Perspectives on Arabic Linguistics XXXIV
Papers from the Annual Symposium on Arabic Linguistics, Tucson, Arizona, 2020
Editor
This volume brings together eleven peer-reviewed articles on Arabic linguistics. The contributions fall under three areas of linguistics: Phonology and phonetics; syntax and semantics; and language acquisition, language contact, and diglossia. They reflect some various perspectives and emphases. Including data from North African, Levantine, and Gulf varieties, Standard Arabic, as well as Arabic varieties spoken in diaspora, these articles address issues that range from sibilant merging, raising, lexicalization, agreement, to diglossia, dialect contact, and language acquisition in heritage speakers. The book is valuable reading for linguists in general and for those working on descriptive and theoretical aspects of Arabic linguistics in particular.
[Studies in Arabic Linguistics, 12] 2023. vii, 286 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 1 January 2023
Published online on 1 January 2023
© John Benjamins
Table of Contents
-
Acknowledgements | pp. vii–viii
-
Introduction | pp. 1–9
-
Part I. Phonetics and phonology
-
Towards an account of historical new-dialect formation in northern Africa: The case of sibilant merging in Arabic dialectsAdam Benkato | pp. 13–32
-
Generational changes in VOT in Qatari ArabicVladimir Kulikov, Najlla Al-Hajri and Buthaina Al-Kuwari | pp. 33–56
-
Production and perception of consonant clusters in nonwords by Southern Iraqi and Najdi SpeakersSaja Albuarabi and Hanyong Park | pp. 57–78
-
Are Arabic listeners “stress deaf” to their own L2 pronunciation?Iman Albadar and Irene Vogel | pp. 79–102
-
Part II. Syntax, semantics, morphology and the interfaces
-
Morphological case, ɸ-agreement, and overt movement interactions in Arabic grammarMarwan Jarrah | pp. 105–124
-
Is morphological case a feature of individual nominal elements? Evidence from Standard ArabicBasem Ibrahim Malawi Al-Raba’a | pp. 125–152
-
Raising in Arabic: Forms and structuresMaris Camilleri and Louisa Sadler | pp. 153–184
-
Equative degree quantification in Damascene ArabicPeter Hallman | pp. 185–210
-
Part III. Language acquisition, language contact, and diglossia
-
First language acquisition of relativisation in Moroccan ArabicAnna Gavarró and Iman El Hadef Hammad | pp. 213–230
-
Arabic and English plural formation in typically developing heritage speakers of Arabic: A longitudinal studyReem Khamis Dakwar, Iman Salam, Amanda Nagler and Karen Froud | pp. 231–254
-
When the leak becomes a flood: Vernacular literature in TunisiaKaren McNeil | pp. 255–284
-
Index | pp. 285–286
Subjects
Main BIC Subject
CF/2CSR: Linguistics/Arabic
Main BISAC Subject
LAN009000: LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / General