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Table of Contents
- Perspectives on Arabic Linguistics XXXII
- Editorial page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Table of contents
- Introduction
- 1. Contributions of Arabic to typology and theoretical linguistics
- 2. The contributions in this volume
- 3. Note on reviewing, the transcriptions, glosses, and examples
- References
- Part I. Phonetics and phonology
- Stress assignment and foot construction in a Southwestern Saudi Arabic dialect
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Stress pattern
- 2.1 Syllable quantity
- 2.2 Stress shift
- 3. Analysis
- 3.1 Word-final vowels
- 3.2 High vowel syncope
- 3.3 Geminates and long vowels
- 3.4 Summary
- 4. Optimality-theoretic analysis
- 4.1 Foot construction and stress assignment
- 4.2 High vowel syncope
- 4.3 Geminate and long vowel effects
- 4.4 Summary
- 5. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- What triggers ˈimāla: Focus on a Palestinian variety with phonological analysis
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Exemplification of ˈimāla in PA-TA
- 3. Feature geometric representation and the blocking of ˈimāla
- 4. The historic uvular /q/ and the back velar problem
- 5. The semantic class of colors and mental/physical challenges
- 5.1 Morpho-semantic class
- 5.2 A morphophonological analysis
- 6. Other exceptional word groups
- 7. Conclusion
- Acknowledgments
- Funding
- References
- A study of the place of articulation of the Arabic voiceless dorsal fricative
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Methods
- 2.1 Participants
- 2.2 Stimuli
- 2.3 Experimental procedure
- 2.4 Analysis
- 3. Results
- 3.1 Ultrasound traces – 2D midsagittal profiles
- 3.2 Nearest Neighbor Distance (NND) from Velar and Uvular Stops to Dorsal Fricatives
- 4. Discussion and conclusions
- References
- Appendix 1. Phoneme inventory of Arabic
- Part II. Syntax and semantics
- On the syntax of correlation: Evidence from Egyptian Arabic
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The grammatical properties of correlation structures in EA
- 2.1 Type A of correlation structures in EA
- 2.2 Type B of correlation structures in EA
- 3. The macro-syntax of correlation structures
- 4. The micro-syntax of correlation structures
- 4.1 Deriving correlation structures in EA
- 4.2 Lexical doubling in CSs as a post-syntactic operation
- 4.3 Summary
- 5. A cartographic analysis of the micro-syntax of correlation structures
- 6. Brief remarks on ‘constructions’
- 7. Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- The complementizer layer in Standard Arabic revisited
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The left periphery in SA
- 2.1 Complementizer distribution
- 3. Complementizer agreement (CA)
- 3.1 Shlonsky’s account
- 3.2 What is it that follows ʔanna and ʔinna?
- 3.3 Possible account
- 3.4 Proposal
- 4. Extraction patterns
- 4.1 Ban on extraction across the preverbal DP in SVO
- 4.2 Proposal
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- Sluicing and sprouting in Jordanian Arabic
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Wh-questions in JA
- 3. Sluicing in JA
- 4. Sprouting
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- Part III. Clinical linguistics
- Clinical linguistic research in the study of Arabic diglossia
- 1. Communication Sciences and Disorders in the Arabic-speaking world
- 1.1 Shortage of Arabic-speaking SLPs
- 1.2 Paucity of academic programs and resources
- 2. Clinical linguistic studies of Arabic diglossia
- 2.1 Aphasia recovery and Arabic diglossia: Adaptation of the Bilingual Aphasia Test to Palestinian Arabic and Modern Standard Arabic
- 2.2 Diglossic codeswitching in Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD)
- 3. Summary & discussions
- References
- 1. Communication Sciences and Disorders in the Arabic-speaking world
- Index
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