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You are here:Home»Displaying items by tag: Arabic - Third Year Abroad
  • Marrakesh

    Thursday, 09 June 2011
    City of the Colourful
    As you make your way to the ‘red city’, you’ll quickly find out that your notion of logistics, normalcy and time is lost here - instead, you’re world will be turned upside down. Though it may prove a little tricky at first, you’ll soon fall into the swing of things and not regret it. As troubadours, henna ladies, tarot readers, laughing children and crazy men wishing to throw a snake upon you (for a small fee, of course). The expression ‘hustle and bustle’ was never more fitting for this place; a constant stream of people, flavours, sounds and colours, you’ll take a lot in. On a daily basis. Work or study here and you’ll have an experience to remember, that’s for sure...
    Published in Africa
  • Arabic

    Wednesday, 14 April 2010

    Fascinating Facts

    1. There are over 225 million Arabic speakers worldwide.
    2. It has been a literary language for over 1500 years.
    3. Spanish is the European language with the most borrowings from Arabic.
    4. Because of the great variation between dialects, an Iraqi may find it very difficult to understand a Moroccan, for example.
    5. Algebra, alchemy and algorithm are all words of Arabic origin.
    Published in Content
  • Tell us a bit about you... 
    I'm 20 years old, studying 'International Tourism Management' at Leeds Metropolitan Univeristy. As part of my second year I had to do a 48 week placement within the tourism industry.

    Where did you go?
    I was sent to Sharm el Sheikh in Egypt for my placement.

    Was your trip organised by your university?
    The university had placements on offer but they were all waitressing in America, and I didn't really want to go down that route. I decided to find my own placement abroad, and I applied for a repping job with Thomson. After a long process I got the job! My accommodation was luckily provided through Thompson.
    Published in Not a linguist?
  • Delectable Damascus

    Tuesday, 16 February 2010

    Damascus, Syria - complicated, vibrant, hot, chaotic, relaxed
     

    There was a distinct lack of university support in finding housing and a notable difference between taught Arabic and the colloquial language.  My social life in Damascus mostly involved other foreign students as there were only one or two night clubs, men have a café culture and there are cheap restaurants everywhere, so going out for food with friends is the easiest option – but not the most sociable one when it comes to meeting new people!  There were very cheap travel opportunities by bus to Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey and the rest of Syria.

    Published in Arabic-Speaking
  • Morocco

    Tuesday, 07 June 2011
    Hanging off the cliff of the African continent, Morocco has been the touchstone for Europeans wishing to travel to the continent for centuries. Only about an hour away from Spain by boat and a few hours from the UK by plane, touch down onto the sun-kissed soil and you’ll be presented with a veritable feast for the senses. So geographically close to Europe, yet so very far from anything you had envisaged, this is the Middle East at its reputably very best. The people are warm and friendly, chatter abounds along the streets of Marrakesh, Essaouira, Rabat and Casablanca; trek into the Sahara desert and you will seldom find established communities, rubbing shoulders with Berber nomads and looking to the sand dunes for peace of mind. Developed in some parts and very much left to its archaic devices in others, Morocco ticks visitors’ wishlists for the right reasons: the food, the banter, the bartering and the beauty of the place are only a few of its attributes. Arabic and French remain the main languages spoken here, yet you will undoubtedly come across near-native English speakers (e.g. voracious orations of ‘lovely jubbly’ and ‘fish and chips’), making the place slightly more cosmopolitan (and humourous) a country to spend a year abroad in...
    Published in Africa
  • Arabic-Speaking

    Wednesday, 12 May 2010
    These are reviews by students who have spent a year abroad in an Arabic-speaking country. They have passed on what they've learnt during their experiences, packing ideas and accommodation tips to help you choose where to go and advice about how to settle in faster.
    We're on the hunt for writers for this section, if you'd like to contribute, please get in touch!
    Published in Arabic-Speaking
  • Learning Arabic in Tunis

    Friday, 09 April 2010

    What?  One month intensive Arabic language course at the Institut Bourguiba in Tunis, Tunisia.
    When?
      July - August 2008

    Find out what to pack, what to leave behind and where to go while you're there on your year abroad...

    Published in Arabic-Speaking
  • Alice spent one month in the summer of 2008 doing an intensive Arabic language course at the Institut Bourguiba in Tunis, Tunisia. Find out what she got up to, how it went, her recommended places to go, emergency contact details, what to take with you and what to definitely leave behind...

    Published in Language Skills

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