Preface
Introduction
Chapter One: The Geography and Demography of pre-Islamic Arabia
Part One: Sources of the Study of Arabic
Chapter Two: Trust Worthy Data
Chapter Three: Grammarians and the Dialects
Partt Two: Pre-Islamic Arabic
Chapter Four: The Pre-Islamic Linguistic Situation
Chapter Five: Pre-Islamic Dialects
Chapter Six: Signs of Development in Pre-Islamic Arabic
Chapter Seven: The Dual Paradigm
Chapter Eight: The Case System
Part Three: Arabic After Islam and Diaspora
Chapter Nine: The Influence of Islam and the Conquests
Chapter Ten: Arabicization
Chapter Eleven: The Dialects
Chapter Twelve: Dialect Division
Part Four: Classical Arabic
Chapter Thirteen: From Pre-Classical to Classical
Chapter Fourteen: The Functional Load of Classical Arabic
Conclusion
Tables
References
Mohamed El-Sharkawi is Assistant Professor of Arabic at Wayne State University, USA, and was previously lecturer at Brown University, USA.
Dr Chris Lucas, SOASWould you consider the book for adoption?Definitely. A book of this type is sorely needed.There is a great need for a book of this type. I think the author is capable of delivering it to a high standard.Dr Peter Glanville, University of MarylandFor the Intro to Arabic Linguistics course, the biggest challenge is finding material. I would love to have one textbook that covers everything, but at present I have to mix and match. I have started using the Oxford Handbook of Arabic Linguistics this semester with two independent study students. This is going well, but I cannot envisage using it in a larger course. A book with readings and then discussion questions or data sets for class time would be great......If the book actually delivers on what is claimed on p1 of the proposal, namely that it will introduce the history of Arabic and its contexts from Pre-Islamic through to Classical Arabic, using primary sources and case studies to establish the course of development, it will be great and I would certainly use it. The rest of the proposal does not spell out how this will be done in a convincing way however.Dr Maher Bahloul, American University of SharjahThe overall structure of the book outline seems quite coherent and should be reader friendly.... I would consider adopting the book.This is a very informative book. It deals with issues of high relevance to the field of dialectology. It should be a useful addition and I am confident dialectologists will welcome this book.
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