ARABIC LANGUAGE - A VIEW
Semitic language is a family language. It is spoken in countries such as the Middle East, North Africa, and East Africa, also known as the Horn of Africa. Today, more than 270 million people worldwide speak the language of this Semitic family. Although many languages are found in this Semitic language family, most of them are extinct today due to their absence from the dialect. Today the only surviving languages in the Semitic language family are Amharic, Hebrew, Tigrinya, and Aramaic, and Arabic is still a surviving Semitic family language.
The Arabic language dates back to AD. It is a minority language spoken by nomadic tribes living in the Arabian Peninsula in the early sixth century. The Arabic language was not found to have an influential language lineage in the early days. With the rise of Islam in the Arabian Peninsula, the traditions, culture and customs of the peoples of the Middle East, which until then had been a dark age, developed internationally. In particular, Arabic, the spoken language of the Middle Eastern people, was adopted as an international language.
Furthermore, the Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him)'s prophetic visit to the Arabian Peninsula, as well as the teachings of the Holy Qur'an and the teachings of the Islamic religion, all in Arabic, contributed to the global rise of the Arabic language. Arabic, once spoken by nomadic indigenous peoples, is now one of the official languages of the United Nations and the national language of 26 countries around the world. It is also spoken as a second language in many other countries. And 206 million people today speak Arabic worldwide.
The United Nations, founded in 1945, has six official languages. The six languages are English, Russian, French, Spanish, Chinese and Arabic. All conferences, conferences and publications conducted by the United Nations are published in these six languages.
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