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Online Arabic Language Course for Kids & Adults

Arabic is not just a language. For a Muslim, it is the key that unlocks the Quran, the Hadith, Islamic scholarship, and the living words of Allah. And for your child — growing up in the West — it is the thread that connects them to their identity, their heritage, and their deen. This course is that key.

Your Child Is Growing Up in the West — But Their Heritage Is Written in Arabic

There is a quiet loss that happens across generations of Muslim families in the West. The grandparents spoke Arabic — or Urdu, or Somali, or Punjabi — and they understood the Quran, the khutbah, the Arabic phrases of daily Islamic life. They heard “Inna lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji’oon” and felt its weight in their chest.
Their grandchildren — your children — grew up in Birmingham, Toronto, Houston, or Sydney. They are proud Muslims. They recite the Quran. They pray. But when the Imam gives a khutbah in Arabic, or when a Quranic verse is discussed in its original language, or when family in the Arab world speaks to them — there is a wall.
Arabic is the most learnable language for Muslim children — because they are already surrounded by it. In their prayers, in the Quran they recite, in the duas they memorise. They are not starting from zero. They are building on a foundation they already have.

What Does the Arabic Language Course Cover — and How Is It Different from Arabic Reading and Grammar?

Al-Huda offers three separate Arabic courses, each with a completely different focus: This course — Arabic Language — focuses on:

Arabic Reading (separate course)

Focuses on: Reading Arabic script fluently — recognising letter forms, connected text, and Arabic reading comprehension

Arabic Grammar (separate course)

Focuses on: Nahw (syntax) and Sarf (morphology) — the structural rules of Arabic language, essential for advanced Quranic and scholarly understanding
Together these three courses provide a complete Arabic education. This course — Arabic Language — is the ideal starting point for most students, particularly children and beginners.

Five Reasons Every Muslim Child Should Learn Arabic

To Understand the Quran Directly

The Quran was revealed in Arabic — and no translation, however accurate, captures the full depth, beauty, and precision of Allah’s original words. A child who understands Arabic does not just read the Quran — they experience it. Every word carries its full weight. Every verse lands with its complete meaning.

To Understand Salah

Five times a day, every Muslim speaks to Allah in Arabic. Al-Fatiha, Ruku, Sujood, Tashahhud, Salawat — all in Arabic. A child who understands Arabic does not just recite these words — they converse with Allah. Salah transforms from a ritual into a relationship.

To Connect With 400 Million People

Arabic is the official language of 26 countries and is spoken or understood by over 400 million people worldwide. It is the language of Islamic scholarship, Islamic history, and the global Muslim Ummah. A Muslim who speaks Arabic is connected to their global community in a way no translation can replicate.

To Access Islamic Knowledge at Its Source

The greatest works of Islamic scholarship — in Tafseer, Fiqh, Hadith, and Aqeedah — were written in Arabic. Every English summary is a second-hand account. A Muslim who reads Arabic accesses 1,400 years of scholarship directly, without the filter of translation.

WHY AL-HUDA FOR ARABIC LANGUAGE?

Certified Native Arabic Tutors

Every Al-Huda Arabic Language tutor is a native Arabic speaker with formal teaching qualifications. This is non-negotiable — Arabic pronunciation, rhythm, and natural expression can only be authentically taught by someone for whom Arabic is their first language. Your child learns Arabic the way Arabic was meant to be spoken — from a native.

Specifically Designed for Muslim Families

Most Arabic language courses are designed for general learners. Al-Huda’s Arabic Language course is designed specifically for Muslim children and adults — integrating Quranic vocabulary, Islamic terminology, and the specific Arabic your child encounters in prayer and religious education. Every lesson connects Arabic to Islam, not just to language.

Practical From the Very First Class

We do not spend months on theory before students speak a word of Arabic. From the first class, students are speaking, listening, and practising real Arabic. Our method is communicative — meaning students learn Arabic by using Arabic, not by studying it from the outside.

Dual Track — Quranic Arabic & Modern Standard Arabic

Al-Huda uniquely offers both Quranic Arabic (the language of the Quran and classical Islamic texts) and Modern Standard Arabic (used in education, media, and formal communication across the Arab world) — in the same integrated course. Students do not have to choose between understanding their deen and communicating with the modern Arab world.

The Al-Huda Arabic Language Curriculum — Beginner to Advanced

Complete beginners — children and adults with no prior Arabic speaking knowledge. Students who can read Arabic letters but cannot speak or understand spoken Arabic.

Unit 1 — Arabic Sounds & Pronunciation Foundations

Before any vocabulary or grammar, students master the authentic sounds of Arabic — because correct pronunciation from the start prevents years of difficult correction later.

Covered:

Unit 2 — Essential Vocabulary — The 500 Most Important Arabic Words

Arabic vocabulary is built systematically — starting with the words most relevant to a Muslim child’s daily life and Quranic exposure.

Vocabulary categories taught at beginner level:

Daily Life Vocabulary
Numbers 1–100 · Days of the week · Months of the year · Colours · Shapes · Common objects (home, school, masjid) · Food and drink · Body parts · Family members · Clothing · Weather
Islamic Vocabulary
Allah and His names · Prophets’ names in Arabic · Islamic greetings and responses · Months of the Islamic calendar · Islamic practices (Salah, Sawm, Zakah, Hajj) in Arabic · Common Quranic words
Action Words (Verbs)
50 essential verbs in present tense — I go, I eat, I speak, I pray, I read, I write, I love, I learn
Descriptive Words (Adjectives)
Big, small, beautiful, good, right, left, near, far, easy, difficult — in masculine and feminine forms

Unit 3 — Basic Arabic Conversation

Speaking Arabic from the earliest possible moment — structured around real situations a Muslim child encounters.

Conversations taught:

Greetings and Introductions
At the Masjid
At Home
At School / Everyday Life
Expressing Islamic Values

Unit 4 — Quranic Arabic Vocabulary (Beginner Level)

Alongside conversational Arabic, students begin building the specific vocabulary of the Quran — words that appear most frequently and carry the deepest meaning.

Covered at beginner level:

INTERMEDIATE ARABIC (Levels 3 & 4)

Students who have completed Beginner Arabic or have some existing Arabic speaking ability and want to develop fluency and deeper understanding.

Unit 5 — Expanded Vocabulary & Conversational Fluency

Building from 500 words to 1,500 words — covering more complex topics and situations.

New vocabulary categories:

New conversation topics:

Unit 6 — Listening Comprehension — Understanding Natural Arabic Speech

One of the most commonly neglected skills — understanding Arabic when a native speaker speaks at natural pace.

Covered:

Unit 7 — Quranic Arabic Vocabulary (Intermediate Level)

Deepening Quranic vocabulary to the point where a student can follow a recited passage with significant comprehension.

Covered:

Unit 8 — Formal Arabic — Modern Standard Arabic Communication

Bridging conversational Arabic to the formal Arabic used in education, media, and cross-regional communication.

Covered:

ADVANCED ARABIC (Levels 5 & 6)

Students with solid intermediate Arabic who want to achieve genuine fluency — understanding lectures, reading books, holding extended conversations, and accessing Islamic scholarship directly.

Unit 9 — Fluency Development

Moving from competence to genuine fluency — natural, confident Arabic speech.

Covered:

Unit 10 — Quranic Arabic Mastery

At the advanced level, students develop the ability to read the Quran and understand it directly in Arabic — without translation assistance.

Covered:

Unit 11 — Islamic Scholarship Arabic

For students who want to access the great works of Islamic knowledge directly — in the language they were written.

Covered:

WHO IS THIS COURSE FOR?

Children from age 5

Our youngest Arabic learners begin with sounds, simple vocabulary, and Arabic songs and rhymes taught by patient, engaging native tutors

School-age children (ages 6–12)

The prime age for language acquisition; children who begin Arabic at this age develop near-native fluency naturally

Teenagers

Building Arabic for Quranic understanding, Islamic scholarship access, and cultural connection

Adults

Never too late; adults who commit to consistent classes achieve conversational Arabic within 12–18 months

Hafiz students

Understanding Arabic massively deepens memorisation, retention, and spiritual connection to the Quran

Islamic studies students

Arabic is the key that eventually unlocks the entire library of Islamic scholarship

How Long Does the Hifz Course Take?

The duration of the Noorani Qaida course varies based on the student’s age, starting level, and frequency of classes. Here is a general guide:
Level Classes Per Week Estimated Duration
Beginner (Levels 1–2) 3 per week 8 – 12 months
Intermediate (Levels 3–4) 3 per week 10 – 14 months
Advanced (Levels 5–6) 3 per week 12 – 18 months
Complete journey (all 6 levels) 3 per week 2.5 – 4 years

Class Duration

45 minutes per session (standard) or 60 minutes (available on request)

Scheduling

Classes are available 7 days a week across all major time zones — morning, afternoon, and evening. You choose the time that works for your family.

Real Families. Real Results. Real Quran.

1,000+ Students Enrolled · 50+ Certified Tutors · 15+ Countries · 5 ★ Average Rating
“My daughter started Arabic Language at age 7. Now at 10, she holds simple conversations with her Egyptian grandmother for the first time in her life. The joy on both their faces on that first phone call — I cannot describe it. This course gave them each other.”

Umm Zainab, Mother of 10-year-old

London, UK

“I started learning Arabic at 38 because I wanted to understand the Quran directly. My tutor is extraordinary — patient, encouraging, and gifted at making Arabic feel natural rather than academic. Eighteen months later I understand Juz Amma without translation. Alhamdulillah.”

Brother Khalid, Adult student

Toronto, Canada

“My son is memorising Quran and enrolled in Arabic Language simultaneously. His tutor told me his memorisation speed has doubled — because he understands what he’s memorising. They are no longer just sounds. They are words with meaning. Everything has accelerated.”

Sister Fatima, Mother of 12-year-old

Houston, USA

Frequently Asked Questions —Advanced Tajweed Course

What is the best age to start learning Arabic?
The earlier, the better. Children between ages 5 and 12 are in the prime language acquisition window — their brains absorb languages naturally and rapidly during this period, often achieving near-native fluency with consistent exposure. However, teenagers and adults can also achieve strong conversational and Quranic Arabic proficiency with regular study. We have successful students at every age.
Quranic Arabic (Classical Arabic) is the language of the Holy Quran, Hadith, and classical Islamic scholarship — characterised by a rich vocabulary, specific grammatical forms, and a literary style unlike spoken dialects. Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) is the formal Arabic used in education, media, and cross-regional communication today. Al-Huda’s course teaches both in an integrated curriculum, as both are valuable for Muslim students.
No — beginners who cannot read Arabic can still begin the Arabic Language course, as the initial focus is on sounds and speaking. However, learning to read Arabic (covered in the Arabic Reading course) is strongly recommended in parallel, as it significantly accelerates language learning.
The Arabic Language course focuses on speaking, listening, vocabulary, and conversational Arabic. The Arabic Reading course focuses on reading Arabic script — recognising letter forms, connected words, and building reading fluency. The Arabic Grammar course covers Nahw (syntax) and Sarf (morphology) — the structural rules that underpin the Arabic language. All three courses complement each other and can be studied simultaneously or sequentially.
For conversational Arabic, most students achieve a functional level within 12–18 months of consistent classes (3 per week). For Quranic Arabic comprehension — understanding the Quran directly — most students achieve significant comprehension within 18–24 months. Full fluency is a 3–5 year journey for non-native speakers, but every stage of the journey brings its own reward.
Dramatically. The Quran uses approximately 1,700 unique root words — and a student who builds systematic Arabic vocabulary will find that understanding the Quran shifts from impossible to natural within 12–18 months of study. Many parents report their child’s relationship with the Quran changing fundamentally once Arabic vocabulary begins to grow.
Absolutely. Adults are disciplined, motivated learners who often progress quickly despite starting later. Our adult Arabic students frequently report achieving conversational ability within 12–18 months. The key is consistency — regular classes, regular practice, and a patient certified native tutor.
Yes — completely free, no credit card, no obligation. The trial is a full 30–45 minute live session with a certified native Arabic tutor, including a level assessment and a sample lesson to demonstrate the teaching approach.

Give Your Child the Language of the Quran. The Language of Jannah. The Language of Their Identity.

The Prophet ﷺ said: “Learn Arabic — for it is part of your deen.” It is the language in which Allah chose to speak to humanity. The language in which the Quran was revealed, in which the Prophet ﷺ taught, in which the Companions worshipped. It is not just a foreign language — it is the language of your child’s deepest identity as a Muslim.