This paper investigates three linguistic features—wawation, the 1CS genitive clitic pronoun, and the relative pronoun—that are shared between the ancient epigraphic forms of Arabic and modern dialects, to the exclusion of Classical Arabic. I suggest that these features represent the earliest linguistic layer of the modern dialects
To comprehend how Arabic became a pluricentric language, we need to navigate through its rich histor...
This chapter describes the phenomenon of contact-induced grammaticalization\linebreak between Arabic...
In modern spoken Arabic dialects, the proximal locative demonstrative “here” is derived either from ...
This paper investigates three linguistic features—wawation, the 1CS genitive clitic pronoun, and the...
Modern Arabic dialects, which are radically different from Classical or Literary Arabic in many resp...
This article sketches the historical documentation of Arabic dialects within the different regions. ...
This paper presents a framework within which the study of the devel-opment of neo-Arabic may be carr...
dialectal Arabic forms of pronouns that cannot be traced back to Classical Arabic have been used for...
The highly archaic Classical Arabic language and its modern iteration Modern Standard Arabic must to...
The dissertation provides a description of the diachronic development of nominal case marking in Ara...
The Arabic dialectology literature repeatedly asserts the existence of a macro-level classificatory ...
This study explores the durative aspectual forms in modern spoken Arabic dialects. It analyzes and c...
This article treats a set of subject cross-referencing morphemes in the medieval Nilo-Saharan langua...
© 2020 Lifescience Global. This article discusses the peculiarities of the Arabic root, its phonemic...
It is not possible for us to enumerate all the classical Arabic utterances that the Algerian colloqu...
To comprehend how Arabic became a pluricentric language, we need to navigate through its rich histor...
This chapter describes the phenomenon of contact-induced grammaticalization\linebreak between Arabic...
In modern spoken Arabic dialects, the proximal locative demonstrative “here” is derived either from ...
This paper investigates three linguistic features—wawation, the 1CS genitive clitic pronoun, and the...
Modern Arabic dialects, which are radically different from Classical or Literary Arabic in many resp...
This article sketches the historical documentation of Arabic dialects within the different regions. ...
This paper presents a framework within which the study of the devel-opment of neo-Arabic may be carr...
dialectal Arabic forms of pronouns that cannot be traced back to Classical Arabic have been used for...
The highly archaic Classical Arabic language and its modern iteration Modern Standard Arabic must to...
The dissertation provides a description of the diachronic development of nominal case marking in Ara...
The Arabic dialectology literature repeatedly asserts the existence of a macro-level classificatory ...
This study explores the durative aspectual forms in modern spoken Arabic dialects. It analyzes and c...
This article treats a set of subject cross-referencing morphemes in the medieval Nilo-Saharan langua...
© 2020 Lifescience Global. This article discusses the peculiarities of the Arabic root, its phonemic...
It is not possible for us to enumerate all the classical Arabic utterances that the Algerian colloqu...
To comprehend how Arabic became a pluricentric language, we need to navigate through its rich histor...
This chapter describes the phenomenon of contact-induced grammaticalization\linebreak between Arabic...
In modern spoken Arabic dialects, the proximal locative demonstrative “here” is derived either from ...