The Definite Article am- [ʔam-] of Jazani Arabic: An Autosegmental Analysis

Authors

  • Mohammed Q. Ruthan Prince Sattam Bin Abdulaziz University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17507/jltr.1502.14

Keywords:

autosegmental phonology, assimilation, Arabic, Jazani Arabic, Saudi Arabic

Abstract

A decent number of studies have discussed phonological or morphological aspects of the definite article in Standard or Classical Arabic. However, only a few have described the definite article in Southern Arabic dialects. Arabic consonants are divided into two categories based on how they affect the definite article al- [ʔal-]. Fourteen consonants with the [+coronal] feature cause assimilation, whereas the remaining consonants with [-coronal] do not. This process raises the question of whether this is also the case with the definite article [ʔam-] of the Southern dialect Jazani Arabic. Thus, one goal of this study was to examine whether assimilation occurs in the first place with [ʔam-]. If so, does it assimilate to consonants with specific features? Does it fully or partially assimilate to other consonants? Does directionality play a role in assimilation? Enlightened by autosegmental phonology and feature geometry, this study presents a novel dataset and a non-linear phonological analysis of Jazani [ʔam-] via linking or delinking features. Results showed that [ʔam-] completely assimilated and caused geminates when followed by [m] and partially assimilated when followed by [b] or [w] but never after [-labial] sounds. Assimilation occurred progressively or regressively based on the sonority hierarchy of the consonants. In addition, assimilation only occurred across morphological boundaries and never within one morpheme.

Author Biography

Mohammed Q. Ruthan, Prince Sattam Bin Abdulaziz University

Department of English

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Published

2024-03-01

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