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  • ...t of Persian origin writing in Arabic who wrote the first great grammar of Arabic. He worked mostly in Bagdad, but died in Shiraz around the year 180/796. ...ammar from a non-Arab perspective. He was probably not a native speaker of Arabic.
    449 bytes (73 words) - 15:39, 28 October 2007
  • * in [[Arabic]]: ''ʔiṭbāq'' 'spreading and raising of the tongue', ''ʔistiʕlāʔ'' *Lehn, Walter. 1963. Emphasis in Cairo Arabic. ''Language'' 39.1:29-39.
    761 bytes (86 words) - 14:42, 20 February 2009
  • Such sounds are for instance found in [[Arabic]].
    353 bytes (49 words) - 20:43, 19 February 2009
  • ...] and [[Ge'ez]]. At the [[University of Tübingen]] he attended lectures on Arabic, phonetics and Old Testament studies. In 1887 he visited Algeria, and the f Having completed a voyage around the world, Stumme was chosen to teach modern Arabic, modern [[Persian]] and [[Turkish]] at the University of Leipzig by his Tü
    3 KB (500 words) - 15:31, 7 October 2007
  • ...machinery to account for the intricate [[nonconcatenative morphology]] of Arabic languages. Furthermore, Marantz (1982) has shown that this framework is abl ...Carthy, J. and A. Prince 1990. ''Foot and word in prosodic morphology: the Arabic broken plural,'' Natural language and linguistic theory 8, 209-284, .
    2 KB (211 words) - 19:54, 17 February 2009
  • ...[[infinitive]], in Latin the [[first person]] [[singular]] [[present]], in Arabic the [[third person]] [[singular]] [[perfect]].
    523 bytes (69 words) - 14:03, 2 July 2007
  • ..., even if they are both about, say, educated middle-class colloquial Cairo Arabic. The mere fact that there are two different descriptions makes the varietie
    2 KB (352 words) - 08:34, 10 April 2008
  • ...dialectal Arabic, it is normally termed ''šəlħa'', a generic term for non-Arabic local languages more commonly applied to Berber. ...tml link]). All but a few of their children are being brought up to speak Arabic as their first language.
    3 KB (438 words) - 16:40, 4 February 2013
  • ...and other languages using the Latin script are alphabetisms. In Hebrew and Arabic, alphabetisms do not exist at all, and they obviously do not exist in langu
    922 bytes (118 words) - 09:00, 12 August 2007
  • "Siwi" is an [[Arabic]] [[nisba]] adjective from ''Sīwah'', the Arabic name of the main oasis where Siwi is spoken; the word is also used in Siwi. ...is available, but the western villages of Maraqi and Bahayeddin are mainly Arabic-speaking; excluding those villages would reduce the count to 15,886. The Et
    4 KB (474 words) - 19:19, 4 February 2013
  • *Lehn, Walter. 1963. Emphasis in Cairo Arabic. ''Language'' 39.1:29-39.
    686 bytes (78 words) - 14:35, 20 February 2009
  • English]] and [[Dutch]] have layered morphologies, while [[Arabic]] and [[Navajo]] have template morphologies.
    1 KB (149 words) - 20:07, 16 February 2009
  • ...s a process by which multilinear representations are linearized. For the [[Arabic]] form ''katab'' 'write-perfect active' this entails the following change:
    807 bytes (102 words) - 09:44, 17 August 2014
  • ...]), meaning 'wrote'. In fact, the morphemic analysis of past verb forms in Arabic is more complex than it might overtly seem were we to add [[gender]] as yet
    2 KB (308 words) - 21:47, 23 February 2013
  • Gemination is a contrastive process in Arabic, Estonian, Finnish, Classical Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Latin,
    869 bytes (113 words) - 18:32, 20 September 2014
  • ...nguages with template morphologies are Navajo (Young & Morgan (1980)), Arabic (McCarthy (1981)), Sierra Miwok (Smith (1985)), and Yawelmani (Archangeli (
    906 bytes (127 words) - 07:17, 17 August 2014
  • McCarthy (1981) has argued that the representation of the [[Arabic]] form ''katab'' 'write, perfect active' consists of three independent tier
    1 KB (162 words) - 09:44, 17 August 2014
  • ...lus of the same sounds on the other hand... On the other hand, in words of Arabic origin we often meet with opposite tendency, viz. to favour certain phoneme
    4 KB (585 words) - 21:36, 3 April 2008
  • in Arabic words are commonly formed on the basis of a triliteral root, i.e. a set of
    2 KB (306 words) - 19:55, 17 February 2009
  • the [[Arabic]] word ''katab'' is made out of the triliteral [[root]] ''ktb'' 'write', th
    2 KB (230 words) - 16:12, 8 July 2009

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