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Easy Amharic

This is a site where you can learn


Amharic easily.
Amharic is easy to learn, but you need to follow the right
strategy. If you really want to learn Amharic, you should
start with the Amharic alphabet first. If you can’t read 
Amharic by yourself, then your learning progress will be 
very slow. So start learning Amharic Fidel. 

After learning Amharic alphabets, learn basic Amharic 


subjective pronouns, which I listed below. Learn also the 
“be verbs, subject-verb agreements and Amharic Tenses.” 
If you learn the Amharic subjective pronouns and be
verbs, communicating with Amharic speakers won’t be ⋯

difficult for you. »


After you can read and pronounce the Amharic Fidel and
words correctly, you can now dive into the Amharic daily
phrases and conversations. You can find here spoken
Amharic lessons.
After you learn all the things I listed above, you can also
learn Amharic conversation more easily.
Now start talking to people using the Amharic you have
learned so far. If you don’t use the Amharic you know, it
will quickly disappear from your mind and become more
complicated. Don’t forget that you have to step out of
your comfort zone to master new skills.
You can practice the Amharic you have learned in my
Telegram group. You can ask me any question you want
there. You can also join platforms like HelloTalk, iTalki,
WeChat, Facebook groups, etc. to meet people and
practice Amharic.
If you want to learn Amharic properly, do as I told you.
You will get results faster. If you can memorize,
pronounce, and write Amharic Fidel correctly, it will not be
difficult for you to listen to and speak Amharic.
You know why Amharic is easy to learn?
1. Because there are no such thing as rules for a letter
and vowels, every letter does not change its sound or
anything here and there. Of course, there is a “ሲጠብቅና
ሲላላ” scenario, or like ሰባ, which means got fatten or ወፈረ,
and 70, which means seventy, but it is very rare and
simple to guess what that means.
2. And the Amharic words are very distinct to read, to
spot at a glimpse of an eye. Look at the Amharic Fidel;
they are very clear to read; “አማርኛ ቀላል ነው።” they are
almost like English spellings.
3. Especially if you learn how to read the Amharic Fidel
first, the basic Amharic words, the Amharic conversations,
and the basic Amharic grammar rules like Amharic subject
and verb agreement, it will be very easy for you to
progress in Amharic quickly.
4. If you also know another semantic language, like
Tigrinya, that is another advantage. Amharic will be the
easiest language for you because the Fidel is the same.
Just keep trying to immerse yourself, speak it to others,
and listen to Amharic media, and you’ll see how much
you’ll improve. Also, if you don’t know a word, ask. Asking
makes you fool for five minutes only, but not asking
makes you fool for your entire life. So, be careful not to
hesitate to ask.
Maybe the one hard thing about Amharic is how fast
people talk. Because Amharic is a very flexible language
like English, a person whose tongue twists easily speaks it
very quickly. And you know what? If you are a fast English
speaker, you can speak Amharic at that same pace too.
Amharic has its own distinctive letters, like English, and
they are easy to learn.
Amharic sentences follow a subject–object–verb
pattern.
Example: እኔ አማርኛ እየተማርኩ ነው። (Ene Amaragna
eyetemarku new.)
English usually follows a subject–verb–object
pattern.
Example: I am learning Amharic.
Nouns in Amharic can be either singular or plural, just like
in English.
ቤት (Bet) = ቤቶች (betoch)
House = Houses
Amharic has around 12 subjective pronouns.
Amharic Subjective English Subjective
Pronouns Pronouns
እኔ I
እኛ We
አንተ You
አንች You
እናንተ You
እሱ He
እሷ She
እነሱ They
እርስዎ You (respectful)
አንቱ You (respectful)
እንትን A forgotten name

When people are talking and want to name something but


are at a loss for the name, they use the word “እንትን.” It’s
like saying “hmm” in English.
There are 33 consonant letters in Amharic, all of which
have 6 vowel letters. Vowels are symbols that follow the
consonants, or some of them change the shape of the
consonants.
Amharic text is written from left to right, which is also the
same as English.
Similar to English, Amharic has a verb tense system as
well.

Please help me.


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from this site. I think you know how difficult life in Ethiopia
is. I would appreciate it if you could help me. Even a small
donation will help me keep up with my work. Thank you

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