5/5 rating based on 51 reviews. Read all reviews for Learn Arabic - Free WordPower for iPhone.
Learn Arabic - Free WordPower is free iOS app published by Innovative Language Learning USA LLC
nadinakz
It doesn't work. There is no sound and the word bank is empty. Would be nice to have instructions as well. Didn't get the point of the app. Very poor.
Ajunaleigh
Complete waste of time. I only get 1 word - silver. What kind of junk is this?? Do NOT get!!
SugarFoot790
But it gives you access to lots of words. It gives you the pronunciation and you can save it to practice later. Awesome.
Urdu Guru
I downloaded this twice just to get to work. The app does practically nothing. Maybe I am too stupid to figure it out. The next and previous buttons do nothing. There is no info on what you are even supposed to do with the app. It's free but don't waste your time or hard drive space. Total Arabic crap.
RamboCat1
Are you complaining about a free app? I learned 100 words at no cost. Good enough for me
MzzRah
I am a first time Arabic language learner. This product has complimented my learning in so many ways I had not expected. I get to know new Arabic words almost everyday. It's a great all round product starting with the pronunciation, writing words both in Arabic and in English. I would certainly recommend it to anyone who has a desire to learn Arabic. Kassim Kano USA
Tony Z (توني)
I have been teaching myself Egyptian Arabic for the last few years using audio CDs. This product has been a nice complement to those other resources in terms of vocabulary and Arabic script. However, the vocabulary and pronunciation of the dialect in these lessons seems quite different from Cairene Egyptian Arabic as spoken on my CDs. There are many dialects of Arabic, and it isn't clear which one this is.
Jrp jrp
I get a word everyday. Love to look through and practice. Wish I did more often.
Todd J Holmes
Northern Egyptians pronounce ج as /g/ and not /j/. I have not once heard /g/. Also at times some words are not common in Egypt and are more Shamy or other dialects on the Arabian peninsula. At times the word pronounced is not the word written.