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Post by j7oyun55rruk on Jan 6, 2024 0:29:06 GMT -6
That's what I made the decision to learn and master the present simple because it was a logical starting point not to try to do anything else until I could confidently use the present simple with any verb conjugation and with any verb and so I got excited. But I can't do it myself. Egyptian Arabic textbooks are scarce and often difficult to use. Find a Mentor I discussed this with my mentor and asked her to work with me to achieve this goal. Mona is great and knows exactly what to do which is the advantage of having a really C Level Contact List good teacher. This is the process we follow in the course where she teaches me the rules of the present tense of Egyptian Arabic. Logistically this was mostly done in English and wrote examples on the document as we went along. Documents are great because both parties can view and update them in real time and they fit perfectly into the course. I went back and reviewed my notes and wrote a list of the Arabic verbs I knew. Next I systematically reviewed and combined every present tense verb I knew and wrote them all down in Arabic script to fill up my notes. Dozens of pages of Arabic Present Simple. I sent Mona a photo of what I had written so that she could check it. In the following course, after ironing out some errors quite a bit, we had a conversation in Arabic entirely in the present tense. It really was Very simple she would ask me questions and I would answer them always using the now simple way. For example, when do you start working and I start working in the morning.
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