Dialogue

Vocabulary (Review)

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Lesson Transcript

INTRODUCTION
Hala: السلام عليكم.
Roland: و عليكم السلام Roland here! Newbie Season 2 , Lesson 5 - Do You Have a Cell Phone?
Roland: Hello, and welcome to the Newbie Series S2 at ArabicPOD101.com, where we study Egyptian Arabic in a fun, educational format!
Hala: So, brush up on the Arabic that you started learning long ago, or start learning today.
Roland: Thanks for being here with us for this lesson. Hala, what are we looking at?
Hala: Hala is a student, This is part one, of a conversation between a student and the employee at the university .
Roland: In this lesson you will learn how to
Hala: use numbers from one to ten.
Roland This conversation takes place
Hala: at the university
Roland: And the conversation here is between,
Hala: Hala, a student and Soad an employee
Roland: So the speakers are strangers, therefore the speakers will be speaking
Hala: formal Egyptian Arabic.
Hala: Listeners...I have a question...
Roland: A question?
Hala: Yep, I want to know when was the last time you commented?
Roland: Ahh, yes! Great question.
Hala: Stop by ArabicPOD101.com, leave us a comment or just say hi.
Roland: haha...okay, you heard Hala.
Roland: Now, let's listen to the conversation.
DIALOGUE
هالة: لـو سـمـحــتي ، أنا عايــزة أعـمـل كارنيه الجامـعة
الموظفة: ماشي ، عايـزة البــطـاقـة، عــنــدك موبايـل ، و تــليفون في البيت؟
هالة: أيــوة ، عــنــدي
الموظفة: مـمــكن الرقــم ؟
هالة: طـبـعاً ، الموبايـل زيرو ، واحـد ، زيرو ، خــمـسة ، تــلاتـة ، إتــنـين ، تــلاتـة ، تــمــنــية ، تــلاتـة ، سـتـة 0105323836
الموظفة: يـعــني زيرو – عــشــرة - خــمـسة ، تــلاتـة ، إتــنـين ، تــلاتـة ، تــمــنــية ، تــلاتـة ، سـتـة
هالة: أيــوة ، تمام
English Host: Let’s hear the conversation one time slowly.
هالة: لـو سـمـحــتي ، أنا عايــزة أعـمـل كارنيه الجامـعةA: law samaḥti,ʿnā ʿayzh ʾʿmil kārnīh ig-gāmʿh
B: māšī, ʿayzh il biṭaʾh, ʿandik mūbāyl, we tilīfūn fi il bīt?
A: ʾywh ʿandī.
B: mumkin ir-raqam?
A: tabʿān, il mūbāyl (( 0105323836 ) zirū- wāḥid- zirū- ḫamsh- talāth-ʿ itnīn- talāth- tamanyh- talāth- sitth.
B: yaʿnī (zirū- ʿašarh- ḫamsh- talāth- ʿitnīn- talāth- tamanyh- talāth- sitth.
A: ʾywh , tamām
English Host: Now let’s hear it with the English translation.
هالة: لـو سـمـحــتي ، أنا عايــزة أعـمـل كارنيه الجامـعة
Roland: Excuse me. I want to make a card for the University.
الموظفة: ماشي ، عايـزة البــطـاقـة، عــنــدك موبايـل ، و تــليفون في البيت؟
Roland: Okay, I want your ID. Do you have a cell phone [asking for the number], and a phone at home?
هالة: أيــوة ، عــنــدي
Roland: Yes, I have both.
الموظفة: مـمــكن الرقــم ؟
Roland: Can I have the number?
هالة: طـبـعاً ، الموبايـل زيرو ، واحـد ، زيرو ، خــمـسة ، تــلاتـة ، إتــنـين ، تــلاتـة ، تــمــنــية ، تــلاتـة ، سـتـة 0105323836
Roland: Sure, the cell phone is 0105323836.
الموظفة: يـعــني زيرو – عــشــرة - خــمـسة ، تــلاتـة ، إتــنـين ، تــلاتـة ، تــمــنــية ، تــلاتـة ، سـتـة
Roland: So that’s 0105323836.
هالة: أيــوة ، تمام
Roland: Yes, correct.
POST CONVERSATION BANTER
Hala: when asking people for their Number, we say do you have a phone , or do you have a cell phone
Roland: I know and that is very strange, because some people may think its asking for the phone itself, but not they are asking for the number.
Hala: that's why we wait after you say yes , to hear the No, or to hear No, sorry, i don't have it .
Roland: I also heard do you have a phone or a cell No a lot
Hala: It depends on the person speaking, but in case you ever encounter this situation, remember, do you have a phone , is asking for your No !
do you remember how to say it in Arabic?
Roland: عَندَك تَليفون؟ “ʿandak talīfūn”.
Hala: And for a cellphone.
Roland: عَندَك مُوبايل؟ “ʿandak muūbāīl”.
VOCAB LIST
Roland: The first word that we used is .
: The first word we shall see is:
Hala: عـنـدي [natural native speed]
Roland: I have Egyptian Arabic
Hala: عـنـدي [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Hala: عـنـدي [natural native speed]
: Next:
Hala: عندك [natural native speed]
Roland: you have Egyptian Arabic
Hala: عندك [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Hala: عندك [natural native speed]
: Next:
Hala: ممكن [natural native speed]
Roland: can, may, possible Egyptian Arabic
Hala: ممكن [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Hala: ممكن [natural native speed]
: Next:
Hala: بيت [natural native speed]
Roland: house
Hala: بيت [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Hala: بيت [natural native speed]
: Next:
Hala: رقـم [natural native speed]
Roland: number
Hala: رقـم [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Hala: رقـم [natural native speed]
: Next:
Hala: صـفـر زيرو [natural native speed]
Roland: zero Egyptian Arabic
Hala: صـفـر زيرو [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Hala: صـفـر زيرو [natural native speed]
: Next:
Hala: واحـد [natural native speed]
Roland: one
Hala: واحـد [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Hala: واحـد [natural native speed]
: Next:
Hala: إتــنـين [natural native speed]
Roland: two Egyptian Arabic
Hala: إتــنـين [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Hala: إتــنـين [natural native speed]
: Next:
Hala: تلاتة [natural native speed]
Roland: three Egyptian Arabic
Hala: تلاتة [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Hala: تلاتة [natural native speed]
: Next:
Hala: خـمـسة [natural native speed]
Roland: five
Hala: خـمـسة [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Hala: خـمـسة [natural native speed]
: Next:
Hala: سـتة [natural native speed]
Roland: six
Hala: سـتة [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Hala: سـتة [natural native speed]
: Next:
Hala: تــمـنـية [natural native speed]
Roland: eight Egyptian Arabic
Hala: تــمـنـية [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Hala: تــمـنـية [natural native speed]
: Next:
Hala: تـسـعة [natural native speed]
Roland: nine Egyptian Arabic
Hala: تـسـعة [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Hala: تـسـعة [natural native speed]
: Next:
Hala: عشرة [natural native speed]
Roland: nine Egyptian Arabic
Hala: عشرة [slowly - broken down by syllable]
Hala: عشرة [natural native speed]
VOCAB AND PHRASE USAGE
Roland: Let's have a closer look at the usage for some of the words and phrases from this lesson.
Hala: The first word/phrase we’ll look at is....
Hala: عَندِك مُوبايل “ʿandik muūbāīl”.
When asking for someone's phone No, sometimes we say do you have a phone , and that indicates the No of the phone itself, same thing with cell No, we ask if you have a cell !
Roland: but remember, you could get a nice surprise everyone once and while, and the person responds by saying No, i don't have a cell phone, i don't like them !
Roland: the next word, really really important guys
Hala: يَعني “yaʿnī” , this means it means , or i mean, and in many cases and situations
Roland: and , you will hear it in the middle of the sentence , or at the start and end, could be repeated a 100 times, with no specific meaning
Hala: it's just a habit we have while talking .
Roland: and now we will check مُمكِن الرَّقَم "mumkin al-rraqam" ?
Hala: this means literally means possible the No , which is another way of asking for phone No
Roland: I know that mumkin is a super word !
Hala: Well, as we use it in many situations, and with different meanings, I would say it is ! ,for example it means possible , possibility, can , may , might .
Roland: that's what i meant when i said it's a super word !
Hala: to say a simple sentence like مُمكِن الرَّقَم "mumkin al-rraqam" means can i have the No , so here it functioned as can i , a very polite request form. Let’s go to the grammar point.

Lesson focus

Hala: The focus of today's lesson is using the verb to have.
Roland: عـَـنـْـدِك مـوبـايـْل "Do you have a cell phone?"
Hala: In Arabic, the verb "to have" is a very special verb, and because the verb "to be" is not used, the same verb can be used in a statement and question just by changing the intonation.
Roland: Let us now talk about negating the verb to have.
Hala: We have two ways to form the negation. The first one is to used the negation word مـِـش .
Roland: Or we can break it adding the مــ at the beginning, and ش at the end.
Hala: Both forms are accepted, but the second is more popular.
Roland: So the two negated forms are مِش عَندي “miš ʿandī” and مَعَنْدِيش “maʿandiīš”.

Outro

Roland: That just about does it for today.
Roland: Okay, some of our listeners already know about the most powerful tool on ArabicPOD101.com....
Hala: line-by-line audio.
Roland: The perfect tool for rapidly improving listening comprehension...
Hala: by listening to lines of the conversation again and again.
Roland: Listen until every word and syllable becomes clear. Basically, we breakdown the dialog into comprehensible, bite-size sentences.
Hala: You can try the line-by-line audio in the Premium Learning Center at ArabicPod101.com.
Roland: شكرا ، أشوفكو المرة الجاية
Hala: شكرا ، مع السلامة

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