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Essential Middle Eastern Vocabularies Series Editor: Elisabeth Kendall Essential Middle Eastern Vocabularies give you up-to-date expressions, jargon and new coinages to express modern concepts across broad areas of interest such as the media, the internet, law and business. Key Features - Terms grouped in thematic sections - Easy-to-learn lists to test translation - Online audio material to check your pronunciation - Index Diplomacy Arabic Elisabeth Kendall and Yehia A. Mohamed What is the word for 'peacebuilding' in Arabic? How would you translate 'multilateral negotiations'? This short,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Essential Middle Eastern Vocabularies Series Editor: Elisabeth Kendall Essential Middle Eastern Vocabularies give you up-to-date expressions, jargon and new coinages to express modern concepts across broad areas of interest such as the media, the internet, law and business. Key Features - Terms grouped in thematic sections - Easy-to-learn lists to test translation - Online audio material to check your pronunciation - Index Diplomacy Arabic Elisabeth Kendall and Yehia A. Mohamed What is the word for 'peacebuilding' in Arabic? How would you translate 'multilateral negotiations'? This short, accessible vocabulary gives you ready-made lists of 1,300+ Arabic expressions, terms and idioms in 10 key areas of diplomatic discourse: - General - Concepts & Practices - Diplomatic Service & Protocol - Organisations - Elections & Government - Negotiations - Treaties & Agreements - Conflict Resolution & Defence - Civil Society & Human Rights - Globalisation & Economic Development Elisabeth Kendall is Senior Research Fellow in Arabic and Islamic Studies at Pembroke College, Oxford University. Yehia A. Mohamed is an Associate Professor of Arabic at Georgetown University in Qatar.
Autorenporträt
Elisabeth Kendall is Senior Research Fellow in Arabic and Islamic Studies at Pembroke College, Oxford University. Previously, she held positions at the Universities of Edinburgh and Harvard, as well as serving as Director of a UK government sponsored Center focused on building Arabic-based research expertise. Her current research examines how militant jihad groups exploit traditional local Arab cultures. She has lectured at government and academic institutions all around the world. Yehia A. Mohamed is an Associate Professor of Arabic at Georgetown University in Qatar. He earned his Ph.D. (2008) in Arabic and Semitic Studies from Cairo University. He has served as a lecturer in Arabic programs at the George Washington University, the Middle East Institute, Johns Hopkins University, the University of Maryland, and Georgetown University's Main Campus in Washington DC. He has developed courses and taught numerous instructional Arabic skill-based and content-based classes, as well as conducting proficiency and assessment exams. Yehia A. Mohamed is an Associate Professor of Arabic at Georgetown University in Qatar. He earned his Ph.D. (2008) in Arabic and Semitic Studies from Cairo University. He has served as a lecturer in Arabic programs at the George Washington University, the Middle East Institute, Johns Hopkins University, the University of Maryland, and Georgetown University's Main Campus in Washington DC. He has developed courses and taught numerous instructional Arabic skill-based and content-based classes, as well as conducting proficiency and assessment exams.