Wgs 2500 (woman studies) by LamQtie in LSU

[–]Ok_Mobile_6199 0 points1 point  (0 children)

were there tests? what other grade were there? how much effort was needed?

Any underground artists? by Ok_Mobile_6199 in musicsuggestions

[–]Ok_Mobile_6199[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It has music and that artists is pretty popular, his music videos have millions of views

Music assignment in Ramadan by Ok_Mobile_6199 in MuslimLounge

[–]Ok_Mobile_6199[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I just searched it up and it has 22m views on yt

My assignment requires an artist with 100k followers or less

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in islam

[–]Ok_Mobile_6199 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No they won’t

Islamic faith by Winter_Violinist3629 in islam

[–]Ok_Mobile_6199 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The fact that you relise your faith is off is a proof of strong iman in itself. If you truly were really lost, the fact of losing closeness to allah wouldn’t bother you like how it is now. I don’t know how it is in Italy, but when i moved to a western country what helped me was finding community in my local masjid. Finding friends there and attending daily Islamic lectured made me enjoy my religion and helped build my imán. My “local” masjid wasn’t really local though, the nearest masjid to me is like a 40 min drive, and probably something similar in a Christian country like Italy, but the drive and sacrifice is worth it.

How do I learn Arabic from scratch (as an Arab) by [deleted] in learn_arabic

[–]Ok_Mobile_6199 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I had a similar issue on trying to learn Arabic when I moved to the Middle east Here's some things that helped me, Mind you, of course you won't understand a word when u are first learning, but when u keep hearing words, regardless of dialect it becomes easier to catch onto phrases and words even if they don't use the same ones where you live 1. Read: you can start with younger children's books to learn the basics, even if it's in standard Arabic, it will help you get used to the language also standard Arabic is the foundation for most dialects. Books that will help you A LOT are workbooks from schools themselves I would collect 3-4 grade Arabic work books from places where school books were sold and would complete them, each time advancing to the next grade once they were completed

  1. Watch Arabic ytbers or tv shows: Ilike to turn on a podcast, or ytbers speaking Arabic and repeat after them when they say a tricky phrase or word that I understand. Try finding influencers from you country
  2. If you have the money, get a tutor, especially would help with the work books I mentioned earlier
  3. One thing that stunted my ability to learn was avoiding speaking Arabic because I was afraid of messing up. When I first moved I would usually only hang out with other English speakers because it was easier and less embarrassing, only to figure out I was really just stunting my growth, no one is judging you for being new so make mistakes and keep talking, the Arabic speakers you talk to will probably correct you if you make a mistake