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1
Automatic identification methods on a corpus of twenty five fine-grained Arabic dialects
In: Arabic Language Processing: From Theory to Practice7th International Conference, ICALP 2019, Nancy, France, October 16–17, 2019, Proceedings ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02314245 ; Arabic Language Processing: From Theory to Practice 7th International Conference, ICALP 2019, Nancy, France, October 16–17, 2019, Proceedings, Communications in Computer and Information Science book series (CCIS, volume 1108), 2019, ⟨10.1007/978-3-030-32959-4_6⟩ (2019)
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2
The SMarT Classifier for Arabic Fine-Grained Dialect Identification
In: MADAR Shared Task: Arabic Fine-Grained Dialect Identification Dialect identification campaign ; The Fourth Arabic Natural Language Processing Workshop co-located with ACL ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02166384 ; The Fourth Arabic Natural Language Processing Workshop co-located with ACL, Aug 2019, Florence, Italy (2019)
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3
Script Independent Morphological Segmentation for Arabic Maghrebi Dialects: An Application to Machine Translation
In: ISSN: 1405-5546 ; EISSN: 2007-9737 ; Computación y sistemas ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02274533 ; Computación y sistemas, Instituto Politécnico Nacional IPN Centro de Investigación en Computación, In press, 23 (3), pp.979-989. ⟨10.13053/cys-23-3-3267⟩ (2019)
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4
Integrating Dialects and Dialectology in the Curriculum of Teaching Arabic As a Foreign Language (TAFL)
Özkan, H. (Hakan). - 2019
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5
The phonology and micro-typology of Arabic R
In: Glossa: a journal of general linguistics; Vol 4, No 1 (2019); 131 ; 2397-1835 (2019)
Abstract: The R sound exhibits considerable variability both across and within Arabic dialects; one that covers place and manner of articulation, as well as the notorious emphatic-plain distinction. Some R phones are in contrastive distribution, while others are contextually conditioned or free variants. This article aims to establish the underlying R phonemes in the spoken varieties of Arabic, evidence of which is sought in R’s dialect-specific phonological behavior: in minimal pair contrasts, distributional phenomena, loanword phonology, and phonological processes that target or are triggered by R. Investigation of such evidence reveals four major patterns based on the nature and number of R phonemes, consequently classifying Arabic dialects into four types: the split-R dialects (primarily Maghrebi and Egyptian dialect groups), the emphatic-R dialects (the Levantine group), the plain-R dialects (the Gulf group together with most peripheral dialects), and the uvular-R dialects (the qeltu-dialects of Mesopotamia). The analysis employs a minimalist, contrast-based model of feature geometry to characterize aspects of the attested R’s – such as emphatic-ness, coronality, dorsality, and sonority – and shows that the typology is directly mirrored in the representation. This has theoretical implications as well. Diverse rhotic representations within closely related language varieties demonstrate that distinctive features should not be interpreted as rigidly as is often assumed, and call attention to the semi-arbitrary relationship between phonetics and phonology.
Keyword: Arabic dialects; emphatic R; feature geometry; phonology; rhotics; uvular R
URL: https://www.glossa-journal.org/jms/article/view/1002
https://doi.org/10.5334/gjgl.1002
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