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{{Short description|Genealogical position of Arabic varieties}}
{{Infobox Language family
{{About|the historical language group|the modern general language (macrolanguage)|Arabic|the separate South Semitic language group|Modern South Arabian languages}}
|name=South Central Semitic (Arabic)
{{Infobox language family
|region=[[Arabia]], [[Arab world]]
|name=North Arabian
|altname = South Central Semitic<br />Arabic
|region=[[North Africa]], [[Middle East]], [[Malta]]
|familycolor=Afro-Asiatic
|familycolor=Afro-Asiatic
|fam2=[[Semitic languages|Semitic]]
|fam2=[[Semitic languages|Semitic]]
|fam3=[[West Semitic languages|West]]
|fam3=[[West Semitic languages|West Semitic]]
|fam4=[[Central Semitic languages|Central]]
|fam4=[[Central Semitic languages|Central Semitic]]
|child1=[[Arabic language]]
|protoname=[[Proto-Arabic]]
|glotto=arab1394
|glottorefname=Arabian
}}
}}
The Arabic language family is divided into several categories which are: [[Old Arabic]], the literary varieties, and the [[Varieties of Arabic|modern vernaculars]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Jallad |first1=Ahmad |title=Al-Jallad. A Manual of the Historical Grammar of Arabic |journal=Academia.edu |date=2020 |url=https://www.academia.edu/38100372}}</ref>
The '''South Central Semitic''' or '''Arabic''' language family consists of
*the living [[varieties of Arabic]]
*a number of closely related extinct dialects of [[pre-Islamic Arabia]], including
**[[Safaitic]]
**[[Dedanitic]] (Dedanite)
**[[Lihyanitic]] (Lihyanite)
**[[Thamudic]]
**[[Hasaitic]]


The [[Genetic relationship (linguistics)|genealogical position]] of Arabic within the group of the Semitic languages has long been a problem.<ref name="Versteegh 2014 p18">{{harvnb|Versteegh|2014|p=18}}</ref>
[[Category:Arabic languages|*]]

==Views on Arabic classification==
Semitic languages were confined in a relatively small geographic area (the [[Syria (region)|region of Syria]], [[Mesopotamia]] and the [[Arabian desert]]) and often spoken in contiguous regions. Permanent contacts between the speakers of these languages facilitated [[Borrowing (linguistics)|borrowing]] between them. Borrowing disrupts historical processes of change and makes it difficult to reconstruct the genealogy of languages.<ref name="Versteegh 2014 p13">{{harvnb|Versteegh|2014|p=13}}</ref>

In the traditional classification of the Semitic languages, Arabic was in the [[Southwest Semitic languages|Southwest Semitic group]], based on some affinities with [[Modern South Arabian]] and [[Geʽez]].<ref name="Versteegh 2014 p11">{{harvnb|Versteegh|2014|p=11}}</ref>

{{Chart top|Traditional classification of the Semitic languages<ref name="Versteegh 2014 p11"/>}}
{{Tree chart/start|align=center|summary=Traditional classification of the Semitic languages}}
{{Tree chart| | | | | | |PS| | |PS=[[Proto-Semitic language|Proto-Semitic]]}}
{{Tree chart| | | | | |,|-|^|. | }}
{{Tree chart| | | | |WS| |ES| | | | |WS=[[West Semitic languages|West Semitic]]|ES=[[East Semitic languages|East Semitic]] ([[Akkadian language|Akkadian]])}}
{{Tree chart| | | |,|-|^|-|-|-|-|-|.}}
{{Tree chart| | |NWS| | | | | | |SWS| | |NWS=[[Northwest Semitic languages|Northwest Semitic]]|SWS=[[Southwest Semitic]]}}
{{Tree chart| |,|-|^|.| | | |,|-|-|-|+|-|-|-|.}}
{{Tree chart|CN| |AM| |AR| |SA| |ET| |CN=[[Canaanite languages|Canaanite]]<br />([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]], [[Phoenician language|Phoenician]])|AM=[[Aramaic]]|AR=[[Arabic]]|SA=[[Old South Arabian|South Arabian]]|ET=[[Ethiopian Semitic languages|Ethiopic]]}}
{{Tree chart/end}}
{{chart bottom}}

Most scholars reject the Southwest Semitic subgrouping because it is not supported by any [[Language change|innovations]] and because shared features with South Arabian and Ethiopic were only due to [[Areal feature|areal diffusion]].<ref name="Jallad2020">{{cite book |last1=Al-Jallad |first1=Ahmad |title=A Manual of the Historical Grammar of Arabic |via=Academia |date=2020 |url=https://www.academia.edu/38100372|chapter=0. Arabic defined and its subgroupings|pages=8, 11}}</ref>

In 1976, linguist [[Robert Hetzron]] classified Arabic languages as a [[Central Semitic language]]:<ref name="Versteegh 2014 p15">{{harvnb|Versteegh|2014|p=15}}</ref>

{{Chart top|The genealogy of the Semitic languages (Hetzron 1974, 1976)<ref name="Versteegh 2014 p15"/>}}
{{Tree chart/start|align=center|summary=Traditional classification of the Semitic languages}}
{{Tree chart| | | | | | | |PS|PS=[[Proto-Semitic language|Proto-Semitic]]}}
{{Tree chart| | | | | | |,|-|^|-|.}}
{{Tree chart| | | | | | |WS| |ES|WS=[[West Semitic languages|West Semitic]]|ES=[[East Semitic languages|East Semitic]] ([[Akkadian language|Akkadian]])}}
{{Tree chart| | | | | |,|-|^|-|-|-|-|.}}
{{Tree chart| | | |SS| | | | | | |CS| | | | |SS=[[South Semitic languages|South Semitic]]|CS=[[Central Semitic languages|Central Semitic]]}}
{{Tree chart| | | | |!| | | | | | |,|-|^|-|.}}
{{Tree chart| | | | |!| | | | | |AM| |AC| | |SS=[[South Semitic languages|South Semitic]]|AM=[[Aramaic]]|AC=[[Arabo-Canaanite]]}}
{{Tree chart| |,|-|-|+|-|-|-|-|.| | | | |,|^|.|}}
{{Tree chart|ET| |ESA| |MSA| |AR| |CN| |CN=[[Canaanite languages|Canaanite]]|AM=[[Aramaic]]|AR=[[Arabic]]|ESA=[[Epigraphic South Arabian]]|MSA=[[Modern South Arabian languages|Modern South Arabian]]|ET=[[Ethiopian Semitic languages|Ethiopic]]}}
{{Tree chart/end}}
{{chart bottom}}

[[John Huehnergard]], [[Aaron D. Rubin]], and other scholars suggested subsequent modifications to Hetzron's model:<ref name="Huehnergard 2014 p3-6">{{harvnb|Brustad|Zuniga|2019|pp=3–6}}</ref>
{{Chart top|Huehnergard & Pat-El's classification of Semitic languages<ref name="Huehnergard 2014 p3-6"/>}}
{{Tree chart/start|align=center|summary=Traditional classification of the Semitic languages}}
{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | | | | |PS| | |PS=[[Proto-Semitic language|Proto-Semitic]]}}
{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | | | | |,|^|.| }}
{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | | |WS| |ES| | | | |WS=[[West Semitic languages|West Semitic]]|ES=[[East Semitic languages|East Semitic]] ([[Akkadian language|Akkadian]])}}
{{Tree chart| | |,|-|-|-|-|-|-|-|+|-|-|-|.| }}
{{Tree chart| |ET| | | | | |MSA| |CS| | |CS=[[Central Semitic languages|Central Semitic]]|MSA=[[Modern South Arabian]]|ET=[[Ethiopian Semitic languages|Ethio-Semitic]]}}
{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | |,|-|-|-|-|-|+|-|-|-|-|.| }}
{{Tree chart| | | | | | | |NA| | | |AA| | |NWS|NA=[[Ancient North Arabian|North Arabian]]|AA=[[Old South Arabian|Ancient Arabian]]|NWS=[[Northwest Semitic languages|Northwest Semitic]]}}
{{Tree chart| | | |,|-|-|-|-|^|-|-|-|-|.| | |,|-|-|+|-|-|-|.| |}}
{{Tree chart| | |AS| | | | | | | | |!| |AC| |UG| |SA|AC=[[Aramaic|Arameo]]-[[Canaanite languages|Canaanite]]| |UG=[[Ugaritic]]|SA=[[Samalian language|Samalian]]|AS=[[Arabic-Safaitic]]}}
{{Tree chart| |,|-|^|v|-|-|-|-|.| | | |!|}}
{{Tree chart|AV| |CA| |SA| |DD| |AV=[[Varieties of Arabic|Arabic vernaculars]]<br />(inc. '''Levantine''')|CA=[[Classical Arabic]] and<br />[[Modern Standard Arabic]]|SA=[[Safaitic#Language|Safaitic]]|DD=[[Dadanitic]],<br />[[Taymanitic]],<br /> [[Hismaic]], etc.}}
{{Tree chart/end}}
{{chart bottom}}

However, several scholars, such as [[Giovanni Garbini]], consider that the historical–genetic interpretation is not a satisfactory way of representing the development of the Semitic languages (contrary to [[Indo-European languages]], which spread over a wide area and were usually isolated from each other).<ref name="Versteegh 2014 p21">{{harvnb|Versteegh|2014|p=21}}</ref> [[Edward Ullendorff]] even thinks it is impossible to establish any genetic hierarchy between Semitic languages.<ref name="Versteegh 2014 p15"/> These scholars prefer a purely [[Linguistic typology|typological]]–geographical approach without any claim to a historical derivation.<ref name="Versteegh 2014 p11"/>

For instance, in Garbini's view, the [[Syrian Desert]] was the core area of the Semitic languages where innovations came from. This region had contacts between sedentary settlements—on the desert fringe—and nomads from the desert. Some nomads joined settlements, while some settlers became isolated nomads ("[[Bedouin]]isation"). According to Garbini, this constant alternation explains how innovations spread from Syria into other areas.<ref name="Versteegh 2014 15-16">{{harvnb|Versteegh|2014|pp=15–16}}</ref> Isolated nomads progressively spread southwards and reached [[South Arabia]], where the [[South Arabian language]] was spoken. They established [[Language contact|linguistic contacts]] back and forth between Syria and South Arabia and their languages. That is why Garbini considers that Arabic does not belong exclusively to either the [[Northwest Semitic languages]] ([[Aramaic]], [[Phoenician language|Phoenician]], [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]], etc.) or the [[South Semitic languages]] ([[Modern South Arabian languages|Modern South Arabian]], [[Geʽez]], etc.) but that it was affected by innovations in both groups.<ref name="Versteegh 2014 21-22">{{harvnb|Versteegh|2014|pp=21–22}}</ref>

There is still no consensus regarding the exact position of Arabic within Semitic languages. The only consensus among scholars is that [[Arabic varieties]] exhibit common features with both the South (South Arabian, [[Ethiopian Semitic languages|Ethiopic]]) and the North ([[Canaanite languages|Canaanite]], Aramaic) Semitic languages, and that it also contains unique innovations.<ref name="Versteegh 2014 21-22"/>

There is no consensus among scholars whether Arabic [[diglossia]] (between Classical Arabic, also called "[[Old Arabic]]" and Arabic vernaculars, also called "New Arabic" or "Neo-Arabic") was the result of the [[Early Muslim conquests|Islamic conquests]] and due to the influence of non-Arabic languages or whether it was already the natural state in 7th-century Arabia (which means that both types coexisted in the pre-Islamic period).{{sfn|Brustad|Zuniga|2019|pp=367–369}}{{sfn|Versteegh|2014|pp=58–59}}<ref>{{cite book |first1=Soha |last1=Abboud-Haggar |chapter=Dialects: Genesis |title=Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and Linguistics |editor1-first=Lutz |editor1-last=Edzard |editor2-first=Rudolf |editor2-last=de Jong |doi=10.1163/1570-6699_eall_EALL_COM_0088 }}</ref>

==Modern spoken Arabic varieties==
According to Dutch linguist [[Kees Versteegh]], modern vernaculars (also called dialects, colloquial varieties or spoken Arabic varieties) are classified as follows:{{sfn|Versteegh|2014|pages=192–220}}{{efn|Versteegh does not mention [[Shihhi Arabic]], [[Dhofari Arabic]], [[Judeo-Yemeni Arabic]], [[Judeo-Moroccan Arabic]], and [[Judeo-Tripolitanian Arabic]].}}{{efn|[[Algerian Arabic]], [[Moroccan Arabic]], and [[Tunisian Arabic]] are koines.}}

{{tree list}}
* '''Arabic'''
** [[Peninsular Arabic|Peninsular]]
*** [[Najdi Arabic|North-east Arabian]]:
**** [[ʿAnazī dialects|ʿAnazī]]: including [[Kuwaiti Arabic]], [[Bahraini Gulf Arabic|Bahrain Sunnī Arabic]] and [[Gulf Arabic]]
**** [[Šammar dialects|Šammar]]: including some Bedouin dialects in Iraq
**** Syro-Mesopotamian Bedouin: including the Bedouin dialects of North Israel and Jordan, and the [[Dawāġrah]] dialect
*** [[Southwest Arabian Arabic|South(-west) Arabian]]: [[Yemeni Arabic]] (including [[Sanʽani Arabic]], [[Hadhrami Arabic]] and [[Taʽizzi-Adeni Arabic]]), [[Bahrani Arabic|Shiʿite Baḥārna]] and [[Omani Arabic]]
*** [[Hejazi Arabic|Ḥijāzī (West Arabian)]]: Bedouin dialects of the [[Hejaz]] and the [[Tihamah]]. Includes [[Mecca]] and [[Medina]].
*** [[Northwest Arabian Arabic|Northwest Arabian]]: [[Negev]], [[Sinai Peninsula|Sinai]], southern Jordan, eastern coast of the [[Gulf of Aqaba]] and "some regions in north-western Saudi Arabia"
** [[Levantine Arabic|Syro-Lebanese]]
*** Lebanese/Central Syrian: including all [[Lebanese Arabic|Lebanese dialects]], [[Damascus Arabic]], [[Druze Arabic]], and [[Çukurova Arabic]]. Versteegh notes that [[Cypriot Arabic]] is usually included in this group although it also has [[North Mesopotamian Arabic]] (qeltu) features.
*** North Syrian: including [[Aleppo Arabic]]
*** [[Palestinian Arabic|Palestinian]]/[[Jordanian Arabic|Jordanian]]:
*** Palestinian urban (madani)
*** Central Palestinian rural (fellahi)
**** South Palestinian rural and Jordanian, including the [[Hauran]]
** [[Mesopotamian Arabic|Greater Mesopotamian]]
*** [[North Mesopotamian Arabic]] (Mesopotamian Qǝltu Arabic)
**** Tigris
***** [[Baghdad Jewish Arabic|Jewish Baghdadi]] and Christian Baghdadi
**** Euphrates
**** [[Anatolian Arabic|Anatolian]]
**** [[Central Asian Arabic]]
***** [[Central Asian Arabic|Uzbekistan Arabic]]
*** [[Gilit Mesopotamian Arabic]]
**** [[Baghdadi Arabic|Muslim Baghdadi]]
**** [[Khuzestani Arabic|Urban Khuzestani]]
** Egyptian–Sudanese
*** Chad-Sudan
**** [[Chadian Arabic]]
***** [[Bagirmi Arabic|Bagirmi]]: Nigeria, Cameroon, and part of Chad
**** Urban dialects of Chad, including [[N'Djamena|N’Djamena]] and [[Abéché|Abbéché]]
**** [[Sudanese Arabic]]
***** [[Juba Arabic]]{{sfn|Versteegh|2014|p=306}}
***** [[Nubi language|Nubi Arabic]]{{sfn|Versteegh|2014|p=307}}
*** Egyptian proper
**** [[Nile Delta]]
***** Eastern Delta ([[Sharqia Governorate|Šarqiyya]])
***** Western Delta
**** [[Egyptian Arabic|Cairene Arabic]]
**** [[Middle Egypt]]: [[Giza]] to [[Asyut]]
**** [[Saʽidi Arabic|Upper Egyptian]]
***** Between [[Asyut]] and [[Nag Hammadi]]
***** Between [[Nag Hammadi]] and [[Qena]]
***** Between [[Qena]] and [[Luxor]]
***** Between [[Luxor]] and [[Esna]]
** [[Maghrebi Arabic|Maghrebi]]
*** [[Pre-Hilalian Arabic dialects|Pre-Hilālī]]: all urban
**** [[Eastern pre-Hilālī]]: Libya, Tunisia (including [[Judeo-Tunisian Arabic|Judeo-Tunisian]]), eastern Algeria
**** [[Western pre-Hilālī]]: western Algeria and Morocco
**** [[Maltese language|Maltese]]
**** [[Andalusi Arabic|Andalusian Arabic]] (extinct)
*** [[Hilalian dialects|Hilālī]]: Bedouin dialects of North Africa
**** Sulaym: [[Libyan Arabic]] and southern Tunisia
**** Eastern Hilāl: central Tunisia and eastern Algeria
**** [[Algerian Saharan Arabic|Central Hilāl]]: south and central Algeria, especially areas bordering the Sahara
**** Western Hilali: Hilali [[Chaouia (Morocco)|Chaoui]] confederations in [[Casablanca-Settat]]
**** Maʿqil: western Algeria and Moroccan plains
***** [[Hassaniya Arabic|Hassaniya]]
{{tree list/end}}

==See also==
* [[Arab (disambiguation)]]
* [[Etymology of Arab]]
* [[Varieties of Arabic]]

==Notes==
{{noteslist}}

==References==
{{reflist}}

==Sources==
* {{cite book |last1=Brustad |first1=Kristen |last2=Zuniga |first2=Emilie |date=6 March 2019 |editor-last1=Huehnergard |editor-first1=John |editor-link1=John Huehnergard| editor-last2=Pat-El |editor-first2=Na'ama |title=The Semitic languages |publisher=Routledge Taylor & Francis Group | publication-place=London & New York |pages=403–432 |chapter=Chapter 16: Levantine Arabic |isbn=978-0-429-02556-3 |edition=2nd |doi=10.4324/9780429025563|s2cid=166512720 }}
* Cantineau, Jean (1955). "La dialectologie arabe", ''Orbis'' 4:149–169.
* {{cite book | last1=Fischer |first1=Wolfdietrich |last2= Jastrow |first2= Otto |title=Handbuch der arabischen Dialekte | publisher=Harrassowitz | publication-place=Wiesbaden | year=1980 | isbn=3-447-02039-3 | oclc=7308117 | language=de }}
* {{Cite journal|last1=Greenfield|first1=Jonas C.|last2=Winnett|first2=F. V.|last3=Reed|first3=W. L.|date=1970|title=Ancient Records from North Arabia|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3263463|journal=Journal of Biblical Literature|volume=89|issue=4|pages=483|doi=10.2307/3263463|jstor=3263463|issn=0021-9231}}
* Kaye, Alan S., & Judith Rosenhouse (1997). "Arabic Dialects and Maltese", ''The Semitic Languages''. Ed. Robert Hetzron. New York: Routledge. Pages 263–311.
* {{Cite book|last=Hélène.|first=Lozachmeur|url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/313039144|title=Présence Arabe dans le Croissant Fertile avant l'Hégire : actes de la table ronde internationale ; le 13 novembre 1993|date=1995|publisher=Éd. Recherche sur les Civilisations|isbn=2-86538-254-0|oclc=313039144}}
* {{Cite journal|last=MACDONALD|first=M. C. A.|date=2000|title=Reflections on the linguistic map of pre-Islamic Arabia|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0471.2000.aae110106.x|journal=Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy|volume=11|issue=1|pages=28–79|doi=10.1111/j.1600-0471.2000.aae110106.x|issn=0905-7196}}
* Scagliarini, F., (1999). "The Dedanitic inscriptions from Jabal 'Ikma in north-western Hejaz" ''Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies'' 29, 143–150 {{ISBN|2-503-50829-4}}
* {{Cite book|last1=Sobelman|first1=Harvey|last2=Ferguson|first2=Charles A.|last3=Harrell|first3=Richard S.|url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/63382915|title=Arabic dialect studies : a selected bibliography|date=1962|publisher=MLA|oclc=63382915|location=Washington, D.C.}}
* {{cite book | last=Versteegh | first=C. H. M. |author-link=Kees Versteegh| title=The Arabic Language | publisher=Edinburgh University Press | year=2014 | isbn=978-0-7486-4528-2|oclc=872980196}}

{{Semitic languages |expanded=Arabic}}

{{Authority control}}

[[Category:Arabic languages| ]]
[[Category:Central Semitic languages]]
[[Category:Language classification|Arabic]]

Latest revision as of 06:48, 12 August 2024

North Arabian
South Central Semitic
Arabic
Geographic
distribution
North Africa, Middle East, Malta
Linguistic classificationAfro-Asiatic
Proto-languageProto-Arabic
Language codes
Glottologarab1394

The Arabic language family is divided into several categories which are: Old Arabic, the literary varieties, and the modern vernaculars.[1]

The genealogical position of Arabic within the group of the Semitic languages has long been a problem.[2]

Views on Arabic classification

[edit]

Semitic languages were confined in a relatively small geographic area (the region of Syria, Mesopotamia and the Arabian desert) and often spoken in contiguous regions. Permanent contacts between the speakers of these languages facilitated borrowing between them. Borrowing disrupts historical processes of change and makes it difficult to reconstruct the genealogy of languages.[3]

In the traditional classification of the Semitic languages, Arabic was in the Southwest Semitic group, based on some affinities with Modern South Arabian and Geʽez.[4]

Traditional classification of the Semitic languages[4]
Proto-Semitic
West SemiticEast Semitic (Akkadian)
Northwest SemiticSouthwest Semitic
Canaanite
(Hebrew, Phoenician)
AramaicArabicSouth ArabianEthiopic

Most scholars reject the Southwest Semitic subgrouping because it is not supported by any innovations and because shared features with South Arabian and Ethiopic were only due to areal diffusion.[5]

In 1976, linguist Robert Hetzron classified Arabic languages as a Central Semitic language:[6]

The genealogy of the Semitic languages (Hetzron 1974, 1976)[6]
Proto-Semitic
West SemiticEast Semitic (Akkadian)
South SemiticCentral Semitic
AramaicArabo-Canaanite
EthiopicEpigraphic South ArabianModern South ArabianArabicCanaanite

John Huehnergard, Aaron D. Rubin, and other scholars suggested subsequent modifications to Hetzron's model:[7]

Huehnergard & Pat-El's classification of Semitic languages[7]
Proto-Semitic
West SemiticEast Semitic (Akkadian)
Ethio-SemiticModern South ArabianCentral Semitic
North ArabianAncient ArabianNorthwest Semitic
Arabic-SafaiticArameo-CanaaniteUgariticSamalian
Arabic vernaculars
(inc. Levantine)
Classical Arabic and
Modern Standard Arabic
SafaiticDadanitic,
Taymanitic,
Hismaic, etc.

However, several scholars, such as Giovanni Garbini, consider that the historical–genetic interpretation is not a satisfactory way of representing the development of the Semitic languages (contrary to Indo-European languages, which spread over a wide area and were usually isolated from each other).[8] Edward Ullendorff even thinks it is impossible to establish any genetic hierarchy between Semitic languages.[6] These scholars prefer a purely typological–geographical approach without any claim to a historical derivation.[4]

For instance, in Garbini's view, the Syrian Desert was the core area of the Semitic languages where innovations came from. This region had contacts between sedentary settlements—on the desert fringe—and nomads from the desert. Some nomads joined settlements, while some settlers became isolated nomads ("Bedouinisation"). According to Garbini, this constant alternation explains how innovations spread from Syria into other areas.[9] Isolated nomads progressively spread southwards and reached South Arabia, where the South Arabian language was spoken. They established linguistic contacts back and forth between Syria and South Arabia and their languages. That is why Garbini considers that Arabic does not belong exclusively to either the Northwest Semitic languages (Aramaic, Phoenician, Hebrew, etc.) or the South Semitic languages (Modern South Arabian, Geʽez, etc.) but that it was affected by innovations in both groups.[10]

There is still no consensus regarding the exact position of Arabic within Semitic languages. The only consensus among scholars is that Arabic varieties exhibit common features with both the South (South Arabian, Ethiopic) and the North (Canaanite, Aramaic) Semitic languages, and that it also contains unique innovations.[10]

There is no consensus among scholars whether Arabic diglossia (between Classical Arabic, also called "Old Arabic" and Arabic vernaculars, also called "New Arabic" or "Neo-Arabic") was the result of the Islamic conquests and due to the influence of non-Arabic languages or whether it was already the natural state in 7th-century Arabia (which means that both types coexisted in the pre-Islamic period).[11][12][13]

Modern spoken Arabic varieties

[edit]

According to Dutch linguist Kees Versteegh, modern vernaculars (also called dialects, colloquial varieties or spoken Arabic varieties) are classified as follows:[14][a][b]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Jallad, Ahmad (2020). "Al-Jallad. A Manual of the Historical Grammar of Arabic". Academia.edu.
  2. ^ Versteegh 2014, p. 18
  3. ^ Versteegh 2014, p. 13
  4. ^ a b c Versteegh 2014, p. 11
  5. ^ Al-Jallad, Ahmad (2020). "0. Arabic defined and its subgroupings". A Manual of the Historical Grammar of Arabic. pp. 8, 11 – via Academia.
  6. ^ a b c Versteegh 2014, p. 15
  7. ^ a b Brustad & Zuniga 2019, pp. 3–6
  8. ^ Versteegh 2014, p. 21
  9. ^ Versteegh 2014, pp. 15–16
  10. ^ a b Versteegh 2014, pp. 21–22
  11. ^ Brustad & Zuniga 2019, pp. 367–369.
  12. ^ Versteegh 2014, pp. 58–59.
  13. ^ Abboud-Haggar, Soha. "Dialects: Genesis". In Edzard, Lutz; de Jong, Rudolf (eds.). Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and Linguistics. doi:10.1163/1570-6699_eall_EALL_COM_0088.
  14. ^ Versteegh 2014, pp. 192–220.
  15. ^ Versteegh 2014, p. 306.
  16. ^ Versteegh 2014, p. 307.

Sources

[edit]