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Hits 21 – 31 of 31

21
Language Accommodation And Style Shifting In The Speech Of Gamal Abdel Nasser ...
Cotter, William M. - : Zenodo, 2012
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22
Dialects in the Arabic classroom : a pedagogical survey of Arabic language learners
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23
Style shifting in Egyptian and Tunisian Arabic: a sociolinguistic study of media Arabic ; Master of Arts
Faust, Casey Michelle. - : University of Utah, 2012
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24
L2 Arabic Dialect Comprehension: Empirical Evidence for the Transfer of Familiar Dialect Knowledge to Unfamiliar Dialects
In: Trentman, Emma. (2011). L2 Arabic Dialect Comprehension: Empirical Evidence for the Transfer of Familiar Dialect Knowledge to Unfamiliar Dialects. L2 Journal, 3(1). doi:10.5070/L2319068. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/6qx1381h (2011)
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25
The development the use of the negation particles miš and mā…š in Egyptian colloquial Arabic
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26
Les noms des langues en arabe
: PERSEE, 2009
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27
Deictic Reference: Arabs vs. Arab Americans
In: http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=toledo1147284821 (2006)
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28
StressTyp
In: StressTyp (1991)
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29
Ed. Gerry Howley Salford Working Papers in Linguistics and Applied Linguistics Volume 1 (2011)
In: http://usir.salford.ac.uk/17631/1/WP (2011)_watson.pdf
Abstract: It has traditionally been assumed that with the Islamic conquests Arabic overwhelmed the original ancient languages of the Peninsula, leaving the language situation in the south-western Arabian Peninsula as one in which dialects of Arabic are tinged, to a greater or lesser degree, with substrate features of the ancient South Arabian languages. The ancient Arab grammarians had clear ideas concerning the difference between the non-Arabic languages of the Peninsula and Arabic, including the-t feminine nominal ending in all states and-n versus the-l definite article. Today, however, we read about ‘Arabic ’ dialects that exhibit large proportions of ‘non-Arabic ’ features. Here I compare phonological, morphological, lexical and syntactic data from several contemporary varieties spoken within historical Yemen – within the borders of current Yemen into southern ‘Asīr – with data from Ancient South Arabian, Sabaean, and Modern South Arabian, Mehri, as spoken in the far east of Yemen. On the basis of these comparisons I suggest that Arabic may not have replaced all the ancient languages of the Peninsula, and that we may be witnessing the rediscovery of descendants of the ancient languages. The Yemeni and ‘Asīri dialects considered are:
Keyword: Abha; Ancient South Arabian; Arabic; Faifi Keywords; lateral sibilants; Modern South Arabian; relative clauses 1. PHONOLOGICAL LINKS BETWEEN SOUTH ARABIAN AND YEMENI DIALECTS; Rijāl Alma‛; Semitic; ‘Asīr
URL: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.384.8919
http://usir.salford.ac.uk/17631/1/WP (2011)_watson.pdf
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30
A Multidialectal Parallel Corpus of Arabic
In: http://www.lrec-conf.org/proceedings/lrec2014/pdf/523_Paper.pdf
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31
Saudi Accented Arabic Voice Bank
In: http://www.mghamdi.com/saavb_ksu.pdf
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