Weiter zum Inhalt

How Arabic Regional Features Become Sectarian Features. Jordan as a Case Study


Seiten 68 - 87

DOI https://doi.org/10.13173/zeitarabling.62.0068




1 ABDEL-JAWAD, H. R. E. (1981): Lexical and phonological variation in spoken Arabic in Amman. PhD dissertation, University of Pennsylvania.

2 ABU-HAIDAR, F. (1991): Christian Arabic of Baghdad. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.

3 AL-JALLAD, AHMAD – DANIEL, R. – AL-GHUL, O. (2013): The Arabic toponyms and oikonyms in 17. In: KOENEN, L. – KAIMO, M. – KAIMIO, J. – DANIEL, R. (eds.). The Petra Papyri II. Amman: American Center of Oriental Research, 23–48.

4 AL-QOUZ, M. Y. (2009): Dialect contact, acquisition and change among Manama Youth, Bahrain. PhD thesis, University of Essex.

5 AL-WER, E. – HERIN, B. (2011): The lifecycle of Qaf in Jordan. In: Langage et société 138: 59–76.

6 AL-WER, E. (1991): Phonological variation in the speech of women from three urban areas in Jordan. PhD thesis, University of Essex.

7 AL-WER, E. (2002): Jordanian and Palestinian dialects in contact: Vowel raising in Amman. In: JONES, M. C. – ESCH, E. (eds.): Language change: the interplay of internal, external and extra-linguistic factors. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 63–79.

8 AL-WER, E. (2003). New dialect formation: the focusing of –kum in Amman. In: BRITAIN, D. – CHESHIRE, J. (eds.): Social dialectology: in honour of Peter Trudgill. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 59–67.

9 AL-WER, E. (2007): The formation of the dialect of Amman. In: MILLER, C. – AL-WER, E. – CAUBET, D. – WATSON, JANET C. E. (eds.): Arabic in the city: Issues in dialect contact and language variation. New York/London: Routledge, 55–76.

10 BASSIOUNEY, R. (2009): Arabic sociolinguistics. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

11 BEHNSTEDT, P. (1994): Der arabische Dialekte von Soukhne (Syrien). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.

12 BLANC, H. (1964): Communal dialects in Baghdad. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.

13 CANTINEAU, J. (1930–1932): Le nabatéen I, II. Nachdruck Osnabruck (1978).

14 CANTINEAU, J. (1934): Le dialecte arabe de Palmyre, I. Grammaire, II. Vocabulaire et textes. Beyrouth.

15 CANTINEAU, J. (1940): Les parlers arabes du Ḥōrān. Atlas. Paris: Klincksieck.

16 CANTINEAU, J. (1946): Les parlers arabes du Ḥōrān. Notions générales, grammaire. Paris: Klincksieck.

17 COTTER, W. (2013): Dialect contact and change in Gaza City. MA dissertation, University of Essex.

18 DAWOOD, G. F. (1994): as-Salṭ wa-ǧiwār-i-hā 1864–1921 [Salt and its environs 1864–1921]. Published with the assistance of Bank al-ʾaʿmāl. [In Arabic]

19 ECKERT, P. – McCONNELL-GINET, S. (1992): Think practically and look locally: Language and gender as community-based practice. In: Annual Review of Anthropology 21: 461–490.

20 ECKERT, P. (1989): Jocks and burnouts: Social categories and identity in the high school. New York: Teachers College Press.

21 ECKERT, P. (2000): Linguistic variation as social practice: The linguistic construction of identity in Belten High. Malden/Oxford: Blackwell.

22 GERMANOS, M.-A. (2009): Identification et emploi de quelques stéréotypes, traits saillants et autres variables sociolinguistiques à Beyrouth (Liban). PhD thesis, Université de Paris 3 Sorbonne Nouvelle.

23 GERMANOS, M.-A. (2011): Représentations linguistiques et contact dialectal: Remarques sur l'évolution de cinq variantes régionales à Beyrouth. In: Langage et société 138: 43–58.

24 HAERI, N. (1997): The reproduction of symbolic capital: Language, state, and class in Egypt. In: Current Anthropology 38: 795–816.

25 HAERI, N. (2000): Form and ideology: Arabic sociolinguistics and beyond. In: Annual Review of Anthropology 29: 61–87.

26 HAERI, N. (2003): Sacred language, ordinary people: Dilemmas of culture and politics in Egypt. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.

27 HEATH, J. (2002): Jewish and Muslim dialects of Moroccan Arabic. London/New York: Routledge Curzon.

28 HERIN, B. (2013): Do Jordanians really speak like Palestinians? In: Journal of Arabic and Islamic Studies 13: 99–114.

29 HERIN, B. – AL-WER, E. (2013): From phonological variation to grammatical change. In: HOLES, C. – DE JONG, R. (eds.): Ingham of Arabia: A collection of articles presented as a tribute to the career of Bruce Ingham. Leiden/Boston: Brill.

30 HERIN, B. (2010): Le parler arabe de Salt (Jordanie). PhD thesis, Université Libre de Bruxelles.

31 HOLES, C. (1987): Language variation and change in a modernising Arab state: The case of Bahrain. London/New York: Kegan Paul International.

32 HORESH, U. (2014): Phonological outcomes of language contact in the Palestinian Arabic dialect of Jaffa. PhD thesis, University of Essex.

33 HOURANI, A. (1991): A history of the Arab peoples. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.

34 ISMAIL, H. (2008): Surburbia and the inner-city: Patterns of linguistic variation and change in Damascus. PhD thesis, University of Essex.

35 JASTROW, O. (1978): Die mesopotamisch-arabischen qəltu-Dialekte. Wiesbaden: Steiner.

36 KUHN, TH. (1977): The Essential Tension. Selected Studies in Scientific Tradition and Change. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

37 O'CONNOR, M. (1986): The Arabic Loanwords in Nabatean Aramaic. In: Journal of Near Eastern Studies 45: 213–229.

38 OWENS, J. (1998): Case and proto-Arabic, Part I. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 61: 51–73. doi:10.(1017)/S(0041)977X (0001)(5755).

39 PALVA, H. (1976): Studies in the Arabic Dialect of the Semi-əl-ʿAǧārma Tribe (al-balqāʾ district, Jordan). Göteborg: Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis.

40 PALVA, H. (1980): Characteristics of the Arabic Dialect of the Bani Ṣaxar Tribe. In: Orientalia Suecana 29: 112–138.

41 PALVA, H. (1989): Linguistic sketch of the Arabic dialect of El-Karak. In: WEXLER, P. – BORG, A. – SOMEKH, S. (eds.): Studia Linguistica et Orientalia Memoriae Haim Blanc Dedicata. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 225–251.

42 PALVA, H. (2004): Remarks on the Arabic dialect of the Ḥwēṭāt tribe. In: Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 29: 195–209.

43 PALVA, H. (2007): Arabic texts in the dialect of es-Salṭ, Jordan. In: Acta Orientalia 68: 161–205.

44 PALVA, H. (2009): From qəltu to gələt: Diachronic notes on linguistic adaptation in Muslim Baghdad Arabic. In: AL-WER, E. – DE JONG, R. (eds.): Arabic Dialectology. In honour of Clive Holes on the occasion of his sixtieth birthday. Leiden: Brill.

45 WOIDICH, M. (1996): Rural Dialect of Egyptian Arabic: An Overview. In: Égypt, Monde Arabe 27–28: 325–354.

Empfehlen


Export Citation