Arabic and the case against linearity in historical linguistics:
This volume explores nearly 2000 years of the history of the Arabic language, from pre-Islamic Arabic via the Classical era of the Arabic grammarians up to the present day. Jonathan Owens advocates a multiple pathways approach to the development of Arabic, which he shows to be alinear in many respec...
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford ; New York, NY
Oxford University Press
[2023]
|
Schriftenreihe: | Oxford studies in diachronic and historical linguistics
52 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | DE-703 Volltext |
Zusammenfassung: | This volume explores nearly 2000 years of the history of the Arabic language, from pre-Islamic Arabic via the Classical era of the Arabic grammarians up to the present day. Jonathan Owens advocates a multiple pathways approach to the development of Arabic, which he shows to be alinear in many respects but multilinear in others |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (xxi, 477 Seiten) Illustrationen, Karten |
Zielpublikum: | Specialized |
ISBN: | 9780191959578 9780192693174 |
DOI: | 10.1093/oso/9780192867513.001.0001 |
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505 | 8 | |a Cover -- Title -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Series preface -- Preface -- List of figures and maps -- Abbreviations and symbols -- Six principles -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Fallacies and metonymies, both unwanted and wanted -- 1.1.1 Linearity -- 1.1.2 The written over oral fallacy -- 1.1.3 The part for whole metonymic fallacy -- 1.1.4 Historical linguistics via non-linguistic criteria: The ""cultural entities are linguistic entities fallacy'' -- 1.1.5 The script is language fallacy -- 1.2 Non-linearity: An empirical comparative alternative -- 1.3 Data sources and methodology | |
505 | 8 | |a 1.4 Notes and conventions -- 1.5 Overview of chapters -- Part I: Old Arabic -- Part II: Reconstruction -- Part III: Contact -- Part IV: Stability -- Part V: Taxonomy -- Putting it all together, Chapters 13 and 14 -- Part I Old Arabic -- 2 Arabic and Semitic -- 2.1 Common Semitic -- Segmental phonemes -- Verb -- 2.2 Contrastive, but general: The ancestors of Arabic in trees -- 2.2.1 The classic arguments -- 2.2.2 Hetzron's alternative -- 2.3 Bifurcated features in Arabic -- 2.3.1 -t ""007E-k = 1, 2 perfect verb suffix -- 2.3.2 Short vowels in open syllables -- 2.3.3 The nominal feminine suffix -at | |
505 | 8 | |a 2.3.4 -ki ""007E-iš 2FSG object -- 2.3.5 Stammbaum and bifurcation -- 2.4 Arabic: A composite West Semitic language -- 3 Arabs, Arabic -- 3.1 Arabs -- 3.2 k → c:25ex: Sibawaih the modernist -- 3.2.1 The 2FSG object pronoun suffix in Sibawaih -- 3.2.2 The history of the *k > c-.25ex/c split revisited: Sibawaih and historical linguistics -- 3.3 The early tradition -- 3.3.1 The traditional linear approach -- 3.3.2 Ibn al-Nadim: Classical Arabic as construct -- 4 Three types of pre- and early Islamic sources: The pre-Sibawaihian setting -- 4.1 Epigraphy -- 4.1.1 Taymanitic -- 4.1.2 Safaitic | |
505 | 8 | |a 4.1.3 Limits of Safaitic for historical reconstruction -- the burden of underspecification -- 4.1.3.1 Underspecification I: Lack of formal indication of short vowels, gemination -- 4.1.3.2 Underspecification II: Gaps in paradigms -- 4.1.4 The contradictions of interpreting underspecification -- Orthography and reconstruction -- 4.1.5 Linearity -- 4.1.5.1 Link to CA -- 4.1.5.2 Link to Proto-Semitic -- 4.1.6 Summary, Safaitic -- 4.1.7 Aramaic loanword š = Arabic s -- 4.2 Papyri -- 4.2.1 Basic overview -- 4.2.1.1 Phonology -- 4.2.1.2 Morphology and syntax | |
505 | 8 | |a 4.2.2 A case study, raw data, and deviation from CA -- 4.2.3 From juridical and cultural koine to Classical Arabic? -- 4.3 Greek orthography, bilinguals, Greek renditions of Arabic names -- 4.4 Language change and socio-demographic realism -- 4.5 An interpretive record -- Part II Reconstruction -- 5 Punctuation and language history: I/I + D, inheritance/innovation, and diffusion -- 5.1 Basic concepts, basic exemplification: The I/I + D paradigm -- 5.2 When things get complicated: Diffusion, not parallel independent development -- 5.2.1 A basis for discussion: The intrusive -n | |
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contents | Cover -- Title -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Series preface -- Preface -- List of figures and maps -- Abbreviations and symbols -- Six principles -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Fallacies and metonymies, both unwanted and wanted -- 1.1.1 Linearity -- 1.1.2 The written over oral fallacy -- 1.1.3 The part for whole metonymic fallacy -- 1.1.4 Historical linguistics via non-linguistic criteria: The ""cultural entities are linguistic entities fallacy'' -- 1.1.5 The script is language fallacy -- 1.2 Non-linearity: An empirical comparative alternative -- 1.3 Data sources and methodology 1.4 Notes and conventions -- 1.5 Overview of chapters -- Part I: Old Arabic -- Part II: Reconstruction -- Part III: Contact -- Part IV: Stability -- Part V: Taxonomy -- Putting it all together, Chapters 13 and 14 -- Part I Old Arabic -- 2 Arabic and Semitic -- 2.1 Common Semitic -- Segmental phonemes -- Verb -- 2.2 Contrastive, but general: The ancestors of Arabic in trees -- 2.2.1 The classic arguments -- 2.2.2 Hetzron's alternative -- 2.3 Bifurcated features in Arabic -- 2.3.1 -t ""007E-k = 1, 2 perfect verb suffix -- 2.3.2 Short vowels in open syllables -- 2.3.3 The nominal feminine suffix -at 2.3.4 -ki ""007E-iš 2FSG object -- 2.3.5 Stammbaum and bifurcation -- 2.4 Arabic: A composite West Semitic language -- 3 Arabs, Arabic -- 3.1 Arabs -- 3.2 k → c:25ex: Sibawaih the modernist -- 3.2.1 The 2FSG object pronoun suffix in Sibawaih -- 3.2.2 The history of the *k > c-.25ex/c split revisited: Sibawaih and historical linguistics -- 3.3 The early tradition -- 3.3.1 The traditional linear approach -- 3.3.2 Ibn al-Nadim: Classical Arabic as construct -- 4 Three types of pre- and early Islamic sources: The pre-Sibawaihian setting -- 4.1 Epigraphy -- 4.1.1 Taymanitic -- 4.1.2 Safaitic 4.1.3 Limits of Safaitic for historical reconstruction -- the burden of underspecification -- 4.1.3.1 Underspecification I: Lack of formal indication of short vowels, gemination -- 4.1.3.2 Underspecification II: Gaps in paradigms -- 4.1.4 The contradictions of interpreting underspecification -- Orthography and reconstruction -- 4.1.5 Linearity -- 4.1.5.1 Link to CA -- 4.1.5.2 Link to Proto-Semitic -- 4.1.6 Summary, Safaitic -- 4.1.7 Aramaic loanword š = Arabic s -- 4.2 Papyri -- 4.2.1 Basic overview -- 4.2.1.1 Phonology -- 4.2.1.2 Morphology and syntax 4.2.2 A case study, raw data, and deviation from CA -- 4.2.3 From juridical and cultural koine to Classical Arabic? -- 4.3 Greek orthography, bilinguals, Greek renditions of Arabic names -- 4.4 Language change and socio-demographic realism -- 4.5 An interpretive record -- Part II Reconstruction -- 5 Punctuation and language history: I/I + D, inheritance/innovation, and diffusion -- 5.1 Basic concepts, basic exemplification: The I/I + D paradigm -- 5.2 When things get complicated: Diffusion, not parallel independent development -- 5.2.1 A basis for discussion: The intrusive -n |
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series2 | Oxford studies in diachronic and historical linguistics |
spelling | Owens, Jonathan 1951- Verfasser (DE-588)134267575 aut Arabic and the case against linearity in historical linguistics Jonathan Owens Oxford ; New York, NY Oxford University Press [2023] 1 Online-Ressource (xxi, 477 Seiten) Illustrationen, Karten txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Oxford studies in diachronic and historical linguistics 52 Cover -- Title -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Series preface -- Preface -- List of figures and maps -- Abbreviations and symbols -- Six principles -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Fallacies and metonymies, both unwanted and wanted -- 1.1.1 Linearity -- 1.1.2 The written over oral fallacy -- 1.1.3 The part for whole metonymic fallacy -- 1.1.4 Historical linguistics via non-linguistic criteria: The ""cultural entities are linguistic entities fallacy'' -- 1.1.5 The script is language fallacy -- 1.2 Non-linearity: An empirical comparative alternative -- 1.3 Data sources and methodology 1.4 Notes and conventions -- 1.5 Overview of chapters -- Part I: Old Arabic -- Part II: Reconstruction -- Part III: Contact -- Part IV: Stability -- Part V: Taxonomy -- Putting it all together, Chapters 13 and 14 -- Part I Old Arabic -- 2 Arabic and Semitic -- 2.1 Common Semitic -- Segmental phonemes -- Verb -- 2.2 Contrastive, but general: The ancestors of Arabic in trees -- 2.2.1 The classic arguments -- 2.2.2 Hetzron's alternative -- 2.3 Bifurcated features in Arabic -- 2.3.1 -t ""007E-k = 1, 2 perfect verb suffix -- 2.3.2 Short vowels in open syllables -- 2.3.3 The nominal feminine suffix -at 2.3.4 -ki ""007E-iš 2FSG object -- 2.3.5 Stammbaum and bifurcation -- 2.4 Arabic: A composite West Semitic language -- 3 Arabs, Arabic -- 3.1 Arabs -- 3.2 k → c:25ex: Sibawaih the modernist -- 3.2.1 The 2FSG object pronoun suffix in Sibawaih -- 3.2.2 The history of the *k > c-.25ex/c split revisited: Sibawaih and historical linguistics -- 3.3 The early tradition -- 3.3.1 The traditional linear approach -- 3.3.2 Ibn al-Nadim: Classical Arabic as construct -- 4 Three types of pre- and early Islamic sources: The pre-Sibawaihian setting -- 4.1 Epigraphy -- 4.1.1 Taymanitic -- 4.1.2 Safaitic 4.1.3 Limits of Safaitic for historical reconstruction -- the burden of underspecification -- 4.1.3.1 Underspecification I: Lack of formal indication of short vowels, gemination -- 4.1.3.2 Underspecification II: Gaps in paradigms -- 4.1.4 The contradictions of interpreting underspecification -- Orthography and reconstruction -- 4.1.5 Linearity -- 4.1.5.1 Link to CA -- 4.1.5.2 Link to Proto-Semitic -- 4.1.6 Summary, Safaitic -- 4.1.7 Aramaic loanword š = Arabic s -- 4.2 Papyri -- 4.2.1 Basic overview -- 4.2.1.1 Phonology -- 4.2.1.2 Morphology and syntax 4.2.2 A case study, raw data, and deviation from CA -- 4.2.3 From juridical and cultural koine to Classical Arabic? -- 4.3 Greek orthography, bilinguals, Greek renditions of Arabic names -- 4.4 Language change and socio-demographic realism -- 4.5 An interpretive record -- Part II Reconstruction -- 5 Punctuation and language history: I/I + D, inheritance/innovation, and diffusion -- 5.1 Basic concepts, basic exemplification: The I/I + D paradigm -- 5.2 When things get complicated: Diffusion, not parallel independent development -- 5.2.1 A basis for discussion: The intrusive -n This volume explores nearly 2000 years of the history of the Arabic language, from pre-Islamic Arabic via the Classical era of the Arabic grammarians up to the present day. Jonathan Owens advocates a multiple pathways approach to the development of Arabic, which he shows to be alinear in many respects but multilinear in others Specialized Arabisch (DE-588)4241223-7 gnd rswk-swf Sprachentwicklung (DE-588)4182511-1 gnd rswk-swf Historische Sprachwissenschaft (DE-588)4127276-6 gnd rswk-swf Arabic language / History Historical linguistics Electronic books Arabisch (DE-588)4241223-7 s Sprachentwicklung (DE-588)4182511-1 s Historische Sprachwissenschaft (DE-588)4127276-6 s DE-604 Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe 9780192867513 Oxford studies in diachronic and historical linguistics 52 (DE-604)BV046289643 52 https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192867513.001.0001 Verlag URL des Erstveröffentlichers Volltext |
spellingShingle | Owens, Jonathan 1951- Arabic and the case against linearity in historical linguistics Oxford studies in diachronic and historical linguistics Cover -- Title -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Series preface -- Preface -- List of figures and maps -- Abbreviations and symbols -- Six principles -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Fallacies and metonymies, both unwanted and wanted -- 1.1.1 Linearity -- 1.1.2 The written over oral fallacy -- 1.1.3 The part for whole metonymic fallacy -- 1.1.4 Historical linguistics via non-linguistic criteria: The ""cultural entities are linguistic entities fallacy'' -- 1.1.5 The script is language fallacy -- 1.2 Non-linearity: An empirical comparative alternative -- 1.3 Data sources and methodology 1.4 Notes and conventions -- 1.5 Overview of chapters -- Part I: Old Arabic -- Part II: Reconstruction -- Part III: Contact -- Part IV: Stability -- Part V: Taxonomy -- Putting it all together, Chapters 13 and 14 -- Part I Old Arabic -- 2 Arabic and Semitic -- 2.1 Common Semitic -- Segmental phonemes -- Verb -- 2.2 Contrastive, but general: The ancestors of Arabic in trees -- 2.2.1 The classic arguments -- 2.2.2 Hetzron's alternative -- 2.3 Bifurcated features in Arabic -- 2.3.1 -t ""007E-k = 1, 2 perfect verb suffix -- 2.3.2 Short vowels in open syllables -- 2.3.3 The nominal feminine suffix -at 2.3.4 -ki ""007E-iš 2FSG object -- 2.3.5 Stammbaum and bifurcation -- 2.4 Arabic: A composite West Semitic language -- 3 Arabs, Arabic -- 3.1 Arabs -- 3.2 k → c:25ex: Sibawaih the modernist -- 3.2.1 The 2FSG object pronoun suffix in Sibawaih -- 3.2.2 The history of the *k > c-.25ex/c split revisited: Sibawaih and historical linguistics -- 3.3 The early tradition -- 3.3.1 The traditional linear approach -- 3.3.2 Ibn al-Nadim: Classical Arabic as construct -- 4 Three types of pre- and early Islamic sources: The pre-Sibawaihian setting -- 4.1 Epigraphy -- 4.1.1 Taymanitic -- 4.1.2 Safaitic 4.1.3 Limits of Safaitic for historical reconstruction -- the burden of underspecification -- 4.1.3.1 Underspecification I: Lack of formal indication of short vowels, gemination -- 4.1.3.2 Underspecification II: Gaps in paradigms -- 4.1.4 The contradictions of interpreting underspecification -- Orthography and reconstruction -- 4.1.5 Linearity -- 4.1.5.1 Link to CA -- 4.1.5.2 Link to Proto-Semitic -- 4.1.6 Summary, Safaitic -- 4.1.7 Aramaic loanword š = Arabic s -- 4.2 Papyri -- 4.2.1 Basic overview -- 4.2.1.1 Phonology -- 4.2.1.2 Morphology and syntax 4.2.2 A case study, raw data, and deviation from CA -- 4.2.3 From juridical and cultural koine to Classical Arabic? -- 4.3 Greek orthography, bilinguals, Greek renditions of Arabic names -- 4.4 Language change and socio-demographic realism -- 4.5 An interpretive record -- Part II Reconstruction -- 5 Punctuation and language history: I/I + D, inheritance/innovation, and diffusion -- 5.1 Basic concepts, basic exemplification: The I/I + D paradigm -- 5.2 When things get complicated: Diffusion, not parallel independent development -- 5.2.1 A basis for discussion: The intrusive -n Arabisch (DE-588)4241223-7 gnd Sprachentwicklung (DE-588)4182511-1 gnd Historische Sprachwissenschaft (DE-588)4127276-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4241223-7 (DE-588)4182511-1 (DE-588)4127276-6 |
title | Arabic and the case against linearity in historical linguistics |
title_auth | Arabic and the case against linearity in historical linguistics |
title_exact_search | Arabic and the case against linearity in historical linguistics |
title_exact_search_txtP | Arabic and the case against linearity in historical linguistics |
title_full | Arabic and the case against linearity in historical linguistics Jonathan Owens |
title_fullStr | Arabic and the case against linearity in historical linguistics Jonathan Owens |
title_full_unstemmed | Arabic and the case against linearity in historical linguistics Jonathan Owens |
title_short | Arabic and the case against linearity in historical linguistics |
title_sort | arabic and the case against linearity in historical linguistics |
topic | Arabisch (DE-588)4241223-7 gnd Sprachentwicklung (DE-588)4182511-1 gnd Historische Sprachwissenschaft (DE-588)4127276-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Arabisch Sprachentwicklung Historische Sprachwissenschaft |
url | https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192867513.001.0001 |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV046289643 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT owensjonathan arabicandthecaseagainstlinearityinhistoricallinguistics |