Arabic needs more than word–definition pairs
First period on Monday, your Grade 5 class is revising clothes and colors. For Arabic, usable flashcards must respect script, morphology, and school register. A strong deck often includes more than a gloss. At minimum, specify that cards should include:
- Arabic headword in script, with or without diacritics depending on level
- English meaning and part of speech
- Plural or feminine/masculine form when it matters (قميص/قمصان; كبير/كبيرة)
- Root letters and, for verbs, the form (كتب؛ Form I كتبَ/يكتبُ)
- One short MSA example sentence that shows typical collocation
Ask the tool to avoid dialect unless you request it, and to keep sentences between 6–10 words for younger readers. This structure turns “shirt = shirt” into a card that can anchor real practice: reading aloud, identifying the root, and producing the plural. To see how this feels in practice, open the generator demo and draft five cards from your current unit before you build the full set. ClassPods will give you a quick first pass you can shape into a reliable deck.