Nobody invented Arabic or otherwise any natural language known to man (English, Turkish, etc...)
Languages evolve in human societies over long periods of time. One language would produce multiple languages over hundreds of years. So most languages today are evolutions of "mother" languages. For example French, Spanish, Italian, Romanian and Portuguese all evolved from Latin.
Linguistically speaking, Arabic evolved from the Semitic branch of Afro-Asiatic languages. For comparison, English evolved from the Germanic branch of Indo-European languages.
Arabic is a language that has evolved over centuries and does not have a single inventor. It developed from the language of the Quraysh tribe in the Arabian Peninsula and was standardized by the 4th century CE.
Greek is considered older than Arabic, as the earliest written records in Greek date back to around the 8th century BCE, while the earliest known Arabic inscriptions date to the 4th century CE.
"Man" in Arabic is "ุฑุฌู" (rajul) and "woman" is "ุงู ุฑุฃุฉ" (imra'a).
All 22 Arabic League Countries have Arabic as an official language and almost the entire population of each of those countries speaks some dialect of Arabic with excepting immigrants from other areas of the world.
To type Arabic in PowerPoint, you can change the language settings to Arabic by going to the "Review" tab, selecting "Language" and then choosing "Set Proofing Language." Once Arabic is selected, you can start typing in Arabic using an Arabic keyboard layout. Alternatively, you can enable the on-screen keyboard to type in Arabic characters.
"Ahlam" means "dreams" in Arabic.
Hindu Arabic numeral system was invented by Indian mathematicians.
me
hindume
Aryabhatta
Yahrab ibn
the question is not when it was invented but if it ever was invented in the first place...
A long time ago
About 500 CE
They were invented in India and brought to Europe by Arabs.
History shows that it was an Arabic idea.
Sometime in the 1st - 4th century
the arabic numbers were invented in the 10th centuary and replaced roman numerals in the 14th centuary