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Ya (far7aan - فرحان) means (happy) too.. it can be used everywhere no matter what the country is.
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Brilliant lessons,
Shucran, -
Great lesson,
Ana as3ad , thanks a lot. -
Hi guys,
Excellent lesson, I had heard of "forsa sayeeda" as a greeting but didn't realise exactly what it meant.
I have also come across "tasharafna" as a similar greeting, (pleased to meet you?). Are they interchangeable or are they used in different circumstances, eg "tasharafna" near the start of a conversation and "forsa sayeeda" at the end? -
Both can be used at the end of a conversation, however (تشرفنا - tasharrafna) which means (we've been honored) can immediately come after someone is being introduced to you, like saying someone told you this is Mr Moshaya and you then say (tasharrafna) immediately.
(فرصة سعيدة - for9a sa3eedah) comes always at the end only. -
Thanks, Ehab, for a speedy response and clear explanation. I am very grateful for the amount of work and effort you put into making this website such a valuable learning tool.
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مبروك جدا
السلام عليكم
وهذا اللقاء من دروس حضرتكم مفيد جدا لطلبتي الأعزاء.
جزاكم الله بأضعافه -
Great lesson!
I have one question though, I couldn't understand whether you guys said أراك or نأراك? -
@cebrax, we said نراك
نراك = We see you
أراك = I see you -
@Moshaya, thank you for your answer :)
Beginner - Happy opportunity
September 19th, 2008 | 1 comment |
We're happy to have this opportunity to bring you another podcast and hope there'll be many more coming your way. In this beginner lesson we teach you what to say upon parting with somebody you meet for the very first time.
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does the word farhan mean happy too?
if yeah what countys would it be used in?
salam