. )~I adults
however I, but I
iL..~1
He is
Jl ~J,i.~ .... ~~- He is
wearing a large turban that is tilted slightly forward
1
99 1 37236
59
I
.;..;3 v. I (perf. only) ~ he/it is not, \ - ' :1 she/it is not,
L:J we
are not;
~ isn't ...?
66
;;.-1 n. pI. 01"":1, .':;":'1 "'-' ~
~,..,...
brother; (in idafa) nom .
"
~
"
~.,,-.::..h..iJ1, gen . ~I, ace. l.>l; (with pron .) ~ ..,.>1, ~I,
I would have done it, but that isn't within my
LS..,.>I, (Egy.lrq.) ~..,.>I; (Dia.) ~~, LS"">~,
~l.>l his br~ther; ~l my brother, (Lev.Gul.) " -" ,
4;~ = ~i ~
reach
my friend;
(h~y)
buddy
t1 '1., ,-,,;..!l.J i l '1., ~ crJ -=--:.Jllh
901454161
-
Thi s
house is not your house, and you have neither
60 -4~ adj. pI. ~~ new, modern; -'!~
.:r again,
a mother nor a brother in it
anew
99
I 36766 I
J"'-
~~I J:.,AJ ~~ ~'1 ~ ~.!ll:..A Is there any intention to add new players to the
61
67 ~ interrog. how; (Lev.) /kiif, keefl, (Gul.) ~
Najaf team?
/cheef/; (with pron.)
991403751
how are you?
~1 conj. if; whether;
.1 n. fem . LS:b.l one (of), someone; anyone; (neg.) nobody, n9 one;
(/Urn.
~ :'l;.i, fem . i? LS.:i;:1
I have not seen him in
(in compounds)
99
I 34782 I
eleven
~I..b.,. '11,CY-' -.- '1 !..l>t.cY-' -.: '1 ...!.l;1, - You don't
64
t-
(the past) five years
70
;1 n. pI. )}\ matter, issue, concern, affair
trust anyone! You only trust (the people of)
~\:JI ~ '1 r+' r ~ .-'!) - I need him for
your sect
an important matter which cannot be postponed
100 1 37897 1
99
)$"1 elat.
more/most, greater/greatest in
number
i~
.:.r .;51 ~ ~..r '11 ...:.-I} 01~ 0L,:> ,-:--::--",1 .j-iJ i~i ~ Ji L:... o..l>lyll ~wl)1 -
78
J....... J'"
(J v. I (i) to finish, conclude, come to an end; to take place, be held (event)
....~ ~ iL..\ J'-r.? . J cou;se of;
in the
~~ ~~ - adv. where, in which; conj. ~ and
means of, through; across, via; on the basis of,
~I
15
based on
Jts::.. ~ c:"\ ~ 0'- Jl ~ l..'>..l.>T Ji U)}
About six
- -?.iJ1 '-;"'\11""; ~ J
~I..\&ol Jo:-\ If r~
-
He found in him
~
99 I 33766
*'
e
~~ .:0- WI ~ I)~
J ~ - My greetings to all the magazine staff for their efforts in preparing
the father (figure) that he had been deprived of
I
a perceptive and educated generation
77 !J~ odv. there, over there; there is, there are;
.!lL:... Iminnaakl (lrq .Gul.) from there, from that place; .!lu. Iia-hunaakl (Dia.) to there, to that
100 I 32553
83
I
:oak:! (often :oak:; or ~;) n. pI. ,-*l;;
region,
area, zone, territory
place
If o.."....u ~
'r3- 1 ~ -?~ ~L.. -¥.: ~ L..~
-
4 ...:..Ll!...l.p,-Jj
~ o..l>-I J Does every woman love her hu sband like you do,
)
~
(def.
~L...I)
0 Y-.r::--.; 1-11 u1~
name 01)1
. \.:.,
~
(Thi s) woman appears on t elevision
with her real name and profess ion
such as, the likes of
\'ofj c:.......
I
90
~1 v.
I
IV to be possible
(J
for sb) to do sth;
0 ....
.
.,:
.... ,
Mrs. Zahra?
0\ ~ it' s possible to (do sth); 0 1 ~ you
99 I 31527
can (do sth)
I
2 Body 110 130 148 170 215 363 627 786 947 1026 1327 1373 1423
.....J.i ~ ~ ~.J
..,..1) i~
r.li ).J....t>
2441 2476 2548 2619 2686 2844
heart eye hand face head blood
hair tongue
.
~
right hand
~
back. ..
.
heel (arso after)
1476
4:.-1)
palm (also rest)
1525 1853 2080 2089 2178 2322 2372
r-t
~
bone
c:"'!
finger
r.t
left hand
o})"
gall bladder (also bitterness)
chest
~
tooth palm
foot
0W
~
- ~I ~ .&Il:.,.i~ I;U
c: J-~ ~ -
Why is God
sins while he is going easy on the Americans? 91
~
conj. however, but; (also
~')
99 1 29658 1
in informal
or sub-standard spelling)
.:,s::J ).r..
~.U.;JIJ .IJJ..II
f I.k>-I -
J&- ~li)14 cr.1 :,::,J.L•.,.jJ
98
clJ n. pI. ~liji time, moment, period; S.iJ1 ...:J.Jl1
And I asked: Where is the food
J
while
and drug control adm ini stration? But nobody
...jJ ,:?I Y" -
rig~t. to
He receive him any
time
90 133727 1
99 129493 1
92 ~) n. pI. J~ ~ n. man
~~ )I,;r 1~;51 Gt}1
J- -Is the woman
99 ~ n. (rarely fem.; Dia. masc.lfem .) pI.
)~, ':"I~ country, nation; )":>\.:ll the country; ~'(Egy.Lev.) fem.n. town, vill~ge ':"I.r..u '7'?I J!.- ':"I~ n. life
92 1 31648 1
J5
has to be struck by this paradox
94
~..!.l;~ ~\....:r';~
')
I;U ~F
') I;U-
Why don't you speak? Why don't you tell me
101
about you r past life?
pI.
~~
parliament; t;11
99 130100 1
95
~ n.
council, board;
~I ~
~ (US) Senate J&- ~'21I...!1l.iS
C')L,~~ ~u..I.r...;1.A.:.I1 ~I -
uJ..;; n. pI. ~I"; subject, topic, issue,
The Council also took a look at the
reports concerning environmental reform
theme; adj. placed, laid down; located,
961302061
situated; spurious (Hadith)
.:r UL,;. ...!..l.o')\5 .:, 1 Jl &~I ...::...Al1.:,,1 ~I \"'Li '-'".;J..II
t.r"'."... -
102
I would like to draw to
fli
II.
I (u) to rise, stand up; to undertake, carry
out '7' (task, activity); to play '7' (a role); to be
J&- on;
your attention to the fact that your talk is
based
completely outside the subject matter of
J.» ,;rj
(with imperf.) to start to do sth
.l:... J..--II Ilr. W - We carried out
the study
that work a long time ago
97 130657 1
991290031
96 .r..jj
n. pI. .I.;j,j minister
G~IJ GIrl ~ l.r..jJ
'\' f G)j)1 • ..L.
103
~-
t4.J..; n. pI. -aat government, administration ~(".ll r-
I:.:.::...a..; J.I
~ l),,~ ~I J~ ..;1 u~4JI J:i...\51 Jl.;.,lj)1 - He confirmed before the finals that
For anyone who has been struck by Alzheimers
J";:> adj.
(rare) state, national
or memory loss, the Palestinians are resisting
he will retire from international play after the
the occupation of their lands, and the Zionists
World Cup
are the occupiers
961248171
.
99 124627 1
,,
....
122 .,.......;. n. pI. '-:"".,...:. people, nation 117 .,....;.:. n. pI.
,-:"t.;.1 reason , cause;
\; : '
~
uL,.-.;' JyU.~ ~".....:JI
because
iJL~4 ,-:"u.J~ 1 ~
The West shou ld not insLT1t people by calling them
of
'11 ~ . /'1 .;1.J"'1 ~ ",I ~ ) ~ '1
J! •• \..... ~I i~ '-:" ~I J.-
o-.aJ,,-..rJ 1Jr-S -
e:-ll
\..j)1 u.J - Christ does not permit a man to
names like "Axis of Evi l" and accusing Islam of
divorce his wife for any reason except perhaps
terrorism 98
adultery 99
I 24222 I
I 24502 I 123 :>~ v. I (u) to return, go back to be attributed
118 ~) n. pI. -aat company, corporation
~:>~
uL......".:1I~~)\...'~.rJI~..I.i
~
~.l;.,;jl};':"" '1"
I 23911 I
124 .L.:. v. I (a) to want, desire sth; ~ you wish; .lll ;L.:.
~."...:.1 ~ ~ il.;l .~ - Can he count his
\j as
"'I (informally .lll .L.:..;I and
.llL.:..;I) hopefully, God willing
happy times? How many are they? A few days?
~ JWI )1J1 u~ " J5 t.L-J "'''..1...:.-0 ~ L.. J~" "'y.jA.t" ~1~1 ~ js:J ~ ",I uSJ ul.;? ..:.......;J" ~,,; 0-4-J .~ - We are
A few months? 98
sth;
l:...... I~I ~ ~ ulkl..w ~1 ~ ~ }"J-I
the network, and for the stabi lity of the power
~u.~~
Jl to
sth/sb; (with imperf.)
be sth
pounds for widening, setting up and renewing
97
Jl to
I 24721 I
prepared to listen to all opposing points
120
oJ""':' n. pI. J~
picture, image, photo;
of view but for every person to have their
manner, way, form
own radio and television program and say
of l5~1 J')U::.....I ~ c,?.i.l1 ~I"
U y j.A>
whatever he wants, well that is chaos,
"'~ '~4 ~~u.) ",l5 t)1b...;J1 J)\.:.>.'il
and not freedom
• I.,;J I ~" -.0L:.. ~Iy. "'~I..I..l)1
contrary, they put hi s picture today on the
•~ ~" ..I.>- Jl ~ fo -
currency, because he stood in the face of
very dangerous situation, namely that security is
the invaders and liberated his land 99
I 24052 I
The country now faces a
lacking to a large extent 98
I 23885 I
20
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
126
~I) v.
IV to want, desire sth or .)\ to do sth
132
j:J. n. pI. Jts::..!.i manner; form, shape; js::...:. Ishak\-il it
Jw.i J..:.r..J ... i J..:.J'...J -Gl,,> J..:.r.. JI..rJ1 .)o1}1
appearance, look; (GuI.Lev.)
~J "~~J'r.> J...t5i J..:.J'''; -
seems to me, ..!.ll.>:..;. Ishakl-akJ it seem that
The Iraqi
citizen wants his life and he wants hi s mother
you
and he wants his children and he wants his
1("' .........lL JI 0 ~JI' "~oo
food and his bread and his electricity and his
~J
OO'
4:... \.;..l5 -
health
I 2396S I
97
u.s Vl,i .1." oJi J.:';} J.,"""' . \.r.'" .:..1).•....:. J)I.>. (J' v-;-lJ ,~ ~ Our children need to learn how to
belong to their country in a real practical way, and not through slogans which they and we are
127
~! part. ;'UI
indeed
4-0 ~ tJ
all tired of ,- J5l!..o ~Iy
134 1.,;1 part. (focus) j .. t;\ as for... , concerning ... ;
.i:;J ~IJi - ad}. special, specific; private, personal;
(non-human pl.)
exclusive, elite
ww.J o..L,>-JJ ~~ tA ~I .!ll.; J ..::......>i
.;51 leu !5~~IIJ"'~I ~ J ..? oJ\hLJ1 015
-
-G~ JjJ .~ ":lJi (J'
She felt, at that moment, that she was a
stranger, alone and lost 89
130
~\I
now, to our main point
problems when students fail in final secondary
99
129
I 22811 I
.:..:L-1 I'ahleenl
I 2S722 I
water source; spy. secret agent; eye (needle)
U.
J1 ~- He kept winking at her with
A
his eye 100 122982
The Sultan trusted his
children or his wives 99
~ fem.n . pI. 0;j" ';;'1 eye; water spring, ~
-
private Jewish doctor perhaps more than his
136
I 22S28 I
J.;;. prep. around; about, concerning ...:...4l; .. )a.J.10~\ 0l>-~ (J' o.d
o.l;L;
I
!.It:.... ..:.-;l5 oJ! !5J\I ~~
-
4
~I
A big cloud of
perfumed pipe smoke greeted me. I looked around me to see if there was a window
131
Zr.~1 rel.pror;. prep. ~
(masc.pl.) who, whom; (with
99
I 22294 I
-D 0;-:W
o.rl:-- .:..\j)\&. Jl> J ~ .:..1.l41J\ •..L.
~~\ .:..\).....J\
J 0 ~ .:r...iJ\ .J;1!..l\ -
137 ~ v. I (a) to work, function; to make, prepare, build sth
These meetings help create direct relationships
0L:....I ~ L..ylJ ,~~I
between the representatives who will be
-
..,..,.,,\....:0.::.:-\ j......; 4-oi
Her mother works as a social specialist, and
working in Egyptian embassies
her father is a dentist
981234461
99
I 22316 I
Frequency index
138
...
~
v. I (iJ to mean, imply sth
:::" or .)1 that;
144 ~+' n. pI.
.)J;
city
(pass.) ~/:; to be concerned '7' with,
~..ul ,J.".
take an interest....., in
needs someone to take him by the hand
.) ...jt f'i ~ -
JJ
~~'ll
J..;II ~~'ll U J ~~I ~I -
~.r
opposite 99 1 21714 1
possession, and I cou ldn't find the appropriate
146
term for it in English
~f n. ~f also, as
after Hitler and Goering
is
961 22381 1
better than cure
.1f'1 ~ ~ .)1 ~ CJj ..r:> ..;~ J -
I found
him to be the best husband a woman cou ld dream of
~
147
...j, . . adj.
good, nice; pleasant; delicious;
J.
~
interj. good, fine, OK; (Egy.Lev. shortened to
-,..1; Lev. shortened also to u.) J>- !ll.o. v-;-li
99122099 1
141
~ -.?j UI '7'~I- It was said that
that he was the third man in the Nazi Party
best; ~I c..~ good morning!; ;;..,. ~
C~I ~ ; ; ..;:t.; j l prev~ntion
P
he was mentally retarded , and it was also said
;J- n. goodness, good; adj. better (~ than), we're fine;
well ; besides
J .:.Jl!.ll ~)I . .;1 w..,1 j:iJ ,L,lli J:-S! . .;1 j:i
I
e:!)~ J
140
Every father in the world
daughter, no matter how much he pretends the
I explained to
him the type of songs which are in our
90 I 24528
fUO; -
harbors a deep haYe.d for t~e. husband of his
!l')U.1 \..r' ~I ~ )1 ~
Ylr~L..... ~.l.r.: .)1.)J~ --Isn't there a
Ishul (Lev.Kuw.UAE) interrog. what
YJ.1.,l1
J l,?"l,,-ll c!' )~ ~I) ~ -
solution that saves the good man from
What is
annihilation without threatening her
your opinion regarding the politi cal situation
(woman's) happiness?
in the country?
991215871
59 136869 1
142
.T (Dia.) interj. yes, right, ah, yeah 41 .L.:. .)1 ~ Jt.; \j 'lJ ,T '1 ~ ~ t ...,r:-Jj -
148 ~ fem.n. pI. ~t (def. -.?~b hand; (Dia.) J.J; ~~1 /'iideekl your (two) hands My
husband neither said "yes" nor "no" to me, he
~~l...= -.?~i ~ t-"~ I."...... J ~ j UI \..r' J:?S
.r:J1 Jl 'l.r"J.)"'\&' cf>- j ~ '1 ~-*I
said "if God's willing"
Many refugees put their fate in the hands of
38 1 57277 1+spo
gangs of sm ugglers to cross the Gulf of Aden to arrive in Yemen
143 ~j adj. national; nationalistic; n. pI. -uun
100 121407 1
nationalist
.;51 .r-L,ll .;1)1 j...>J1 Jl.)\l1 CL:j. .ru ~~J~)..LoJl~l,.:.>-I\..r'~
149 ~ part. (future marker, short form of'::';
r)
will
Egypt now needs direct national action
...... I)JJI u,...) ~ ~ -:..L:...:JI ~ - The
a lot more than it needs teachers and
office of (overseas student) delegations will
accou ntants 95 122704
I
cover educational expenses 901 23562 1
22
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
150
U~ n. pI. -aat, ~~~ project, enterprise; adj. lawful, legal; .)yli
U..r-
156 .;.; (Egy.Lev.lrq.Gul.) adv. only, just; conj. however, but; (Lev.lrq.Gul.) interj. enough!
bill, draft
law
stop! (Lev.) (with imperf.) as soon as
.)0) JLiJ,~1 ~ wts:1.,.,.>1 U..r-!lL:.,. UPI (J' ~i 6..K.!J.1 -
(J..,r- (J' ~l:-ll V
bread hunger
.~
dinner
.).J-I.J - '
olives
y. ' LL
C
water
..
3797 3827 3835 3965 3994 4015 4114 4134 4146 4181 4201
~
juice
o~
fruit
u...)
recipe
Jl...4>-
vegetables
,y.:. j) ..s~ ~ .)~
r"-.? 0)')1.:...
(~~ : papa,
4300 4335
C~:.
~ .1.iS-
&. r'
chicken eggs lunch salt fruit
~lo.;
nutrition
/'-+SU
wine fruit
J.?
liver
.r.l
milk; yoghurt
3225 3354 3442 3489 3495 3696 3795
Jf'
araq
WJ
morsel
~I~
~
WJ...
~~ .......:.s.
drink wheat spoon ingredient herb, plant
grapes cup cream sweets, onions
J \.kil•
iftar; breakfast
4336 4364 4490 4518 4567 4601 4663 4794 4807 4909 4970 5366 5404 5431 5584 5633 5770 5871
;Sr-
fork
.)r:l
lemon
~~j
bottle
~
4:-
bowl, plate appetite
\Aj
apples
.J.
date
C.
~
knife
JlZ.r.
oranges
v~~
UaL
salad
..sj;.;
to have lunch
~
hummus
U
cr
~
sweets
J:i:.
flour
~
cheese
j}
almonds
oJ:'
sorghum
~Jl.
banquet
v}
food
:.,.-:.
delicious
J?
carrots
meat vinegar to have dinner
dessert
~
pope)
2665 2692 2774 2801 2856 2858 2982 3010 3082 3085
rice
candy
baba ghannouj
fat
5947 6151 6198 6217 6225 6239 6277 6279 6354 6449 6450 6452 6516 6523 6539 6625
)oj
mushrooms
~
delicious
J L> _
cucumber
I~
pizza
~
onion
~ ~ ......i-;.. J)zi
0:.L..
kibbeh meal, dish mansaf breakfast plain (coffee, tea)
6637 6638
4
sheesha
u.~
sweet potato, potato
6640 6768 6787 6802 6823 6890 6938 6953 7022
45
Jill oJ)~
~.,t.
cake pepper tomatoes mulukhiyah
Jr
broth, stock
l:--~
okra
"-,5
J.".s )oj
kabsa alcohol have breakfast
7073 7260
~}.4.0
...l>..:> .;JI ,-;-,1»-\II J~ i f L; ~ L. IJ.,.
you'll find out in the morning that the
182
i"j.;;. n. ~
Sleep well my friend and
problem is simple
u....;; ~.1 iJLJI -
99 1184381
us from the rest of the parties that talk about
.p num. fem. ~ ten; n. ulp tens,
92
Thi s is what distinguishes
peace but don't make it
I 18801 I +spo
scores, dozens; (used in the numbers
11-19)
189
J..olp ~ ..!.l;.Ir.
J
Jl,lJII.1* , J~ )1 ul~ Dozens of men
rA -::..:J J>- -
.?;;. n. pI. .'L..
Sir, Mr; lord, master, boss
~j.1t... ,~I L;I.1 .l,-ll ..;...;1 .. ~~ ~ ~L;
-:1..!1l ~I -
4 .
Ok sir.. ..you are the master
stayed up nights in a prolonged effort
and I am the slave, what else do you want me
until your innocence was proven
to do for you? (Said in ridicule)
99 118273
I
99 117543
I
26
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
190 ~L,..
n. pI. '-:"'t.:.....:.\ owner, possessor;
196 '-:"'~ n. pI.
" ..,...:5
book
originator; friend, companion; pI. ~
...... 1)J.l~ -=.. ....... l1.;J 4-,.:5 -=..J.,.:.1 .~ L..~ -
companion (esp. of the Prophet); ~L,.. n.
When he came she took her books and
-aat (female) friend, girlfriend
pretended to be studying
.:r.J.l1 ~ J..-zAl1 .j w....J.1 ,-:",\.:......:.1 r-" - -::.....:.~
religion and science? 99 117450
,i;. n. pI. ~J~ extent, limit, level; edge, corner; ~J~ border, frontier; range, scope;
I
v. I
(i) to tell, relate, report; (Lev.)
IHaka, tiHki/, (Irq.) IHicha, tiHchil to speak,
.... Wl - Communications and
talk; say; tell
coordination have been established with the
~'-?.r.: L.. ~ )"..~I
Ministries of Public Works and Health
-
96116143
I
JS J ~ 04 ~ u"s
How is he going to convince her to tell him
everything 50 that he understands what is happening?
218
J.u n. pI. JI.,,;,f goal, target; intention,
86 I 17673 I +spo
objective; (in sports) goal, point
v-:l ~J ,~I ~I C!~ Y' l;.j",\,> 01
225 ~ n. pI.
4
e:,l-8' result, outcome;
the Palestinian people, but not to the point
~ as a result of ~~!J '~.J~~I ~ ~4
of death
~b ~)l.., -
~}I ~)~ JI -
98115682
Our goal is to starve out
I
consequence;
t . . j~l;r .j\...i...:.
His recovery from the crisis did
not come as a result of medications, but thanks to (his) inner strength
219 ~~ n. pI. -aat relation, link, tie,
981 1S357
connection ~ ~L....:ci~~ .:r....Li1 ~')U-
L.. -
226
What is the
I
':';'1 n. pI. ~I"';f (Lev.lrq.Gul. ..:->I;') sister;
relation sh i p between rei igion and the
mate, counterpart (in a pair);
economy?
sisters; siblings
99115425 •
I
I.l...
,
t#
•
J
this man and how she didn't seek a divorce
Js- I~ -
from him
Thank you for
your congratulations on a happy holiday
91
99 I 15492 I +for
227
I::-:{ adj. united
221
J#I';:;>- Y' ~10\ 0~1 r~1 ~ -
d)
The United Nations Organization felt
that partitioning (Palestine) was the best solution 92 116529
t u"sJ ~ )1-1 don't
understand how your sister could live with
thank you, thanks ~I ..L,>J~ ~
I 16432 1+for
-sb n. pI. ,I) opinion, view; idea
~~;I I~!J 'Jllr. ~ J-II )-""",,,,1 Js- .!.I ~\ J?'.!.I~ 0i.!..LI J;\ c,JI ..!.1.;>.\ ~1..6.::...1 u"s ~\ ')
.:.. J')UJI ~
220 ~ n. thankfulness, thanks; I~ interj.
~Iy:.!
rebellion against a Muslim ruler, even if
center of Ru ssia, and it will never fall
he oppresses the people
98 I 15483
971153071
I
Frequency index 29
230 ~ adj. pI. ..!~ small; young; ..!lA...>J1 children, youths; (Lev.lrq.)
~j
if /mayy/
and
..!l.J.\ person, individual
January, it is necessary to accomplish a kind of
V""L>....:.1 '.:')\! -
J-o -
No, I will beli eve it 65 I 21911
progress in reality
I
.J..L,a;l>
What happened? - You won't believe it. -
peace process hasn't witnessed any tangible
84117343
~l:ll ......;,...,;, ,-,",,1 f' 1~ ~")l.J1 ~~. IS?I..",..\; ~ two hundred; ~I ~ and ~~ percent;
~
247 •.:i;.J n. unity; solitude, loneliness; pI. -aat
(Egy.lrq .) Imiyya/, (Lev.) Imiyye/,
(Gul.) Imiya, 'imya/;
~
unit, item; portion, section
(in idafa)
;.;,:. ~ ~L.,.,I oJ..>. }I
(Egy.Lev.lrq.) Imiit/, (Gul.) Imiyat, 'imyatl IJ.r"\.k; ,;,; ~1cLl1
o.JL -
w.:... 01S:.... 0" ..:..l:ll 015
.:,.s::J ..:..)l,....J:-1 J.a:-i ..:..,;15
She was the most beautiful of all the
beauties, but her isolation struck her with early
c,/.r.)'1 ~I ~ ~~I ~UI 0:0 r.J1 JJ\.>. - Hundreds of inhabitants of the 5ulaimaniyya
old age 94114958 1
area demonstrated during the last two days
,
protesting the Iranian bombing
245
,
248 ~1 n. pI. ~i nation; people, community;
991142761
~')l:.'il ~'11
the Islamic community;
.' o¥1 ~'YI the '"
Ze prep. when
~
United Nations
Lr"; ,y ~ 'j.-JI 0" ~i Jl L:J ~ ..w
~l..a,>. J ~I .J.." J..oi ~r " L:JJ\.:.. 0-;>-J ~\... 0}fi 'Y ~i.r.Al10i L:..4..!.::)10-;>-l:...!...>~ ~i 'Y J ~I ,J.." - When we tried to find out
.r":'J
the origins of this language and its characteristics,
a burrow to hide in
..,.; t.2i -
We have been transformed into
a nation of ants, searching for their food and
95 114824 1
we were surprised when we discovered that the gypsies themselves do not know the identity of the language and its origi ns
249
rf adj. important, serious; ~I the main thing, what's important
941150521
4 Clothing 669
1213
~Iy
J,,1
collar
4630
~
4763
hijab, veil
4812
to wear,
5090
put on
5189
~
to veil
ring, earring
shirt
patterned (also plan)
suit
skirt clothes jeans sleeve collar to dress to clothe headcloth, veil
suit of
7582
clothes
7611
veil
6167
0W
dress
7663
uniform,
6373
o}.la::
pants
7927
dress
6462
~
wearing hijab
shoe
6592
~l..,as.
headband
,-;,I..r 0';"""
sock jacket
.)t;. 4A.L
slipper
..:..~- )J)}>-
....'fS)}>- .us::...:, - His figure
is attractive, his words are pleasant and his soul
)or vn. into;
looking
n.
Jl at; examining, looking J
pI. )1,;1 view, look, glance;
opinio~;
-:! i)or in view of the fact that ~ j:>:- ~L.,.;. l.{ ,i l;.;1~ J~IIJ..,.
99 113635 1
I
264 ~ n./adj. young man, .:..:. young woman,
270
pI. '7-'W youths
.::.ll. student, ..:...l,dllo female
female students; pI. -uun applicant; (person)
r-r=
'7-' .,....:.... 0" J,.j. l,>- wy!i i r JJi l?) .u,.ulTonight is the first time I see English theater
93114181 1
79 116493 1+spo
~~J
,
n. mandate, term of office; pI. -aat state, ,
~
L,;.J~l5 ~'lJ
J i).J":" Y
.lA J i P
~ '1)1
pI.
283
~b
Ishayfiinl
adj. lasting, enduring; permanent,
@) always Wb a..U ~b~ ~".....; ~ ;;':.J\; 4...0} .!ll;... J~\ jJ>l5 iL;WI J."!' 0i j,; i WlllA J
-::..l5rJl .lA .:.r ~I
elL..... U.J -
~U
constant;
Many of these
companies are present in the state of California,
LS';>-\ -
and t hey have many interests in this state
accompli sh a lasting, Just, comprehensive
941141501
next generations 99 113082 1
not, might not
-L.o - What wi ll he say to her when he
province; i~1 -::..~ 'ljl the United States
278
If.
33
;f n. .J0.f
news, report; (gram .) predicate;
.J0. ~I the news; (Egy.)
J> conj. (with foil. subjunctive) in order to,
~ ",:!.!l.)~f (Irq.)
~ .!l.:;0.G What's new with you? How are
so that
.;.?JI Y\.:.. l?..I.:.&- c..A...i.>-i J-> s.... cr..J~ i ~ -
you?
~JrjJ> ~...I..o?-l.J~i
I'm doing specific exercises so that I can lose weight, around my waist for example
~i~ -
96 113792 1
Is he in good health?
Do you have any news of Ahmad?
991130161
t (Dia.) prep. (short form of ~) on;
280...s. and
i~ (Lev.) by the way; Jl>- ~ (Lev.) in any
286
c:~\j
n. date; history
~..r"l16}:; J}o.¥.k.i ~~ t..!1l~
case
k ..:J~
~I.J
J.L- ci'l -
now?
the village
99113211 1
991130121
281 ~ n. pI. A~i age (of a person); life, lifetime; (Dia.) LS';; ~ my dear, my darling ..::...;I J.>.i;.r..r '¥.!lr J}o...::.....; ~
c::.-:.5)
c::.-:.5 .. ~I.:.L;Iy:.!J - I f you had slept
your whole life on a single bed, you and your
-
That
had not ever happened in the whole hi story of
You are going home
287
:\";;'I.J~
n. pI. -aat study, research, examination
i"u:;.:.r J5~.r. 'l...l! -::..L....U:-I
-::..L..a...a>..::J1
J ...... 1.J..ill ~ -
J J.,r.4l1
Th e assignment
into the specialti es might not please everyone who submitted an app li cati on to study at the
five brothers, you wou ld have understood me
universities
991130941
991130371
34
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
288 ~,.;.o n. pI. ~I~ position
295
J..? fem.n . (rarely masc.) pI. JI.,...:.f market
?T .>I.J 0\5 dJ - ~I ~ ~.M t,S?\ ,-;-,I?\ !ll.:.A
praise God, thanks be to God; (Oia.) '&I..v-
rSlJ.1 ,-;-,.,)-1 -
.... ')l...ll&. /Hamdilla 9-s-salaama/ praise God
There are other civilian
(political) parties among the Muslim Brothers
for your safety! (said to sb returning from
and the ruling party
a trip)
.& ..LJ.I.J ~ ~ ~I
931136991
t..r'" }I -
The matter
was concluded well, praise God
290
t::.!~ n.
pI. ·aat institution, organization;
94 113315 1 +for +spo
foundation L..J.> 0.J.>lJ
4:s:J ~.Jlf .l---~ ~.>} -:...L.....'y ~
'>.J .JL,JI Jl-.:.j ~I ..!lE ~
After that she turned to the left and entered
always able to avoid taxes
another passageway
961132241
991125901
291 ':';L,.:.1 v. IV to add sth
298
;;J.Ju, U ~.Jl:>-I» :"';L,.:.\ ~ «!ll.:.A 0)0.::;111 JlJ «t,S?i -
'-;-'~
n.
.t
.
pI. ,-:",Iy'l door, gate; category, rubriC;
section, chapter
\.,.. p.,. ,-:",UI d;.J ci>.> -
He said : "Wait for me here" and then
added: "Choose another table for us"
left the door open
891142151
99 112585 1
292 t.U:.! n. pI. ·aat sector, section; 0) t.U:.! Gaza
She entered and
299 ~ (L. ~) rel.pron. which; a fact that
Strip
J f i l ,-!L...ol Jl t,S.>\lt o)jN U""L...o ) l l f o \ -
t.Lk.il\.J i WI t.1.1.il1 ~ ;Slf- .~ Jl..l:5l:JL ~ U""~I - We are trying to make certain the
They shot a lot of bullets, which led to the
building of a partnership between the public
90 113967 1
wounding of many
and private sectors
300
901140281
~1 n.
sake; s-f.-f ::;(
~ and ~\~ because of, for .. ,...
,...
the sake of; .)1 ~ 'j in order to
293 ~ ~ n. pI. ·aa( collection, group; squad; bloc
~~ C"'>'\JdjJ, -.JU,~, JI.J.J\ -
d ) .:;)1.;
t,Sx)
He put on his glasses with the golden
~i :.r ~~\, )~ .;JI
;S.J UI
.>.wl:-~ y....;
j~.J ~I ~ J.J; . ; J:,4..!.l1 JlrJl ~I ~I - We are proud of the praiseworthy efforts which Your Majesty has been making on
frames and took out a stack of paper
behalf of our Iraqi brothers, in order to rid
981128561
them of their distress and overcome hardship 96 113027 1
294
~ v.
II to turn over, surrender sth JI to sb;
to greet, salute sb;
~ -J ~ give m; regards
•
301 .>Lil vn. unification, unifying; n. pI. -aat union
to; ~ and .JrL-: /yislamuh/ (mostly Gul.)
~~I ~)...LII MI~.J
inter}. thanks!
415 ~/i -
l..~ ,0" A i~
(J' ~ y. .,..
J.:L.II..Lo.
been present since the year 1918 when the first
J.::.W ~rJl JJ..u1 ...... ~
world epidemic happened among humans
We announce our satisfaction with
96112522
I
the esteemed efforts of the Secretary General
309 Ic-::\ conj. while, meanwhile; ~ Ic-::\ later
of the Arab League to accomplish national
.).:ll ,i)..,:il ;,;.,...ul Jl 0..4:). L) J~ .) l5 IdJ
harmony in Iraq 88 113875
~
I
.:.r. .)~ J ..l"J}1 .:.r. ..ul> .."..,~ -
While
Amr was on his way to Medina, he met his two
303 4.;.~.i.; n. pI. ...,...../)'; school
friends Khalid Ibn_AJ-Walid ?Qd Uthman Ibn
~ ....... l> 01..:5 lA ....... l> ~y~
....... J-u
J5-
Talha
Every private secon dary school has its own
89 113495
I
special tie 99112353
I
310
.:Jl> ad}. present, current; Ql>- presently, currently
304
~
ad}. beautiful, nice;
.1_~1 .).fjJ1 fine
\.)l>-
&. .)~)~I L) .:r.~lpl ~lrJl ~~.)1
.......ili 4.lp 4)..,......
arts
i\ 415 ~W ii ~¥I L:....,.; (J' ~ t.W ~I~\.; \...;Si
-
J>
Have some of our beautiful
values gotten lost? Or have they all gotten lost,
L)J
Jl r
.......ili 4.l~ -
The
number of Iraqis present in Jordan currently reaches 700,000 Iraqis, and in Syria 600,000 96112597
I
or the most influential of them? 99112198
311 ~ n. rule, government; pI.
I
U n. pI. c:yl type, kind, form; l.. ..~Y.... somewhat, more or less
.."..,l:---II 4.l J ..u1 ~
.,.(
305
its::;.i
decision, verdict;
.)J.:J Jj J,LilI
(J'
I-,!~ ~Y .)U.~I i..G.;.....1 -
its::;.i
judgment,
statutes, laws; ~
by vi rtue of, because of
.L:.:i JlrJl J
l"J1 '-:-' f- Iy-~\ -
.:r...ul J~)
Religious leaders in Iraq
The Germans used a new kind of bomb over
during the rule of the Abbassid state permitted
London
the drinking of wine
98112318
306 ~
If.
I
98 112301
I (u) to appear,
emer~e, rise; to go out,
312 ~w.l
If.
I
IV to indicate, mention, cite, refer to
come out, get out; (Dia.) ~ (a) to appear,
J1 sth
seem; to turn out, end up, amount to
...:.....;... ~lrJI ~~f l l -:..1~l:AJ1 .)\
.i.:..~ ~I J...-.l1 -
F
~ JL.a;)l1
J J:lli ~)L..,..
Jl ~.r;J i~1 (J' Cl...lii i~ ~J l..~
He began to spend the night calling until
dawn, then he would take a shower, sip several
~I -:..)ll)l1 -
J1 ~ '.;)lA....lJ
For the sake of
comparison, we point out that the Iraqi Kurdish leadership forbade popular celebrations 90113362
I
cups of coffee, and head for work 96
I 12562 I +spo
313 ~ n. pI. -aat side; direction; part, party; sector, office, institution; -:..~ entities,
307 ~~ n. pI. -:..1..J;. service, assistance; -:..1..J;.
parties, individuals, "players"
F .)\ ,=h,.·~1 JJl>- ~ (J'J
services, assistance, aid; ~~ (Magh.) work,
.~ r l ..r..jJ
employment; job, task
....... L;l..1 ...,...)..wl ~I t.WJ~1 ~ .)li}o..ul>
.... ..IJ.I ~y.
-
-
Jl J-~ (J' ;Sl J..a.::..- .... ~l.OJl i4~I J
In the coming days more than one worker
will reach the end of his service 98112380
I
For his part, Surani tried to inform the
Minister of Education, Dr Khalid Tuqan about the terrible conditions in private schools 991121241
36 A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
5 Transportation ~)o
road
487
?r .Jt;... '-:"'4 UL.!. ....uJ
center; station
to stop
504
O:.y
return (trip)
115 223 251 298 467
510 528 536 541
1674
depart
street
traffic transportation
arrival
872
departure, exit
to go, walk
C.J.~ 4.>L..
field, arena
....uy
to stop, halt
~
2379 2395 2408 2435 2447
3640
driver
3651 3652 3663
2516
to cover
box; trunk ~I
to depart,
~
cargo;
bus
shipment
3675
exit, way out to obstruct c,S..l.I>
to lead, guide
.),,.....
ambulance
JlA.....!
(.),.... : car)
JAj
tunnel;
.J\.:.. ).1 Jlkj
train
- I"
door, gate
~y.
..,.sIJ
to fly
rider,
3694 3846 3873 3889 3991
car (also ascent; to pass by port, harbor
-JJ
JI':;'" ";";,;5
driver corniche
fl.y:.
chauffeur
~ ~.,
. J' ..........
journey
6798 6858
march, walk errand
6871 6929 6944 7023 7046 7146
bicycle stop to park (also
steamship intersection,
::......
-:: .... ,
;15 as
if I;
..r.J>"
.).i )ai ~
'-?fi. ~rY
to take a walk to walk, stroll train road, way bridge, overpass automobile
~!,...
318 .:;lS' and ,jlS'J conj. as if; (with pron.) -.jlS' and
i WI 1..Lo. L,l.~ ~L:;I c!. y.,.. ~y,JJ ~J...ul ~I '\ \" J,l4..o J..:;r.L 00,1" ~ J~ ~I i f -
.... ')LJI
e ~I -
4 0:- jJ~
r-'"
We
but we failed
(Lev.)
~4.r"-4
lr.I.r'" J! -:..:.J I .t,..j .:;1 L:J J l> -
tried to get the girl to come to her senses,
991117721
320 J';; n. pI. JI)\ statement, remark; saying, utterance
Yes, (what do you want)
brother? Whom do you want sir? There is
4J.,5 d .I~I JI;i ~ '-?.r-11 ..r.ydl,;5~
nobody here .... go ahead, good bye ("brother"
C')LlJ JJ \II lJ, )',::.>4
and "sir" are used here for ridi cu le)
,-?J~I -
62
I 19037
iL,.W .M.:..,..; ..li ()~I
The confidential report mentions
some statements from experts that North
1
Korea might be preparing its first test of
316
J} adj. pI. JI..,} long; tall; ~} for a long
nuclear weapons
ti me; extensively
971 120361
..,.,.a.J l,.W r"W J 1.,5;..; ')\.;.,1 ~):JI Jlj; 'Y ..;.,I.f--> \ • JJr J,i li'Yl - There
321
.1;; n. woman, wife; (without def. article)
is a long road ahead, and Turkey will not actually
.\;1: (Lev.lrq.;
join the European Union for another ten years
wife; (in idafa) ..;.,Ir Imiraatl (Egy.), (Lev.lrq.)
991119141
•r
Egy. derog').r Imaral woman,
Imart/; (with pron.) ..:.;I
book, we can say that there is nothing new
on the basis of elections characte ri zed by
in it in terms of facts and very well-known
freedom and transparency must be a basis for
i-W> ..:.>:J
~I} r:...LI1 -
The peaceful transfer of power
events in the Arab region, but it shoc ked
democratic government
the Israe li s
9S 1119781
99111773
323
.
328 ~ n. pI. ...:..~ power, rule, authority;
I
«
F. v. I (a) to make sb/sth do sth
329 I~ v. I (u) to appear, seem (J to sb, 01 that); to look, seem (big, small, happy, sad, etc.);
(with imperf); to cause sb/sth to be sth;
)~ \. .
to appoint sb (minister, etc.); to begin to do
it seems
JS. and )~ Ij evidently, apparently,
t
sth (with imperf.)
0\11l::-!. ~ J..,U yi 6....,.;,1) I~ - I t seemed
..;ht 0i 0\11 ~ l::-!. )i ~) ~ 0i .)Oi ')
clear that she no longer feared anything now
.!..l,.;) )i ~) -
981 11S47 1
I don't think there is a man
or a thing that can make me tremble or be
330 ;; ' ~ num. fem . ~ five;
confused now 90112881
) ~~ 1f',)1 J~)
I
~I ~ -
324 (j con). when, after
) UI J.J"'-~..!.L!.) ~ ~! J
?
If' ~ ..!.o~l,ll
~ fifteen
J ~I...\J J
Five security men were
wounded in the incident, some of whom have
J:i ~ JL l i -
left the hospital
When he asked about them, he was told that
991114061
they are about to enter hell 331
991115981
Z$~~1 ad}.
economic, economical;
(Lev.) thrifty
325
JL v. I (a) to ask sb (,y/J about; 1~!I0!
lV,' ~)..l>J~~L.,a;:.;II~~0i-4j~
whether); to request from sb (0i to do sth);
We want to accompli sh economic growth in the
to pray to (God)
range of 7.1 %
JL ,~)) ~; '-?~ I~ (.))1 J>~
88 112838 1
~-4; 0) ,-?i) cr'\A... ,-?i :tlUI - The husband entered a store to buy a dress for his wife,
332 ~ n. pI. ..!.ol>.;i , ..!.or. search (,y for);
(J of); research , examination
so the seller asked him: What size and co lor
discussion
do you want?
(J of)
95 112075 1
~ I~ '->-foL
j'1 ~11l". i}i 0i ~-
I need to read this research because I will
326 J.~ v. I (i) to" li~e, be alive; to experience sth
explain it tomorrow to the students
ilh:JI ~ If' ~ ~~) ~ If' ;Si I""';'~ cY.U1 -
991113741
They lived more than t hirty-five years
under the repression of the former regime
333
991114751
.:r.~ n. pI. 0~;t religion i...l.:-- ')).:r.~ '1) Ji>- ~ ') .~.r.')1 J:iNeither mind, nor religion, nor principle can
327
'»I} n.
accept the killing of inn ocent people
pI. -uun citizen; fellow citizen,
compatriot '7'
991113461
rJl .t".. ~ Jy.d-I cf:-: ') .)o1}1 ~i
...:..1),,.-11
~;) ~
')) - Citizens are no longer
334
F
v. I (i) to carry, bear sth; to transport
ab le to obtain drinking water or car fuel
(cargo); to become pregnant (~l» ; to attack
97 111765 1
~
sth, campaign ~ against
Frequency index 39 ..L.....
~
y
r--I
-SoUl UL.:JI j 1..;:-:5
Id J.# j
L::>:.. ~
341
pi II. VIII to consider sth/sb to be; to regard . " -'
sb/sth as; to believe .:,,1 that
He opened a big office on
-
~ p\ I..;\J i~~ ul.,:-J ~II.i.o. ...:....h...:.
the street that bore the name of Saad Zaghloul later on
j,~ ~)JI ~ ~.P.-"\ "";.r-'J u. il"...l;
971 11514 1
i\)L -
She occupied thi s position for many
years, and I consider myself a student of hers 335 ~? ad). pI. -uun military, army; n. soldier,
and I will take the same road to bettering
private
women's (lives)
~ ...,..;~ J!~..J.,o ~i.J; J 0'...JL,.k.II 0-' ~
98111281
':"I~I
. J! I}\.; il.?JIl.;.uL:... Ilr:
Gandhi does not have an army, but he has
':'4:; n.
I 11536 I +Iit +for
to bring '-:-' sth
337 ~ n. pI. ..;;;" army; armed forces; troops
338
He loves
her and misses her a lot during the day
hope for this end, and I await it impatiently
96 I 11497
v. IV to love, like sb; to want, like sth or
)4.01 JI}o i~ t...~J ~ ...:! -
~I U~ t... j;.:.;\J ':4.0 1o.i.o. .;1\ rS - How I
JoLS ~
~1
to do sth
336 ~ interrog. how many/much; (Egy.) iLS
99111171
I
Many pilots have civilian
if
II.
I (u) to exit, go out ,y-10-' from; to
leave 0-' (a place); to deviate ,y- from;
I
(Alg.) to appear, show up, be visible lo~ i~y ':"J~ IF."; ~ L,?~I ,-:,-",oUIIJ) lo..:.....l
339 ;S'J\..!.! n. pI. -aat participation, association cj)...ltJ UiJ-1 .)y.-: J~-
while he remained immersed in his thoughts
He will be beside him even if the whole world
99 110724
stands agai nst him 89 112137
I
359
I
2.:; v. I (a) to put, place sth J/~/J inside/on/under; to lay down (rules, conditions);
353 L5? v. I (i) to occur, take place; to happen
to lay (an egg); to give birth to (a child); to
J to sb; to flow, run (liquid); to run (person)
write, compile, draft, compose sth
n. ~l> especially, particularly; t,;,lJ-1
"""l» cr'lJl~) , I~ IfL.:. 0y5i) ~L ;11 ..:,..l.:"A (,,)-'>-! J t:r:J1 J .",...l:J:.1 ~IJ~ -
99110560 1
pI. ~ 'Yji, (Egy.) ~ 'Y) child, son, boy
368 ~~l adj. social; ~~ '11 tiL:l1 personal status
if~1 0\...i rj>' ~
This matter made me think, after my
..:,..lz:.L '-.?~lA.:J -
pi oJ~l:-o JI ~
.....
chi ldren finish their university studies, of
J."..JI
vo lunteering in one of the aid organizations
to the government's initiative to carry out social security packages to avoid the negatives
99110683 1
363 ~~ n. pI. .\...~ blood; (Dia.)
of the market
f:;
941110951
..:,.. ,}j:; ~ ~ .:r tr.ul ..:,...ri l 0i ~ \... J LJ.1 J..y ,0l:....;l.;.Ji) ,JI,rJI),~ J .\....ul ~?
-
We are looking forward
369
It was not long before tears began to
~~
n. pI.
.1 discussion, conversation,
talk; story, interview; Hadith (narratives based
flow from her eyes when she remembered the
on the words and deeds of the Prophet
blood in Palestine, Iraq, and Afghanistan, wasted
Muhammad)
unjustly in war
~
99110621 1
This discussion needs to take place on more
~ adj. true, correct; sound, healthy;
971106671
.:r ;Si ~ ..!..;..l:I-1 11.. '-.?,;f: 0i ~ -
than one level
364
authentic (Hadith): '-.?J~I ~ Sahih AI-Bukhari (Hadith collection); interj. yes,
370
4,.;,l:-::- n. politics;
~ really, truly J ili:...!J.10}! ~ t..L;.ulo)j) rli) ~l5 0!
J.r--.u~ 0",...;: 'Y
-!.ll~ Jl,."".;.i o~ 0~ 0i ~ J-:.:!:-I-Ifthe
-
right;
1"...."J.l::.i::....'YI
pI. -aat policy
J ~JL:.lL 0y;S-.T. 'Y 0 ~ -
~IS
adj. complete, full; integral, perfect;
J~~J ;J..IS '-:~ ~ rWI .,.....Il1
99 110266 1
'--"z.,aJ1 .j~1
384
~l50~ completely
armed groups
378
.)i ~ el.,1l J ~ ~ ).p~ J.ily J--
~ '-.l!...l.1 \..!...
.r.~1 ~ ..r-;?J u-~ ~ yJ- -'::--ll t: I)
...;;
marriage baby engaged father-in-law little son
Frequency index 45
6429 6430 6515 6636 6645 6656
398
S.1j
(..1! :J.1
~~
6659 6665
to marry off married
l:-! 4;L...ia>
boy, son
.;U.
to divorce
~.}
daughter
~.,.:.I
brotherly
n. pI.
.li~f friend
child custody,
.
jy:-
.,.-
nursery, daycare
6764 6766 6812
!"':!
mom
Yo
father
~y
to marry off brother-in-law, son-in-law
7342
u..u..
aunt
twin
403 ~ adj. possible
.:.r o .JL.... .1 4lli..l..PI .y ~..l!l4 ..Jl.4.. -.,...;LS:JI I~ ~ '-7-:!.;:J1
6963 6996
dad
•...l>..:l.1 ..:...l; ~}I ..:........,.a; .:,1 ~I .:.r .:,15 J.a"tr"}11..L..y ~~~I -;.Was it possible for
.J I~ r-rl Jli ,:r..lJ1 '-:-'rJl
~/\jI.1 ;""JL.)'I ~rJl ..:...~I - The
the United States of America to stay silent
author begins his article by talking about his
about this su bj ect?
Arab friends and acquai ntances who he said
98197841
have succeeded in bringing together Americans 404 ~:; n. support, assistance, bolstering,
and Arab-Islamic soc ieties 99 I 9751
I
promotion
..,...,.!.1 ~IA ~ J~.:,I r...ull..L. ~ ~I
399 .J ~.1~ n. pI. -aat dollar LS.,>-I./ ~I ..:...lA.:...:lI .Jl.......1
c!.J -
~
".".Ir
JIl;.J~l.i 'V~.1~ yo JI J:.o~I.r- j-..:>.1
-
Couldn 't this suppo rt end up
benefiting Iran and not Iraq?
The
93 110286
I
price of oi l reached seventy-five dollars, so we were forced to raise the prices of oi l derivatives
40S ~! I'eel (Egy.) interrog. what; n. ~)'l/il-'eel the
once again 94110209
th i ng; so-and-so
I
a..d:-Il?j • ..l5" l?~
400
.~
vn. building, constructing, erecting; j&- a~ based
-
.p. ~l>- ~ 41.1 .~ J~I ,:!I
What is all this beauty, by God I've never
heard anything like this sentence before
n. 'building, structure, edifice;
90110586
I
on, according to
~UI
.l:.:-! J.>..Y' ':'yli .J.1..l..P..l:..P J.a-
~ ~t.:.s::JI.1 -
406 ,:r..1 Iweenl (Lev.lrq.Gul.)
Would you support a unified law
for building mosques and churches? 9719894
where; (with pron .) ~.1 Iween-ak/ where
I
have you been?
.~ ,:r..1
401 ~). n. method, procedure, way
~).JI •.lr. ~..l..P
.:.r .»I}l.i ,~ ~Ij ,:r.r.J1 .!.lI J h.
l?.P -""';I.1)Il:J I""';) ~,,~ -
c: J-l..;j .:,1 ~L,.lJ1 .:.r ..,...,.! -
is the regular guy going to get it from? OK, so
friend in that manner
rai se our salaries for us a bit
99197271
65 114746
~1 elat.
fem . v;. higher/highest; adj.
advanced, superior; ;~I above (mentioned), aforementioned
.:,1 ,:r....ul .u;. t.lk...I.1 ;51 j&-'11 Jl':'l:-o~ W~ )y-ll J} ~4J1 j
u-4: -
Dumyan pushed
He's
telling you that gas has gone up on you, where
It is not approp ri ate for you to deal with my
402
interrog. where; ,:r.}
(Lev. !la-ween/, Irq . !li-ween/) to what place, to
407
I
.J.:i..;..A n. pI. .J~~ source .T-~ .:,1 W..b... .J~L.a,..:.r ':'L:.:JI ~
r---
i WI ~Lr .J.,..1J.JI.1 ....A...:..:51 ~ ~""""".1 - Her parents discovered the symptoms of the illness as a result of the
up and graduated from the university, he
blueness of her sk~n .and he~ ~ifficulty breathing
dreamed that he wou ld get a job and marry
99184901
and have a small girl
453
96 18769 1
.:!.,l;.; II.
V to speak
e/J1 to/with sb; to
discuss ,y (a topic) ./.
446 Jil
lowest; n. minimum p!. J5 'r L,;"A:t \? ~.:"I '-4) Ji~1
447
.:" • ..!>..:;, : • .• _';; '. -.~ .1 Y . v •."......... v:;---
elat. less/least, smaller/smallest, lower/
. ~ - J.1j!. ~ ~ - They
J.--
bring them men of religion and psychology
At least I want him to contact me by te lephone
experts to speak with them so that their fear of
once a day
facing death will dissipate
9918481 1
95 I 8852
Y
II.
I (i) to be less
V
than), decrease, diminish
454
\ • ,y J-"!. )I ~ ....wI ~ ,y o~ -=...;\5 ~I '-!.r. Jl,,-ol - The ship was far from this area,
I
r-"1 elat. more/most important ~ tWI .;:..
t
".
or.r:-') ...\..bl..!.\1 if!.>-..;.....i;Ji 0i dl~ ~ JJL:.-i t
.:.,5i ~IJJI J
I~i dl~ ~
At the beginning I
)fo. J
-?.ill )0.:11 dl~ -
I didn't
wasn't enthusiastic about the idea of the
try after that to turn behind me to see for the
comm uniqu e, but after that I found it to be
last time that sce ne which will never again be
-
472
The
to hurt him
I got up, did my
abl utions, and prayed 9718403
..;...~\S ~)J.l .~ ~I ..;...a.:J1 -
excellent
repeated
99 I 8227
98 I 8267
!l j
I
v. I (u) to leave (behind), quit, abandon sth
o)Jl:.l1 ......,}
475
J:.-o J) !l;.; 'J ...:...;15 0\511 ~ -
~
•
'P .
I
t.~! n. pI. -aat
meeting, gathering;
~
l~ ~I sociology
J ~I '-.!.iL. .:...l
The nature of the place did not leave Romell
M'J ~'JI ~I";"'~p'-I
the opportunity to maneuver
01.->- J ..;....ili .)1 '-:-'rJl
98 I 829S
was discussed in the meetings of the Higher
I
•.bl,-.all -
The issue
Council of the Arab Pharmacists Union which 473 ~J:;
n. pI. -aat degree, grade, level;
was held in Amman 92 I 8843
class, rank
I
7 Materials 558 J)J .la.t.; 948 1363 ~ 1720 ~..I>1745 .::......j 1904 '-"~ 1946 ...,...L,...) 2095 Jo) 2264 JJ~ 2323 ~
paper; leaves petroleum stone iron oil gold
.l.,,>-
sand petroleum steel (also string, thread
~ L:.-' C·)
glass
~
wood; board
~~..I>~.y
.T'.J>":" ~
~
JL..
liquid
:;L..
watery, liquid
~L...)
rope, cord
iron (adj) stick gem, jewel fabric, textile clay; mud
ashes, cinders
"":'1)
fabric, cloth
~...u...
metallic
y
sample, specimen
lead
hard)
2755 3039 3050 3086 3138 3206 3210 3242 3265
3269 3358 3471 3508 3512 3556 3658 3780 3815 3994 4165 4295 4532 4622 4709 4769 4785 4883 4904
~L,:.
.J..,.L,:.
:r.-> 4J"~
---:.>~y
raw; crude mixture, blend wooden
4:-~
6901 6902 7235 7286 7422
.:r.l
JJr
..:....:-.1 ..!.ll... (._ to
If
l-;
4k~ .:.Jj
~.i..
~
wood mixture cotton
.la.\.,:.
mixture, blend
0...u...
metal
.J!.?
silk
~
coal silver oil-based
plastic fuel cement wire, thread porcelain copper floor tile asphalt gilded, golden asphalted, paved
grease, fat
Jd
ZJJ~
5283 5359 5494 5644 5652 5837 6043 6401 6408 6847
adobe bricks
1fL..
diamonds
.la.\.,:.
to mix, blend
~
j\o:-
brass, copper gasoline, kerosene
7574 7785
jJJ! ).f.!
turquoise crystal, glass
52
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
,
,
476
~} ad}. near, close; related; pI. (lev.) ,-;-,I}
483
~) recently; soon; n. pI. ~I)
related;
but (also)
c?.rJ.l yA ~!J •c)l ~ c.r::l rlll 01J t;
relative, near relation
..:... ~...;i 0"y')1 ~i,)'.k.4.; -
...wll."...u .~ ~ y... )..1.:......1,) ........i) ~I j'"
...,...,.,.~""lA!.lI.1.L.../YIJJ~~.~ JI..l.:l1 ~I (J" ~ ~ • His poetry is controversial in cultural circles particularly after
0')-4.7lylS ) ..:..~I •.l.o. J!. Jl c\.::,..; 'i JI..rJ1 w..a... - We do not need such
r
.r -
operations if they indeed desire the good of
two collections of modernist poetry were
Iraq
published
97 1 82 27 1
99
478
1
8164
1
48S ..,.L...l n. pI.
;1S v. I (u) to look J! at; to examine, look J J.>.i c: . :.",;.". : :; 'i,) ..!..l,.;b:. ~ 'i -
~ especially, particularly
99 1 7924
I
488 ~ adj. good; i~ adll. well
~i ..;)1 ~ )1
90 I 8703
92 I 8371
490
':'1.>
'-!..lA i ..l.Oi ~ -
I wanted
I +spo
.)4~
vn. visiting; n. pI. -aat visit ,y I~ ~ ~~...l.,o 0).,) ~~ t.~ ~I ~ -
496 ~ jj n. pI. -aat wife
~ )j iL.i ......;;) ,~ J! i..4.JI
I went to visit a friend
~I
who lives in a house far from the clamor
J-"))
..:...lkl-
.:r w~T J! )l:..:: ~~ ,~~ J-"'..r.
of soc iety
0~1 -
97180461
at his house. He stood if] frol)t.of his wife
In a few moments the mayor arrived
shaking with anger. He"was on the verge of
491
ci') adj. fantastic, amazing, marvelous,
breaking apart into thousands of tiny pieces
magnificent, awesome
98 \7840
~I
4:.>:J .. WI) ~ 0..1.>1) '-:--'"" ~ ~ J . . . . . . ~ - I experienced a
lS""1l1 ~I
497
¥
I
n. execution, implementation, carrying
single, wonde rful true love story...but it ended,
out
unfortunately, last summer
La.l,..i:.;
97 I 8028 I +for
~~
J....: 0\5 )r)ll .:r I p cJll:""I}1 .:r J .!..L.:. .:r L. ,~ ~ - It is clear
that many things could have been carried out in a different manner, there is no doubt
492 .I?'! vn. conducting, carrying out, undertaking;
n.
about that
pI. -aat procedure, process;
88 I 867S
step, measure; move, action
I
..:...~l>.;:.;~1 • IT."'j j.-LSJI ...... ~ Cl:.:-o) ~i ~~I ~I
.:r ~')t!JI J ..,.1.rJI -
Armitage
498 0;J n. pI. 01)f color, tint, hue; type, sort,
announced his comp lete support for holding
kind
the Iraqi elections on the thirtieth of the current month
.:.,;;~i .1)) .....A.l;!..1 J ! J:lli 0} J L,?1I1 La. ~ e:t~1 ~~ .kl}~ ~jA - Her hair, which had the
8S 190841
color of the night, was pushed to the back
JL...:J! n. pI. -aat contact, communication;
earrings
connection, relation, relationship
99 176681
behind her ears which were decorated with gold
493
..:...~) I~! ci) t.Si J If. JL.".;~I ~ t.S 1 ,y ) LA.:.... ~I - You can get in touch
.-i
499
with me at any time if you want to consult
I'""'~
adj. pI. ';I.J, .L.:J old, ancient; ';I.J n .
old timers, veterans
about anything
~ ~ ,~...IA.II .... t.; t.S~..r. i~ -
97 I 7989
to put on hi s old clothes, piece by piece
I
He began
99176691
494 l:i~ n. world
~ t.S 1 J!-o ~r.-) 41jA -1 ~ fJ u.l5 ~~ u r
~)..l.:.ll; ~
-4~
He worked in education in a
- A full minute passed and no one
number of American universities in New York
opened the door, so I pressed the bell again
and Boston
9917S241
971 77S8 1
511 ."-".. pl.n. women (sg .•f;~)
r+'r .L.;J J~) i f ~ ~ u4~ ~uJ';
504 .~,;P n. return, going back; return trip ":;~y ~.~ l....J~ ~ ~I ~)I':>l5
~IJ -
.J.ri- The poor man didn't know what was
about men and women she knew and loved
awaiting him when he got back to the house
9S 1 7826 1
She told me never-ending stories
94179921
512 505
J~ (def. J~) adj. high, elevated
;L.\.:>IJ -
E:? v. I (a) to open sth; to open, start (a business); to turn on (lights, radio, TV);
:'I LS~ 4 J-il
to conquer (city, land)
~~.J'...J ~I jt.p,. r.-~
I hope, grandfatheG to get a higher scientific
..I..S
)pJ..l1 ~
degree, and to travel
J! .G:-) -
f.?-I ~~ Y') ~I
The soldi er crouched on his right
My uncle
knee and aimed his weapon at me
Yunan came out of an inner room and locked
97176841
the door behind him, and came to the open area in a silk shirt
•
515
-:!
•
99 I 7466
~ vn. knowing; .)1 ~ knowing that, in view
of the fact that; pl.n.
n.
knowledge, information;
i);. (Gul.) news; ...!..\..}SO ,f!.) Iweesh
I
521 .. ~ k! n. pI. -aat organization
-j I~ .)l5
cluumakl what's new? (what news do you
f..r-:JI WO:..I. ~J"..i.:-::.ll ~I
have?)
-::....;l5 b! ~
U:4 I~ll - Why are
you interested in him if your relationship ended? 99 17390
I
526 ~; adj. strange; n. pI. .~j stranger, foreigner 519 ~li n. pI. -aat culture, civilization
j&-\~';'.:iT'" I~ .. Jt...A.;~I.1}.:r ~')l5
-j ~.I.}.4;.l1 \A..,.:.)) ~ '7'\.:SJ1 i...lA: 0.,s01 e~U - The book presents a piece of
.;>-1 ~.:r)...I...-r ...::.......II ~
~'pi ~I i\...1 ..:..5~J }j" J-" ~I ~ rJ-l1
ti ,y ~I .:,'1 -
~.,.....,)I Jf d'J'JI,y ~ o.r"j -
A butcher was arrested
Mrs
and convicted before the military court because
Mariam walks on the street with confidence,
he refused to sell meat
while Zahra does not raise her eyes from the
95 I 743S 1
unpaved ground 9617250
541 .:;IJ n. leadership, command; driving
•~
(a vehicle), piloting (an aircraft); ..:...I~IJ
547 J-PI
J-f LS~ yo
~ jJ:-1 ~ j.-L...::l1
J
n.
I , l
pI. J.,.....,I source, origin; descent,
lineage; original, master copy;
leaders, commanders
~I o~L,i
.......... II..!.;~ loUL; 01 JL;
..!.;...I..!. oUL;
r
J .:r-l!ll -
')\.;,1 originally,
primarily; J.,..;,1 principles, basic rules; funds, assets, capital
He
J...:>\ .:r- o1r l J) ~j.,sJL.. ~ pi - Sa~kozy appointed the first
said that a new leader, named Montgomery,
.) 0.r.j) \,if
would take over the leadership of the eighth
~.rill (..
Army, and he is a strong leader in dealing with
women of Arab origin to be a minister in the
soldiers
French government
87180471
99 I 7020 1
542 t.t;~
n.
57
defense (military, legal, sports);
548
~
n. pI.
i
P science, the study of; ~I ~
psychology
protection
~?,y
t.u..ul J-" ~rl i f ..::..lijJJ,);-i
J~I -
Roosevelt announced America's
~~I .) ..,...l,,-ll
i.,LJ.l
~IJ~ .L:.;I U.rU -
They got to know each other while studying
intention to defend the freedom of the seas
political science at the university
9617233 1
99170141
543 ~ n. pI. ~ way, road; means
\...~.~...l..all ~ J-" l:"..:. ~ ~ \...\1~) J~l>:. 0~1..!.J~ -
...,..,)101
The Lord
549
.::s;;1 adj. safety, security, protection L .;-0\ JLQ;I cJ fo. ~L.\aj l:..>..,.... 01 J;\ 01 ..l.;) 0;:iI.ro-l1 ~
..:...I.,:..... -
I want to say that Syria
does not make anything by way of chance ...
has been calling for the signing of a sec urity
whatever happens now is just and perfectly
agreement with the Iraqis for years
logical
87 I 79671
97171S31
550 J;'" n. pI. J jI.;; house, residence 544
..,e"
.}! (Dia.) pron. you (fem.sg.); (Tun.)
and
!,)'J
~ ...... \.,.. ~I
~~Ilr. ~r
Jl4 ...... \.,.. !,)I ..ill) ~ ii .
il.JJ
5175 5264 5305 5411
birthday moment
)..,1
stage, phase
....... IJ" '1';""1
adolescence intermission
Relative Time
125
.:JI
vPL.. • 1 ..r
i
Jli
~ ~
past yesterday next, coming future
minute
~L.
hour, o'clock
26 393 7226 158 1856
i.J!
day
tJ:-"1
week
l;1c--
week
k
month
J....U
season (also
next, coming tomorrow
section,
i'' ':"
current
class)
.r"'l>-
present
~
Jl.A
now
..J"I)
current
J>-'l
later, next
.~
yT .r"L.....
tomorrow coming, next contemporary
!l1.liT
at that time
~I
now
~
eve, night before
3017 3794
second
time; (.:J'YI: now)
203 237 500 539 598 775 1088 1094 1703 1776 1783 1810 2245 2370 2480 2849 2850
~~ ~J
.)~
'.$~
yesterday contemporary
978 62 69 2253 1103 366 4305 892 883 880 3631 584 5140
r-'Y'
iU,
season year
4:...-
year
...\..U>
decade generation
J,>:u:'-J"
)..,1
stage stage
¥
age
.:J}
century
~
~
age era
..l...i
eternity
~
eternity
Frequency index
Parts of the day (from morning
Months (ranking is from list of
to night)
names and abbreviations)
Islamic calendar
pi
dawn
6588
T"-'" ~
dawn
Eastern Calendar (Lev.lr.)
335
early
196
.:.>",IS
1006
morning
306
.l.1.:-!-
morning
120
;I~I
1250 December,
morning 1967
~
449
~)
Rajab
437
.:.>~
Sha'ban
60
.:.>LA..)
March
258
.:.>l...:i
April
1377
4898
~
forenoon
278
)~1
May
714
1425
~
noon
226
':'>1.r.?
June
Dhul Hijjah
.-
174
j;t
July
Libyan calendar·'
-...1
August
(since 1994)
J~\
September
214
.r-s-
191
3416
~.J.J-
sunset
4816
~J...
sunset
4644 642 392 518
.~
evening
. L...
evening
1521
-,?i
Ai (January)
October,
987
)l;
Nar (January)
November
335
C:?)
Rabi' (March)
~ .lo
Tair (April)
Western Calendar
900 1053
(Egy. and some Magh.)
1372
~
Saif (June)
:.r...?
J:l
night
1S8
.r.~
January
61
..r"'l;
4l:l
night
167
.r.1~
February
374
~li
116
..,..)lo
143
J)
April
134
Days of the week (in order)
~\ • "1 ~
March
Maa (May) Nasir (July) Fatih (September)
Seasons
137
y.lo .J:'y.
May
Sunday
June
1121
~
Monday
907
':'>I~
June
1722
.l:..:.
winter
July
1943
C:?J
spring
August
3034
~?
1504
. U')C
Tuesday
136
~y.
1291
.~)
Wednesday
175
~\
1115
~
Thursday
955
4...1:-
Friday
83 124
1148
..::..:--
Saturday
144
~
162
.r.p\
October
~'"
November
..r---;'
.:.>811 lr. L:J..i i~ ..:.~ dL..J
J
563 J~l vn. occupation (of land or property); ('+'
filling (a post, a position)
J-a.' r
JlrJl
~ - I t is an important class
J JJ\;>.I . } !.Il;.... 01 J.,z 0i ..;k:J.I 0-'
because it offers the researcher the basic
~J..,....JI .;.;L;)\...]I ~ ~;
principles which he will follow in his
'-:,ilrJl -
'1 J 4J..,....J ~~l....o It is logical for us to say that
dissertation
there is an anti-Syrian occupation force in
9s172161
Iraq and it doesn't want to improve Iraqi-Syrian relations
558 J;J coll.n. paper; leaves; cards;
8S 17979 1
ti;j un.n. pI.
JIJ..i1 sheet of paper; leaf; playing card
J.-- 0~ ~
.. ..:J.; L..
p i ~) -
JS JJ)I J.-- ~J ~I
564
A
adj. fem .
,~, pI. ~ white; ~I
n.lad}. whites, Caucasians
He leaned over and recorded on
Lih..... t,SJ.j.J'...J ~i . '';';~J~I J ~I 0\5 ~ )1~ ~ .).1;.;) ~i - The doctor was
the paper everything I said .. then he appeared to be thinking
in his 40s ... bald, wearing a white coat, and
99169161
medical glasses with a silver frame 99168241
559 ~IJ n. father; fem .• :idl) mother; 01~1)1 parents 0\5 I~I 0~ L.. jSl 0~ ~I ~ ,j:>.J..:.II
J .....,L,:.) .;...JI -
565 ~ n. pI. ~ts::; office, bureau, department
U;:->...\..o ~)\S JI .:r.J.JI)1 J..>.I
e-"
Smoking among students is at its
L..~
Jl.!. i Yo ~ ~
~WI jLp,. .;.;r-" .~ -
highest when one of the parents or both
.J~W ~ 0\5
He was preparing to
leave his office after a difficult day when he
of them are smokers, and particularly in the
suddenly heard the sound of the fax machine
home
9816924 1
99 16914 1
566 560 ~ n. pI. -aat association, society
place; (Internet) forum
~ ~J ~ ,:r.5)..!..1.1 .....~ Jll,)L.. ~I ........ l:!:-I
:,£:..! n. pI. .;.;4J3 assembly room, gathering
J ;. ,. oJ•.i1 .L;...c..."i -=- Matti joined the
L •..r"lA.l~ ':J.rJl ......u11 t,S...I:;... J .!.l)....:.. ~ lii i Y •• \ i l ........".... t:; - I have been a
group of participants in his role as president of
participating member in the Arab Intellectual
the Friends of Nature organization in the
Forum in Cairo since its inception in 2001
university
81 18390 1+for
9S 17203 1
567 4OJ~ n. resistance, opposition 561 ~) ad}. official, formal; ~; officially, formally J! t...~L;) .b.,.... ~J ~~ J}J i~L,:.
.d ..... L; -
.L;,>-~ ~~ t,S?~1 d"•.,.oJ1 0b..,....J1
4:,4l
A staid servant met her in official
iL..i '-:"'l,.ll
J ~rJl ....ul ~ J\.i.) yW -
~
It opens
the door for other nationalities to demand the revival of their languages and to resist the
black clothing and led her to a big hall
Arabic language in the Sudan
97170191
87177661
Frequency index 61
575 ~ n. pi. -aat request; demand; application;
568 ~ n. poetry Y"..,...:JI 0'1 .;1JW ~..,...;> Y' ..,...:JI.::..>';'>-I..)j
(purchase) order
r-:J..ill .j o~ •)J~ '":"' ~ L,?jJl .:rill I chose poetry as a subject for my attempt,
..j-'
because poetry is the art whose roots go way
9916681 1
.
back to ancient times
. , young man; adj. youthful,
0~
576 ,":",w, n. pi.
98 168S6 1
~~;.; ~ o...l»L.. ~1.::..>~) I~! -
4-:.l1 J
If you want any help, don 't hesitate to ask me
fresh
569
'.......
"'",'!J",,,,
~ adj. local; ~ locally
(.w.IJ
45 J .:.1\5:.. 0~
~~IJ ~J...ul .:;li~ (J' ~ j~1
-.,...kJ1 -
l5..r"-" ,":",w,
-..4Jl.!l\.:..o. 015
There were a thousand Egyptian young
cT'~1 t.I..kA.l.lJ .... ~ .... j')l.lI .::..>I.i...a.>-~I~.,:l
men who wou ld have liked your spot in the
-
College of
The agency benefits from its international,
regional, and local re lationsh ips to provide the
M edic in~
99 16663 1
necessary statistics to the government and the private sector
577 .1)) n. ;1)) behind, past, beyond; ~ 1.J.J.l 1 J! backward, in reverse; ~I)) adv. behind; ~ I)) ~
9517121 1
from behind
570 ~ adj. pi. i~ great, mighty, powerful
U...ul
~')\.;~~"""}~loi-Youhave a great opportunity to get an education, so
571
".I)J
,":",~I C~ ~i
Salah shut the door
9017372 1
r')tP! n. information, media; vn. informing,
578 ~~r. n./adj. Syrian ~.J.r"
~ ,":",}JI i~! 01. (J' ('""Ip.j 0 # '":"'.rl l ~1f')'1 J:;.W ~I .....". - The Arabs are right
~
u--:-, ..::...1)..>, ~ step, stride; measure
...15';, ~is ~ ,4.1 L.J I .k.....", JI 0)..> i...lZ u.; }I J.i J",....li
')11 ~ ')I ~",...::....JI O.,r.->' '-:"~ JL,., ~)? )1- Mrs Miryam's room door now
action
did not open except for someone to go in or
.:;lS
come out
in her stud ies and in university activities,
96 I 6772 1
so that perhaps she might forget what had
~ ~ll:-I &!';~I) U J..li1 .j ~ d~
t..
~
-
She began to immerse herself
happened
596
~1 n. importance, significance jQ; ')I .~ ~1..kJ1 ~ .:;1 -J Jli ~I .1.,:...-0 ,y
y l-
He told me that
98 16S86 1
602 ~ prep. within, inside; among
the personality of the student, for him,
cr-P c:J:i) u~1
was not less important than hi s educational
\..r'~I ul} -
y .:;\ ~ J\.4j1 ~
An ag[eem~nt took place over
level
disso lving the militias"'and integrating them into
93 16963
the sec urity forces
1
97166461
~ ~ ')II ~ ,Jlj-ll IJ.." ~ ..,Wl ~ -
,
,
597 ~ adj. difficult, hard
..::.JL Uu.
603 ~)~)I and ~~)ll'urubbi/ n./adj. pI. -uun European
I have often asked myself this
"""L>.
~)J)')II ~l:)1
~l:)1 Jl.,.>i ~~ I follow sports news, especially European sports
questions, but the answer is very hard 981 6619 1
news
598
Jf! adj. next, coming, approaching, nearing
tr--"~I.j JAil -
A
.:;.,s-L 41.L.:.':;1 L;\
91 170031
604
.'
:.? adj. artistic; technical; n. technician ~I 0R.~I Lr...li...,-:-l ~ ulS.rJI ~I) ~~ j5J ":--"'..t .:;\ ~ oJ~lAJI- ~)}I) ~I uIJ..IAlI)
Hopeful ly I wi ll be among you
next week
c!Y' -
uU.l:.:..Il.J.." ~ i.r4: In regard to watch in g over the companies, it
87 17399 1
does not have the technical apparatus and the
599 ..;.,J.;. n. pI. ..;.,I.b-l event, incident
technical abilities nor the resources which
u.f';' .)1 ..;.,IJ.>. ~I -
if. ~~ .j t::' ,;....; ..:,..:..IJ She started to review in her mind everyth ing
would enable it to go to each site which carries out these activities
that had happened
87 17291 1
971 667S 1
605 600 'jj:; n. pI. -aat (sports) championship,
~.,;1 v.
IV to clarify, explain (J to sb)
01
that
tournament; cycle, turn, rotation , lap;
~I '-:.:J....j ul) it; ~ - He remained silent,
J1
Jl to; to
,y
reverse
(one's decision); to go back (~~ on one's
if' C? J
staring at the ceiling for about a half hour, then
word)
41 e:::-) JJ )L,JI J ~I ..:.S;..til -
he got up and left the apartment 96
E:-J v. I (;) to return, go back, come back Jl to; to be traced back
I 6574 I
I quit
working at the bar and will not return to it 9816428
I
l!1 part.
(with object pron.)
608 4>.1';-p n. sincerity, candor, frankness; 4>.1~ and ~I;"" frankly
,
614
(~ith
.)i ~)J )11..;...- .!.lILL .J).14 e--I ~I.f""'; ~ -
L...~l.J
L...4\ (t%f) her; (= \.0)
with her
.)~ L...41 i~ v--:1 J..a; Jl.;..~UIIS..l>I.;..·~
Li sten, Tariq , I will ask you a
l.f;....J)..::..J.1,...I.i .... ) .JlL l.?yl!ll
question and I want you to answer frankly 95
41 JI J )
~I i):!.M-
One of the messengers came to Lamis' class
I 6651 I
informing her that the director of the secondary department had requested to see her
609 ~~ n. pI. -aat group, party; gang
97 I 6471
~I ..,.....l:.lI...L.....4.; .:r.jJl&.";-' .. ~lA:- 4..r''j.>. l.?~
-
Cool it, guys, we don't want to spoi l this
lovely occasion
615 .)J~ num. twenty; twentieth
J5 .. Lol&..:r..r---..".; ~ .. ~I I.lr. -:...h,;)
98 164371
.;L,>. if" ~...; ~~..".;
twenty years ... every corner in it reminds me of
becoming acquainted with sb; n. pI.
a part of me life
knowledge, information; culture,
99
education
,y .)L.;)l1 ~
Lo if' j.o\;JIJ ~ rllJ ~I
616
1S?)l1 .;..\.:sl5JI --.: Thinking and knowledge
J.1 iLoi..::....UJ
J iO ~J ~ '7"'UL -
host some of the 2006 World Cup matches
She
92
I 6755 I
stood in front of the sh5lP hesitantly for a few moments, until she was surprised
617 c..~ n. pI. -aat success
i wi ~ I.r"~ L:.-~ -4..1:l:-1 '7"')... ~I Jh~ .b:.l; IS? ~I a,.?I - The new style
when the door opened_and a girl in her 20s appeared 99
-
.••
I 6363 I
achieved a notable success which made the other police departments take notice of it
612 ~I; vn. facing, confronting, encountering;
97
I 6377 I
n. pI. -aat confrontation, encounter .;..l&.UI
J d~..:~.I.Y' ~J.i ...I.i J "l?' c:-'"..,.II
~IJ .:r..r"ll2:l.1 ~ .... ~l-i 0J?\ ~~
625 ~ n. pI. !l;:" bank (financial institution)
e:: f-:-"JJ..l1 ~ 0\5
V. J>- J -
JI r-".;~ 0.r.l.. i· • ,J' Jl--i.; o~~ i ?u- ~I r-".;~
He wa5 playing
.;L,l... -
th ree others arou nd them
dirhams
99 I 6236
95
I
1
6456
1
.;
620 ~ n. development, growth; progress
The bank intends to increase its
capital from 300 million dirhams to a billion
dominoes with one of his friends, with
626
c.L::.i
~;;
tt
~I)I individual, person;
n. pI.
..
,.,..
.;
b;; b;;
separately, individually, one by one
... \5 ~~.,.....:. ~ J! u~~1 The towns need comprehensive
u~.,::.-J.I -
I~ .):lil.):..1.:>-}10y,pl a:WI ~I)i 0\5
development on all levels
..,..-i ./> r-! -
80176621
only ones who knejV _ab.out
Close family members were the
f'!1¥
mother's illness
il~f foot (also as
unit of measure)
9716261 1
621 ~l>
n.
pI. -aat need, want (for what one
lacks); desire, wish; objective, purpose, goal;
Jl ~~ jlp.-
627
i..wlo.;5
in need of
Ji ...;lL.. ~I..;:::--~ I)) .1.;j}1 ~ .;...L.,.oi uI~l> ~ Jr.:-S
The Council of Ministers issued a decision to
import two hundred thousand computers to cover the needs of the universities, institutes and schools
99161671
:,r
2,r J
doing sth; to think, believe
-
~11~J~0UIUL.:.J~ Ul.!J1 ~
r-" ')III~ J.U.i \5lil ~I -
He walked down AI-Ban Street thinking about this happy person that the street had been named after 991 6168 1
promotion, encouragement ~
~~ n. pI. -uun
employee; 0*WI staff,
workforce, personnel; pI. J~ worker, laborer; operator; regent, prefect; ~i;J1 '-;'~ labor Party They closed the
door of acceptance, because there are a lot of foreign workers who are unemployed 97162471
629 ~tw adj. cultural, intellectual, educational ~1.;J..lIJ ~lA!J1 ...L.>WI ~I u~L;J -
Jl P
.;.,1l:J1 ~...l.o
The city of Nazur lacks
cultural and dramatic institutes and halls for putting on plays 86170561
623 .J'~ n. development, advancement; .!...;J.>..:.II J
628
j...>J1 i f 0;11WI ._:_;t~ ')II -
)j v. /I to think ,-;,/~ about sth/sb; to consider that
~ I~ "'Jrll ~J.j~I..I.:>-i ¥ loser .r" ~> to expel, kick out tennis ~ ~) running, jogging .JI';-> loser swimming pool ~ JoY. ball ;;~ a card game; deck of cards ~j':" running ~J to jump, leap .J.J>':" goal ........;.J to make or let play J~ racing, running G swimmer JL-t; -yo Mondial (World Cup) ¥ I the FIFA (Federation Internationale de Football Association)
c:.
Frequency index
632
..I.Sf - adj. sure, certain, definite; i..l.Sf - definitely,
638 J""';'~ n. arrival; attainment, achievement
for sure
.r..JjJ Jr"'J ~ i.,)1 )~I
..;i ..L,5i c:..Jj J .jll.i W f i LSJ..L:lILSlj! ~~I
~ )~I )1):-1 -
LSJ~ ~ 'Y V" r~
come today because of the arrival of a
-
67
I was amazed at how a
~).l.u..l..i.l
It was difficult for him to
Bedouin could know German, and I said: I'm
delegation from Algeria yesterday
sure he is a spy wearing Bedouin clothing
89
I 6728
1
77 I 7875 I +spo
639 633
.1""::' conj.
.p v. I (u) to kill sb; (often pass.) J:i to be killed
except, whether (or not), regardless,
either (or); n. equality
~~
J)' Ji Jr-.r.~ .Ir'~ J.> v}1
4lL.
v"':' Ji ~p Ji -
~; o).~
April ended with a.
Death has a right
-
~I
J:) k
The month of
h~avy rai~ .that
killed
sixty people and wounded mO ore than
to claim us, whether it comes from a fire, or drowning, or a devil, or a beating stick
a hundred
(violence)
95
97
c:..J:j
.r fii c.>- ?,J
1
6311
I
I 6208 I 640 ~;.; n. speed; ~ r. quickly
~ r. ~Y\J i~1 ~~L -
634 ~y. adj. daily; ~y. adv. every day, on a daily
I will go to the
bathroom and return quickly
basis; per diem .. '-lJJ.l1 J~))\.,5
t.,.. Y- A o.r"WI J ':;j~I·l:.:i
~..r...rS .)~1 ~ I~L. -
99
1
6061
I
During his vacation in
officials. What could possibly be wrong with
• < :r..:r, adj. pI. .1.*1 dear, precious ..!.l....l"..-L.~~ .).,51 J .. '-"....1 .. -?:r..r l: '-"....1 [;1
him as a groom?
-
Cairo he is meeting daily with senior state
97
I 6214 I
641
I am sorry, dear... sorry.. 1 won't be diplomatic
with you 9716161 1 +for
635 o')I..P n. pI. vi).;. prayer
~~)o')\...ajI~~L...i~~i rAl (.I};I -
I advise you to take a hot
shower and then pray a couple of prostrations
642 .W n. evening
J
.Lo ~UI i~WI ~I i Y- l-r. J..a.:.;.. She will call them next Friday at seven o'clock
with the intention of letting go of your
in the evening
worries
99160661
9916100
I 643 .)1;;' n. pI. .:f-.,1t;; address; title, headline;
,
636 .JfL.:. n. pI. .1';"':' poet
J ,.,J.~ ~ILSjJl fl..!J1 r ~ l?'t,..J1 ~I -
(website) URL V"I} y-i ..,...)i
Isn't Abu Nuwas the poet
who became famous for wine in the Abbasid era? 94
ci...:.
U;: ~4JI.j Finally, he
address of his private apartment on
I 6364 I
~ n.
'-i)J
J ....... ~I -
takes out a piece of paper and writes the Shawarbi Street 95
637
.)Iy ~-.J
..:.ll ..I..i.l l>1?,.)~.)i :.;l,>- )l. ..l>IJ - He joined the
I 6247 1
, < 644 ~ n. pI. .g.1 physician, doctor
~ Jlj>'\II •.L. y... J ..;1 ~I J.,.4:
college of medicine and worked hard for years
~I J!.J.A:..; .)i -
on behalf of a single dream which filled his life:
in cases like these we must transfer him to the
to become a surgeon
hospital
97161921
97 1 6108 1
The doctor says that
68
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
645 il'.1.;.:.! n. usage, using, utilization
but since the beginning of the war no one sees
;~I il..l>..::....1 ~ ~I ~ Ik1or-i...:......2.i
them in the streets
-
89
Qamara spent months in learning how to
I 6658 I
use the computer 8816785
. n.
646 ~
652 ~~! adj. elected; n. -aat (spo.) national
I
team }}
pI. J p mind, intellect;
JW4 (Alg.)
..:...l>..:;:J.11.-:---- "l - J.;JI ~ "& J5 J.:i o)UI i~ "';-4: - ~}I - Before anything
/bi-I-9qal/ slowly
...,...l....>:Y4 .s)..t; L:..:S:J 'JW4 r+": "l .:rJ1 -
else, teams play, especially national teams, with
Art is not understood with the mind, but we
the goal of not losi ng
comprehend it with feelings
86168281
99160041
647
653 ~. tJl"" num. fem .··L::i1 two·I J ~ tJl"" fem . ~ J ~ L::il'" ~ "" ----
•t
n. pI. ~L,s-I holiday, festival, feast -,?l..!. 0~J li;1..:....r5 WI...,...i) ~ ~ ~
twelve
,_.lr..k..i.:..-L .. 0W';"'O 0~IJ 0WIy> 0~1 ~4.:.JJ - Two in favor and two opposed ..1 will
During the New Year holiday, I broke a plate and a tea cup 98
648
keep my opinion till the end
I 6068 I
9816001
Jo1 n. pI. JL..I hope, wish; )\:;i hoping, wishing, in the hope
(~i oJ that)
~ ~Y"- 0i j )l...lo~ o)~j ~.~ cl. J ..:...~
r:r ~Jj -
654
..
I ~
• J
LS~
d-,-! 454):Y ...I;..IJ...:...iJ oJ ~IJ ~..u:il
..!..oI...l;..!J
~ ~ yill -
He came on a short
visit hoping to return accompanied by
J
n. pI. ~ j->:- soldier ;..,.J:.I ely> ~ lrl);' ~ll\lI..:...I;1.k.I1
The German airplanes began
their raids on the soldier's forward and rear
a wife from among the daughters of his
positions simultaneously, to confuse them and
homeland
cause chaos among them
98160591
8716781
649 ~)l> n. foreign ministry, foreign office I; ~I .f;:::'" .- vI..:.~ 01 ~ \110)b"ll . }JI ~ ~ LSlll .1)-lllA LS~ -
c: ..:...1) "lJ..ll1 ..:...1).::1" ..:...~ )t;:....1 ~P
~I JJ~
investment contracts for hundreds of billions Do
of dollars with a large number of states of the
you believe that there is someone who will pay
region
a single dollar to buy this nonsense with which
87
I 6737 I
he tarnishes the canvases? 99
J
.t
657 );. n. pI. );'1 light; lamp
I 5963 I
c:
651 i'-:::! vn. undertaking, carrying out...,... (task, activity); playing...,... (a role); rising, standing up
"l
...,....rll il,)..i:... ~J..!.lt:.... 0~ ~i pAll
UlrJl J
r-"Iy. ...I;..i -
Gypsies also live there,
~i ~i I~ .?)i ~I 0.\...2.... );.\11 -:....;\5 -'j ~.;JI LS.;JI J10J}~
saints 98 I 5843
I
659 ~ ad}. popular; national, of the people
:(.,..\;1
~t..",1 L.. J~ • ~ .:.rU1 ~ ~ 'JWI
~I- The raid did not harm the ships as
J;l4.! n. opposite (to), corresponding (to), vis-a-vis
much as it harmed the popular quarters
~WJI
9s161141
Fawaz sat on the chair facing the officer
660 ~~
Jl.i. ~ }01 ~ jl} ~ -
9715905
n. pI. -aat
~I -
I worked as a police officer for ten
years in various governorates, and I wandered around vil lages, hamlets and alleyways, and I got to know the dregs of society
.t
oJ...
667 y- n. pI. .Iy-I air, a!mosphere; weather,
I~
climate;
by air, by plane; )..1
C~
air
force
yl:.1 0 IS ".f. t.; c...J..,:. J ~ '-:"' l) I ...:...4.\S:.\ J>-IJJI ~~...:....1.lW l:jl~ - I closed the door behind me and took off my
91 16386 I
clothes. The air was warm 50 I stayed in my underclothes
fot v. VIII to expect, wait for sth/sb ~.r"L '..I>-I J .::.....1
.j ~~ yo:. -
He confirmed
that Jordan, with what it represents in terms of
asked Iran to suspend its sensitive nuclear activities 90 I 62741
moderate policy, would be a model in the use
669 ~l> n. (Egy. IHaagal pI. -aat, Magh.
of nuclear energy 9616003
IHazhal pI. ~I..,.,.. IHwayizhl) thing,
I
something, object; ~I..,.,.. (Magh.) clothes;
663
""';;l; n. pI. . jJ') circumstance, condition,
belongings
~l>
situation
•..!.WI .jJ)2J1 ,J.,.
J!.o .j ~ .j~I ~ -
J5 4:- .j.rt • .M.i &..L.. c:.M.il> ~ -
Well, then, I'll sit with your mother until I find
We need to act wisely in complicated
out everything from her
circumstances such as these
98 I 5784
99 I 5834
I
:
~
bought a new car which his family did not know anything about 9416043
I
.,
~
...
,
670 ~ and ~ n. pI. .la.Ia>,
l
664 .;":'1 n. pl.;-'I family, community l:....!..; . < - "I - r t I-.' - ,~l.; - r1 •...l...I>-. - . J L.... _ ...,J'-"
I ...
..la.b;
plan,
project He
t...J~t -
\.:5 ~I ~ I~l··~ l;.j~ \.:5..1s-t
I promise you that we will succeed ... if the
plan is carried out as I imagine it 88 I 6433
I
70 A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
671
,).:i.o adj. civil, civilian; n. pI. -uun civilian :,... ,-:-::-""iJ ~ ~..l.o ......... ~ db jJ ~ 0)-::-__ J~~
CJr.'-! .)J.,.:-I -
678
Prior to
J)Ii,l n. releasing, launching; ():JI) firing, shooting; l;)Ii,1 and J)Ii, ~I J.- (yes) absolutely, defi~itely; (no) not at all; ~) J.J)Ii,~1 for sure J '11 t.;')'J:.1A '1 .}L;i ~ "';1- He is
that, five civilians we re killed and seven others were wounded in a booby-trapped car explosion
..........0;
stingy and selfish, not thinking at all about
90 16252 1
anything except himse lf 672 !lJw, v. 11/ to participate, share (with sb)
J
88 I 6322 1
in sth
~m J !lJw,J 'il:i ;;,:)\! ,-,"",L' ~J
99 15560 1
c:: ~IJ J-y ~)I .~
"'L;...;J .)~J\!I..!.U..J .:r..rJI"!'u"J ~~y-.-ll !l)~.. ~)I - President Bush came and met
683 ~ n. pI.
iui section, portion; department,
division
with the Saudi Crown Prince and the King of
;S~ ~I J.:.ll~ ~...lAJ- You have
Bahrain and the King of Jordan and President
been accepted into the department with a
Mubarak
battle
90161841
97 15602
I
Frequency index
684 ~~ n. specification; definition; \-,!¥ and
-'!~~
690
rl2'l n. interest, attention; care, concern J1 ",~WI ~ ;JI i f ~ .J
specifically
-'!~~.J'~ ~J.o i f ~t.; .)1 ,J..,.
if
I.r. l,ll".. J.A...:..l.I CjUI L?~l..a.:i'Y1 ",..cll -
wl.J -
Thi s
time we are coming to you from the city of
..;:?U ...;> ~) 01 L...J ~I.J ~\s::tI 'YI
Hardly had he answered the phone when his
face changed from normal welcome to extreme
Jeddah, and spec ifically from the Seventh
interest, and he quickly ended the call and
Economic Forum which is currently being
stood up
held here
88161171
93 I 5839
I 691
685 ~ n. back, rear part;
.::..J;. (prep.) and ~
01-
Religious intolerance Js -a direcJ: result of
behind (of) sth/sb;
political repression
at the back, in the rear
961 5598 1
J J..l.> .J 1.(:-'l>J1 ......i.l.> ...;K, ~I -
~~ ..... ...wl
:s,..~ ad}. religious; spiritual
~l,....JI-:...,.s:.u •.,?t.,.. ~ 0J.JI ~I
~I ~ from the back, from the rear; ~ (adv.) and ~ ~
yi;.
71
He took hi s place behind the camera and stared
692
,.:i;w n. pI. -aat help, support; ...::.A.~L.. aid
into the lens with care
~L.. •..u:.L.. ...:... c.::..}k.J ~~ ...:.J...a.;1 -
97 I 5628 1
contacted her father and asked him for
I
monetary help
686 ~ fem.n. sun
~
861 6221
\?,rJ1 '-:'"' ~i i f ~?-I ~ J.? r.".,ll ~I~ 'Y~ W1al1 ,-:,",,rJ1 ~~ - Today the sun of
pi
freedom is dawning from the furthest Arab west
693
I
~lS' n. (in
idafa) all of, the entirety of;
~lS'
all
together
on the countries of the Arabs which are dark
~I YL..a.4.lI ~l5 i f 0~ t.:... -
with despotism
are prisoners here from al l the Palestinian
99 15481 1
factions
There
85 16301 1
687 ~t n. addition, added amount, greater
number
(~
of); more, additional, increased
(~)
0i
C.;;l
694 ~ n. pI. ~ servant, slave; pI. ~~ servant (of God);
" r 'Y'YI i f -,!)I ~
...,....,....i 0i -'!) 'Y
~~I humanity, humankind; .& ~I
I, myself
J ~10l5 L.. ...wJ10y J '&1- God
o';'-).J ~ - I don't want to cause you
",:>,-10 y
any more pain. I suggest that we separate, even
helps the servant as long as the servant helps
if only temporarily
his brother
88161541
92
I 5795
1
695 '-:'"'; n. west; West; ~; westward, in the west
688 ..;, ~ v. V to be exposed J1 to sth; to encounter, run into, have to deal with
~ l"...r-" "--"WI '-:'"',;. J~ ~?-I
J1 sth
...:;.,~I ,J..,. -
~ ..!.dJ· ..:;...;,rU .J1..:;...;,r
) ..!.>~ I~L.. -
What
..,r 015 The Hurriyya district north-west
of the capital was the scene of most of these
wou ld happen if you got sick or had an
attacks
accident?
98 I 5465 1
95 15689 1
689
z..;..:;, num. fem. t;-
696 ~\s. n. pI. ~I;' capital city seven;
).S- ~
seventeen e:;ll t.;.;J.JI ....,..:~ i f J,.,J.1 ':"'~,J -
during;
~~/~ J
-
-
t¥ ..l.;~1 -
707
I 5868 I
~
v. /I to achieve, realize (success, goals);
to serve, promote (interests); to investigate -j sth; to interrogate
c: sb
.:r ~ ~ ~ -!.Li J~ -
c.~)
entrance to the metro
that you are happy with what you have
I 5373 I
J:!
At least nine women were
I found the place a few steps away from the
98
L..
shot dead during the Janjaweed attack on the
89
j.i n. pI. -aat, J~ place, location; shop,
~L:3i J
village
I 5974 I
store
during;
i y:J> .wi ,:-
mountain
;l;.j
canal; channel
~
nature
~
garden;
.
paradise
993 1001 1019 1039 1081 1127 1137 1184 1298
~
gulf
~
trees
~
star
~
environment
~
moon
..If-!-o
scene, view
..,..L... surface Jf )
C;
-
river current, stream
1319 t:::) 1361 ~ 1396 ~IJ 1435 ~
quarter bank, shore wadi, valley periphery; ocean
1478 .l.,.,U 1481 .;i\ 1590 ~J.) 1596 t5.lL-
space; vacant horizon path, trail calm, Pacific
desert
3965 )L...a> 4021 ~
island
4044 )..i
region, district
field
4074 4322 4389 4408 4455 4520 4556 4860 5012
abyss, cha5m
1624 ~...l>1693 .1..,-... 1733 0.J!? 1806 JA> 1833 ~I; 1874 ~~
garden
2095 2144 2155 2172 2199 2220 2405 2493
J..-J
sand
dirt, soil maritime; naval
~l$.
forest
~ ~r
rocks wave
J>-L..
coast, seashore
r»~
shore, beach
Cr J1\
waves to overlook; to look out of
2571 2596 2681 2733 2793 2795 3115 3230 3535 3553 3639 3795 3804 3919 3928
.l:.:--
port, harbor
~
view, scenery
~~ -..?.,5 .r.
planet
.;:...~
plants
WJ)
garden
;...
well
o~
lake
land (adj) land; dry land
~;
dust, dirt
""'IJ
oasis
~
grass; herb
'-"'..J
countryside
~JI..,-...
desert
;;}>L..
coastal
oj..
vegetables date palms
~.)~
wilderness
u.s
cave
oJJ~
peak
J..r.-
view; heights
~
flood
~JL-
cliff; abyss
015.r.
volcano
J')\.A
crescent, new moon
5091 5118 5199 5211 5242 5549 5557 5714 5831 6153 6297 6366 6505 7061 7192 7301 7302 7410
...r):-
plant
..s)
soil, earth
0.r">
vegetable
~
mountainous
0~
orchard
~
desert
~~
wilderness
J~
full moon
~
village; estate
~
planet earth
°.Ju
hill
~
water spring
y
hill
.J!J.S.
brook
.
~ low ground '-"-"
reef
~
wilderness
~~
shooting star
74
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
712 ~.J and ~I.J conj. or; otherwise, or else; (Egy.)
719
~lS'
",J.
n. pI. ,-:-,\.:5' writer, author; pI.
Iwalla/, (Lev.lrq.Gul.) Iwilla/, (Magh.) Iwella, walal
worker, clerk; a.p. pI. -uun writing
~l>- ,-?i~.J ~.Ji
l:~ "";lS' ,-?i ~ J
.?r.-i
~J ~L.. -1
J...LOI L..
941 5453 1
Or 1.l5 ~ ,-?."....I ';":1
.:?J t.r'"."il c,st"IJ -
,-?J~I L.. 0;d-IJ
Now I don't know
what to do; several times I've tried to distance myself and close the matter but I can't
,
722 ~l v. VIII to contact '-:-' sb, get in touch '-:-' with sb; to be connected or related J! to sth
...s:J
J-.a:::
~r.l ~ U ,~~ ~ lr. --0.".... He is going to cal l her, not to make up with her, but to scold her
92 1 5614 1
97 1 5289 1 +spo
716 ;Ju, n. energy, power; potential, ability Jl-;>- ~I
J>- ~I ;,;11 0} I.io. -
This is beyond
717
I 5368 I
~ -,
(Egy.Lev.) interr;g. who;
.:J (Lev.) to/for ~
whom; whose You know who pays really good tips?
saying; n. (person) saying
~ iJLlI :(,.~~ ')Uti I".J~~ -
724 J~ n. pI. ~t;- multitude, public; ~I).I
J~ tLa:-! ~\";'...LO 0~ iJ\.SJII.io...:..>~i I~! oJJ~~ .:r.J.J1 tf i."h.o Y' L.. ..:..>~IJ .4-"11 -
66177171 +spo
~ti a.p.
magazine appeared to be eavesdropping on us
the masses
The Japanese and the Arabs
718
that someone sitti ng near us read i ng a foreign
961 5360 1
.. 1,.iL"l1 ~..r..~ ~ eJ..,>,.J:.o --OJ\.>. ..::..,;1 \,i.rJI J -
,
~I ~ 2lk: l:... l:;J c.r-4: l.,a>....:, 0i
these (non-human pI. and fem.pl.)
t!J .iJL..a.lI ...........J.r.\h:; I . ...; _ .-ll _I. .. , .... ..L..:.l1-
.T
~
~J
~LiI ~ .)l5J ..;.....,.:-t;
efforts, to prepare, to plan
long time ago
85159181
98 I 5131
I
•#
oJ.,. -
76
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic /,
$ L..;; issue, affair; matter, question JJW~..:r.I~IJ1 ~";\ - )'!.jJ ~t
96 I 52041
'-;"'1..>';1 n.
I am sure that the
money he received went into his accou nt and
,jJ; .:.r ~..f..1 .h ~) J- : ~I ~WI JL
741
calculation , appraisal;
.sU...l..\ ,-:,L>- J ,-!L>- -
I 5136 I
740 ~?
n. pI. -aat
Jl ~~ 4---L .;11 Jly ~\ ,j~ U;A: ~ ";1
not prevent one from sea rchi ng for t he answers 97
'-;"'~
account, invoice; expense
.r'-' ~J ' IS~ ~ L...;1":)5 '-:' y:l-\ )y\&- - The US Secretary
terror, terrorism; vn . terrorizing,
frightening
of St ate announced t hat Italy's entering
,JlrJIJ ~ '-:'~I ~ ~ r-11.!lL:...111.1
the war was a major human catastrophe,
I)~
and Egypt cut off its relations with Italy
Jl2:... ,-:,1..»';11 '* -
As long as there is
inj ustice against people such as (those in) Palestine
immediately
and Iraq, te rrorism will contin ue to be justified
88
90
I s6C3 I
I 5556 I 748 ~L. n. pI. 0~ resident, inhabitant;
742
I$~
/shway/ (Lev.Gul.lrq .) adv. a little bit;
\..;\ .. ,,:~'p- i j)l .. ..::........=
the Strip
~ ": I ~\ -
97
Ismat...we have to t hink a bit.
I 5093 I
What am I going to do when I go to Egypt now? 60
743
I 8225 I +spo
•
749
)..iJ n. extent, degree; amount, value;
eO;:
business
ability,
~j
capability, capil-city - __
J-o
" -\
:.srs-
J I.,1 . . ~\ )I
IS';>-\ L:.;WY ~
Joi -
.)i 1cS1~ ~
We have to always lower our
C:3jy -.:..LS:.,...!. .l.!..;1 ,f' ~~
He spoke about building a network
for the distribution of natural gas, pointing to the plans that stipulate that it reach Amman
expectations so that we are not hit with
and Zarqa
disappointment
83 1 5830 1+news
99149271
756
J1;.; v. V to be connected":",, with, have to do J.l..:;.u:...i !1L:..,. J" -
grid, system
.J'pi -.:..~I
...... with sth/sb
~.~W~
762 ~ n. pI. -aat, !1~ net; web, network;
Are there
~I ~ ~l!J1 ~I -
Third Generation (3G) will become the best
questions related to the lecture?
available network
91 1 5362 1
961 5022 1
78
763
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
J; v. /I (Oia.) to preserve, keep sb safe (of God):
"IJ~
768 0~ (Egy.Lev.) adv. also; . ; 01.5 again,
'&1 God keep you safe! (used
once more; 01.5
to express thanks for a service); to let sb do
"
~,
.
sth : U) ~ let me go!; (a~~ . verb, with
..1ll>
4l>- stay with me; seat~d; uJ...;l~ 4- stick
2nd pers. pron .) stay: ~
~t.;
4- remain
d me too; ':1.5 (Lev.) adv.
also
J 01c5J.P t.r"}I}>- -
The subject is very nice, and it also has some use
with the subject
541 8928 1
4 4 j JlIJ ..::..;\ ~I 4-4J "A ~ ~J 4 "-;-'J - God keep you, my son, and give
~.?
769 ~~ adj. new, recent; modern; pI. -uun
you health, you and all those like you, 0
(mostly in idafa)
Generous Lord
babies;
~~
.~'1)1 ~~ Jw,\
~ ~...l> ~~ ~\
66 1 7277 1 +spo
newborn
recently' lately JjJ
~ - -
world, but they certainly do not possess
Watch out for
thieves in the crowd
self-consciousness
98148641 96150491
766 ~ ~ adj. bare, naked; free (ifl,:r from); pure, absolute (truth);
772 ,'p ~< v. I (i) to reveal , disclose i f sth; to
• sth; to examine expose, uncover i f ":'lA.:J1
n. mere, nothing , but;
.y sb (medically)
~~ as soon as, the .i nstant; ~/.-! for no JlJ'US
J!- i
~
y.\I...,-J
*" "-;-'; J Ull. -:;~
4:.-""""';'; J~ t ~ .~
Algeria 94 I 5063
I
...;i -
He didn't ask himself about
whether he was doing what he was doing accord ing to his desires, or whether he was
775 ~ n. tomorrow; i~ tomorrow
I~ L;l"..,:..Il?JJ 0i v .?~
-
being forced 87154461
I remembered that
I have a test tomorrow 91
782
I 5254 I
fo n. pI. ..r.:'~ factor, element; component, ingredient; race, ethliicity; member, agent;
776
~f elat.
(pl.) individuals
better/best
l.:.:.L,.. ~ 0i .r l.:..::b:. C~ .,r"\.:s. r-"i if 01 ..u-i l.:..4;..L..> c:: l,llr - Among th e most
L.. ";y' -i ~ ~ ~L ~ 4iJ - I wi ll make a pizza for you that is
important elements in the success of our plan
one hundred times better than the restaurant
is that we cut off contact, finally, with our friend
(one)"What do you think? 9614942
Ahmad
I
861 SSOO
777 ~ and ~ n. pI. -aat file, folder; dossier; (computer) document, file ; ~I
.
J1 ~~ ~ UJJ.I J..;;;)l1 ~~ ...Jj..A;
want it? 98
I 4811 I +for
U;.
rL Ij'; -! cl.", J ~ dj.i -
~I -
found guilty and he spent various periods in
for publication in "The Young Arab"
prison, one of which reached a full six-months
87 I 5291 1
88 I 5246
.8 n.
pI. ..:...~ young woman, girl
LSIA
,y o~ .~\
y.! .. ~ -
~l:....f n. manufacture, industry; pI. -aat trade,
craft
t i\ -=--...L; ol::4l1 .!.ll; .)\ Wf i .)\ ...1>-\ ~ 'l
.) 4A>- ~I ~L:...,.,ll . lh&.'l O)J.r" ..!.lll:J, 4l)l&. u---i ~ JoWl -
No one can
these are things that are far from our
principles
understand ing
87153161
89 15229
f;
I
There is a need to
give local industry its_due in .t~ading, on fair
know whether that girl went to sleep or not...
792
This type of ode is not appropriate
I 797
791
.).r-J.I ~ 'l ..!JL,...il1 I..r' c;JI IJ....
\?rll
He was arrested several times, and he was
•
798 ~ n. pI. ~ summit
);'1 secret; If;
n. pI.
l.r.jJ lS) l,,:>-1 ~....; .. ~I d~ W .) .)~I L;i
secretly, privately; ~,.,
'"
..:.j J
III
;:JI ~l5!~1 secretary; ifi4l1 ;:JI
lSI
J-
I am now at the peak of my
working life .. 1 might be chosen as a minister
sacrament
at any time
If' ~ .:,.s:l .. ~J"'-~1 J--\ ~ )f')U )Y":' J 'l ..!.ll~ !I~t ,~ - There are no secrets among the family of the brotherhood ... but it will remain a sec ret between us, I promise you
89 1 5186
I
799 j~ n.ladj. pI. .I~i enemy ..... ...1.:>-
that
J ......,;; c!'-'..J ~ J
~ .I~ ~I -
99 14699 1
.)~
,y J>..:: I..r'
Who abandons his country during
its trial and puts himself in the service of the
793 ; . adj. pI. );~f free, independent; n.
enemies?
I';'\
88 1 5189 1
liberals; independents ..:...I~
or- lli.:...... 4l J ).)L:J.)! .l_a.. v-J.)L:J .)!
ifL...~1 U.... ~ -
4---- L;)r' Jol,.:;.)\ ~ O)L,....
800
..!.ili v. I (i) to own, possess sth; to control sth ..:...1).,,-11 I..r' c;JI IJ.....)A ifL:JI I..r' 0-:;'j... -
Lebanon is not a file, Lebanon is an
Million s of people own this type of car
independent, free state, with sovereignty,
89151181
which Syria must deal with on thi s basis 99146841
801 ~L; n. pI.
794 ~...Jj..:; and ~j..:.A n. pI. -aat responsibility,
(def. ~I;l side, perspective,
L..
J-" I..r'
W:i .rU J-- -
Do you know
'":-')1; adj. wanted, needed; demanded, required, necessary
~ Cf'
Jl1\ ~}1l1 o~)I.J....\ c!).)\ ~
~ Yo
After his family paid the required
..w -
who Safwat Shakir is?
bribes, their child was released after two days
88 15271 1
97147301
82
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
803 ;~! vn. investing; n. pI. -aat investment ~
810 oJL.o! n. pI. -aat Emirate
~i o;~) .;..1;L.o';'i1 J!.;..)L.. -
t ~;.r" J ;l!;.--')U o~..I.:>:- \.1.Jf- L:.......;.J
~L.. o~ ~ y
-
I traveled to
the Emirates to visit my sister
We laid down new conditions
for investment in Syria which were not there
9214969
I
\1,;. n.
pI.
before 76
804
811
I 60081
~; II.
.~i
mistake, blunder, error;
adj. (invar.) wrong, mistaken
~ ~ l:.:.,,>t; :r tk,,:. \5 i J ''';'''''; l:..oL.oi ..:..j}1
V to expect, anticipate sth; to look
forward to sth
-
J.-I..I>-i e~ y.~ •.? t ~ Jj J'1 '-:' ~I .L..:.,JI -
The time available to us is limited, and any
error on our part would create a catastrophe
He was amazed because his wife had
95
I 4767 I
not told him that she expected anyone for
812 ~ n. pI. -aat, ~Li greeting, salute,
dinner
I
9814678
805
salutation
-
87
v-:-li ,...:... ~)o.; ,-?jJl JLS::l4 ~ ~I
The soul becomes attached to the place it is
813
driven out of, isn't that true? 9S 14822
';"~r
continuation of the dictatorial program which
growth; .;..1;# events, developments ($'"L:-l1 ;}o:ll ...... ...1:.....; Jl:lI ~ U.....
:r. 0~1 ~I .r..J. ~i :r J>I~...LII
I 4816 I
"'~I ~ r."ll -
807 ~~ adj. suitable, appropriate
free the Bahraini people from the traditional bonds
time? I don't want to delay you at work
85
I
808 :.)i~ and jl~ !Dia: _~~~) prep.
J~.J. c?...jrl 'Y .. ~I :r ~i (5) 'Y lei .;...r'" ~ J')IL;;j L-r! ..cL.aJ I J
What is
J~
the percentage of success? - About fifty percent 9614772
I 5334 I
815 .;:. interrog. when
approximately, around, about ~ JIJ>' - ~ c~1 ~ rS -
This, naturally, requires
democratic political development in order to
~i Ji ~)'Y ~~l:..o..:..jJ J ~...::...1...a;IJ" ~I I f - Did I call you at an appropriate
J
I
814 ; # n. pI. -aat progress, development,
the ruling regime was following in the country
'Jlli
The noble Prophet,
non-Arab women 9614728
He stressed
that this decision was an extension and
9814681
.J:!-J ';"~r -
peace be upon him, married Arab and
,-?;yl.::5:::...LI1 ~ ;i~IJ ~I...I.:.oI ;i.,ill U.... Ji ..lSi
95
:,f n. pI. .yi prophet; ~I the Prophet :r i')LJIJ oJlAlI ~ ~~I ~I C...J;
constantly
J rSl:l 1il1.JI ~ ,-?jJl -
I 5215 I +for
Muhammad
I
806 ;ir.;.;.! n. continuation, continuity; ;ir.;.;.~
~')t)1
!JLo. Jl5 -
There were guards who saluted the soldiers
psychology
~ -!lJ.l5
~I ly.Ai ..rl.;>-
..,yL.J1
..,Jr fem.n. pI. ..r.::- soul, spirit; ~I r-4
-
I don't see either of the two gi rls ...
I
I don't know when they go out in the
I (u) to come, show up; to attend, be
as it appears
morning .. They creep out without a sound,
809 ~
II.
86 I 5240
present at (meeting, party, concert); to view
I
(film, TV show)
J ..wJ ~.,., cr.k J.:.., ...;..wiJ1 J! ~ t '-:'~~ ~ y.:
-
Diyab has not come to the hotel for
about two months; and maybe he will not return 9914598
I
816
~L.,.:.!
n.
affliction, illness; pI. -aat casualty,
injury; pI. -aat point, score, goal 0;>-..d1 ~ \ '1'1\ i~ ~rl J\.1...rl4 ~'YJ'11 ~L.,.:.!J
...... I;~ ~;
pi J:i-
Frequency index
An American study in the year 1991 linked
this hospice is to help patients who can't be
smoking before pregnancy and children
cured, who are awaiting death
getting cancer
98 1457S 1
8S
83
I S301 I
0~
817 .:; n. pI.
art; specialty; type, variety
~ - r-' )1 L..i
823 !l~ adj. shared, common, joint, collective C .J'-" - -I I ~I' _ - IJ)u -
91 149471
CJ':; n. pI. 01~i sadness, grief, sorrow,
He is no longer able to sleep without a
anguish
sleeping pill, and he is no longer able to
0)-1
J.--. ,..:...}I '-;-' ~ ~L! lS..!..!.J
I~
Jh; 4:5J ci~ !l.;) ~ ~I -
t
015 Rushdi
was pale as death; a deep sadness was in his
do anything, neither at night nor during the day 99145221
eyes, and he let his beard grow, but it didn't get very long
828 r?L,.. n. pI. il.5:;. ruler, governor; adj. ruling,
89 1S054 1+lit +for
822
in power
..Ai' n. pI. ~..;; patient, sick person; adj. ill, sick
\.:.:.1).J..;..:u L;..,s~ -
We don't want anything
from those rulers more than to
J l?l..!J1 c:: -
9714501 1
village food: olives, dr-w mosque
J 41 0~~ \.... ~ .f5~1 ~ 0-!k J~
o.4J.d:..1 ~I - In two months, at the most,
weapons after the war to increase your
we will pray together with God's permission in
arsenals?
the new mosque
8714989 1
88149121
847 ~ adj. specific, determined; fixed, set,
~
J?
853 t;.1 voc.part. fem . li:!1 oh!
r
..:..>Iyo:.~IJ .yo:.;11
Lrol i r.l l ~
prescribed; appointed, designated
J1l:J1
,-:-".l..
.:r 0~ ..li yUIJ ~ ,-:-"I.l.. .!.It:.... .f"-i ,-:-".l.. .:r ~IJ - There are specific sects,
0.,s:J1 4-. ~I '-:-'? r"~ '-!"""" )1 - Our guest today, brothers and sisters, is
and the requester might be from one sect and
the official spokesman for the Kuwaiti
the mufti from another
AI-Umma Party
97144691
8415122 1
86
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
854
c::.r: adj. quick, prompt; l...:.r: quickly,
was only broken by the trickling water flowing
promptly
from the fountain
c!.JJ ,~ It ;Sll....:.r' ).kill .)\5
89 I 4809
I +Iil
~~ ~~ ('"1=-41 JI?lI - The train 860 .;.:-. v. I (a) to strive
was faster than necessary, and the workers 98 I 4375
Jl for
sth; to pursue,
chase ~1.Jj after (a goal)
raised their hands in greeting to the soldiers
~~.r'w~Js-J~~J--
I
855 ...')\..;, n. security, safety; integrity; "'~I
Are you trying to get a speeding ticket?
e
88 I 4841
I
goodbye! ~JLJI u...;..:.i.J
e:!'}1
J
lr,:...l>- Js- ~ o.T'j ~
~JLJIJ.}-JI
J-
861 ft.;1 v. IV to install, establish, set up sth; to hold, host (event, party); to reside, live,
She kissed Zahra
-j
two kisses on her cheek and wished her safety
set up residence
on her trip and safety in giving birth
C::;/';" ";)11 t ..,..L. Js-
ilA: ~I.)I
98143871
~rJI ~...\..o J>-...\..o ...l:..>- -
The museum is
at
being erected on an area of 4 thousand square
856 ~\.. n. finance
meters at the entrance to the city of AI-Arish
.:,:~I
J.,.... -j "-.IJI.cl1 r+"~1 ~ ~...LiJ ~ • , V \ ~lll U:-'~I JJG:. ~lll JI.JJ)U
r+"
.).",L -
The quantity of shares traded in
I
8914800
862 ..;.;;. n. fear;
l;";; for fear (~ of). fearing
the Bahrain Money Market during the last week
(Js- for)
was 20.71 million shares
.u,...L...> 4:>;-J J
80 I 5342
He noticed signs of fear and surprise on
I
~.llIJ ";~I ..;..\..~ .Ji..:>.)1-
the face of his friend
•
857 o~t n. pi. ·aat direction; course; trend ,
99
I 4297 I
movement . . J.;.ll ~ o~~ ~.r' ~~ ~...GI
LA.Y )2:;
)II ..;....L..,U -
She started off as
fast as possible in the direction of the Metro station ... She deliberately did not
858
~.;..;. n.
I
pi.
~I~l
..::....b.l.::>1 'o-4~ Jt.s::..;.1 ..;..R ~ ~IJ ..:.J..,a..i;1 .)1 ..!...J;
J
-
..,...all -41; e::
t 4-:5:J ,~I...wl
With the increasing light, new forms
not long before they broke up, and became clear bit by bit
to transmit (news); to translate sth;
9614426
0!j) (~.JI):; (~i.~I) ~
(the newspaper) quojed (the President)
e .J}JI ~ Jl JZJ J~I ~
.r~I .)J~..!.r. -
I
864 J~ n. substitute; ~ 'i~ instead of. in lieu of
L.a"....;...:...)1-4 lri.JJ J.-./~I r-WI JI;k I..,..t.;
as saying tha't '
~J\.JI ~j\....J
.I~~I (?~j:;
appeared, all mixed together at first, but it was
fo v. I (u) to transfer, transport sth;
.:,:jJl 0:-o..r.J.I
light, lamp;
Premier League
~
look around her 8914800
863
He was arrested
.\".ll~
L>...6.l... - They took down the American
flag and raised in its place a shirt spotted with
and transferred to Jabal AI-Tur with the
blood
criminals who threaten the security and
9914315
I
safety of the cou ntry 9714421
I
865 ~ adj. medical
Y- ~ ..;.r0 )I 4,.k]1 4;:....1.J~ .r ~)~ lrl
859 ~ n. silence
J.o:-)1 cr:-"I>-I -
..s.,.... ~ t J:Z ...:........,.0 ~U ,o~ Jt.; I.K.. ;.J.,.;L:JI .r w.cll .lfl .r.? - He said this
of men
sharply, and then a heavy silence reigned which
95
Despite her medical studies,
she doesn't know anything about the feelings
I 44971
Frequency index
866 'll~ n. pI. )JJ:; office, bureau; district, circuit; circle, ring
J~iJ . .•..f"-" ;)b J "!"wJi...Li ";l..!.ll JOi \'~~~ ~ ~ -
was crowned champion of the local tournament last season
P
96143861
Didn't I te ll you that he
has entrapped you in his circle of magic ... and
872
u:; n. departure, leaving; getting out, exit; deviation (if from)
exchanged your heart wit h the heart of a chicken? 90 14742
'-:-'~
I
Jl ~IJ ..lUll J} i f ~ ..::...k.4:J1
CJ.J!LI -
90 14688
chairmanship WhlIJ · '11'b~ r -.I1 c:...J -0i b . r."1c' - ..... ll'>-.J'
I
873 0')\$.! vn. announcing, declaring; n. pI. -aat announcement, decla':.ation, 'statement;
over the leadership of the department, I have
advertisement, billboard
always been enthusiastic about accepting Egyptian
0l5.P."'~1 Jl.:i.Y" ~1}101 J~ ~
students because they are smart and diligent 79
She grabbed her bag from off
the chair and headed for the exit door
867 4.,;,U,! n. presidency, leadership, direction,
0J~ J .l,,5) i r-r~ ~~I - Since I took
87
~ ~4d:-1 0~0
I 5379 I
r-"...l.,.O wL-l..!...:.-~
~ t~1 JJ~ J -
She looked pale, like
the dead, and kept trembling and breathing deeply and trying to get control of herself 90
~iJ
w'YT ~I; c:...jy.>. ...,.,.~'Y10pl ;)jJ..:...li
knowledgeable of
870
I
876
I 4296 I
.w
n. pI. JJ\!' shade; patronage; JJ\!' auspices;
J.!a.ll
J4 unpleasant, disagreeable (person)
.u..LJ1
,-:-,l:&- jJ; J t... .>J~ 'YI dJ.>.}1 ~ 4,,; C:!~
-
IS.;!: L.. ~l:::...;1 ~)...u .r" ~ r He loves Egypt·so much that he follows
I
J5
893
itS n. pI. -aat college, institute, faculty;
everything that happens in it with extreme
entirety, totality
interest
1. _ _ • -r-:
98141861
~ ..,..J.I 0..,:Al1 -
1' --11 ...r') ~J.r-o :-I ...... J.:J.I4..l5:. ---II c.r--_ . .l) ,t..lkZl
He headed quickly for the door... He
907 U~J'. n./ad}. pI. -uun British ;;. elL.a.l1
~I u.;LI ~lk,~1 J~ \II ~ ...,.."...,t; oSlJ..I....>l -
rang the doorbell violently and without ceasing,
'-:,:.1)
and he began to pound on t he door with his
occ upation, Sheikh Salih res um ed founding a
.:.....)..!...
After the British
palms and his feet with everything he had in him
nationalist school with his fri ends
89 I 4537
82 I 4863
I
I
92
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
908 .;.:. v. I (i) to pass, go by, elapse (time);
~-:
914 ..,.... n. pI.
, , , ",,,.-:.
l>- J)J
LA.; In
letter and spirit
go ."...;/Jl to/towards
~ ~ j&- 1)~Li ..,...JI .:" ~ .:" ~ .:"i ~ Lr.ll~ r-r~J.., r-+'1p.I J Jw,~I - The co~tents
J o;lJ.I Jl ~ o.i>UI Jl ~ -
He went to the window looking at the alley
of the text must gain the trust and respect of
at night
the children, as well as their faith in its benefits
89
I 4502 I +Iit
88145481
909 ~ n. loftiness, nobility; (in titles) His/Her
915
~;; n. pI. -uun
employee
h,l>-
~UI ..!.l1;
J J.;ll ~l5)
Highness
;.;\.1;.; J~ \.r'
r-- J ~~ ~I j&- J-'! ~~ )
. u.I; L .11 . lki ~
41
J5 ...;~~ d~ ...;ljf i id-l L:".!. -
They know him
919
~~
(def.
well, they meet him almost every day and
~~I
give him something from what the soldiers
-
gave them 96
I 4137 I
.)~)
adj. pI.
.:,,)~
remaining, lasting;
n. remainder, remnant
,y-
abstained 98
~I JUIJ
....... ":";.J--'" JJ~ ~')U
Three countries voted with it, and the rest
I 4053 I
Frequency index
920
:J.j. II. I (u)
to thank, give thanks to sb;
926
j5 Kul Wa-Ishkur (a type of baklava
~i.J
~ II.
V to speak (a language); to speak
93
e::
with sb (J&-/Jy/.J" about)
J:Z ~ ~ \.-its o}~ J ~ r. ~ ~" iJL:..iII ~ b~ -
What
does the artist feel when he accomplishes a
these guidelin es as long as different instructions
new work?
were not issued
92 I 4297
72
I
0-4:
v~ )..w,; t.. v~ 'pI i.rL. .;) JLi ..!.ll~ ~ t.Sy:.I - He said he would adhere to
I 5477 I
94
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
933 .J~ and .J~ (Egy.Lev.Gul.) conj. because, in
c.t"s::.. ~i .Jl!s. Ji'll ~ ~L.. C:!) ojJ ~ L;\ o~
8414642
I
I need a quarter hour, at least, to put on my
940 ~ n.ladj. Zionist
make-up 49
J ~~ \II ~IS";'IJ ~J.JI ~IS";'I d~J ~I; Jy> ~~1S'i1 e i ..u.....; 1j~1.JL,S:J1
I 7933 I +for +spo
Jd~ n. pI. ~~1. ~\I~
sign,
evidence, proof
of); pI.
(~
clu~,
J~l
:i.,,; ~I -
indication, guide,
to clash with the academics about the Zionist
..!lJlS' ~i , •• J)IJ 0~)'1 \' .JIJr ~\ 4 -
J"h .y.1).1 ~ .1; La. I
heritage
Keeping appointments is an
7914882
evid ence of faith and honor, isn't that so, Abu
941
Marwan 7
~.To ~ ~ .Ji .~J...v.... i4i l:.. .!J..I.>-
J
I
n. pI. -aat station (gas, electrical power,
u.; Y: ~ . WI
935 ~~ n. pI. ~~~ wish, desire
~I
< ~
broadcasting); stop, layover
I
9614078
The religious movements and the
social movements in the Zionist entity began
handbook
~..r>J 'i ')\kJI J ~ ~I ~ ) ~ (,)..1.>-J - It happened a few days ago that I felt a desi re to
l.:>! n. pI. -aat reform, restoration; ~\.:.. ':>l.:>l
I
corrections, amendments
939 ~ adj. journalistic, press; n. journalist, reporter .:riJI J ,-:-,~\l1
0~1 CJL..,l JJ\.i \lJ..!lJ\.:..
J 4\.:.:. -
Stay as
you are and don't try to reform the world
->. (f" _
...,.....ts- -
1
·.LII... .:Jl5 ~J
government seized the coffee beans from the
~
market, announcing that trade in coffee beans
The expressions of her beautiful face
would be handled by the government itself, in
changed occasionally in a mysterious way
order to supply the armies
99 I 3855
94140361
I
96
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
958
....;~
n. pI. -aat
962 ~ n. pI.
dispute, co~f1ict;
disagreement, difference (,-?i,1
.j
of opinion)
~lA;IJ 1c+l5l.!.. ~ ,~~')\.;LI.;Sj;; ..w J')U.JI
J&- -
dl.:-A amount, sum (of money);
extent, degree; scope, range
t
o~41 ';l,.>- ~ i~ ~ -JL. &. '-:"' J1: 0i tu.:......1
She no longer remembered the
-
He was able to escape with a large amount
disagreement between them , she forgot their
of money with which he began his new life
problems and their agreement to divorce
97 I 3913
I
96139661
963 ~ n. pI. ~L;.i body
959 ;~l n. choice, selection; election;
.~ 'U:=-ll
.j 0 y-'r-I .
green brass dusky, pale
~l
blond
jJJ! )l.O.....
turquoise
~t
yellowness black and white
7967
~".....I
to become black
Frequency index
966
~~
n. pI. -aat writing; script; essay, piece
973
of writing
.;u. n. pI. -aat aircraft, airplane 1 I.S .I.M..... ¥. ~ ¥.
economy; saving
~ .r.WI t...~ -':NJ ....\II ~L.a:il ...;.;. ~ I~tl -
Why
.k,...aJ4 -
this earth to the extent that suffices us all, so
restore its past glory?
we al l live happily just as He created the air and
88
I 4227 I
li ght exactly 96 I 3827
970 ~,;...o n. pI. .!.l.,!~ battle, campaign
~..;,.,S.... Jlj>-...I.i tS~.,.. iY~"" J> a.,., WI ;S -Ii t.:.-.. \k, .us JWI It.:. I '. \; -
I
,
,
977 '-';; n. proximity, nearness; ~;; and
Montgomery's time to sleep had come, so he
~ ":'"JJ4 and ":'" ~ near, near to ":'" J ..;~ JI ..L.JI ~ I~ ~ C!..!.: [.1)
ente red into hi s chamber confidently and went
~ IJ ,,,:,,,L:JI -
to sleep whi le the whole world stayed awake
from him, and he got him to his place near the
J"",r-1.
-
r
..:.\.1 -
Religion is a blessing for mankind, calling for
financial scandal in the history of the United
love and mercy 98
I 3796 I
States 92
I 3972 I
He is responsib le for the biggest
98
A Frequency Dictionary of Arabic
980
1 1:. 01
...1.:1-1 -
J.....: L,;..lll 0i ..l.>\ J..L.a: f
No one believed that the world could
At the end of my talk I directed to each of
be that small
them a direct question: Do you want to do
95
I 3768 I
something for your country? 9014075
984
I
990
4- n. pI. 0~, u~ paradise; garden )l:JIJ :i.:J:-1 ~ y:- y.
" JJl:.;:;J ~ ~r - 4~ ~~IJ ~~
-
taking tranquilizers 97
;.b.lJ1 ...!.ll;
.j J-bll I.:JI cj I.A~'Y..,I -
jOlll ~ -
Amira had worked with her husband in the
climbed the trees of the forbidden garden in
Gulf, and her children were scattered throughout
the house of the supervisor
countries where they had been admitted for study
95 I 3691
94 I 3795
cj ~ y...11 ~I J~I ..;.L-;.., ,-:-,1.rJ1 0?J1..,...,J He played "sock soccer" and
I
I 1002 }~ n. mention, citation; memory
994 o~ n. pI. -aat look, glance, view o.lf'", \...;.14-01 0';";
J
..:....rci1..;J1 ~I 0.r'~ ~ J::kll
J
"':'sJl..!.
~l:-ll ~IJ}>:JI.., ..!..>I..I.>~I .;S~ ~ ....:. I
lSlJ -In his mother's
gaze he saw miserliness and greed
participated in commenting on the
97 I 3687
limited itself to ambassador's lecture. vvhich .. had ,.. mentioning events al'ld polffical developments
-
I
995 ~ n. opposite, reverse, contrary
92 I 3824
J-> "';4.r ~ ~.., J,:JI J! ~ 01 J} .k.",....,1 J! ~ - He decided to get to the Nile and walk upstream until he got to Assiut 98 I 3626
I
1003 ~IA~ and ~I}~~ n. democracy __ oil c..r::'" • 'l:..:..SJ .., U,I-, ...ul·~..!..>..c..;.; c:_.r~ .T'-' ~t:....,J LSJ.>.! 'J:. ~).:JI -
The Palestinian issue headed the agenda
He has two full years
controlling device
1009
JIc&-I J.J~ ~I ~I ~)..l.,.2j
i-)ell
.. ).;11 ~l.il ~ ~Iy- ~ .)')\..0\5 .)lol&- .... loi i) L....J I -I-j on) ..;..~)-I J.>- ,":",lAJ)'1 J.>- ,":",)-1 ~t; if..!.llLi •...b..::l.1 ..;..~ \}}I
-j ~..lll -
97 I 3508
C:....;....;
I am asking you
~
-
Dr Karam picked up a paper
from off the table and took a gold pen out of his pocket 96 I 3559
1028
~l&.
n. utmost, extreme; :11- Their dead and captured reached
1030 ~ v. I (a) to cut off, sever sth; to interrupt, stop (flow); to block
1SO,OOO since the beginning of the British attack
(street); to cover, travel (a distance);
89 I 3839
to pledge (a vow)
I
,":",L.:. lA..i.>-l,..!.ll~ 1024
~ ~)3 ~I
01 ~
~3 ~
~ ..j ~ lb- ~? !JL:... ..:..;\5 I~! -
my daughter and raise her and then a you ng
If there
Joj. J5 ~ -
How can I bear
really is a crime, it wi ll appear
man takes her, severing all paths between us
99 I 3453
and her?
I
99 I 3403
1025
oW
;.f11 v. IV to show, manifest, demonstrate
j;;. v.
I
I (i,u) to precede, come before sb/sth;
01 ~ ~ to have done sth previously
1031 0':;..;3 n. revolution, uprising
tWI CJl - ~I .:.r ~l>- Jll.?~ y.
waitress 55 I 6052
I 3S26 I
'-7"'t...)~1 ~
I +spo
1.l.o...1
r:-: ~ f l ~...\.O..1-
This leads to a state of depression and anger,
1033
.lSh certainty; -. n. confirmation; affirmation; .
and might be exploited to create an
.l.§8~ certainly; --!. i.l.§G in confirmation of;
environment in which terrorism grows
underscoring, emphasizing
90 I 3696
~
eJ..1l..u ~ Y- ...L,5t:J~ \'~ ...... l.d:-I o)~1J '-!.ro11 d ..r.WI -
J-.a.>-
.:r.i
.:.r
Where did
I
1040 ~W n. pI. -aat contest, competition; race
he get it? For sure there is some cooperation
LS-4-' ~~ ~L.. J J..1'Ilo,;l.d:-~ jl.i .:.r ~J.' -
The kingdom
to propagate sth
witnessed a big development in the health
.:-~li11
and health care arenas, since health services
v-:-l..,s
d.:... .:-.r;...1 ~I d ? ':-)J....o ~ If ~~ '11..1 - Dozens of
are bei ng offered over the whole breadth of
books were issued and hundreds of articles
the nation
and studies were published about the
92 I 3617
I
.:.t\>. v.
I (a) to fear sth/sb; to be afraid ~
personality of Columbus 88 I 3812
1042
I
J>' about sth/sb; J>' for (sb's safety) .:.r . . . t.>.i c.?J .. )L...:;~I J c.L.a.JII.l.o. .:-P
of sth/sb; to be worried
1036 )~~ n. pI. ~\.;:; dinar ):.; ~ ~l....:... ~u...,;~
to fear
41 J! ~L...)..,..::S
He wrote a letter to God, may He be praised,
Jl..u..1 ..,;~ ~) -
asking him for a hundred dinar
about suicide, but I am afraid of our Lord, may
85
He be praised and exalted
I 3968 I
96 I 3463
1037 o:/L.!.! vn. mentioning, pointing out;
n. pI. -aat indication, sign, signal
~ ~i
1043
t.:... ~.rP .:-I)L.!.! c!'..1 ~~ Traffic lights need to be put up here
)..1)1 -
.:.r
.:.r
to regulate the traffic 9713465
1038
This morning I thought
I
~1
I
v. IV to throw, toss; to deliver, give
J>' » 1 J.il to arrest sb I.+-- J5 ~i J....Q... '-7"'; i J>' ..1 ~rll 'j.>.~
(a speech);
~
~b'; el..lll .:-I.r"i ':-~~..1 -
They entered the
car and each one threw himself onto the nearest seat, and the sound of cannons kept
01 v. I (u) to think, believe, presume 0i that
getting louder
~ty.i-:...:..:b~;';:"L...c::..lJ; -
89 I 3711
I
Frequency index
103
14 Opposites Note that in most cases the positive term is ranked higher than the negative one. Word 1 ..l...
Jjl
.# -4~
.;51
.r? f~
;\,,>0.J~
i\...\
'-:'?
.r,51 ~\... ..;..j.
J.>b -L..,
i~1..i
inside
outside
preceding
next
,-:,I~
question
answer
~
long; tall
short; small
~I '-;-!.}
to take
to give
far
near
\.b:.
correct
wrong
~I~
end
beginning
'-:'./\.,....1
east
west
better/best
worse/worst
~
possible
impossible
j..u:.
friend
enemy
JI,.-!.
south
north
~
strong
weak
..,.....,l.
clear
obscure
0&
good
bad
;;'i
world
the hereafter
• l> ~ ~I ~ c...,.!1- Explain to me
be transformed
what's the story with that phone
JlI..l:1-1 .::J ~ ,~r.J1 c:: ~ u~lY' ...:.J...l>-
46 I 6976 I +spo
":"' ~ ~ .,rJ1 ..;..;lS ,~ Jl;j IT-~t,,.. Jl IT-J'''lh::l.1 -
1048
Violent confrontations took place
1054 ~ v. I (a) to laugh (~ at)
¥
with the police; the gardens were transformed
J
into actual battlefields; the police were beating
i'%Jl- Magd AI-Din started to laugh at
the demonstrators
Dumyan's anger and his manner of speaking
89 I 3697
89 I 36671
I
;J n. dawn
1055
,~I ~I~i e-" ..;-> ~..i.>i ··i.,:J1 i f P-
~}> J ~t"..~
d' ~ IT-..ll1 ~ J.lkl
f 'i.!2.1 v. X to use, employ, utilize sth lylS ~Lo J)I ~.".:.:I:-I ~I ~l>.1 ~L.a5 r.)~ ~
~ll:-I Jl ~l.- J "-!~ LS...G)J lolA- ..i.>iJ ~ -
.~I ~l>. '11 d' J.A!l1 c.;Jllh ~ Y'~
He was unable to sleep; he started to toss and
.!.l)WI -
turn until he heard the dawn call to prayer; he
shoemaker, the Roman soldiers were using
got up and took a shower and put on his
this heavy type of shoe during battles
clothing and returned to the university
85 I 3825
According to my experience as a
I
97 I 33681
1056 ~L.. v. III to help, assist, support sb 1049
Jj1 v. VIII to meet, encounter c::1,,:", sb
•J..\.r.
~.I:~i -41 J ~..t;\l1 ..;...h.i..... L.~ L.....
His excellency the prime
Abdallah gave
921 3S11 1
1058
10S
I
1064 ~~ adj. working, operating; active;
,~I) ~II)~I- When
(Dia.) a.p. doing, making
u~1 ¥.-I 0i ~IJ...I.l1 ..15Y -::.J)1 ~
J
Andalusia fell into the hands of the Spanish
-.>.ill
Christians, they persecuted the Muslims and
~ ~ ~L::-- 4-W .j u..WI oi)1 J~ -
the Jews together
-.,.J.4J1 ,-""Iri) i...l.ll 1..0...,.; -
9013600 1
the study confirms that the physical effort that
At the same time
the working woman exerts at work will help
1059 0~ n. praise; 41 z,~ praise God!
Js:.! '-lL. JI?-ll ~ -.>.ill 41 0b...,.- -
her avoid (high) blood pressure and heart disease
Praise
9613329 1
be to God who made a hundred kinds of beauty
1065
90 13S71 1
A
n.
thinking, pondering; reflection,
meditation
1060
• adj. confirming; ..ISj.!
p i Js- ..}J..ti - \II C:!l::; 015 -
underscoring,
Things were happening faster than my ability
emphasizing
r
0i 1..15
~ ..,...,11 J! '7'~ ...:.J5 1"i ~
~~
r+.-' ..1.>-1) J5 -
to think 98 1326S 1
He ended
his speech with a message to the delegates, stressing that each one of them is an
1066 ; .J; v. I (u) to study, learn sth
ambassador for Egypt
.!1l~ ~ ,~)
871 3718 1
\ it V i~
,t"....;u c:.aJ 0 y WI U"A 01 J)
.;~
J! -
He decided to study law
to become a judge, and he returned after that
1061 ~ adj. short, small (of stature)
to his home town in the year 1647
~~..I.>- ~ ;r,) '7'LJI J! ..L....)i ~l:.ll i4\II J ....w '-:-f. ~ -.>..b:- - He accompanied him to the door and a short,
97133121
1067 0y.jA.ls and 0y.# Itilfizyoon, tilivizyoonl
serious conversation took place between
television
them about what needed to be done in
~14.>1r- 0 ~ - According
~~! ;JJWI ~lPl 11J ' ~j> ~ 4---')..k.;.....;,
to the doctors' reports, by the end of the
.1.3-1 -
curre nt month his excellency the Sheikh will
He dialed her number, but she didn't
answer, and when he tried again, she hung up
have completed his period of convalescence
on him
88
99
I 3576 I
I 3190 I 1089 .:;.,~ v. I (i) to strike, hit; ~
1083 ~ n. age (of a person)
an example
..l> ~))11 ~)I ~L. ~ J 0
~J
prayers at the mosque); (used as a title)
creatures, humankind
1097
JS -,?.b-J e~\0i.y
.~~IJ jWI ~I}J ~')UIJ rWJI .:rJJI have to pay everything by myself: school
~ ':'J~J
l5 ;~J..l,s! L.;~ l,W1..:...l,..I)...LlI.:;5L..\-
-
The old generation refused to
let young people participate in its sessions,
I want to know your opinion .. Do we accept
considering it to be shameful
this student? Graduate study slots here are
97 13185 1
very limited as you know 9913151 1
1104
1098 ~li n. pI. ~I) list, index; ~I) legs (chair)
,;..lA n. pI. ~l.!.; feeling, sense, emotion ,;5i f~1 UI
I 3254 I
,
.:);..!. adj. Eastern, oriental; n. East, eastern J.> c!') .:JLS:.;J"'>-) .Ll5 \r...\..o r-"i (J' .j.rJ1 - Two of its most
.:J~ ~
important cities are Kalba and Khor Fakkan,
,
1108 .:J.,,"':J.! num. thirty; thirtieth
and they are located on the eastern coast of
U;-y.;) 4.:.... 4;...... r - ' ) j ~ ~t;..!.Li ..j.J"i-
the Gulf of Oman
I know that you met him when he visited
96
I 3140 I
Egypt in 1936 98
I 3095 I
1115
..ri: n. d
l
(iY.) Thursday
~li-,!'1 ~liY-~ L..JI)a:;L-1 will 1109
,'.I:J.! v.
VIII to be different
to disagree
U;-y.; L L..t... -
Y'
from sth/sb;
..!.J..b-
L..
Jy
92
It is useless to argue now about what
97131291
..:..~\ . v.
1116
....A..;:.1 n. sorry, regret, remorse; pity, sympathy; ....A..;:.)U .... .... unfortunately; ....A..;:.)U . . . . .L how unfortunate!
IV to respond, reply (J! to sb or
question)
I 3265 I
.:J'YI Ul:>..;.:Ji ~I (J'
happened th i rty years ago
1110
wait until after Thursday to begin work
c: with sb (..)1 J.> about)
..
~
J.>IY' about; to answer, reply .:JI
J..lii L.. ...........)U) ,..j.J"i L.. ..ill) - ~4-:1>- c.i-"
,.l5 -,?j ~\.:..
Y' ) j JU -
When did he ask
for her hand in marriage? - Really, I don't
that or '-:"' with (a yes, a no); to comply J!
know, and unfortunately I can't ask Nizar
with (sb's request)
about someth i ng like th is
..,..!-.:Ji ~)) '11;.. ..!.lJLL ,->I~
-
,J).14 c:---I
question and I beg you to answer frankly 89
96131471
Listen, Tariq, I will ask you a
I 3397 I
, 1111 Jy..:. n. feeling, sentiment, awareness
1117 :)\.;\
v.
IV to report
:'y:'i that; to provide
'-:"' (information); to be useful, be effective (for sb) ..) t;J.:j
..b- '11
J:.l ~L.,. '1.#. .:JI .:J~ ~ ~ ~\';I .JY ..) .:J..,5)'..!...o ..,,; r-A: .r!-;..u..
I-,!~ IJ"""':' 4-i>b ..) ~i ..li i-,?..u) 4> ~ ~.l&- - The phrase "my boy" awoke within her
oGl.i J 1..;Jl,; She sai d t hat hi s death was a bi g loss to Iraq
Thi s
will lead th e hu man race t o ruin 88
The poverty rate
in t he Gaza Strip is t wice as hi gh as t he
and Australi a
I 3413 I
97 I 3068
I
15 Nationalities Arab
4331
~Jj)l.Y'
~J"I
American
4410
~J.:5
~I _- J""'.I
Israeli
466S
~L::....~.?
:S-;}
French
4728
~JJJI
ZJL..."....
European
4981
;)W _ ..r.
907
"Ua,.f. t,.J
British
5139
:;Jv.~
944
~I.r-l
Iranian
5311
~~"...
- '1
African
5469
German
5619 5783
~w'
Afghan
English
• . Jjl -r-'J •
Turkish
6994
~.,5
Cuban
Russian
7047
ZJL..
7968
:).J:....
Non-Arab
4S
\,.V·
107
85
Palestinian
233
~
.)If -"t,.J. W
Iraqi
S72
Lebanese
603
381
~.r-
Egyptian
479
177 212
Arab
~~Y-"
Saudi
578
~Jr"
Syrian
1087
878
t"i~)
Jordanian
1166
1063
:;'.,,5
Kuwaiti
1462
1266
~br"
Sudanese
1480
1371
~ .
from Gulf
1491
Moroccan
1640
1663
~.A.~
Algerian
1763
1689
~
Yemeni
1954
Libyan
2346
1405
1739
\S .:r ~ ..w...) o)..i4.I1 o~...\..!.
96 I 3113
.L,ll oJJ~ -
.:r .1?1.ri- J ib.;......1 d~ -I..r--4-- ~J '7'L.:. rJ ~ ........ ~I ...:...L..... jl.1-S..l>1 - As a young man
her 88 I 3365
I
Faisal worked as a statistical engi neer with one
1128 ~ v. I (a) to find ; meet, encounter sb/sth