thank you very much for kill and genocide arabs. thank you israel

You sound like an ex-Shah scumbag, you don't represent the Iranian people.
Iran was invaded by Arab savages and they forced their religion, culture, and language down the throats of the Iranian people. Unfortunately for you, that will not happen to Israel.
Iran was invaded by Sunni Arabs, Iran is Shia. You are anti-Iran, anti-secular Syria and pro-ISIS/Al Qaeda insurgency.
Iran was invaded by Arab Muslims. Arabs changed Iran's alphabet, culture, language, and religion. Arab Muslim animals raped and massacred Iranian Zorosastrians and other minorities. And they are still doing it today. You have a problem with facts.
Wow, do you need to read up on Iranian history. Yes, Arabs conquered Iran and eventually Iranians converted to Islam, but they retained their language and culture throughout; they were never "Arabized". Modern Iranians speak Farsi not Arabic, the alphabet is
based on the Arabic one but is uniquely Iranian in character. If anything, Persia conquered the Arabs culturally. Shia Islam only took root in the 16th century under the Safavids.
No actually, Arabs invaded and then raped, looted, and killed Iranians, and then they forced their culture, religion, and language down their throats. This is what Arab Muslims did. Face it and move on.
Persian alphabet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The
Persian alphabet (
Persian: الفبای فارسی
alefbā-ye fārsi) or
Perso-Arabic script is a
writing system based on the
Arabic script and used for the Persian language. It has four letters more than Arabic: پ [
p], چ [
t͡ʃ], ژ [
ʒ], and گ [
ɡ].
The Perso-Arabic script is an
abjad and is exclusively written
cursively. That is, the majority of the letters in a word connect to each other. This is also implemented on computers. Whenever the Perso-Arabic script is typed, the computer auto-connects the letters to each other. Unconnected letters are not widely accepted. In Perso-Arabic, as with Arabic, words are written from right to left.
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Nothing like it was before the Arab invasion:
Ancient Scripts: Pahlavi
The Pahlavi script was used to record the Pahlavi or Middle Persian language that was spoken in pre-Islamic Iran between 3rd century BCE and 9th century CE. Pahlavi evolved from the
Aramaic, and so it retained the right-to-left writing direction. However, the Aramaic script was suited to write a Semitic language, and therefore introduced difficulties in representing the Persian language. One problem was that Middle Persian had more consonants then Aramaic, and the solution to which was to use some of the letters to represent multiple sounds. Another difficulty was to need to represent vowels. In this case, the old Aramaic letters of
'aleph was used to write the vowel /a/. A more complicated scenario involved the letters
yod, which was used to write the semi-vowel /y/ as well as the vowels /i/ and /e/. Similarly, the Aramaic letter
waw was used for /w/, /u/, /o/, and sometimes the consonant /v/.
There were several forms of Pahlavi as it evolved through time. The most notable variants are those from the Arsacid (256 BCE to 226 CE) and the Sassanian (226 to 652 CE) dynasties, which might had actually represented slightly different dialects. Also, a more cursive variant was also used for writing on papers and manuscripts. Unfortunately, many letters in the cursive script grew to be visually similar (if not identical), making the script even more complicated.