The "broken" plural problem in Arabic and comparative Semitic : allomorphy and analogy in non-concatenative morphology

Bibliographic Information

The "broken" plural problem in Arabic and comparative Semitic : allomorphy and analogy in non-concatenative morphology

Robert R. Ratcliffe

(Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science, ser. 4 . Current issues in linguistic theory ; v. 168)

J. Benjamins, c1998

  • : us
  • : eur

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Note

Revision of the first volume of the author's dissertation (doctoral--Yale University)

Bibliography: p. [245]-254

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The formal aspects of non-concatenative morphology have received considerable attention in recent years, but the diachronic dimensions of such systems have been little explored. The current work applies a modern methodological and theoretical framework to a classic problem in Arabic and Semitic historical linguistics: the highly allomorphic system of 'stem-internal' or 'broken' plurals. It shows that widely-accepted views regarding the historical development of this system are untenable and offers a new hypothesis. The first chapter lays out a methodology for comparative-historical research in morphology. The next two chapters present an analysis of Arabic morphology based on contemporary formal linguistic approaches, and applies this analysis to the noun plural system. Chapter Four shows that neither semantic shift nor ablaut-type sound change account adequately for the data. The fifth chapter offers a systematic comparison of the plural systems of Semitic languages, incorporating much new research on the languages of South Arabia and Ethiopia. Chapter Six proposes a new reconstruction.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Foreword
  • 2. Note on transcription/transliteration
  • 3. Chapter I: Methodological Preliminaries
  • 4. Chapter II: Morphological Analisys of Arabic
  • 5. Chapter III: The Arabic Noun Plural System
  • 6. Chapter IV: Survey of Previous Scholarship
  • 7. Chapter V: The Comparative Semitic Evidence
  • 8. Chapter VI: Subclassification and Reconstruction
  • 9. References
  • 10. General Index

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