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Arabic, English, and French are spoken in Egypt. There are many different ethnic groups that speak the language of everyday communication in Egypt, but Arabic is by far the most widely spoken language in Egypt.
Egypt is located in the northeast of Africa, at the crossroads of Europe, Asia and Africa, and is a shortcut to the sea route between the Atlantic and Indian oceans. It is bordered by Sudan to the south, Libya to the west, Palestine to the east by the Red Sea, Europe across the sea through the Mediterranean Sea to the north, and Jordan and Saudi Arabia to the southeast.
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The peoples of Egypt are Arabs, Greeks, Romans and some indigenous Egyptians, but they no longer have their own language, and they all speak Arabic.
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Arabic as the official language Some nationalists in the Arab world who seek to get rid of the official language and use traditional Arabic as a foreign language are often incompatible with illiterate populations that are politically Arabized in nominal Arab countries but not necessarily linguistically, culturally and ethnically. This policy was popularized in Egypt in the mid-20th century by the Egyptian scholar and nationalist Ahmad Lutfi al-Sasayyid, who called the official language of Egypt the native language of the Egyptians. Bayoumi Andrel, a late Egyptian linguist and Egyptologist of antiquities, studied the "modern Egyptian language" from a nationalist perspective, which he considered "unrelated" to Arabic.
He argues that the fourth ancient Egyptian, inherited from the coptic language, involves Arabic syntax, morphology, and phonology.
Similar to the emphasis on the disconnection between minority languages and Arabic languages, the Nubians were separated from Egypt and Sudan, and the more successful example is the Berber (also known as amazigh or imazighen) from Morocco.
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Arabic is common in Egypt.
The Arab Republic of Egypt (Arabic: English: The Arab Republic of Egypt) is abbreviated as "Egypt".
Located in the northeast of Africa, it is located in the transportation center of Europe, Asia and Africa, and is a shortcut to the sea route between the Atlantic Ocean and the Indian Ocean.
Egypt is bordered by Sudan to the south, Libya to the west, Palestine and Israel to the east by the Red Sea, Europe across the sea through the Mediterranean Sea to the north, Jordan and Saudi Arabia to the southeast, and the official language of Egypt is Arabic. For historical reasons, English and French are also widely spoken.
Ancient Egypt is one of the world's four great civilizations and the world's first kingdom, they built the world-famous pyramids and the Valley of the Kings. In 3200 BC, a unified state of slavery was established. It belonged to the Persian Empire in 525 BC and began to be ruled by Rome in 30 BC.
It was invaded by the Arabs in 640 AD and became an Ottoman province in 1517. It was ruled by France from 1798 to 1801 and became a British colony in 1882.
Egypt is the most populous country in the Middle East and the second most populous country in Africa, and has long been a leader in Africa in terms of economy, science and technology. It is also the third largest economy on the African continent. Its key industries, such as tourism, agriculture, industry and services, have almost equal share of development.
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Arabic bai. Arabic except du
In addition to being the official language of Egypt, it is also the Arabic, Yemeni, Emirati, Oman, and Kuwaiti editions.
Official languages of Pakistan, Qatar, Iraq, Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine, Sudan, Libya, Tunisia, Somalia, Djibouti, Mauritania, Comoros, Algeria and Morocco.
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Question 1: What language does Egypt speak The peoples in the land of Egypt are **people, Greeks, Romans, and some indigenous Egyptians, but they no longer have their own language, and they all speak **, such a mixed world of peoples.
Question 2: What language do Egyptians speak? Does English work? Egypt speaks **, English can be used to communicate, most Egyptians still know English, and a small number of Egyptians can speak French. My Egyptian friends all speak English.
Question 3: What language is spoken in Egypt? *Language.
In addition to being the official language of Egypt, it is also the official language of Saudi Arabia**Yemen, the United Arab Emirates, Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Iraq, Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine, Sudan, Libya, Tunisia, Somalia, Djibouti, Mauritania, Comoros, Algeria and Morocco.
Question 4: What does Egypt speak in the language of Zhaotanxu? Egypt is the Republic of Egypt. As you might have guessed, its official language is slang. For historical reasons, English and French were also widely used in Egypt.
Question 5: What language do the Egyptians speak The peoples in the land of Egypt are the ** people, the Greeks, the Romans and some indigenous Egyptians, but they no longer have their own language, and they all speak the ** language.
Hope it helps.
Question 6: What is the language of Egypt **The language is official.
There are also a few who speak English.
As for the French ......
I guess no one talks about it except the French who settled there
Because Egypt was not colonized by France
The French-speaking one is Central Africa or South Africa.
Question 7: What language is used in the three countries of Saudi Arabia, Iran and Egypt Saudi Arabia uses the ** language, Iran uses the Iranian language, Egypt uses Egyptian, remember, the languages of the three countries are different.
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Peking university. Wuhan University.
Nanjing University. That's all I know = =)
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The official language of Egypt is Arabic. English and French are commonly used foreign languages. There are still many people who can speak English in tourist attractions, and basically there is no problem with daily communication.
When visiting museums or cultural heritage, it is recommended to accompany a group (with Chinese explanation) or a local English-speaking tour guide in the scenic area.
Basic Arabic Phrases:
Hello: salmo alikom (pronunciation).
Thanks: shukarn (pronunciation).
You're welcome: ma-salama (pronunciation).
Very good: meya -meya (pronunciation).
Goodbye: ma' as salama (pronunciation).
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Written records of the ancient Egyptian language date back to the 32nd century BC. Egypt's national language today is Egyptian Arabic, which gradually replaced the Coptic language of Egyptian life after the Muslim conquest of Egypt. Today, Coptic is still used as the liturgical language of the Coptic Orthodox Church, and it is still spoken by a small number of Copts today.
Scholars generally divide the Egyptian language into six periods according to time:
Archic Egyptian: Spoken before the 26th century B.C., it was the language of the early dynastic period.
Old Egyptian: 26th to 20th centuries BC, it was the language of the Old Kingdom. Middle Egyptian:
From the 20th century BC to the 13th century BC, it was the language of the Middle Kingdom to the 18th Dynasty, and from the 13th century BC to the 4th century AD, it existed only in the form of literary language. Late Egyptian: 13th to 7th centuries BCE, from Tutankhamun at the end of the 18th Dynasty to the Third Intermediate Period.
Demotic: 7th to 5th century BC, from the late ancient Egyptian period to the Roman Egyptian period. The ancient Egyptian language began in the 26th century BC and was spoken for about 500 years.
The Middle Egyptian language lasted for more than 500 years from the 21st century BC, and the new Egyptian language began to appear.
However, the advent of the new Egyptian language did not extinguish the Middle Egyptian language: it remained in written form until centuries AD, just as Latin was used in the Middle Ages, or as classical Arabic is today. The secular form began to appear in 650 B.C. and continued to be used in conversation until the 5th century A.D.
Coptic emerged in the 4th century AD and struggled to survive as a living language until the 16th century, when European scholars traveled to Egypt during the Renaissance to learn from native speakers.
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Language experts use vowel letters to mark these consonants, but in fact, they are purely for convenience, but unfortunately some people mistakenly think that this "artificial" pronunciation is the correct pronunciation. Its actual pronunciation is most likely *tvwa?t-?
a:nix-?a?
ma?n, and v is a vowel that is still undetermined. The basic word order in Ancient Egyptian is the predicate subject-object structure (VSO), if we write it on"Man opens the door", the ancient Egyptians would say:
Open-person-door"(wn s ??It uses the so-called status constructus to combine two or more nouns to denote possessives, similar to the Semitic and Berber languages.
Early Egyptian languages did not have definite or indefinite articles; So "p?" is used”、t?and "n?."
and so on, which have the same effect as the indefinite article. Like other Afro-Asian languages, Ancient Egyptian has only two grammatical genders: feminine and masculine, similar to Arabic and Tualeq; In addition, there are three syntax affixes, including:
Singular, even, and mode, although the plurality may well have disappeared by the time of Neo-Egyptianism.
Never mind. Just live in the same place.
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