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1
MULDASA: Multifactor Lexical Sentiment Analysis of Social-Media Content in Nonstandard Arabic Social Media
In: Applied Sciences; Volume 12; Issue 8; Pages: 3806 (2022)
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2
Beginning Moroccan Arabic (Darija): An OER Multimedia Textbook
Shiri, Sonia; M’barki, Abdessamad; Fincham, Naiyi. - : Language Flagship Technology Innovation Center, 2022
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3
Advanced Moroccan Arabic (Darija): An OER Multimedia Textbook
Shiri, Sonia; M’barki, Abdessamad; Fincham, Naiyi. - : Language Flagship Technology Innovation Center, 2022
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4
Towards a Dialect History of the Baggara Belt
In: EISSN: 2226-471X ; Languages ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03334787 ; Languages, MDPI, 2021, 6 (3), pp.146 (1-17). ⟨10.3390/languages6030146⟩ (2021)
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5
On Interdental Fricatives in the First-Layer Dialects of Maghrebi Arabic
In: ISSN: 1876-6633 ; Brill's Journal of Afroasiatic Languages and Linguistics ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03465827 ; Brill's Journal of Afroasiatic Languages and Linguistics, Brill, 2021 ; https://brill.com/view/journals/aall/13/2/article-p288_5.xml (2021)
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6
Improving Machine Translation of Arabic Dialects through Multi-Task Learning
In: 20th International Conference Italian Association for Artificial Intelligence:AIxIA 2021 ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03435996 ; 20th International Conference Italian Association for Artificial Intelligence:AIxIA 2021, Dec 2021, MILAN/Virtual, Italy (2021)
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7
The Southern Moroccan Dialects and the Hilāli Category ...
Francisco, Felipe Benjamin. - : Freie Universität Berlin, 2021
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8
Towards a Dialect History of the Baggara Belt
In: EISSN: 2226-471X ; Languages ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03334787 ; Languages, MDPI, 2021, 6 (3), pp.146 (1-17). ⟨10.3390/languages6030146⟩ (2021)
Abstract: International audience ; The Baggara Belt constitutes the southernmost periphery of the Arabic-speaking world. It stretches over 2500 km from Nigeria to Sudan and it is largely inhabited by Arab semi-nomadic cattle herders. Despite its common sociohistorical background, the ethnography of Baggara nomads is complex, being the result of a long series of longitudinal migrations and contacts with different ethnolinguistic groups. Thanks to a number of comparative works, there is broad agreement on the inclusion of Baggara dialects within West Sudanic Arabic. However, little or nothing is known of the internal classification of Baggara Arabic. This paper seeks to provide a comparative overview of Baggara Arabic and to explain dialect convergences and divergences within the Baggara Belt in light of both internally and externally motivated changes. By providing a qualitative analysis of selected phonological, morphosyntactic, and lexical features, this study demonstrates that there is no overlapping between the ethnic and dialect borders of the Baggara Belt. Furthermore, it is argued that contact phenomena affecting Baggara Arabic cannot be reduced to a single substrate language, as these are rather induced by areal diffusion and language attrition. These elements support the hypothesis of a gradual process of Baggarization rather than a sudden ethnolinguistic hybridization between Arab and Fulani agropastoralist groups. Over and above, the paper aims at contributing to the debate on the internal classification of Sudanic Arabic by refining the isoglosses commonly adopted for the identification of a West Sudanic dialect subtype.
Keyword: [SHS.LANGUE]Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics; Arabic Dialects; Historical dialectology; Sudan; Sudanic Arabic
URL: https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03334787/document
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03334787
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03334787/file/languages-06-00146%20%285%29.pdf
https://doi.org/10.3390/languages6030146
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9
A Historical Reconstruction of Some Pronominal Suffixes in Modern Dialectal Arabic
In: Languages ; Volume 6 ; Issue 3 (2021)
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10
A Transformer-Based Neural Machine Translation Model for Arabic Dialects That Utilizes Subword Units
In: Sensors ; Volume 21 ; Issue 19 (2021)
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11
The Old and the New: Considerations in Arabic Historical Dialectology
In: Languages ; Volume 6 ; Issue 4 (2021)
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12
Contrastive Feature Typologies of Arabic Consonant Reflexes
In: Languages ; Volume 6 ; Issue 3 (2021)
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13
The Southern Moroccan Dialects and the Hil&#257 ; li Category
In: Languages ; Volume 6 ; Issue 4 (2021)
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14
Mahdia Dialect: An Urban Vernacular in the Tunisian Sahel Context
In: Languages ; Volume 6 ; Issue 3 (2021)
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15
Edición y traducción del texto ḥassāní manuscrito de la primera constitución mauritana ; Edition and translation of the Ḥassāní manuscript of the first Mauritanian constitution
Ould Mohamed Baba, Ahmed Salem. - : Universidad de Granada, 2021
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16
The production and perception of peripheral geminate/singleton coronal stop contrasts in Arabic
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17
ArAutoSenti: Automatic annotation and new tendencies for sentiment classification of Arabic messages
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18
Vowel unpredictability in Hijazi Arabic monosyllabic verbs
In: Glossa: a journal of general linguistics; Vol 5, No 1 (2020); 32 ; 2397-1835 (2020)
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19
Le Dialecte Arabe de Rḥāmna (Maroc) ; The Arabic Dialect of Rḥāmna (Morocco)
In: Al-Andalus AAM, 26 (2019) 03.1-14 (2020)
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20
Vowel Elision, Epenthesis and Metrical Systems in Bedouin Arabic Dialects
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