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TitleNew edition: Modern Arabic: Structures, Functions, and Varieties, Revised Edition
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The full citation is available from Linguist List at:
http://linguistlist.org/issues/15/15-2509.html

Abstract:

The revised and updated edition of 'Modern Arabic' takes this authoritative,
concise linguistic description of the structure and use of modern Arabic to an
invaluable new level. Clive Holes traces the development of the Arabic
language from Classical Arabic, the written language used in the 7th century
for the 'Qur'an' and poetry, through the increasingly symbiotic use of Modern
Standard Arabic or MSA (the language of writing and formal speech) and
dialectal Arabic (the language of normal conversation). He shows how Arabic
has been shaped over the centuries by migration, urbanization, and
education--giving us "a balanced, dispassionate, and accurate picture of the
structures, functions, and varieties of the contemporary Arabic language."

Holes explains the structural characteristics--phonology, morphology, syntax,
semantics, and lexical and stylistic developments--that the majority of the
dialects share, as distinguished from Modern Standard Arabic. He also shows
how native speakers use both types of Arabic for different purposes, with MSA
being the language of power and control as used on television and in political
speeches, and the dialects serving as the language of intimacy and
domesticity. He further shows how MSA and spoken dialects are not as
compartmentalized as one might be led to believe. 'Modern Arabic' illustrates
the use of the Arabic language in real life, whether in conversation, news
bulletins and newspaper articles, serious literature, or song.

This new edition takes into account research published in several areas of
Arabic linguistics since the first edition was published in 1995. It includes
more extensive comment on the North African Arabic vocabulary of Modern
Standard Arabic, more information about "mixed" varieties of written Arabic
that are not in MSA (especially in Egypt), updated references, explanations,
and many new examples. All Arabic is transcribed, except for an appendix
presenting the Arabic alphabet and script. Students of the Arabic language
will find 'Modern Arabic' without peer--as will those general linguists who are
interested in discovering how Arabic compares structurally and
sociolinguistically with European languages.


SourceClive Holes
Inputdate2004-09-10 02:16:00
Lastmodifieddate2004-09-10 02:16:00
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