theprestige
Penultimate Amazing
While true... 'Allahu akbar' is stil Arabic, even when written in the Latin alphabet. It doesn't suddenly turn ino English (which would be God/Allah is greater/the greatest). So, while English doesn't (generally) have the guttural 'kh' sound, and in English 'k' and 'kh' would both be pronounced as 'k'... we're talking about Arabic here, and there are rules/guidelines for transliteration.
So no, even though Dawkins speaks English, and English is written in the Latin alphabet, and it's possible to write Arabic with the same alphabet as English, akbar is not the same as akhbar.
They're semantically identical. In spoken English, they're even vocally identical.
It's like those people who refuse to have a conversation about Genghis Khan, because nobody by that name ever existed. Chingis Khan, on the other hand, was totally a real historical figure. Or the whole, "it's not Bombay, it's Mumbai!" thing.
Potato, potato.