Ultimatelyit's down to the publishers/copyrightholders to make their content available to Apple for them to sell in a particular country and/or language - without them granting Apple licenses to sell their content, Apple can't sell it.
thank you , but i think that Apple doesn't support arabic books ! because there is hundreds of publishers and copyrightholders for arabic books , so i think that Apple doesn't support or contract with arabian publishers !
Hi guys,
I made a search and I found some Arabic books on iBooks. You can search: ويكيليكس or by the publisher's name: OWNI and you'll find the book I'm talking about.
In the beginning I thought the text is posted as pictures -since iBooks doesn't support Arabic- but it's all written as a text that you can select and highlight with all the features that English books have -except the dictionary-.
Does iBooks support Arabic? I don't know, but apparently, you can publish in Arabic
Thanks,
Abdullah.
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Attached is a picture of a typical book that is written in the style i want to copy. The page is split into three sections: the section at the top is the text itself, underneath is the commentary, and at the bottom is the footnote. The dotted line on the top section is to show that the sentence continues to the next page. in the second section the red part in brackets is the original text, and the part in the fancy brackets and different font is Quran.
I want to copy the entire style of these books, including the fonts (which i believe is either amiri or scheherazade, and including amiri-quran for the quran quotes), the lines, page numbers and chapter names in arabic etc.
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I have written at least twice about book banning this week, as the Kuwait Book Fair bannings have been strongly protested by Egyptian writers and publishers, as well as by Arabic Booker-winning author Abdo Khal, who has refused to appear at the Kuwaiti fair.
Of course, great books have been banned my neck of the woods. The Cairo Book Fair has disallowed novels by great authors such as Haidar Haidar, Mohamed Choukri, Hanan al-Shaykh, Elias Khoury. Some Egyptian goofs had the idea to ban 1,001 Nights, although they failed. Both social and government censorship are real, serious problems.
Banned works thus include the novels of the great Elias Khoury (published in Lebanon), as well as translations of Harry Potter, Shakespeare, and others, where rights are held by Lebanese publishing houses. (Correction: I had previously added Gabriel Garcia Marquez to this list, but apparently no Arab publishing house yet has the rights to Marquez.) A cursory scan of the Arabic Booker shortlists shows most were published in Lebanon.
A bill was introduced in 2009 that would allowed the import of books from any country into Israel. However, I have not been able to find mention of whether the bill passed, or whether any changes have occurred.
Ultimately I think that with freedom comes responsibility. Libraries should always stand for freedom of access, but they should also shoulder the responsibility for teaching others how to evaluate that information and help them determine what is valuable and relevant.
I loved how the book is not bogged down with all of the Arabic terms so I can focus on understanding the concepts first. I also love how there is a glossary of Arabic terms at the end of each chapter so that whenever I am ready to become more advanced in the language, I can always go back to these as a reference.
I totally recommend the entire set of books to anyone who is thinking about learning Arabic. The workbook and the vocabulary book go hand-in-hand with the textbook and are seamlessly integrated. The exercise book reinforces the grammar and the vocab learned in each chapter. This book is great for beginners and for anyone who wants to really solidify their Arabic.
May Allah hugely bless the two sisters in both worlds for such an amazing work done ???the books is simple straight to the point and makes learning Arabic incredibly addictive because of how the books are simplified
Recently I went to Kedah a northern state in the Peninsular Malaysia on my holidays trip. It was a planned trip, a coincidence with my staff wedding reception. My wife was so excited about the trip, not so much because we had a good break and quality time together but because such trip offer her another opportunity to look for her favourite books. My wife has passion for Arabic Books.
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