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Dictionary and grammar

Understand the whole Arabic sentence, not only one translation

Fasaha keeps the word, its root and pattern, and the sentence around it in one place. You get the depth you need, then return to reading instead of rebuilding the context in another tool.

Tap any Arabic word for meaning, audio, root, pattern, and examples
Open sentence analysis when the grammar carries the meaning
Stay with the page, subtitle, or line that made you curious
Why this works

Open sentence analysis when the grammar carries the meaning

Understand Arabic words and sentences with instant lookups, roots, patterns, grammar, and context without leaving what you are reading in Fasaha.

A word makes sense inside its sentence

A translation list can suggest a meaning. The surrounding sentence tells you which meaning is active and what the word is doing there.

Arabic structure becomes visible

Roots, patterns, forms, and grammar stop feeling like separate theory when they are attached to the word you just met.

Lookup should return you to Arabic

The useful tool is the one that answers the question and gives the sentence back. Fasaha keeps lookup beside reading, listening, and review.

How to use it in Fasaha
  1. 1

    Open the Arabic you want to understand

    Start in a Fasaha story, transcript, article, dictionary search, or another supported Arabic surface.

  2. 2

    Tap the word that blocks the sentence

    Check the meaning, pronunciation, root, pattern, and examples without leaving the original line.

  3. 3

    Use sentence analysis for the relationship

    When separate word meanings are not enough, inspect the sentence structure, roles, and context together.

  4. 4

    Save only what you want to meet again

    Keep the useful word or line for later review, then return to the Arabic while the context is still alive.

Common questions

Is this only an Arabic-to-English dictionary?

No. Fasaha connects meaning with pronunciation, roots, patterns, examples, sentence structure, and your chosen interface language.

Do I need to know Arabic grammar first?

No. You can begin with the meaning and reveal more structure only when it helps. The analysis is support for reading, not an entrance exam.

Why not copy every sentence into a separate translator?

A separate tool breaks the reading loop and often flattens the sentence into one answer. Fasaha keeps the word and analysis attached to the source context.

Intent guides

More ways to learn with Fasaha

These landing pages are built for clear search intent, clean indexing, and fast decision-making. Each one explains a real Fasaha workflow instead of repeating the homepage.

Learn Arabic with subtitles

Use interactive Arabic subtitles, transcripts, and tap-to-learn lookups to turn native media into daily study with Fasaha.

Learn Arabic with subtitles

Arabic podcast learning

Learn Arabic through podcasts with repeatable listening, transcript support, speaking follow-up, and review loops inside Fasaha.

Arabic podcast learning

Arabic reading by level

Read Arabic by level from A0 to C2 with native audio, tap-to-learn depth, and a progression that keeps input challenging but readable.

Arabic reading by level

Keep the sentence. Leave the tool switching behind.

Fasaha is available on the App Store and Google Play. Start with the Arabic you already want to understand.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play