‘Towards a Sociohistorical Reconstruction of Pre-Islamic Arabic Dialect Diversity’
Author: Alexander Magidow
Date: 2013
Institution: University of Texas at Austin
Subject: Linguistics
Abstract:
This dissertation establishes a framework for a reconstruction of the Arabic dialects that existed immediately prior to the Islamic conquests and tests that framework with a reconstruction based on the demonstrative pronouns and adjectives used in over sixty modern spoken dialects of Arabic dialects. The dissertation develops a framework, drawing on work in sociolinguistics, in which the unit of reconstruction is the speech community rather than the 'language' or 'dialect.' Speech communities are defined as...
Date: 2013
Institution: University of Texas at Austin
Subject: Linguistics
Abstract:
This dissertation establishes a framework for a reconstruction of the Arabic dialects that existed immediately prior to the Islamic conquests and tests that framework with a reconstruction based on the demonstrative pronouns and adjectives used in over sixty modern spoken dialects of Arabic dialects. The dissertation develops a framework, drawing on work in sociolinguistics, in which the unit of reconstruction is the speech community rather than the 'language' or 'dialect.' Speech communities are defined as...
“A Study of the “ghous” in Morocco”
Author: Nasser Berjaoui
Date: 1999
Institution: Chouaib Doukkali University
Subject: Linguistics
Abstract:
This dissertation, fully based on an extensive fieldwork of eight years, presents the rules of the Moroccan Arabic 'ghous' (a Secret Language) of the Tafilalet (South-east of Morocco) in four parts. The first part shows that the Tafilalet 'ghous' comprises four multi-faceted types, namely the Substitution-Pseudo-Suffixation, the Substitution, the Restructuration and the Inversion types, and that the variables of localization, communities, age and sex characterize each type. The second part discusses the rules in the...
Date: 1999
Institution: Chouaib Doukkali University
Subject: Linguistics
Abstract:
This dissertation, fully based on an extensive fieldwork of eight years, presents the rules of the Moroccan Arabic 'ghous' (a Secret Language) of the Tafilalet (South-east of Morocco) in four parts. The first part shows that the Tafilalet 'ghous' comprises four multi-faceted types, namely the Substitution-Pseudo-Suffixation, the Substitution, the Restructuration and the Inversion types, and that the variables of localization, communities, age and sex characterize each type. The second part discusses the rules in the...
A Contrastive Study of Middle and Inchoative Alternations in Arabic and English
Author: Abduljawad T. Mahmoud
Date: 1989
Institution: Abduljawad T. Mahmoud
Subject: Linguistics
Linguistic Field(s): Syntax, Semantics, Morphology, Lexicography
Abstract:
This study presents a detailed analysis of the semantic, syntactic and morphological features of the middle and inchoative (unaccusative) alternations in Arabic and English. The issue of the middle/ unaccusative contrast and the question of whether middles constitute a semantically and syntactically uniform class are also addressed. On the basis of this analysis, a new typology of the middle and unaccusative verbs in the two languages has been proposed. In addition to the semantic properties...
Date: 1989
Institution: Abduljawad T. Mahmoud
Subject: Linguistics
Linguistic Field(s): Syntax, Semantics, Morphology, Lexicography
Abstract:
This study presents a detailed analysis of the semantic, syntactic and morphological features of the middle and inchoative (unaccusative) alternations in Arabic and English. The issue of the middle/ unaccusative contrast and the question of whether middles constitute a semantically and syntactically uniform class are also addressed. On the basis of this analysis, a new typology of the middle and unaccusative verbs in the two languages has been proposed. In addition to the semantic properties...
A Reference Grammar of Kunuz Nubian
Author: Ahmed Sokarno Abdel-Hafiz
Date: 1988
Institution: State University of New York at Buffalo
Subject: Linguistics
Supervisor: Donna B. Gerdts
Linguistic Field(s): Language Description
Abstract:
This is a grammar of Kunuz Nubian (KN), an Eastern Sudanic language spoken in Southern Egypt. It is the first grammar ever written on this language. The areas covered in the study are phonology, morphology and syntax. The chapter on phonology introduces KN phonemic inventory which is followed by the description of the syllable structure, stress, phonetactics and phonological rules. The chapter on morphology shows that the morphemes that participate in the composition of KN...
Date: 1988
Institution: State University of New York at Buffalo
Subject: Linguistics
Supervisor: Donna B. Gerdts
Linguistic Field(s): Language Description
Abstract:
This is a grammar of Kunuz Nubian (KN), an Eastern Sudanic language spoken in Southern Egypt. It is the first grammar ever written on this language. The areas covered in the study are phonology, morphology and syntax. The chapter on phonology introduces KN phonemic inventory which is followed by the description of the syllable structure, stress, phonetactics and phonological rules. The chapter on morphology shows that the morphemes that participate in the composition of KN...
Affiliation, discrimination, and well-being in modern Egypt: Cultural and social dimensions
Author: Kamal-Montasser
Date: 1998
Institution: McGill-University-Canada (0781)
Subject: Social Sciences
Language: English
Abstract:
This thesis contributes to knowledge in the field of medical anthropology, particularly in Egypt and the Middle East, in two specific ways. First, the thesis demonstrates how a limited focus on kinship and micro social relations precludes a full understanding of the life experiences of people, especially at times of illness. The thesis shows that these conceptual limitations stem from a romanticized view of Egyptian culture—a view that poorly corresponds to the contemporary Egyptian situation....
Date: 1998
Institution: McGill-University-Canada (0781)
Subject: Social Sciences
Language: English
Abstract:
This thesis contributes to knowledge in the field of medical anthropology, particularly in Egypt and the Middle East, in two specific ways. First, the thesis demonstrates how a limited focus on kinship and micro social relations precludes a full understanding of the life experiences of people, especially at times of illness. The thesis shows that these conceptual limitations stem from a romanticized view of Egyptian culture—a view that poorly corresponds to the contemporary Egyptian situation....
An Arabic creole in Africa: the Nubi language of Uganda
Author: I.H.W. Wellens
Date: 2001
Institution: University of Nijmegen, Department of Arabic and Islam Studies (KUN)
Subject: Linguistics
Supervisor: Prof.dr. M.A. Woidich
Linguistic Field(s): Education and Training
Abstract:
Nubi Arabic is a creolized variety of Arabic, spoken in Uganda and Kenya by appr. 50,000 speakers, one of the few documented examples of a creole language with a non-Indo-European basis. Nubi Arabic developed from a pidginized variety of Arabic, which originated in the 19th century in the camps of the Egyptian army in Upper Egypt and the Sudan. This pidgin Arabic was brought to Uganda and Kenya where it underwent a process of creolization....
Date: 2001
Institution: University of Nijmegen, Department of Arabic and Islam Studies (KUN)
Subject: Linguistics
Supervisor: Prof.dr. M.A. Woidich
Linguistic Field(s): Education and Training
Abstract:
Nubi Arabic is a creolized variety of Arabic, spoken in Uganda and Kenya by appr. 50,000 speakers, one of the few documented examples of a creole language with a non-Indo-European basis. Nubi Arabic developed from a pidginized variety of Arabic, which originated in the 19th century in the camps of the Egyptian army in Upper Egypt and the Sudan. This pidgin Arabic was brought to Uganda and Kenya where it underwent a process of creolization....
Author: Gaber Gaber
Date: 2012
Institution: University of Durham
Subject: Linguistics
Abstract:
This work presents a full and unified investigation of the phenomenon of non-concatenative nominal morphology in Libyan Arabic (LA), with special reference to the formation of the broken plural (BP). The analysis provides a morphophonological account of morphologically derived words in LA. It is based on two main ideas: the first is specifying the input for the derivational morphological process which represents the underlying structure of the derived word; the second is to account for...
Date: 2012
Institution: University of Durham
Subject: Linguistics
Abstract:
This work presents a full and unified investigation of the phenomenon of non-concatenative nominal morphology in Libyan Arabic (LA), with special reference to the formation of the broken plural (BP). The analysis provides a morphophonological account of morphologically derived words in LA. It is based on two main ideas: the first is specifying the input for the derivational morphological process which represents the underlying structure of the derived word; the second is to account for...
AN OUTLINE OF THE SHILHA (BERBER) VERNACULAR OF DOUIRET (SOUTHERN TUNISIA)
Author: Dr Zouhir Gabsi
Date: 2005
Institution: University of Western Sydney, Australia
Subject: Linguistics
Linguistic Field(s): Language Description
Abstract:
The Tunisian Berber (or Shilha) vernaculars are among the least described Afroasiatic (Hamito-Semitic) languages to this day. Although they have been provisionally assigned to the 'North-Berber' group within the Berber branch of Afroasiatic, their immediate affiliation remains an open question. The principal task of the present work will be to describe the phonology, morphology and syntax of Douiret. Less central to the aims of the study is the analysis of the basic wordstores of the...
Date: 2005
Institution: University of Western Sydney, Australia
Subject: Linguistics
Linguistic Field(s): Language Description
Abstract:
The Tunisian Berber (or Shilha) vernaculars are among the least described Afroasiatic (Hamito-Semitic) languages to this day. Although they have been provisionally assigned to the 'North-Berber' group within the Berber branch of Afroasiatic, their immediate affiliation remains an open question. The principal task of the present work will be to describe the phonology, morphology and syntax of Douiret. Less central to the aims of the study is the analysis of the basic wordstores of the...
Arab political dispute mediation
Author: Yassine-Nahla-Abdul-Karim
Date: 1999
Institution: Wayne-State-University (0254)
Subject: History
Language: English
Abstract:
This dissertation argues that Arab mediation is distinctive from mediation that occurs in countries in other parts of the world in terms of the likelihood of Arab countries choosing it as a method of conflict resolution, in terms of the manner or process by which it is conducted, and in terms of the outcomes of mediation. two clusters of independent variables are responsible for the distinctive nature of Arab mediation: those linked with Arab political...
Date: 1999
Institution: Wayne-State-University (0254)
Subject: History
Language: English
Abstract:
This dissertation argues that Arab mediation is distinctive from mediation that occurs in countries in other parts of the world in terms of the likelihood of Arab countries choosing it as a method of conflict resolution, in terms of the manner or process by which it is conducted, and in terms of the outcomes of mediation. two clusters of independent variables are responsible for the distinctive nature of Arab mediation: those linked with Arab political...
ba’da and qabla in Online News: A Corpus-Based Study
Author: Ayman Eddakrouri
Date: -
Institution: -
Subject: Linguistics
URL: dar.aucegypt.edu/bitstream/handle/10526/4802/Ayman-%20Thesis.pdf?sequence=1
Abstract:
This thesis offers a corpus-based analysis and description of two of the most frequently used words in Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) in terms of their semantic values and cohesive functions, syntactic features, and idiomatic usages.
Date: -
Institution: -
Subject: Linguistics
URL: dar.aucegypt.edu/bitstream/handle/10526/4802/Ayman-%20Thesis.pdf?sequence=1
Abstract:
This thesis offers a corpus-based analysis and description of two of the most frequently used words in Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) in terms of their semantic values and cohesive functions, syntactic features, and idiomatic usages.