Modern Arabic
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EXPLORE THIS TITLE DescriptionTable of Contents Reviews |
![]() 440 pp., 6 x 9 Paperback ISBN: 9781589010222 (1589010221) eBook ISBN: 9781589019041 September 2004 LC: 2004005616 Georgetown Classics in Arabic Languages and Linguistics series |
Modern Arabic
Structures, Functions, and Varieties
Revised Edition
Clive Holes
Foreword by Roger Allen The revised and updated edition of Modern Arabic takes this authoritative, concise linguistic description of the structure and use of modern Arabic to an invaluable new level. Clive Holes traces the development of the Arabic language from Classical Arabic, the written language used in the 7th century for the Qur'an and poetry, through the increasingly symbiotic use of Modern Standard Arabic or MSA (the language of writing and formal speech) and dialectal Arabic (the language of normal conversation). He shows how Arabic has been shaped over the centuries by migration, urbanization, and education—giving us "a balanced, dispassionate, and accurate picture of the structures, functions, and varieties of the contemporary Arabic language." Clive Holes is Khalid bin Abdallah Al-Sa'ud Professor for the Study of the Contemporary Arab World at the Oriental Institute, University of Oxford, and a Fellow of Magdalen College. He is also a Fellow of the British Academy. Karin C. Ryding and Margarett Nydell
Reviews
"Thanks to Clive Holes we now have a book that examines in some depth the relationship between the spoken and written language, and which provides us with a lively and erudite account of the current state of the Arabic language in its many forms. . . . it is really in the areas of phonology, morphology and syntax that Holes is at his best, drawing on his vast experience of field work and profound linguistic knowledge. His assessment of modern Arabic in all its forms is honest, contrastive and comparative, and presents impressions and analyses of many categories from a fresh angle. It will appeal to anyone with an interest in the Arabic language today."—Bibliotheca Orientalis "Clive Holes's book is written in a pleasantly informal manner. Matters are discussed throughout in a knowledgeable, objective and informative fashion and presented in a lively, readable style. . . . The author has no theoretical axe to grind, he is bound to no one school of thought and has no interest in supporting the cause of any particular doctrine. His approach to the material and the problems it raises is refreshingly straightforward and characterized at all points by the simple application of common sense and the desire to see the truth for what it is. This is in welcome contrast to much recent work in Arabic linguistics, which suffers, as Holes observes in his preface, from a regrettable reluctance to see things as they are. His book is a deliberate, and very successful, attempt to redress the balance. It will be read with pleasure and benefit by all who are interested in the Arabic language. . . . [A]n excellent book and will surely become a standard work on the subject. It will be read with much profit by all interested in the Arabic language, to whom it is herewith heartily recommended."—Zeitschrift für Arabische Linguistik "In a pleasant and extremely clear style on which he must be complimented, the author puts at the disposition of a large readership, from advanced students of Arabic to general linguists, an excellent synthesis of the relationships between written Arabic, spoken standard Arabic, the spoken dialects and relationships between the dialects. It was only natural that Clive Holes's work would benefit from our improved knowledge of dialectal Arabic, but these improvements would have been insufficient without the author's remarkable powers of synthesis and his ability to capture sociolinguistic phenomena. One can only warmly recommend a work which is agreeably accessible at the same time as rigorously scientific, and which opens paths for future research, which one hopes will be explored by the community of Arabists. [Translated from French.]""—Journal of Semitic Studies "Even seasoned Arabists can profit from this hefty tome, the first of its kind to serve as a solid introduction to the entire field of of Arabic linguistics and Comparative Arabic dialectology."—Language, reviewing a previous edition or volume Table of Contents List of Figures and Tables Foreword to the Georgetown Classics edition Preface to the second edition Preface to the first edition Transliteration conventions, gloss lines, and abbreviations Introduction 0.1 Where is Arabic spoken? 0.2 Varieties of Arabic 0.3 Aims of this book Notes 1. A Brief History of Arabic 1.1 Arabic as a Semitic language 1.2 Arabic at the dawn of Islam 1.3 The spread of Arabic 1.4 Middle Arabic, the modern dialects, and the evolution of Modern Standard Arabic 1.5 The contemporary linguistic situation Notes 2. Phonology 2.1 The phonology of MSA 2.2 The phonology of the dialects 2.3 Phonological variation in the dialects 2.4 Phonology and script Notes 3. Verb Morphology 3.1 General principles 3.2 Root and morphosemantic patterns: MSA 3.3 Morphosyntactic patterns of the finite verb: MSA 3.4 Verbal affixes 3.5 Morphophonological adjustments 3.6 Dialectal verb morphology Notes 4. Noun Morphology 4.1 The verbal noun 4.2 Participles 4.3 Other categories of the singular noun 4.4 Number 4.5 Case and definiteness 4.6 Gender Notes 5. Beyond Root and Pattern: Pronouns and Deictics 5.1 Personal pronouns 5.2 Demonstratives 5.3 Interrogatives 5.4 Temporal, locative and manner deictics Notes 6. Syntax and Semantics I: Phrase Structure 6.1 The noun phrase 6.2 The verb phrase 6.3 Negation Notes 7. Syntax and Semantics II: Sentence Structure 7.1 Word order 7.2 Clause order and type Notes 8. Lexical and Stylistic Developments 8.1 Foreign borrowing into Arabic 8.2 The language academies 8.3 The language of the media 8.4 Repitition and parallelism Notes 9. Language Level 9.1 Introduction 9.2 Language levels in Cairo 9.3 Level switching 9.4 Co-occurrence phenomena and level 9.5 Dialogue and dialect in literature and journalism Notes Appendix: The Arabic Script Bibliography Index |

