Early Arabic grammatical theory : heterogeneity and standardization
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Bibliographic Information
Early Arabic grammatical theory : heterogeneity and standardization
(Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science, Series 3 . Studies in the history of the language sciences ; v. 53)
J. Benjamins Pub. Co., 1990
- : alk. paper
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Note
Bibliography: p. [275]-283
Includes indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Arabic grammatical tradition is remarkable for having organized a large amount of descriptive material within a sophisticated formal framework. The present study seeks to elucidate the early development of this system from a theory-internal perspective; it is mainly concerned with the development of the syntactic theory as a formal object, as system of rules. This endeavor is constituted of four sub-goals: a description of early developments, their periodization, their relation to the traditional account in terms of the Basran and Kufan schools, and their relation to modern linguistic theory.
Table of Contents
- 1. Abbreviations and Conventions
- 2. Preface
- 3. 1. Introduction
- 4. 1. The problem
- 5. 1.1 The schools
- 6. 1.2 The data
- 7. 1.3 The Quranic variants, the Qiraa'aat
- 8. 1.4 The players
- 9. 1.5 Plan of the book
- 10. 1.6 Odd remarks
- 11. 2. Two General Points
- 12. 2.1 Dependency
- 13. 2.2 The i-inf (genitive)
- 14. 2.3 Scope of study
- 15. 3. Farra' as Linguist
- 16. 3.1 'Asl
- 17. 3.2 General rules
- 18. 3.3 Position, context, mawdi'
- 19. 3.4 Analogical reasoning
- 20. 3.5 Farra' on gender
- 21. 3.6 Ma'aaniy l-Qur'aan: Farra' and Zajjaj
- 22. 3.7 Conclusion
- 23. 4. Sibawayhi's Methodology
- 24. 4.1 Sibawayhi's use of substitution
- 25. 4.2 Techniques
- 26. 4.3 Sibawayh and Sarraj
- 27. 5. Noun Complementation
- 28. 5.1 Sarraj
- 29. 5.2 Sibawayh
- 30. 5.3 Types of relation in Sibawayh's treatment of NC
- 31. 5.4 General summary
- 32. 5.5 Farra'
- 33. 5.6 Axfash
- 34. 5.7 Mubarrid, Tha'lab and others
- 35. 5.8 The class of noun complementizers
- 36. 6. Sibawayh and Farra' vs. Later Grammarians
- 37. 6.1 'Isnaad
- 38. 6.2 The a-inf form
- 39. 6.3 Sequence of the tamyiyz (or the proper use of analogy)
- 40. 7. Farra' as Transitional Figure
- 41. 7.1 The specifier, tamyiyz
- 42. 7.2 The locative, darf, and sifa
- 43. 7.3 Passive
- 44. 8. Farra' and the Period of Heterogeneity
- 45. 8.1 Meaning, structural categories and precision of terminology
- 46. 8.2 Are terminological differences categorical differences?
- 47. 8.3 Summary
- 48. 9. Minor Writers
- 49. 9.1 The linguists
- 50. 9.2 MN
- 51. 9.3 Ibn Kaysan
- 52. 9.4 Lughda
- 53. 9.5 KJN
- 54. 9.6 Tabular summary
- 55. 9.7 Tha'lab and Abu Bakr al-Anbari
- 56. 9.8 Terminological and conceptual heterogeneity
- 57. 9.9 Non-standard traditions
- 58. 9.10 Dating works
- 59. 10. The Development of the Basran and Kufan Schools
- 60. 10.1 Sibawayh
- 61. 10.2 Farra'
- 62. 10.3 Linguists after Farra'
- 63. 10.4 Zajjaj
- 64. 10.5 From data to theory
- 65. 11. The Structural Development of Early Arabic Syntactic Theory
- 66. 11.1 The data
- 67. 11.2 Technical questions
- 68. 11.3 Periodization
- 69. 11.4 The schools and linguistic data
- 70. 11.5 Reconstruction
- 71. 11.6 Principles of development
- 72. 11.7 The early evolution of Arabic syntactic theory
- 73. Appendix 1
- 74. IA. Subject Matter of Ma'aaniy l-Qur'aan, Farra' and Zajjaj
- 75. IB. Harf in Morphology and Syntax
- 76. IC. The musnad and musnad 'ilayhi in Farra'
- 77. ID. The term sagala
- 78. IE. Noun complementation citations in Axfash
- 79. IF. Page references to 7.1.4
- 80. IG. Form and function of governed item in Farra's 'iyqaa' relation, vol. I
- 81. IH. References to Basra, Kufa and individual linguists in Tha'lab's Majaalis
- 82. IJ. References to Basrans and Kufans in first two volumes of Zajjaj's MQ
- 83. Appendix II Arabic Quotes
- 84. Appendix III Arabic Linguists
- 85. References
- 86. Primary
- 87. Secondary
- 88. Index of Arabic Grammarians
- 89. Index of Arabic Grammatical Terms
- 90. Subject Index
by "Nielsen BookData"