(Part 2) Best products from r/arabs

We found 20 comments on r/arabs discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 99 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

Top comments mentioning products on r/arabs:

u/kerat · 12 pointsr/arabs

So I went through a phase where I studied the Quran quite thoroughly for a few years. I read a bunch of English translations.

Hands down the best English translation, the one that opened my eyes to a lot of what was going on under the surface, was The Message of the Quran by Muhammad Asad.

Muhammad Asad was born in Austria as Leopold Weiss, the son of a rabbi. He moved to Palestine, and then to Saudi Arabia where he lived with bedouins. He learned Arabic fluently, converted, married a Saudi woman, and wrote several books on Islam.

His translation of the Quran is mainly made up of his footnotes, and they don't always follow mainstream Islamic views. But it's definitely worth a read. I always recommend that English speakers stay away from the translations authorized by the Saudi Ministry of Islamic Affairs and refer to this one instead.

u/ManifestMidwest · 1 pointr/arabs

To add to this, there's also a really good /r/learn_arabic subreddit. Lingualism has also published a reasonably good English-Shami dictionary. IIRC it has around 4000 words, which is a solid start. I use their English-Tunisian dictionary and have found it really helpful.

u/[deleted] · 7 pointsr/arabs

God bless you brother.
"Men in the Sun and Other Palestinian Stories" a book by Ghassan Kanafani. Great stories. Here is an example http://www.reddit.com/r/Palestine/comments/2asay3/letter_from_gaza_ghassan_kanafani/

Amazon link:
http://www.amazon.com/Men-Sun-Other-Palestinian-Stories/dp/0894108573

u/Oneeyebrowsystem · 3 pointsr/arabs

I just finished reading "the Baghdad Eucharist", translated to English from the Arabic novel "Ya Maryam". It is a beautiful written novel about two Iraqi Christians living in Baghdad, an older one who lived through Iraq during good times and has good memories about the place and another whose life has been only sectarian strife and war.

u/MubarakAlMutairi · 5 pointsr/arabs

Here.
Are.
Some.
Books.

Some.
More.
Books.

Would you like a link to my amazon wishlist to see all the books? There are a lot of non-Islamic stuff there to that you might like.

u/el3r9 · 2 pointsr/arabs

This is the lecture he refers to, if anyone is interested.. It is one of the best pieces I read about the history of the Turkish language and certainly more informative than any other article on the subject.

And this is the book

u/Akkadi_Namsaru · 1 pointr/arabs

Al-Kitaab is garbo. I've been using Mastering Arabic Grammar by Jane Wightwick and it's much easier for starting with the basics.

IIRC you want to learn Levantine, so you should check out these:

This one comes highly recommended.

I have the Iraqi version of this and it's good for learning phrases.

Also check out Hiba Najem on YouTube if you haven't already, she has a bunch of videos about Lebanese Arabic.