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When making plans, appointments, and travel arrangements in Arabic-speaking countries, you need to be able to state dates and other calendar terms in Arabic. Understanding the days of the week, the months of the year, and how to tell time in Arabic can help you to avoid confusion.
Calendar terms
In Arabic, the week always starts on Sunday and the names of the days of the week are based (mostly) on numbers.  we can add prefix like Yawm" the day of ....
 al-aHad (Sunday)
al-ithnayn (Monday)
ath-thulaathaa' (Tuesday)
al-arbi'aa' (Wednesday)
al-khamiis (Thursday)
al-jum'a (Friday)
as-sabt (Saturday)
When using the names of the days in conversation, the word yawm(day) is often dropped.
Other terms used to describe days in more general terms include
al-yawm (today)
ams (yesterday)
ghadan (tomorrow)
taariikh (date)
The Arab world uses three different systems for the names of the months. The two most common ones are one based on the French months (used commonly in North Africa) and one that is used in the Fertile Crescent area (Syria, Iraq, and Jordan).
North AfricanFertile CrescentEnglishyanaayir kaanuun ath-thaanii January fabraayir shubaaT February maaris aadhaar March abriil niisaan April maayuu ayyaar May yuuniyuu Haziiraan June yuuliyuu tammuuz July aghusTus aab August sibtambir ayluul September uktuubir tishriin al-awwal October nuufimbir tishriin ath-thaanii November diisambir kaanuun al-awwal December
The last system is based on the Islamic calendar, which is a lunar calendar and doesn't correspond to the months used in our calendar.
Telling time
The time of day can be described in general terms or specific times. The following words can be used to describe the general time of day.
SabaaH (morning)
DHuhr (noon)
ba'd-aDH-DHuhr (afternoon)
masaa' (evening)
layl (nighttime)
nahaar (daytime)
When you want to know a specific time of day, you can ask as-saa'a kam?(What time is it?). Remember that time expressions use ordinal (first, second, and so on) numbers rather than cardinal numbers (one, two, and so on), such as the following:
as-saa'a al-waaHida (one o'clock)
as-saa'a ath-thaaniya (two o'clock)
as-saa'a ath-thaalitha (three o'clock)
as-saa'a ar-raabi'a (four o'clock)
as-saa'a al-khaamisa (five o'clock)
as-saa'a as-saadisa (six o'clock)
as-saa'a as-saabi'a (seven o'clock)
as-saa'a ath-thaamina (eight o'clock)
as-saa'a at-taasi'a (nine o'clock)
as-saa'a al-'aashira (ten o'clock)
as-saa'a al-Haadiya 'ashra (eleven o'clock)
as-saa'a ath-thaaniya 'ashra (twelve o'clock)
When expressing time between the hours, use the following terms to break things down.
saa'(hour/time/clock/watch)
daqiiqa (minute)
thaaniya (second)
nuSf (half)
rub' (quarter)
thulth (third [20 minutes])
To give a specific time, you would state the hour and then add the minutes, quarters, etc. to the end of the phrase, as in the following examples.
as-saa'a ar-raabi'a illaa rub' (quarter 'til four)
as-saa'a al-waaHida wa nuSf fii-SabaaH (1:30 a.m.)
as-saa'a as-saabi'a wa rub'fii-l-masaa' (7:15 p.m.)

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