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Arabic language --- Arabe (Langue) --- Congresses --- Congrès
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Arabic language --- Arabe (Langue) --- Congresses. --- Congrès
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The papers in this volume are a selection from papers presented at the Annual Symposium on Arabic Linguistics, held in Cambridge, UK, in 2002. They deal with a wide range of theoretical issues in varieties of Arabic.
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The papers in this collection derive from the Annual Symposia on Arabic Linguistics held in Stanford (1999) and Berkeley (2000). The selection is noteworthy for its diversity of approach, and for a noticeable broadening of the kinds of questions that are being asked and the kind of data being gathered about Arabic in various settings. These papers cover many aspects of Arabic linguistic research, from models of language acquisition, to the borrowing of discourse patterns, and the use of 'secret' languages.
Arabic language --- Arabe (Langue) --- Grammar --- Congresses --- Semantics --- Syntax --- Grammaire --- Congrès --- Sémantique --- Syntaxe
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The papers in this volume approach the study of Arabic, its structure and use, from different linguistic and sociolinguistic perspectives. The book is divided into three sections: Section I Morphological and Phonological Perspectives; Section II Semantic Perspectives; Section III Sociolinguistic Perspectives.
Arabic language --- Grammar --- Semantics --- Congresses --- Arabic language - Grammar - Congresses. --- Arabic language - Semantics - Congresses. --- Semitic languages
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This is the third in a continuing series of papers presented at the annual meetings of the Arabic Linguistic Society whose primary purpose is to provide a forum for the study of Arabic within current approaches in linguistics. The volume includes a section on Arabic in relation to other languages, with papers ranging from the importance of Arabic to general linguistic theory, and guttural phonology to Arabic loanwords in Acehnese, verbless sentences in Arabic and Hebrew, and a contrastive study of middle and unaccusative constructions in Arabic and English.
Arabic language --- Semitic languages --- Syntax --- Grammar --- Social aspects --- Arabe (Langue) --- Congresses. --- Grammaire --- Congrès --- Aspect social --- Syntaxe --- Semantics --- Arabic language - Grammar - Congresses --- Arabic language - Semantics - Congresses --- Arabic language - Social aspects - Congresses --- Arabic language - Syntax - Congresses
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The papers in the first section of this volume, 'Variation in Arabic', deal with a wide range of topics: the function of Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) vs. dialect variation in political speeches, patterns of variation in concord in Cairene dialect, the extent to which Cairenes 'know' MSA, and the scope of emphaticization in different dialects.In the section on 'Phonological Perspectives' there are papers dealing with emphasis spread and with gemination/degemination/antigemination in Iraqi Arabic.
Arabic language --- Grammar --- Semantics --- Syntax --- Arabic language - Grammar - Congresses --- Arabic language - Semantics - Congresses --- Arabic language - Syntax - Congresses
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This volume includes twelve papers selected from the Ninth Annual Symposium on Arabic Linguistics, held at Georgetown University, Washington D.C., 1995. Three of the papers deal with codeswitching with Arabic, two with the acquisition of Arabic, and four with different aspects of Arabic grammatical structure. The volume also includes three papers presenting data on negation in some Arabic dialects (including those of Yemen, Morocco, Egypt).The topics are diverse and include Arabic and constraints on codeswitching, verb embeddings and collocations in codeswitching, ellipsis in child langu
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The majority of the papers in this volume were presented at the Twenty Fourth and Twenty Fifth Annual Symposia on Arabic Linguistics held at the University Texas in April 2010 and at the University of Arizona in March 2011. One paper is also included from the Twenty Third Annual Symposium.
Arabic language --- Semitic languages --- Grammar
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Diglossia is one distinctive feature of Arabic and other languages, such as Swiss-German (Ferguson 1959). Neurocognitive studies aiming to understand the neural mechanisms of diglossia in general, and Arabic diglossia in particular, are sparse. This paper provides a framework for discussing neurophysiological approaches to questions concerning the representation and processing of languages exhibiting diglossia in the brains of native speakers, as well as understanding the potential contribution of such approaches for applied linguistics and teaching Arabic as a first or second language. The fi
Arabic language --- Semitic languages --- Grammar
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