Quran
Translation
Understand the words of Allah directly — learn word-by-word Arabic Quran translation in English and Urdu, and connect deeply with every verse you recite in prayer and daily life.
Course Overview
What is Quran Translation?
Quran Translation is the study of the meaning of every verse in the Holy Quran. This course teaches you word-by-word Arabic meanings in English and Urdu, so you understand exactly what you are reciting — not just how to read it.
You will build an Arabic vocabulary of over 500 frequently repeated Quranic words, identify grammatical patterns, and develop a genuine connection with the message of the Quran in your own language.
Skills & Outcomes
What You’ll Learn
Complete Course Structure
Course Structure of Quran Translation
- Difference between Quranic Arabic and Modern Arabic
- Three types of words — Ism (noun), Fil (verb), Harf (particle)
- How Arabic sentence structure differs from English
- Right-to-left reading direction and word grouping
- Recognising word types by sight in Quranic text
- Understanding that word order is flexible in Arabic
- Introduction to masculine and feminine nouns
- Identify word types in Surah Al-Fatiha
- Match 20 basic words to their meanings
- Spot nouns and verbs in simple verses
- Top 100 most repeated nouns in the Quran
- Singular and plural forms of key words
- Masculine (Mudhakkar) vs feminine (Muannath) nouns
- Definite article الـ (Al) — “the” in Arabic
- Flashcard drills — Arabic to English
- Find these nouns in Juz Amma verses
- Write meanings without reference
- Independent pronouns — هو (he), هي (she), هم (they), أنت (you)
- Attached pronouns — ـه (his), ـها (her), ـهم (their)
- First person — أنا (I), نحن (We — used for Allah)
- Why Allah uses “We” in the Quran (Royal plural)
- Pronouns attached to nouns change the meaning
- Identifying who is being referred to in each verse
- Understanding “We revealed” vs “He revealed”
- Circle all pronouns in Surah Al-Ikhlas
- Translate 10 short verses using pronoun knowledge
- Top 150 verbs most repeated in the Quran
- Past tense (فِعل ماضي) vs present/future (فِعل مضارع)
- Command form (فِعل أمر) — “Say!”, “Read!”, “Believe!”
- How the subject (doer) is embedded in the verb
- Match 50 verbs to their meanings
- Identify verb tenses in 10 Quranic verses
- Prepositions — في (in), على (on), من (from), إلى (to), مع (with)
- Conjunctions — و (and), فـ (so/then), ثم (then), أو (or)
- Question words — مَن (who), مَا / مَاذا (what), كَيف (how), لِماذا (why)
- Negative particles — لا (no/not), لَن (will not), لَم (did not)
- Particles are tiny but change verse meaning completely
- The word و (wa) connects most Quranic sentences
- Negatives — difference between لا, لن, لم
- Underline all particles in Surah Al-Baqarah (verses 1–10)
- Translate 5 verses using particles learned
- Almost every Arabic word comes from a 3-letter root
- Same root — different forms, related meanings
- Root ك-ت-ب — كَتَبَ (wrote), كِتَاب (book), كَاتِب (writer)
- How to use roots to guess unknown word meanings
- Find all words from root ع-ب-د in the Quran
- Guess meaning of 10 new words using root knowledge
- All 37 Surahs of Juz Amma — verse by verse
- Word-by-word breakdown before full sentence meaning
- Each Surah’s central theme and message
- Connecting themes to practical daily life
- Why the same root appears differently in one Surah
- Understanding repetition as emphasis (e.g. Surah Ar-Rahman)
- Recognising recurring Quranic phrases across Surahs
- Translate 3 Surahs per session independently
- Write Surah summary in own words
- Memorise key phrases with their meanings
- Complete word-by-word translation of Surah Al-Fatiha
- Full meaning of Tashahhud (At-Tahiyyat)
- Duas of Ruku’ — سبحان ربي العظيم and meaning
- Duas of Sajdah — سبحان ربي الأعلى and meaning
- Opening dua (Thana) and Darood Ibrahim meaning
- Understanding prayer as a direct conversation with Allah
- Connecting emotional meaning to physical prayer postures
- Reflecting on meaning during Salah after this module
- Recite Al-Fatiha and state meaning of each word
- Write full Tashahhud with translation from memory
- Ayatul Kursi (2:255) — word by word with grammatical notes
- Last two verses of Surah Al-Baqarah (2:285–286)
- Surah Yaseen — selected passages and full theme
- Surah Al-Mulk — first 10 verses with reflection
- Deeper vocabulary — divine attributes (Sifaat) of Allah
- Understanding conditional sentences — “if you believe…”
- Spotting vocabulary from earlier modules in longer passages
- Translate Ayatul Kursi without assistance
- Write a reflection on the meaning of Surah Al-Mulk
- Translate 3 unseen Quranic verses independently
- Vocabulary test — 100 words to meanings
- Identify word types and roots in a selected passage
- Oral translation of Al-Fatiha word by word
- Official Course Completion Certificate
- Teacher’s personalised evaluation report
- Recommended vocabulary list for continued self-study
- Understand your daily prayers with full meaning
- Follow Quran recitation with comprehension
- Enroll in Quran Tafseer for deeper study
How We Teach
Teaching Approach in Each Module
Every session combines vocabulary building, grammar explanation, and immediate Quranic application.
Every verse is broken into individual Arabic words before the full sentence meaning is discussed — building comprehension piece by piece.
All meanings explained in both English and Urdu to ensure complete clarity. Students choose their preferred explanation language.
Students receive structured weekly flashcard sets of new Quranic words for daily review — 15 minutes of vocabulary practice builds long-term retention.
Grammar rules are never taught in isolation. Every grammatical point is introduced through a real Quranic verse so students see the rule in action immediately.
From Module 5 onwards, students attempt to translate new verses independently before the session — building confidence and self-reliance in understanding the Quran.
Each session ends with a brief reflection — connecting the meaning of the verse to daily life, Salah, and personal spiritual growth.
Who Is This For?
This Course Is Perfect For
You can already read Arabic but want to understand what you’re reciting — this course bridges that gap completely.
Parents who want to explain the meaning of prayers and Quranic verses to their children at home — in a way they themselves fully understand.
Those who pray regularly and want Salah to become a mindful, meaningful conversation with Allah — not just recitation from memory.
Planning to study Tafseer or Quranic Arabic in depth? This course builds the essential vocabulary and grammar foundation you will need.
Course Details
Everything You Need to Know
Ready to Understand
Every Word You Recite?
Have questions about the course, your current level, or where to start? Fill out our contact form and our team will respond within minutes.
