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About the Author

Works by Hans Wehr

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Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Wehr, Hans
Birthdate
1909-07-05
Date of death
1981-05-24
Gender
male
Organizations
University of Münster (1957-1974)
Nationality
Germany
Birthplace
Leipzig, Germany
Place of death
Münster, Germany
Associated Place (for map)
Germany

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Reviews

13 reviews
The root-based system makes it very difficult for beginners to use, obviously. I would add that if you want to speak Arabic (and not just read it), you should be aware that this book will not offer you much help.

Because of the history of publishing and scholarship in the Arab world, there seem to be some Egypt-centric tendencies in the book as well.

I would only recommend this book to people who are studying Standard Arabic for purposes of scholarship, religious or historical study, or work show more in media. Unfortunately if you want to speak and converse in Arabic like an Arab, you may need any number of other dictionaries. As far as I know are published dictionaries in Egyptian, Yemeni, Gulf, Syrian and other dialects.

I would add that in many ways, this monstrous tome is merely a (partly) modernized abridgement of Lane’s lexicon, which gives many more variant forms, including vowel variants and epenthetic forms. Wehr has chosen some of these and, prescriptively, in favor of a more Egyptian understanding of Arabic, scrapped others. For instance, for “a fifth,” Lane has khums and khumus; Wehr keeps only the first form. For others, though, like ‘ear’, Wehr follows Lane in including both udhn and udhun. It seems that Wehr was following the lead of prescriptivist Arabs to help construct a coherent, sanitized Arabic.
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If you're studying Arabic at anything beyond the beginning level, you need to have Hans Wehr. Invaluable for translating news articles, essays, etc. The organization of the entries - 'Arabic style' alphabetical by roots, rather than by 'spelling,' as an English-speaker might expect - is somewhat challenging at first but eventually it helps you to better understand how words are related to each other and how the Arabic language constructs meaning by manipulating roots.
Absolutely critical dictionary for any serious study of the Arabic language. I am on my third copy of the book after wearing out the first two copies. Yes it requires practice to learn to use the dictionary but I find it invaluable for translating Arabic media and websites.
This is one of the definitive Arabic-English dictionaries and certainly served me well when I was studying that beautiful but difficult language.
½

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Statistics

Works
10
Members
790
Popularity
#32,236
Rating
½ 4.4
Reviews
13
ISBNs
19
Languages
2
Favorited
2

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