Arabic, Standard
A language of Saudi Arabia
| Population | 206,000,000 L1 speakers of all Arabic varieties (Wiesenfeld 1999). |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. Also in Algeria, Bahrain, Chad, Comoros, Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Oman, Palestinian West Bank and Gaza, Qatar, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Tanzania, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates, Yemen. |
| Alternate names | Al-’Arabiyya, Al-Fusha, Literary Arabic |
| Dialects | Modern Standard Arabic (Modern Literary Arabic), Classical Arabic (Koranic Arabic, Quranic Arabic). Preserves the ancient grammar. |
| Classification | Afro-Asiatic, Semitic, Central, South, Arabic A member of macrolanguage Arabic [ara] (Saudi Arabia). |
| Language use | National language. 246,000,000 L2 speakers of all Arabic varieties (Wiesenfeld 1999). Not a L1. Used for education, official purposes, written materials, and formal speeches. Classical Arabic is used for religion and ceremonial purposes, having archaic vocabulary. Modern Standard Arabic is a modernized variety of Classical Arabic. In most Arab countries only the well-educated have adequate proficiency in Standard Arabic, while over 100,500,000 do not. |
| Language development | Fully developed. Bible: 1984–1991. |
| Writing system | Arabic script. |
| Comments | VSO. |
Also spoken in:
Algeria
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Language use | Official language. Used for written materials, formal speeches. Not a L1 language, but taught in schools. |
Bahrain
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. |
| Language use | National language. Used for education, official purposes. |
Chad
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Language use | Official language. |
Comoros
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Widespread. |
| Language use | Official language. Not a L1. |
Djibouti
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Language use | Official language. |
Egypt
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. |
| Language use | Official language. Not a L1. Used for nearly all written materials and formal speeches. Taught in schools. |
Eritrea
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. |
| Language use | Official language. Some schools. |
Iraq
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. |
| Language use | National language. Used for education, official purposes. |
Israel
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. |
| Language use | National language. Used for education and communication among Arabic-speaking countries. |
Jordan
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. |
| Language use | Official language. Used for education, official purposes, communication among Arabic-speaking countries. Education officials promoting this variety among students. Regional varieties have been used in classrooms, but this is changing. |
Kuwait
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. |
| Language use | Official language. Used for education, official purposes. |
Lebanon
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. |
| Language use | Official language. Used for education, official purposes, communication among Arabic speaking countries. |
Libya
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Language use | National language. Used for nearly all written materials, formal speeches. Not L1, but taught in schools. |
Morocco
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Language use | Official language. Used for education, official purposes, communication among Arabic speaking countries. |
Oman
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. |
| Language use | Official language. Used for education, official purposes, formal speeches. |
Palestinian West Bank and Gaza
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. |
| Language use | National language. Used for education, official purpose, formal speeches. |
Qatar
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. |
| Language use | Official language. Used for education, official purposes, formal speeches. |
Somalia
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Language use | National language. Most Somalis have very limited or no proficiency in Arabic. |
Sudan
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. |
| Language use | Official language. Used for written materials and formal speeches. Not L1, but taught in schools. Little known and used in the Southern Sudan. |
| Comments | Not intelligible with Sudanese Spoken Arabic [apd] or Sudanese Creole Arabic [pga]. |
Syria
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. |
| Language use | Official language. Used for education, official purposes, formal speeches. |
Tanzania
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. |
Tunisia
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Language use | Official language. Used for written materials and formal speeches. Not a L1, but taught in schools. |
United Arab Emirates
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Region | Middle East, North Africa. |
| Language use | Official language. Used for education, official purposes, formal speeches. |
Yemen
| Language name | Arabic, Standard |
| Language use | National language. Used for education, official purposes, formal speeches. |
Entries from the SIL Bibliography about this language:
Academic Publications
Kilpatrick, Eileen. 1978. The use of Arabic in the Krongo Jebels and at Tabanya.
Walter, Stephen L. and others. 2005. Eritrea national reading survey, September 2002.
Vernacular Publications
Modern standard Arabic for southern Sudan: Alphabet book. 1983.
Modern standard Arabic for southern Sudan: Alphabet story book. 1983.

