Jewish and Muslim Dialects of Moroccan ArabicRoutledge, 11 janv. 2013 - 624 pages This is a comprehensive study of the Jewish and Muslim dialect networks of Morocco in its traditional boundaries, covering twenty-two Muslim and some thirty Jewish dialects of Moroccan Arabic. |
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Page 3
... probably present , there is no evidence that a large segment of the population spoke Greek . The Romans had continuously controlled the Atlantic coast down to at least Salé ( adjacent to Rabat ) and at times as far south as Essaouira ...
... probably present , there is no evidence that a large segment of the population spoke Greek . The Romans had continuously controlled the Atlantic coast down to at least Salé ( adjacent to Rabat ) and at times as far south as Essaouira ...
Page 4
... probably underwent extensive phonological restructuring and grammatical simplification in one or two generations , as a Latin- and Berber - speaking population shifted rapidly to Arabic . MA was largely confined to a few urban centers ...
... probably underwent extensive phonological restructuring and grammatical simplification in one or two generations , as a Latin- and Berber - speaking population shifted rapidly to Arabic . MA was largely confined to a few urban centers ...
Page 11
... Probably only a minority of the refugees spoke vernacular Arabic when they arrived in Morocco . It is also clear from documentary evidence ( such as rabbinical responsa ) that Judeo - Spanish survived as a vernacular among the Andalusi ...
... Probably only a minority of the refugees spoke vernacular Arabic when they arrived in Morocco . It is also clear from documentary evidence ( such as rabbinical responsa ) that Judeo - Spanish survived as a vernacular among the Andalusi ...
Page 23
... probably hastened the demise of Judeo - Spanish as a vernacular . Except during the era of Moulay Isma'il , Mk has been politically secondary to Fs , Rb , and Mr. In Mk we do not find the sharp separation between old medina dialect and ...
... probably hastened the demise of Judeo - Spanish as a vernacular . Except during the era of Moulay Isma'il , Mk has been politically secondary to Fs , Rb , and Mr. In Mk we do not find the sharp separation between old medina dialect and ...
Page 25
... probably the most important Jewish town in this general area , and I have much fuller data on its dialect than for the other towns mentioned . Its population seems to have had a significant Andalusi component , and two of my three ...
... probably the most important Jewish town in this general area , and I have much fuller data on its dialect than for the other towns mentioned . Its population seems to have had a significant Andalusi component , and two of my three ...
Table des matières
1 | |
35 | |
3 Phonology | 131 |
4 Affixal morphology | 209 |
5 Derivational ablaut | 274 |
6 Case studies of idiosyncratic lexical items | 379 |
7 Simple phrasal structures | 460 |
Maps | 504 |
References | 592 |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
3FeSg 3MaSg ablaut ablaut plurals adjectives allomorph Andalusi Andalusi Arabic Arabic assimilation Atlantic strip attested once Berber Br-M CCaC Ch-M Chaouia-M completely dominant confirmed Dimin diminutives diphthongs elicited fairly common feminine FeSg Fs-J Fs-M geminate GJAF GMADT Hassaniya imperfective Jebli dialects koiné labialization lexical item Mk-J monophthongized morpheme Mr-M nearby north Tg northeast northern and Jebli northern-Jebli nouns oasis occurs PAJM participle passive pattern pharyngealized phonemic phonological prefix preposition pronominal pronunciation quadriliteral Rb-M recorded once rural belt Saharan dialects schwa semivowel sense Sf-J Sk-M Sous-M southwest speakers stem suffix syncope Tafilalt Tafilalt Ra TAPChIS term Tg-M TJAF Tn-M towns triliteral ungeminated urban belt urban belt Rb variant VbIN verb versus vowel western oases Wj-M Zaër-M TAZ