“The Arabic language across the ages” provides a collection of linguistic and philological studies that investigate diachronically and chronologically different aspects of the Arabic language and its dialects. It presents studies on Arabic dialectology (e.g., Arabic North-African dialects), morphology (e.g., The Arabic plural), lexicology and lexicography (e.g., culinary lexicon), phonetics and phonology (e.g., vocalization), syntax (e.g., the function of the particle bi-), sociolinguistics (e.g. A lexical atlas of the Arab world), and history (e.g., dialects of Arabic before and after Classical Arabic).
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The Arabicization of the Hebrew morphology in al Andalus: the adaptation of the fa‘ala paradigm
págs. 49-64
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Broken versus regular plural in Modern Arabic: the case for taf‘ īl
págs. 107-118
A morphological study of the plural in Arabic: a connectionist versus a rule-based approach
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págs. 161-184
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