This paper aims to establish the Arabic cognates or origins of "demonstrative pronouns" in the world languages from a radical consonantal (lexical root) theory perspective. The data comprises key demonstrative pronouns like this, that in eleven major and minor families like Indo-European, Sino-Tibetan, Afro-Asiatic, Austronesian, Dravidian, Turkic, Mayan, Japonic, Niger-Congo, Uto-Aztec, and Tai-Kadai, which make up 60% of world languages and 96% of world population. The results showed that all such demonstrative pronouns have true Arabic cognates with the same or similar forms and meanings. Therefore, the results support the adequacy of the radical consonantal or lexical root theory according to which, unlike the Comparative Method and/or ...
This is a preliminary research on four consonantal roots in Classical Arabic lexical repertoires whi...
Modern Arabic dialects, which are radically different from Classical or Literary Arabic in many resp...
International audienceFrom as early as the 2nd century A.H. (8th century A.D.), scholars of Arabic h...
This paper traces the Arabic origins of "plural markers" in world languages from a radical linguisti...
© 2020 Lifescience Global. This article discusses the peculiarities of the Arabic root, its phonemic...
This paper examines the Arabic origins of some common place names in English, German, French, Latin,...
This paper traces the Arabic origins of English, German, French, Latin, Greek, and Sanskrit "urban t...
This study aims at conducting a comprehensive comparison of pronouns in three languages namely Arabi...
This paper deals with analyzing the contrasts in the ways of expressing quantity of the pronouns in ...
The aim of this paper is to extend the application of the lexical root theory to the investigation o...
dialectal Arabic forms of pronouns that cannot be traced back to Classical Arabic have been used for...
This article outlines an approach to lexicon in Arabic linguistics, with special implications for te...
This article discusses the peculiarities of the Arabic root, its phonemic structure, and morphologic...
This paper presents a framework within which the study of the devel-opment of neo-Arabic may be carr...
This paper investigates three linguistic features—wawation, the 1CS genitive clitic pronoun, and the...
This is a preliminary research on four consonantal roots in Classical Arabic lexical repertoires whi...
Modern Arabic dialects, which are radically different from Classical or Literary Arabic in many resp...
International audienceFrom as early as the 2nd century A.H. (8th century A.D.), scholars of Arabic h...
This paper traces the Arabic origins of "plural markers" in world languages from a radical linguisti...
© 2020 Lifescience Global. This article discusses the peculiarities of the Arabic root, its phonemic...
This paper examines the Arabic origins of some common place names in English, German, French, Latin,...
This paper traces the Arabic origins of English, German, French, Latin, Greek, and Sanskrit "urban t...
This study aims at conducting a comprehensive comparison of pronouns in three languages namely Arabi...
This paper deals with analyzing the contrasts in the ways of expressing quantity of the pronouns in ...
The aim of this paper is to extend the application of the lexical root theory to the investigation o...
dialectal Arabic forms of pronouns that cannot be traced back to Classical Arabic have been used for...
This article outlines an approach to lexicon in Arabic linguistics, with special implications for te...
This article discusses the peculiarities of the Arabic root, its phonemic structure, and morphologic...
This paper presents a framework within which the study of the devel-opment of neo-Arabic may be carr...
This paper investigates three linguistic features—wawation, the 1CS genitive clitic pronoun, and the...
This is a preliminary research on four consonantal roots in Classical Arabic lexical repertoires whi...
Modern Arabic dialects, which are radically different from Classical or Literary Arabic in many resp...
International audienceFrom as early as the 2nd century A.H. (8th century A.D.), scholars of Arabic h...