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How Old Is The Arabic Language?

Author: Studio Arabiya
by Studio Arabiya
Posted: Sep 01, 2022

On ­December 18 of every year, we celebrate the World Arabic Language Day. The day was established by the United Nations ­Educational, Scientific and ­Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in 2010, and "coincides with the day in 1973 that the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted Arabic as the sixth official language of the Organization" (source: UNESCO website). Each year, institutions, organizations as well as Arabic and non-Arabic speakers use this day to celebrate the Arabic language and appreciate its many amazing facets.

Spoken by over 400 million people, this Semitic language is the world's 5th most widely-spoken language, and its number of learners increases every passing day. If you are looking forward to being one of them, start your journey with an online Arabic language course right now and waste no time!

Keep reading to learn more about the Arabic language, its history, origins and other amazing facts!

Arabic Language History

It's hard to keep track of when and how some language first appeared, especially that the origin of the Arabic language is still a debated topic. However, there are some sources that provide insights on when Arabic first emerged, and scholars agree that Arabic is one of the oldest languages ever discovered and used in the world.

Arabic Language Origin

Arabic is an Afroasiatic language, according to the language family tree. Arabic is the family's most commonly spoken language. The Afroasiatic language family, which spans the Middle East and most of Africa, consists of six branches and over 300 living languages and dialects, with over 350 million native speakers.

When Did The Arabic Language Emerge?

The Arabic language as we know it is thought to have originated in the sixth century, but older variations of the language existed, including the Safaitic dialect, an old Arabic dialect used by pre-Islamic nomadic inhabitants of the Syro-Arabian desert. However, according to various sources, the language's first appearances date back to the second millennium BC.

The Arabic of the Maghreb (North Africa), Egyptian Arabic (Egypt and Sudan), Levantine Arabic (Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and Palestine), and Iraqi/Gulf Arabic are the four main regional dialects spoken in the Arab world today, with dialectic differences in different countries.

Modern Standard Arabic differs from both Quranic and Classical Arabic. It has undergone a period of "Europeanisation" in the 19th century which has modified parts of the language and has had a major impact on grammar.

How Old is The Arabic Alphabet?

First of all, the Arabic alphabet is incorrectly labeled as an "alphabet". Rather, it is an "abjad". An abjad is a system that makes every letter in the language stands for a consonant rather than a vowel, requiring the language's user to include the vowels using vowel markers.

The Arabic alphabet was established in the fourth century CE, but the oldest extant Arabic writing is a 512 CE trilingual inscription (Greek-Syriac-Arabic).

Some argue that the Arabic script developed in the North, in Al Hirah (fourth to seventh-century Mesopotamia), while others argue that it originated in the South, in Himyar (110 BC to AD 525).

The Nabatean Aramaic script is the ancestor of the North Arabic script, the oldest extant copies of which date from the 4th century B.C. However, since the Aramaic script represented fewer consonants than the required number for Arabic, the use of certain shapes was extended by the use of dots put on the letters.

Arabic letters are distinguished by their use of dots. Often the only way to distinguish such letters is to add a dot above or below the letter. The Arabic letters weren't dotted until several years after the Quran was turned into a book. To unify and standardize it, diacritics, as well as various tone and pronunciation grids, were added.

The Kufic, named after the town of Kufah in Mesopotamia, which hosted a popular Muslim academy, and the Naskh, or Mecca-Medina script, were the two main styles of alphabet Arabic writing that evolved rather early in the Muslim era.

About the Author

Studio Arabiya is a premier source of One-on-One Arabic and Quran courses for every level and age, taught online by native Arab instructors.

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Author: Studio Arabiya

Studio Arabiya

Member since: Jul 17, 2019
Published articles: 108

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