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Welcome to Sindibad Café.




Samarra a Model for Harmony? Get Real, NYT

An unusually flimsy bit of analysis comes to us today from Timothy Williams of the New York Times, who claims that Samarra, the site of the 2006 shrine bombings that kicked off the worst of Iraq’s sectarian violence, has now transformed into a tranquil enclave to be emulated throughout the country.  This claim is interesting, especially as Timothy basically admits that tranquility is enforced by a heavy US military presence, and the Americans are the one group in Iraq who are definitely on the way out.

 

On Security Council, China Vies for Title of Chief Vetoer for Middle East Affairs

Beijing’s promise to veto new sanctions on Iran is one more sign of increased Chinese assertiveness, and may eventually help the growing economic power-house secure another oil supply outside the US sphere.  It is also an ironic twist in the history of Security Council action in the region, as China take’s the American role of the lone hold-out.

 

Lesson 3: The Language of ض [dhad]

The next trickiest consonants after ق [qaf], in the various spoken dialects of Arabic, are ث [tha], ذ [dhal], ظ [dha], and ض [dhad].  In Egypt and much of the Levant, the letter ث [tha] practically disappears, being sometimes converted to س [sin] as in

ثورة [thau-ra] (revolution) --> سورة [sau-ra],

and other times to ت [ta] as in

كثير [ka-thir] -->كتير [ka-teer].

 
Lesson 3: The Language of ض [dhad]
Monday, 01 February 2010
The next trickiest consonants after ق [qaf], in the various spoken dialects of Arabic, are ث [tha], ذ [dhal], ظ [dha], and ض [dhad].  In Egypt... Read more...
Lesson 2: ق [qaf] Across Dialects
Monday, 25 January 2010
The letter ق [qaf] is one of the harder consonants for students of the language to hit smoothly, so it should come as little surprise that native... Read more...
Lesson 1: Go and Speak
Monday, 18 January 2010
Spoken Arabic in Iraq - Unit 1 - Lesson 1 The words for two very common actions, going and speaking, are one of the universal points of difference... Read more...
Skipping from Mecca to Beijing in a Textbook
Saturday, 30 January 2010
David Griesedieck is the owner of an impressive last name, and all who have seen him must note that his wild white hair and thick-rimmed glasses make... Read more...
The Magical Fatalism of Juan Rulfo
Wednesday, 20 January 2010
The novelita of Pedro Páramo is a parched wail carried on the wind across the plains of Jalisco.  It is magic realism with the taste and texture of... Read more...
Fresh Organs for Sale – Kidneys, Hearts, and Languages
Tuesday, 19 January 2010
Okay, so grammar transplants may be nowhere on the horizon and we shouldn’t worry about a black market in dismembered participle phrases, but in... Read more...
Samarra a Model for Harmony? Get Real, NYT
Monday, 22 February 2010
An unusually flimsy bit of analysis comes to us today from Timothy Williams of the New York Times, who claims that Samarra, the site of the 2006... Read more...
On Security Council, China Vies for Title of Chief Vetoer for Middle East Affairs
Monday, 01 February 2010
Beijing’s promise to veto new sanctions on Iran is one more sign of increased Chinese assertiveness, and may eventually help the growing economic... Read more...
Baath-Branded Candidates to Stay Banned
Monday, 25 January 2010
After negative reactions from the US and the UN and numerous cries of protest from within Iraq, many expected that the Iraqi government might find... Read more...
Global Opportunities
Saturday, 07 November 2009
Have you found a golden opportunity, and now you just need a translator to close the distance?  Our team of top-notch linguists may be just what you... Read more...

Cowardice at Fort Hood
Matthew Delventhal - 07 Nov 09
There was a coward at Fort Hood on Thursday 5 November, and it was not one of the wounded soldiers who gave life-saving care to their comrades, or the...
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