Dialectal conditional clauses in academic arabic in israel

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Abstract

Conditional clauses (CCs), which specify hypotheses regarding something that could have taken place or will take place, consist of aprotasis (condition) and an apodosis (governor) (Arabic: šarṭ/jawāb). Different types of CC are recognized cross-linguistically along a logical continuum from real to impossible conditions. In Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) and Arabic dialects, different CCs are distinguished by conditional markers and verbal patterns. Distinctive strategies characterize each variety. The use of CCs from local dialectal types in high-standard spoken and written Arabic is therefore striking, yet frequent, alongside standard forms. I analyze dialectal Muṯallaṯ, Northern Galilean, and Galilean Bedouin CCs and their use in academic language. Six elderly speakers for each traditional variety constituted the control groups. For each variety, I selected highly educated women/men, bilingual in their dialect/MSA and educated in the humanities/sciences: six senior academic staff members over age fifty-five and six university students up to age thirty-five. Following Grigore (2005a; b), the CC corpus for the present study is yielded by both spontaneous interactions among members of the same dialectal variety and age group and controlled individual speech production. Different dialectal conditional systems have emerged from this analysis. Traditional dialectal systems show a distribution of verbal patterns and conditional markers similar to those in Damascene Arabic (Jalonen 2017). Nonetheless, they express two real subtypes (‘more possible’, ‘less possible’) and two irreal subtypes (hypothetical, counterfactual), similarly to Baghdadi Arabic (Grigore 2005a; b). Each traditional conditional system expresses the four semantic categories through different morpho-syntactical means. Dialectal structures persist in the conceptual background of educated speakers, producing different perceptions of the MSA conditional system. The pluricentricity of Arabic and fleeting boundaries between ‘norm’ and ‘spoken-word’ are reaffirmed, which is not surprising in a dialectal area with substantiated ancestral traditions of linguistic independence from the models of the Arabian Peninsula.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)125-134
Number of pages10
JournalRomanoArabica
Volume20
StatePublished - 2020

Keywords

  • Arabic Pluricentricity
  • Clauses
  • Contact between Modern Standard Arabic and Palestinian Dialects
  • Galilean Arabic Varieties
  • Galilean Bedouin Arabic
  • Muṯallaṯ Arabic

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Cultural Studies
  • Language and Linguistics
  • Linguistics and Language

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