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Fish, Milk, Tamarind
Regular price $19.95 Save $-19.95GOURMAND AWARD WINNER 2023, BEST ILLUSTRATED
A delightfully illustrated selection of 100 commonly used Egyptian food expressions
Can you guess what Egyptians mean when they say that something is “a peeled banana” or that someone is “sleeping in honey” or has "turned the sea to tahini"? You may find the answers quite unexpected when you open the pages of this delightful giftbook featuring some one hundred popular food-inflected phrases and sayings used by native speakers of Egyptian Arabic.
Idiomatic expressions lend color, dynamism, and humor to everyday speech, and convey complex ideas and beliefs with an economy of words that also tell us something about the culture from which they spring. Each expression in Fish, Milk, Tamarind is given in Arabic script and English transliteration followed by its literal and intended meanings, while humorous color illustrations throughout help readers visualize and remember the expressions. Learners and native speakers of Arabic, as well as Egypt enthusiasts and language lovers will find much in this book to teach, entertain, and enthrall them.

Blowing on Yogurt and Other Egyptian Arabic Expressions
Regular price $18.95 Save $-18.95The idioms in this small, yet mighty, linguistic treasure trove have been put together to showcase the use of the Egyptian word illi, in itself a fascinating anomaly of the language as the only relative pronoun that exists in this dialect. Organized around their day-to-day linguistic function, each expression includes the original Arabic, a translation, an English equivalent or explanation, as well as whimsical illustrations.
This book covers a wide array of meanings and contexts—packed full of expressions that will console, threaten, encourage, and much more—and is sure to entertain and inform both lovers of language and Egypt enthusiasts.

Challenges in Teaching Arabic as a Foreign Language
Regular price $70.00 Save $-70.00An essential collection of empirical studies on the TAFL (teaching Arabic as a foreign language) classroom experience, by leading professionals in the field
Although teaching Arabic as a foreign language (TAFL) has grown inexorably in recent decades, there is a dearth of empirical research on the TAFL classroom experience. In this insightful volume, Dalal Abo El Seoud brings together up-to-date practice-based research and conceptual contributions by eighteen professionals in the field. These address a wide range of challenges in teaching Arabic as a foreign language and ways of overcoming them with a clear eye to twenty-first-century language-learning skills, which advocate communication, collaboration, critical thinking, and creativity.
The chapters address curriculum design, teaching Arabic to non-English speakers, trends in the use of technology, motivating students, teaching Arabic language varieties, and teaching language skills. This volume will be an invaluable resource for teachers and teachers in training of TAFL and for scholars and researchers in the field.
Contributors:
Dalal Abo El Seoud, The American University in Cairo, Cairo, Egypt
Hagar Lotfy Amer, The American University in Cairo, Cairo, Egypt
Wael M. Asfour, independent scholar, Cairo, Egypt
Mona Azzam, State University of New York at Binghamton, New York, USA
Mahmoud Al-Batal, The American University of Beirut, Beirut, Lebanon
Nino Ejibadze, Tbilisi State University, Tbilisi, Georgia
Shereen Y. El Ezabi, The American University in Cairo, Cairo, Egypt
Mohamed Ibrahim, Kafrelsheikh University, Kafr al-Sheikh, Egypt
Mimi Melkonian, Brunswick School, Greenwich, Connecticut, USA
Haitham S. Mohamed, University of California, Berkeley, Berkely, California, USA
Joanna Natalia Murkocinska, Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, Poland.
Heba Salem, The American University in Cairo, Cairo, Egypt
Mohamed Sawaie, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA
Laila Al-Sawi, The American University in Cairo, Cairo, Egypt
Paweł Siwiec, Jagiellonian University, Cracow, Poland
Iman Aziz Soliman, The American University in Cairo, Cairo, Egypt
Przemysław Turek, Jagiellonian University, Cracow, Poland
Shahira Yacout, The American University in Cairo, Cairo, Egypt
