The "broken" plural problem in Arabic and comparative Semitic [[electronic resource] ] : allomorphy and analogy in non-concatenative morphology / / Robert R. Ratcliffe
| The "broken" plural problem in Arabic and comparative Semitic [[electronic resource] ] : allomorphy and analogy in non-concatenative morphology / / Robert R. Ratcliffe |
| Autore | Ratcliffe Robert R |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : J. Benjamins, 1998 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (273 p.) |
| Disciplina | 492.7/5 |
| Collana | Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science. Series IV, Current issues in linguistic theory |
| Soggetto topico |
Arabic language - Morphology
Arabic language - Morphophonemics Arabic language - Number Arabic language - Noun Semitic languages - Morphology Semitic languages - Morphophonemics Semitic languages - Number Semitic languages - Noun |
| Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
| ISBN |
1-283-31226-3
9786613312266 90-272-7564-5 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
THE ""BROKEN"" PLURAL PROBLEM IN ARABIC AND COMPARATIVE SEMITIC ALLOMORPHY AND ANALOGY IN NON-CONCATENATIVE MORPHOLOGY; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Table of contents; FOREWORD; NOTE ON TRANSCRIPTION/TRANSLITERATION; CHAPTER I. METHODOLOGICAL PRELIMINARIES; 1. General aims of diachronic linguistics; 2. Diachronic investigation in morphology; 3. Notes on reconstructive method I: Establishing the data; 3.1 Distributional analysis and internal reconstruction; 3.2 Establishing correspondences among languages; 4. Notes on reconstructive method II: Evaluating hypotheses
4.1 Evaluating allomorphic variationCHAPTER II. MORPHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF ARABIC; 1. Basic issues; 2. Morphological rules and relationships in Arabic; 2.1 Autosegmental morphology; 2.2 Problems with templates; 2.3 Morphological rule types; 2.4 Templatic and affixational morphology revisited: Templates as constraints; 3. Organization of the lexicon; 3.1 The form of lexical entries; 3.2 Levels; 4. Low-level phonological effects on morphology; 4.1 Syllable structure constraints; 4.2 Epenthesis and glide formation; 4.3 Syncope and glide deletion; CHAPTER III. THE ARABIC NOUN PLURAL SYSTEM 1. General aims2. Observations on productivity and regularity; 3. Analysis by singular-plural groups; 3.1 Group (1): underived masculine nouns of three or fewer consonants; 3.2 Group (2): triconsonantal and shorter feminine nouns; 3.3 Group (3): quadriconsonantal nouns; 3.4 Group (4): three-consonant stems with long vowel treated as four-consonant stems; 3.5 Group (5): the problem of derivation of derived forms I: the active participle CaaCiC; 3.6 Group (6): the problem of derivation of derived forms II: verbal adjectives and nouns (CaCiiC, CVCaaC, etc.) 3.7 A general account of groups (4), (5), and (6)3.8 Group (7): special adjectival types; 3.9 Form and distribution of the 'sound' external plural; 3.10 Synopsis of the Arabic level I plural system; CHAPTER IV. HISTORY OF THE BROKEN PLURAL PROBLEM WITHIN THE COMPARATIVE SEMITIC TRADITION; 1. Overview; 2. The major theories; 2.1 Brockelmann (1913); 2.2 Barth (1894); 2.3 Kuryłowicz (1962, 1973); 2.4 Murtonen (1964); 2.5 Corriente (1971); 3. The major theories considered against the Arabic data; 3.1 Plurals of underived masculines (Group 1): CiCaaC, ?aCCaaC, CuCuuC, ?aCCuC 3.2 Plurals of underived feminines (Group 2): CVCaC, CiCaaC, CVCaCaat3.3 Group (3) and group (4) plurals: CaCaaCiC(at); CaCaa?iC, CawaaCiC, etc.; 3.4 Group (5) plurals: CuCCaC, CuCCaaC, CaCaCat, CuCa(C)at; 3.5 Group (6) plurals: CuCuC, ?aCCiCat, ?aCCiCaa?, CuCaCaa?; 3.6 Group (7): special adjective types; 4. Conclusion from study of previous scholarship; CHAPTER V. THE COMPARATIVE SEMITIC EVIDENCE; 1. Diachronic problems presented by the plural systems of Semitic languages; 1.1 The broken plural and the sub-classification of Semitic languages; 2. Noun pluralization in East Semitic 3. Noun pluralization in Northwest Semitic. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910457777303321 |
Ratcliffe Robert R
|
||
| Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : J. Benjamins, 1998 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||
The "broken" plural problem in Arabic and comparative Semitic : allomorphy and analogy in non-concatenative morphology / / Robert R. Ratcliffe
| The "broken" plural problem in Arabic and comparative Semitic : allomorphy and analogy in non-concatenative morphology / / Robert R. Ratcliffe |
| Autore | Ratcliffe Robert R |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : J. Benjamins, , 1998 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (xi, 261 pages) |
| Disciplina | 492.7/5 |
| Collana | Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science. Series IV, Current issues in linguistic theory |
| Soggetto topico |
Arabic language - Morphology
Arabic language - Morphophonemics Arabic language - Number Arabic language - Noun Semitic languages - Morphology Semitic languages - Morphophonemics Semitic languages - Number Semitic languages - Noun |
| ISBN |
1-283-31226-3
9786613312266 90-272-7564-5 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
THE ""BROKEN"" PLURAL PROBLEM IN ARABIC AND COMPARATIVE SEMITIC ALLOMORPHY AND ANALOGY IN NON-CONCATENATIVE MORPHOLOGY; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Table of contents; FOREWORD; NOTE ON TRANSCRIPTION/TRANSLITERATION; CHAPTER I. METHODOLOGICAL PRELIMINARIES; 1. General aims of diachronic linguistics; 2. Diachronic investigation in morphology; 3. Notes on reconstructive method I: Establishing the data; 3.1 Distributional analysis and internal reconstruction; 3.2 Establishing correspondences among languages; 4. Notes on reconstructive method II: Evaluating hypotheses
4.1 Evaluating allomorphic variation; CHAPTER II. MORPHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF ARABIC; 1. Basic issues; 2. Morphological rules and relationships in Arabic; 2.1 Autosegmental morphology; 2.2 Problems with templates; 2.3 Morphological rule types; 2.4 Templatic and affixational morphology revisited: Templates as constraints; 3. Organization of the lexicon; 3.1 The form of lexical entries; 3.2 Levels; 4. Low-level phonological effects on morphology; 4.1 Syllable structure constraints; 4.2 Epenthesis and glide formation; 4.3 Syncope and glide deletion; CHAPTER III. THE ARABIC NOUN PLURAL SYSTEM 1. General aims; 2. Observations on productivity and regularity; 3. Analysis by singular-plural groups; 3.1 Group (1): underived masculine nouns of three or fewer consonants; 3.2 Group (2): triconsonantal and shorter feminine nouns; 3.3 Group (3): quadriconsonantal nouns; 3.4 Group (4): three-consonant stems with long vowel treated as four-consonant stems; 3.5 Group (5): the problem of derivation of derived forms I: the active participle CaaCiC; 3.6 Group (6): the problem of derivation of derived forms II: verbal adjectives and nouns (CaCiiC, CVCaaC, etc.) 3.7 A general account of groups (4), (5), and (6)3.8 Group (7): special adjectival types; 3.9 Form and distribution of the 'sound' external plural; 3.10 Synopsis of the Arabic level I plural system; CHAPTER IV. HISTORY OF THE BROKEN PLURAL PROBLEM WITHIN THE COMPARATIVE SEMITIC TRADITION; 1. Overview; 2. The major theories; 2.1 Brockelmann (1913); 2.2 Barth (1894); 2.3 Kuryłowicz (1962, 1973); 2.4 Murtonen (1964); 2.5 Corriente (1971); 3. The major theories considered against the Arabic data; 3.1 Plurals of underived masculines (Group 1): CiCaaC, ?aCCaaC, CuCuuC, ?aCCuC 3.2 Plurals of underived feminines (Group 2): CVCaC, CiCaaC, CVCaCaat3.3 Group (3) and group (4) plurals: CaCaaCiC(at); CaCaa?iC, CawaaCiC, etc.; 3.4 Group (5) plurals: CuCCaC, CuCCaaC, CaCaCat, CuCa(C)at; 3.5 Group (6) plurals: CuCuC, ?aCCiCat, ?aCCiCaa?, CuCaCaa?; 3.6 Group (7): special adjective types; 4. Conclusion from study of previous scholarship; CHAPTER V. THE COMPARATIVE SEMITIC EVIDENCE; 1. Diachronic problems presented by the plural systems of Semitic languages; 1.1 The broken plural and the sub-classification of Semitic languages; 2. Noun pluralization in East Semitic; 3. Noun pluralization in Northwest Semitic. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910781471603321 |
Ratcliffe Robert R
|
||
| Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : J. Benjamins, , 1998 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||
The "broken" plural problem in Arabic and comparative Semitic : allomorphy and analogy in non-concatenative morphology / / Robert R. Ratcliffe
| The "broken" plural problem in Arabic and comparative Semitic : allomorphy and analogy in non-concatenative morphology / / Robert R. Ratcliffe |
| Autore | Ratcliffe Robert R |
| Edizione | [1st ed.] |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : J. Benjamins, , 1998 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (xi, 261 pages) |
| Disciplina | 492.7/5 |
| Collana | Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science. Series IV, Current issues in linguistic theory |
| Soggetto topico |
Arabic language - Morphology
Arabic language - Morphophonemics Arabic language - Number Arabic language - Noun Semitic languages - Morphology Semitic languages - Morphophonemics Semitic languages - Number Semitic languages - Noun |
| ISBN |
1-283-31226-3
9786613312266 90-272-7564-5 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
THE ""BROKEN"" PLURAL PROBLEM IN ARABIC AND COMPARATIVE SEMITIC ALLOMORPHY AND ANALOGY IN NON-CONCATENATIVE MORPHOLOGY; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Table of contents; FOREWORD; NOTE ON TRANSCRIPTION/TRANSLITERATION; CHAPTER I. METHODOLOGICAL PRELIMINARIES; 1. General aims of diachronic linguistics; 2. Diachronic investigation in morphology; 3. Notes on reconstructive method I: Establishing the data; 3.1 Distributional analysis and internal reconstruction; 3.2 Establishing correspondences among languages; 4. Notes on reconstructive method II: Evaluating hypotheses
4.1 Evaluating allomorphic variation; CHAPTER II. MORPHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF ARABIC; 1. Basic issues; 2. Morphological rules and relationships in Arabic; 2.1 Autosegmental morphology; 2.2 Problems with templates; 2.3 Morphological rule types; 2.4 Templatic and affixational morphology revisited: Templates as constraints; 3. Organization of the lexicon; 3.1 The form of lexical entries; 3.2 Levels; 4. Low-level phonological effects on morphology; 4.1 Syllable structure constraints; 4.2 Epenthesis and glide formation; 4.3 Syncope and glide deletion; CHAPTER III. THE ARABIC NOUN PLURAL SYSTEM 1. General aims; 2. Observations on productivity and regularity; 3. Analysis by singular-plural groups; 3.1 Group (1): underived masculine nouns of three or fewer consonants; 3.2 Group (2): triconsonantal and shorter feminine nouns; 3.3 Group (3): quadriconsonantal nouns; 3.4 Group (4): three-consonant stems with long vowel treated as four-consonant stems; 3.5 Group (5): the problem of derivation of derived forms I: the active participle CaaCiC; 3.6 Group (6): the problem of derivation of derived forms II: verbal adjectives and nouns (CaCiiC, CVCaaC, etc.) 3.7 A general account of groups (4), (5), and (6)3.8 Group (7): special adjectival types; 3.9 Form and distribution of the 'sound' external plural; 3.10 Synopsis of the Arabic level I plural system; CHAPTER IV. HISTORY OF THE BROKEN PLURAL PROBLEM WITHIN THE COMPARATIVE SEMITIC TRADITION; 1. Overview; 2. The major theories; 2.1 Brockelmann (1913); 2.2 Barth (1894); 2.3 Kuryłowicz (1962, 1973); 2.4 Murtonen (1964); 2.5 Corriente (1971); 3. The major theories considered against the Arabic data; 3.1 Plurals of underived masculines (Group 1): CiCaaC, ?aCCaaC, CuCuuC, ?aCCuC 3.2 Plurals of underived feminines (Group 2): CVCaC, CiCaaC, CVCaCaat3.3 Group (3) and group (4) plurals: CaCaaCiC(at); CaCaa?iC, CawaaCiC, etc.; 3.4 Group (5) plurals: CuCCaC, CuCCaaC, CaCaCat, CuCa(C)at; 3.5 Group (6) plurals: CuCuC, ?aCCiCat, ?aCCiCaa?, CuCaCaa?; 3.6 Group (7): special adjective types; 4. Conclusion from study of previous scholarship; CHAPTER V. THE COMPARATIVE SEMITIC EVIDENCE; 1. Diachronic problems presented by the plural systems of Semitic languages; 1.1 The broken plural and the sub-classification of Semitic languages; 2. Noun pluralization in East Semitic; 3. Noun pluralization in Northwest Semitic. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910974147503321 |
Ratcliffe Robert R
|
||
| Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : J. Benjamins, , 1998 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||
The foundations of Arabic linguistics [[electronic resource] ] : Sībawayhi and early Arabic grammatical theory / / edited by Amal Elesha Marogy ; with a foreword by M.G. Carter
| The foundations of Arabic linguistics [[electronic resource] ] : Sībawayhi and early Arabic grammatical theory / / edited by Amal Elesha Marogy ; with a foreword by M.G. Carter |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Leiden ; ; Boston, : Brill, 2012 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (248 p.) |
| Disciplina | 492.7/5 |
| Altri autori (Persone) | MarogyAmal |
| Collana | Studies in Semitic languages and linguistics |
| Soggetto topico | Arabic language - Grammar - History |
| Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
| ISBN |
1-280-68822-X
9786613665164 90-04-22965-5 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto | pt. 1. Sībawayhi in the Kitāb -- pt. 2. Sībawayhi in his historical and linguistic context -- pt. 3. The grammar of others. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910462117203321 |
| Leiden ; ; Boston, : Brill, 2012 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||
The foundations of Arabic linguistics [[electronic resource] ] : Sībawayhi and early Arabic grammatical theory / / edited by Amal Elesha Marogy ; with a foreword by M.G. Carter
| The foundations of Arabic linguistics [[electronic resource] ] : Sībawayhi and early Arabic grammatical theory / / edited by Amal Elesha Marogy ; with a foreword by M.G. Carter |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Leiden ; ; Boston, : Brill, 2012 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (248 p.) |
| Disciplina | 492.7/5 |
| Altri autori (Persone) | MarogyAmal |
| Collana | Studies in Semitic languages and linguistics |
| Soggetto topico | Arabic language - Grammar - History |
| ISBN |
1-280-68822-X
9786613665164 90-04-22965-5 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto | pt. 1. Sībawayhi in the Kitāb -- pt. 2. Sībawayhi in his historical and linguistic context -- pt. 3. The grammar of others. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910790391303321 |
| Leiden ; ; Boston, : Brill, 2012 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||
The foundations of Arabic linguistics : Sibawayhi and early Arabic grammatical theory / / edited by Amal Elesha Marogy ; with a foreword by M.G. Carter
| The foundations of Arabic linguistics : Sibawayhi and early Arabic grammatical theory / / edited by Amal Elesha Marogy ; with a foreword by M.G. Carter |
| Edizione | [1st ed.] |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Leiden ; ; Boston : , : Brill, , 2012 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (248 p.) |
| Disciplina | 492.7/5 |
| Altri autori (Persone) | MarogyAmal |
| Collana | Studies in Semitic languages and linguistics |
| Soggetto topico | Arabic language - Grammar - History |
| ISBN |
9786613665164
9781280688225 128068822X 9789004229655 9004229655 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto | Preliminary Material -- The Term Mafʿūl in Sībawayhi’s Kitāb / Almog Kasher -- Don’t Be Absurd: The Term Muḥāl in Sībawayhi’s Kitāb / Avigail S. Noy -- Spatial Language in the Kitāb of Sībawayhi—The Case of the Preposition fī/in / Mohamed Hnid -- The Relation between Frequency of Usage and Deletion in Sībawayhi’s Kitāb / Hanadi Dayyeh -- The Parsing of Sībawayhi’s Kitāb, Title of Chapter 1, or Fifty Ways to Lose Your Reader / M.G. Carter -- Zayd, ʿAmr and ʿAbdullāhi: Theory of Proper Names and Reference in Early Arabic Grammatical Tradition / Amal E. Marogy -- yaqum vs qāma in the Conditional Context: A Relativistic Interpretation of the Frontier between the Prefixed and the Suffixed Conjugations of the Arabic Language / Manuela E.B. Giolfo -- A Comparison between the Usage of laysa in the Qurʾān and laysa in Sībawayhi’s Kitāb / Haruko Sakaedani -- The Mood of the Verb Following Ḥattā, according to Medieval Arab Grammarians / Arik Sadan -- Elements of the Syriac Grammatical Tradition as these Relate to the Origins of Arabic Grammar / Daniel King -- The Medieval Karaite Tradition of Hebrew Grammar / Geoffrey Khan -- Subject Index -- Index of Names. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910958034203321 |
| Leiden ; ; Boston : , : Brill, , 2012 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||
The foundations of Arabic linguistics III : the development of a tradition: continuity and change / / edited by Georgine Ayoub, Kees Versteegh
| The foundations of Arabic linguistics III : the development of a tradition: continuity and change / / edited by Georgine Ayoub, Kees Versteegh |
| Edizione | [1st ed.] |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Leiden : , : Brill. |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (x, 284 pages) |
| Disciplina | 492.7/5 |
| Altri autori (Persone) |
AyoubGeorgine
VersteeghC. H. M |
| Collana | Studies in Semitic Languages and Linguistics |
| Soggetto topico | Arabic language - Grammar - History |
| ISBN |
9789004365216
9004365214 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto | Front Matter -- Copyright Page -- List of Contributors -- Introduction / Georgine Ayoub and Kees Versteegh -- Case and Reference / Georgine Ayoub -- The Grammatical and Lexicographical Traditions / Ramzi Baalbaki -- A Twelfth Century League Table of Arab Grammarians / Michael G. Carter -- Blind Spots in Raḍī l-Dīn al-ʾAstarābāḏī’s Grammar of Numerals / Jean N. Druel -- Syntax, Semantics, and Pragmatics in al-Sīrāfī and Ibn Sīnā / Manuela E.B. Giolfo and Wilfrid Hodges -- Early Pedagogical Grammars of Arabic / Almog Kasher -- What is Meant by al-ḥāl al-muqaddara? / Aryeh Levin -- Demonstratives in Sībawayhi’s Kitāb / Arik Sadan -- How Have the Descriptions of taḥḏīr Changed? / Haruko Sakaedani -- Origin and Conceptual Evolution of the Term taḫṣīṣ in Arabic Grammar / Manuel Sartori -- The Classification of the Verb in the Arab Grammatical Tradition / Zeinab A. Taha -- Learning Arabic in the Islamic World / Kees Versteegh -- Back Matter -- Index. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910961771203321 |
| Leiden : , : Brill. | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||
The foundations of Arabic linguistics, IV : The Evolution of Theory / / Manuela E. B. Giolfo, Kees Versteegh
| The foundations of Arabic linguistics, IV : The Evolution of Theory / / Manuela E. B. Giolfo, Kees Versteegh |
| Edizione | [1st ed.] |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Leiden, ; Boston : , : BRILL, , 2019 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource |
| Disciplina | 492.7/5 |
| Collana | Studies in Semitic Languages and Linguistics |
| Soggetto topico |
Arabic language
Arabic language - Grammar Arabic language - Grammar - History |
| ISBN |
9789004389694
9004389695 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto | Front Matter -- Copyright Page -- Notes on Contributors -- The Evolution of Theory in the Arabic Linguistic Tradition / Manuela E.B. Giolfo and Kees Versteegh -- Contribution to a Modern Reading of Sībawayhi / Hassina Aliane -- Pronouns in Sībawayhi’s Kitāb and Related Concepts: ḍamīr, ʾiḍmār, muḍmar / Georgine Ayoub -- Grammar for Beginners and Ibn Hišām’s Approach to Issues of ʾiʿrāb / Ramzi Baalbaki -- Sallaṭa/tasallaṭa, a Possible Parallel for ‘Govern’? / Michael G. Carter -- The Notion of taqdīm wa-taʾḫīr in al-Kitāb and Its Development in the Arabic Grammatical Tradition until the 4th/10th Century / Hanadi Dayyeh -- The Intriguing Issue of Dictionary Arrangement in Medieval Arabic Lexicography / Joseph Dichy -- Can Ambrosiana X 56 Sup. Improve Our Understanding of Sībawayhi’s Grammar? / Jean Druel -- Conditionality: Syntax and Meaning in al-Sīrāfī and Ibn Sīnā / Manuela E.B. Giolfo and Wilfrid Hodges -- The Technical Terms taqdīr and taḫfīf in Persian Classical Sources / Éva M. Jeremiás -- How to Parse Effective Objects according to Arab Grammarians? A Dissenting Opinion on al-mafʿūl al-muṭlaq / Almog Kasher -- The Phenomenon of ittisāʿ al-kalām in Old Arabic / Aryeh Levin -- Which Verbal Nouns Can Function as Adverbial Accusatives of State or Condition (ḥāl) according to Sībawayhi and Later Grammarians? / Arik Sadan -- What is Definiteness in Arabic? Focusing on Proper Nouns for Genera and ʾasmāʾ mubhama ‘Ambiguous Nouns’ / Haruko Sakaedani -- Definition and Determination in Medieval Arabic Grammatical Thought / Manuel Sartori -- The Concept of tawṭiʾa in the Medieval Arabic Grammatical Tradition / Beata Sheyhatovitch -- Malay Grammar between Arab and Western Model / Kees Versteegh -- Back Matter -- Index. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910962819803321 |
| Leiden, ; Boston : , : BRILL, , 2019 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||
Key features and parameters in Arabic grammar [[electronic resource] /] / Abdelkader Fassi Fehri
| Key features and parameters in Arabic grammar [[electronic resource] /] / Abdelkader Fassi Fehri |
| Autore | Fassi Fehri Abdelkader |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : J. Benjamins Pub. Co., 2012 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (378 p.) |
| Disciplina | 492.7/5 |
| Collana | Linguistik aktuell/linguistics today |
| Soggetto topico | Arabic language - Grammar |
| Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
| ISBN |
1-283-42422-3
9786613424228 90-272-7496-7 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
Key Features and Parameters in Arabic Grammar; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Dedication page; Table of contents; Foreword; Provenance of Chapters; Part I Temporality, aspect, voice, and event structure; Tense/Aspect interaction and variation; 1. Past, Perfect, Perfective; 1.1 The Past/Perfect ambiguity; 1.2 Temporal and modal qad; 1.3 One or two projections of T; 1.4 Perfective; 2. Present, Imperfect, Imperfective; 3. Imperfect and SOT; 4. Perfectivity; 4.1 ST as Perfective; 4.2 PT as Imperfective?; 4.3 From Tense to Aspect; 4.4 The Tense/Aspect language typology revisited
5. Conclusion Transitivity, causativity, and verbal plurality; 1. Issues; 1.1 Problem 1: Semitic morpho-syntax; 1.2 Problem 2: Transitivity theory; 2. Number Theory; 2.1 Ingredients of Num T; 2.2 Verbal plurality and distributed Num; 2.3 Distributed plurality; 2.4 Causative complexity, verbalization, and distributivity; 2.5 Two sources of transitivity; 2.6 Parallel plural morphology; 2.7 Summary; 3. Cross-linguistic evidence; 3.1 Causatives, transitives, and event quantification; 3.1.1 Causativization and transitivization; 3.1.2 Multiple behaviour; 3.1.3 Event quantification 3.2 Moravcsik's resistant cases 4. Conceptual motivations and competing analyses; 4.1 Little v: Verbalizer or transitivizer?; 4.2 Aspect; 4.3 Voice; 4.3.1 Anti-transitive reflexives; 4.3.2 Reflexive causatives; 4.3.3 Agentive and expositive causatives; 4.3.4 Requestive causatives; 4.3.5 Ergative Num and intensive forms; 4.4 Further empirical motivations; 4.4.1 Ergative and unergative Num in event plurality and transitivity; 4.4.2 Adicity, (in)transitive alternations, and multiple uses; 5. Num theory and Num heights; 5.1 Sg and Pl Merge; 5.2 Language variation; 6. Summary and conclusion Synthetic/analytic asymmetries in voice and temporal patterns 1. Analysis, voice, and temporality; 1.1 The problem; 1.2 Nominal auxiliaries; 1.3 S/O Agr split and auxiliary selection; 1.4 Temp auxiliaries; 1.5 Voice; 1.5.1 Arabic and anaphoric Agr; 1.5.2 Latin and split Agr; 1.5.3 Modern Greek; 1.5.4 Albanian; 1.5.5 Moroccan Arabic; 2. Formal complexity and categorization; 2.1 Further analytic and synthetic questions; 2.1.1 Pass and additional complexity; 2.1.2 Two finite Agrs; 2.1.3 Ancient Greek as fully synthetic; 2.2 Reanalysis as the source of analytic pass or perfect 2.3 A splitting analysis (of Temp and Agr categories)3. Peculiarities and structural heights; 3.1 Imperfective passive; 3.2 Verbal and adjectival voices; 3.3 Multiple functions across heights; 4. Summary and conclusion; Arabic Perfect and temporal adverbs; 1. Salient properties of the Arabic TR system; 1.1 Polyfunctionality of T/Asp forms; 1.2 The PresPerf split: Synthesis and analysis; 1.3 The Past split: Simple Past Pfv and complex Past Impfv; 2. The Perfect/Past ambiguity; 2.1 Aspects and Tenses; 2.2 Positional "deictic" adverbs; 2.3 Perf and modal qad 2.4 Adverbs and simple vs. complex tenses |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910457284103321 |
Fassi Fehri Abdelkader
|
||
| Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : J. Benjamins Pub. Co., 2012 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||
Key features and parameters in Arabic grammar [[electronic resource] /] / Abdelkader Fassi Fehri
| Key features and parameters in Arabic grammar [[electronic resource] /] / Abdelkader Fassi Fehri |
| Autore | Fassi Fehri Abdelkader |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : J. Benjamins Pub. Co., 2012 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (378 p.) |
| Disciplina | 492.7/5 |
| Collana | Linguistik aktuell/linguistics today |
| Soggetto topico | Arabic language - Grammar |
| ISBN |
1-283-42422-3
9786613424228 90-272-7496-7 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
Key Features and Parameters in Arabic Grammar; Editorial page; Title page; Copyright page; Dedication page; Table of contents; Foreword; Provenance of Chapters; Part I Temporality, aspect, voice, and event structure; Tense/Aspect interaction and variation; 1. Past, Perfect, Perfective; 1.1 The Past/Perfect ambiguity; 1.2 Temporal and modal qad; 1.3 One or two projections of T; 1.4 Perfective; 2. Present, Imperfect, Imperfective; 3. Imperfect and SOT; 4. Perfectivity; 4.1 ST as Perfective; 4.2 PT as Imperfective?; 4.3 From Tense to Aspect; 4.4 The Tense/Aspect language typology revisited
5. Conclusion Transitivity, causativity, and verbal plurality; 1. Issues; 1.1 Problem 1: Semitic morpho-syntax; 1.2 Problem 2: Transitivity theory; 2. Number Theory; 2.1 Ingredients of Num T; 2.2 Verbal plurality and distributed Num; 2.3 Distributed plurality; 2.4 Causative complexity, verbalization, and distributivity; 2.5 Two sources of transitivity; 2.6 Parallel plural morphology; 2.7 Summary; 3. Cross-linguistic evidence; 3.1 Causatives, transitives, and event quantification; 3.1.1 Causativization and transitivization; 3.1.2 Multiple behaviour; 3.1.3 Event quantification 3.2 Moravcsik's resistant cases 4. Conceptual motivations and competing analyses; 4.1 Little v: Verbalizer or transitivizer?; 4.2 Aspect; 4.3 Voice; 4.3.1 Anti-transitive reflexives; 4.3.2 Reflexive causatives; 4.3.3 Agentive and expositive causatives; 4.3.4 Requestive causatives; 4.3.5 Ergative Num and intensive forms; 4.4 Further empirical motivations; 4.4.1 Ergative and unergative Num in event plurality and transitivity; 4.4.2 Adicity, (in)transitive alternations, and multiple uses; 5. Num theory and Num heights; 5.1 Sg and Pl Merge; 5.2 Language variation; 6. Summary and conclusion Synthetic/analytic asymmetries in voice and temporal patterns 1. Analysis, voice, and temporality; 1.1 The problem; 1.2 Nominal auxiliaries; 1.3 S/O Agr split and auxiliary selection; 1.4 Temp auxiliaries; 1.5 Voice; 1.5.1 Arabic and anaphoric Agr; 1.5.2 Latin and split Agr; 1.5.3 Modern Greek; 1.5.4 Albanian; 1.5.5 Moroccan Arabic; 2. Formal complexity and categorization; 2.1 Further analytic and synthetic questions; 2.1.1 Pass and additional complexity; 2.1.2 Two finite Agrs; 2.1.3 Ancient Greek as fully synthetic; 2.2 Reanalysis as the source of analytic pass or perfect 2.3 A splitting analysis (of Temp and Agr categories)3. Peculiarities and structural heights; 3.1 Imperfective passive; 3.2 Verbal and adjectival voices; 3.3 Multiple functions across heights; 4. Summary and conclusion; Arabic Perfect and temporal adverbs; 1. Salient properties of the Arabic TR system; 1.1 Polyfunctionality of T/Asp forms; 1.2 The PresPerf split: Synthesis and analysis; 1.3 The Past split: Simple Past Pfv and complex Past Impfv; 2. The Perfect/Past ambiguity; 2.1 Aspects and Tenses; 2.2 Positional "deictic" adverbs; 2.3 Perf and modal qad 2.4 Adverbs and simple vs. complex tenses |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910778813703321 |
Fassi Fehri Abdelkader
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| Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia, : J. Benjamins Pub. Co., 2012 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
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