Abstract
Educated spoken Arabic (ESA), like any of the world's innumerable other koineized forms of speech, greatly depends for its maintenance and dissemination on the binding power of writing, on its quasi-permanence and transferability in space and time. It is understandable, too, that koines – and the koineizing tradition is an ancient one in the eastern Mediterranean – should regularly call upon earlier, whence written ancestral forms and, as far as the Arab and Islamic worlds are concerned, the fundamental importance of the immutable Koran cannot be over-estimated. Although a koine needs a spoken base, Classical Arabic, itself probably never the dialect of any single group or region (cf. Ferguson, 1959), substantially contributed through its more or less fixed written norms to an older koine and nowadays, via the so-called Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) of contemporary literature, journalism and ‘spoken prose’, to a more recently emergent pan-Arabic or, conceivably, pan-Arabics. In a not dissimilar way, in the Romance-speaking area, Latin existed for centuries as the language, for example, of clerics, side by side with developing regional koines and subsequent new literary languages which borrowed greatly from it, just as the Classical Latin koine was itself modelled by writers, like Cicero, whose cultural values were determined and carried by Greek. A crucial difference, however, between Latin vis-à-vis the Romance languages and Classical Arabic or the substantially similar MSA vis-à-vis ESA is that the latter qua spoken language may not be any more freely written than the regional vernaculars of Arabic. It is not, for instance, orthographic or orthoepic difficulties that inhibit the ‘transcribing“ of spoken Arabic of whatever kind but rather the almost mystical regard in which Arabs hold their written language to the detriment of spoken counterparts.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Philosophy,Language and Linguistics
Reference16 articles.
1. English Aspectual Verbs
2. Sur L'Aspect Dans Le Verbe En Arabe Classique
3. Educated spoken Arabic in Egypt and the Levant: a critical review of diglossia and related concepts;El-Hassan;Archl,1978
4. The Active Participle in an Arabic Dialect of Cyrenaica
Cited by
52 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. Sociolinguistic awareness in L2 Arabic: A study of learners' code use repertoires;Foreign Language Annals;2023-08-10
2. Active participles in Jordanian Arabic;Brill’s Journal of Afroasiatic Languages and Linguistics;2021-11-29
3. Index;The Cambridge Handbook of Arabic Linguistics;2021-09-30
4. Maltese;The Cambridge Handbook of Arabic Linguistics;2021-09-30
5. Language Planning in the Arab World in an Age of Anxiety;The Cambridge Handbook of Arabic Linguistics;2021-09-30