Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction to Arabic
- 2 Phonology and script
- 3 Arabic word structure: an overview
- 4 Basic Arabic sentence structures
- 5 Arabic noun types
- 6 Participles: active and passive
- 7 Noun inflections: gender, humanness, number, definiteness, and case
- 8 Construct phrases and nouns in apposition
- 9 Noun specifiers and quantifiers
- 10 Adjectives: function and form
- 11 Adverbs and adverbial expressions
- 12 Personal pronouns
- 13 Demonstrative pronouns
- 14 Relative pronouns and relative clauses
- 15 Numerals and numeral phrases
- 16 Prepositions and prepositional phrases
- 17 Questions and question words
- 18 Connectives and conjunctions
- 19 Subordinating conjunctions: the particle ʾinna and her sisters
- 20 Verb classes
- 21 Verb inflection: a summary
- 22 Form I: The base form triliteral verb
- 23 Form II
- 24 Form III triliteral verb
- 25 Form IV triliteral verb
- 26 Form V triliteral verb
- 27 Form VI triliteral verb
- 28 Form VII triliteral verb
- 29 Form VIII triliteral verb
- 30 Form IX triliteral verb
- 31 Form X triliteral verb
- 32 Forms XI–XV triliteral verb
- 33 Quadriliteral verbs
- 34 Moods of the verb I: indicative and subjunctive
- 35 Moods of the verb II: jussive and imperative
- 36 Verbs of being, becoming, remaining, seeming (kaan-a wa-ʿ axawaat-u-haa)
- 37 Negation and exception
- 38 Passive and passive-type expressions
- 39 Conditional and optative expressions
- Appendix I: How to use an Arabic dictionary
- Appendix II: Glossary of technical terms
- References
- Index
1 - Introduction to Arabic
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 May 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction to Arabic
- 2 Phonology and script
- 3 Arabic word structure: an overview
- 4 Basic Arabic sentence structures
- 5 Arabic noun types
- 6 Participles: active and passive
- 7 Noun inflections: gender, humanness, number, definiteness, and case
- 8 Construct phrases and nouns in apposition
- 9 Noun specifiers and quantifiers
- 10 Adjectives: function and form
- 11 Adverbs and adverbial expressions
- 12 Personal pronouns
- 13 Demonstrative pronouns
- 14 Relative pronouns and relative clauses
- 15 Numerals and numeral phrases
- 16 Prepositions and prepositional phrases
- 17 Questions and question words
- 18 Connectives and conjunctions
- 19 Subordinating conjunctions: the particle ʾinna and her sisters
- 20 Verb classes
- 21 Verb inflection: a summary
- 22 Form I: The base form triliteral verb
- 23 Form II
- 24 Form III triliteral verb
- 25 Form IV triliteral verb
- 26 Form V triliteral verb
- 27 Form VI triliteral verb
- 28 Form VII triliteral verb
- 29 Form VIII triliteral verb
- 30 Form IX triliteral verb
- 31 Form X triliteral verb
- 32 Forms XI–XV triliteral verb
- 33 Quadriliteral verbs
- 34 Moods of the verb I: indicative and subjunctive
- 35 Moods of the verb II: jussive and imperative
- 36 Verbs of being, becoming, remaining, seeming (kaan-a wa-ʿ axawaat-u-haa)
- 37 Negation and exception
- 38 Passive and passive-type expressions
- 39 Conditional and optative expressions
- Appendix I: How to use an Arabic dictionary
- Appendix II: Glossary of technical terms
- References
- Index
Summary
Arabic is a Semitic language akin to Hebrew, Aramaic, and Amharic, and more distantly related to indigenous language families of North Africa. It possesses a rich literary heritage dating back to the pre-Islamic era, and during the rise and expansion of the Islamic empire (seventh to twelfth centuries, AD), it became the official administrative language of the empire as well as a leading language of international scholarly and scientific communication. It is today the native language of over 200 million people in twenty different countries as well as the liturgical language for over a billion Muslims throughout the world.
Afro-Asiatic and the Semitic language family
The Semitic language family is a member of a broader group of languages, termed Afro-Asiatic (also referred to as Hamito-Semitic). This group includes four subfamilies in addition to Semitic, all of which are indigenous languages of North Africa: (1) Tamazight (Berber) in the Northwest (Morocco, Mauretania, Algeria, Tunisia and Libya); (2) the Chad languages (including Hausa) in the Northwest Central area; (3) ancient Egyptian and Coptic; and (4) the Cushitic languages of Northeast Africa (Somalia, the Horn of Africa). The Semitic part of the family was originally based farthest East, in the Levant, the Fertile Crescent, and the Arabian peninsula.
Arabic, Hebrew, Aramaic (including Syriac), and Amharic are living language members of the Semitic group, but extinct languages such as Akkadian (Assyrian and Babylonian), Canaanite, and Phoenician are also Semitic.
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- Information
- A Reference Grammar of Modern Standard Arabic , pp. 1 - 9Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005