Catherine Taine-Cheikh

List of John Benjamins publications for which Catherine Taine-Cheikh plays a role.

Articles

Taine-Cheikh, Catherine 2018 Condition, interrogation and exception: Remarks on particles in BerberAfroasiatic: Data and perspectives, Tosco, Mauro (ed.), pp. 105–130 | Chapter
Comparison of the different Berber dialects shows that there are many shared characteristics, particularly typological ones. The degree of similarity varies, however, depending on the element. Conjunctions have been recognized as a class with very little similarity among the varieties. … read more
Taine-Cheikh, Catherine 2018 Ḥassāniyya Arabic in contact with Berber: The case of quadriliteral verbsArabic in Contact, Manfredi, Stefano and Mauro Tosco (eds.), pp. 135–159 | Chapter
Generally speaking, it is at the edges of the Arabic speaking world that one finds the most borrowings and where the influence of contact on the internal development of Arabic is most visible. Although Mauritanian Ḥassāniyya is an exception to this general trend (Taine-Cheikh 1994, 2007), the… read more
Taine-Cheikh, Catherine 2018 Expressiveness and evaluation in Arabic: The singular development of the diminutive in Ḥassāniyya ArabicMorphology and emotions across the world's languages, Ponsonnet, Maïa and Marine Vuillermet (eds.), pp. 81–113 | Article
Old Arabic had many expressive derived forms: firstly, the forms with radical repetition, consonant reduplication and/or vowel lengthening; secondly, the forms with prefixes, suffixes or infixes. Most of these formatives survived in the Arabic dialects, but Arabic scholars generally focus on… read more
In Berber studies, it is often considered – at least in French-speaking literature – that there is a specific verbal category named Aorist. This category is not supposed to exist in the Semitic family, which is also part of the Afro-Asiatic phylum. However, the Arabic prefixal conjugation shows… read more
The deictic ad fulfills many functions in Mauritanian Berber (demonstrative, copula, connector, injunctive particle, etc.). Most of these uses are found more or less in all Berber languages. However, Zenaga differs markedly on several points: ad is not used as a preverb to express future; on the… read more