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Hits 161 – 180 of 5.249

161
Lexique arabe tchadien - français ; Chadian Arabic - French Lexicon ; قاموس صغيّر باللغتين العربية التشادية و الفرنسية
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162
The treatment of the 'ḥāl' in 'Kitāb Sībawayhi'
Ismail, Abdul Rahim Hadj. - : University of St Andrews, 2021. : The University of St Andrews, 2021
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163
Semantic Classification of Multidialectal Arabic Social Media
In: Dissertations (2021)
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164
The marginalization of the feminine in the grammatical heritage of the Arabic language
Wael, Farouq (orcid:0000-0002-1565-6163). - 2021
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165
The Languages of Exile in the Literatures of Al-Andalus ; Las lenguas del exilio en las literaturas de al-Ándalus
In: 1616: Anuario de Literatura Comparada; Vol. 9 (2019); 173-195 ; 2445-2262 ; 0210-7287 ; 10.14201/161620199 (2021)
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166
Changes in Muṯallaṯ Arabic color language and cognition induced by contact with Modern Hebrew
Letizia Cerqueglini. - : Studies in the Linguistic Sciences: Illinois Working Papers, 2021
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167
Facebook dialect: orthographical standardisation in Romanised Lebanese-Arabic
Naboulsi, Omar. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2021
Abstract: With the advent of the internet, the new communicative opportunities afforded to millions of its users across the globe have not always come without drawbacks– and in some cases, unexpected advantages. For speakers of colloquial Arabic dialects, such as that of Lebanese colloquial Arabic, the traditional Arabic script used for writing both Classical Arabic and its associated colloquial forms was not available for use in the first programs and applications that enabled digital communication. The resulting adoption of the Roman script has persisted well beyond the availability of the Arabic script for online communication, and is considered a non-standard orthography, used for the writing of a non-standard language, offering its users both constraint (for the representation of sounds for which the Roman script is not suited) and freedom (for the writing of certain colloquial Arabic features of that the Arabic script is not suited, as well as from the generalised constraint of standard language culture). This puts the Roman script orthography of Lebanese colloquial Arabic in a unique position, where users do not have a direct standard reflex to which to refer or recourse, meaning that unlike non-standard orthographies such as those used to write English dialects, or even creole languages such as Jamaican Creole with a standard lexifier (in this case also English), there is no means by which users can tend towards (or away from) a codified, standardised manner of writing. And yet what emerges is not unbound chaos, but an effective and in many cases expressive writing that generally serves the practical (if not ideological) needs of its users well. Though the QA dialects and in particular their online CMC manifestations have been studied extensively over the past two decades, the opportunity to understand how written conventions form on a grassroots level when there is no standard reflex from which users can draw has not yet been taken advantage of. This study adopts a ‘mature’ understanding of the sociolinguistics of writing and a modern understanding of standardisation as a cultured and imposed paradigm, with which we can consider the non-standard writing of Lebanese colloquial Arabic as it is used in the city of Tripoli in Lebanon not as an orthography that is simply awaiting standardisation (or which can be expected to inevitably standardise), but rather as flexible, dynamic writing well-suited to its use outside of the standard language culture paradigm, and yet within which written conventions nevertheless can be observed, and a process of conventionalisation and its effects can be detected and described. The city of Tripoli, due to its troubled history, has a history of Facebook groups initially formed for the discussion of news not otherwise covered by mainstream media, but which have evolved over time to become discussion boards for members of the city, seeing regular Roman script writing and so serving as the first corpus for this study, alongside a series of experimental interviews conducted in Tripoli in 2016 that allow the novel comparison between spoken and written forms in a manner not yet exploited by studies of grassroots conventionalisation, allowing us to ultimately describe this process and produce novel conclusions about how conventionalisation works for non-standard orthographies untethered to a single standard form or the imposed constraints of standard ideology.
Keyword: Arabic; Colloquial Arabic; Conventionalisation; Conventionalization; Lebanese; Lebanese QA; Lebanese-Arabic; Non-Standard Language; Standard Language; Standard Language Culture; Standardisation; Standardization
URL: https://doi.org/10.7488/era/1418
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/38151
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168
Exploring tutoring and learning gains for learners of Arabic
Amer, Mahmoud. - : University of Hawaii National Foreign Language Resource Center, 2021. : (co-sponsored by American Association of University of Supervisors and Coordinators; Center for Advanced Research on Language Acquisition; Center for Educational Reources in Culture, Language, and Literacy; Center for Open Educational Resources and Language Learning; Open Language Resource Center; Second Language Teaching and Resource Center), 2021
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169
Hacia una relectura morfo-semántica de los arabismos
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170
Resettled Syrian Refugee Children in Canada: Oral Language, Literacy and Well-being
Al-Janaideh, Redab. - : University of Toronto, 2021
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171
The production and perception of peripheral geminate/singleton coronal stop contrasts in Arabic
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172
The Development of Case Morphology and Sentential Word Order in Arabic as a Second Language: A Processability Perspective
In: Theses and Dissertations (2021)
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173
The impact of Arabic part of speech tagging on sentiment analysis: A new corpus and deep learning approach
In: Test Series for Scopus Harvesting 2021 (2021)
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174
Utilising concept-based instruction in teaching pragmatics: Exploring the development of requesting behaviour of Iraqi Arabic-speaking EFL learners
Al-Jumah, Khalif Abdulrahman Jumah. - : University of Otago, 2021
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175
Saudi Mothers' Experiences Maintaining Their Young Children's Arabic Language and Islamic-Saudi Identity
Albakr, Ashwaq Mohammed. - : University of North Texas, 2021
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176
The clause structure of Turaif Arabic
AlShammiry, Khalaf. - : University of Kansas, 2021
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177
EXPLORING LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND IDENTITY: PERSPECTIVES FROM NON-NATIVE ARABIC UNIVERSITY TEACHERS IN THE US
In: Doctoral Dissertations (2021)
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178
Quran Acronym, Acrostic, Mesostic, and Telestic Searchable (Arabic) Database
In: Keith L. Yoder (2021)
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179
Euphemistic strategies in Algerian Arabic and American English
In: ExELL (Explorations in English Language and Linguistics), Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 80-105 (2021) (2021)
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180
Kinship terms as indicators of identity and social reality: A case study of Syrian Arabic and Hindi
In: Russian Journal of Linguistics, Vol 25, Iss 1, Pp 125-146 (2021) (2021)
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