You are on page 1of 9

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

652
73 .



.
" "
.
.

.
.
503333 .
52.5
.


. 555.1 .

.

Arabic ******** Miscellaneous facts

Arabic is one of the oldest ********s in the world that today is


spoken by over 256 million people in about 30 different
countries. It is the official ******** of Algeria, Bahrain,
Comoros, Chad, Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Iraq, Israel, Jordan,
Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman,
Palestinian Authority, Qatar, Western Sahara (SADR), Saudi
Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates, and
Yemen.
There is a form of Arabic called Modern Standard Arabic,
which is understood by most Arabic speakers and is often
used in international organizations. In fact, Arabic is one of
the official ********s of the United Nations and is mostly
spoken in the Middle East and Northern Africa. Arabic writing
is varying as well, is extremely complex and often does not
even compare to its spoken form. Arabic is considered the
sixth most spoken ******** in the world even though the Arabic
******** is spread into many varying forms. In the United States
alone, there are over 590,000 Arabic speaking people. The
total number of Arabic speaking internet users is now at 16.5
million and growing constantly.
Many Arabic nations enjoy great wealth due to the huge oil
reserves found in those regions thus making the Arabic
population an important factor on the global market. In fact,
the entire GDP of all the Arabic nations amounts to about
115.8 billion dollars. In addition to their wealth from the oil,
there are countless investment opportunities, business
projects, international organizations, etc., in Arabic countries
as well. Due to the size of the Arabic markets and the
opportunities available on this growing online market, it is
obvious that the Arabic speaking population has great
potential for business online.

:

http://www.borsaat.com/vb/t72019.html


-
-
- English Fundamentals
- FoR RoNa El ToTa
2 -

English Annaqed

" " ""










: ""


2011 .
.

You might also like