Arabic is a Central Semitic language famous for its root-and-pattern morphology and diglossia between Classical/Modern Standard Arabic and diverse spoken vernaculars. It is sacred to Islam and official across the Arab world.

Arabic
Arabic · arabic · Cairo, Cairo Governorate, Egypt · 30.0444, 31.2357 · Egypt · Saudi Arabia · Iraq · Morocco · Algeria · Sudan · Yemen · Syria · Tunisia · Jordan

Historical Evolution

Arabic descends from Proto-Semitic, with Classical Arabic preserved through the Qur'an and pre-Islamic poetry. The Arab conquests spread the language from Iberia to Central Asia; regional koines evolved into modern dialects (Egyptian, Levantine, Maghrebi, Gulf). Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) unifies formal media and education while remaining no one's native mother tongue.

Phonology

MSA maintains emphatic consonants (ص, ض, ط, ظ), pharyngeals (ع, ح), uvular fricatives, and vowel length contrasts. Dialects simplify or merge emphatics and vary vowel systems substantially. Root consonants typically appear as C–C–C templates mapped to vowel melodies for derivation.

Syntax

MSA is VSO or SVO-flexible with rich nominal inflection (case, definiteness, gender, number). Verbs inflect for person, gender, number, mood, and voice via templatic patterns. Negation, aspect, and modality differ markedly between MSA and colloquial varieties, which often use bipartite negation particles and very different lexicon.

Attributes

Total Speakers370 M
L1 Native Speakers310 M
Number of Countries26 countries
Language Vitality Index10 scale
Web Domain Share (%)0.6 %
Language FamilyAfro-Asiatic / Semitic / Central Semitic
Standard ScriptArabic abjad
Grammatical TypologyVSO/SVO, Fusional, Root-and-pattern
UNESCO Risk CategorySafe
Clear