The Effect of Prefixation on Syllable Structure in Najdi Arabic

Authors

  • Eisa S. Alrasheedi University of Ha’il

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17507/tpls.1310.14

Keywords:

phonology, prefixation, syllable structure, syllabification, Najdi Arabic

Abstract

This study investigates the effect of prefixation on the syllable and syllabification in Najdi Arabic. It mainly addresses the role of prefixation on the syllable in this variety of Arabic, providing a prosodic representation of it within the context of rule-based phonology. The paper provides a review of the phonological processes that deal with prefixation phenomena in Najdi Arabic, whose domains of application are somewhat subject to syllabification processes and the syllable structure. To achieve this, the paper discusses the three types of prefixation in Najdi Arabic: (a) nominal prefixes, i.e., the definite article /ʔal/ and prepositional prefixes (predominantly fi- ‘in’, and bi- ‘in/at’), (b) the agreement-related prefixes, i.e., verbal prefixes and (c) the adverbial prefix /ʔib-/ ‘with’, which is prefixed to the host noun and changes its grammatical category to an adverb. The results show that each type of prefixation has its own functions, which are essentially related to the type of the host it attaches to. For instance, the prefix /ʔib-/, which is the Najdi Arabic adverbial marker, is a stress-bearing morpheme, given that it is a heavy syllable on its own, which attaches to the initial position at the very beginning of its nominal host.

Author Biography

Eisa S. Alrasheedi, University of Ha’il

Department of English Language, College of Arts

References

Al-Ani, S. (1970). Arabic Phonology: An Acoustic and Physiological Investigation. The Hague: Mouton.

Alessa, A. (2008). When Najd Meets Hijaz: Dialect Contact in Jeddah. In Between the Atlantic and Indian Oceans: studies on contemporary Arabic dialects: proceedings of the 7th AIDA conference, held in Vienna from 5-9 September 2006 (Vol. 4, p. 51). LIT Verlag Münster.

Alfaifi, A. (2019). Syllabification of Coda Consonant Clusters in Najdi and Hijazi Arabic. Unpublished PhD thesis, George Mason University.

Alrasheedi, E. (2015). Affrication in Ha’ili Arabic: A Rule-Based Approach. International Journal of Linguistics, 7(4):27-41.

Alrasheedi, E. (2019). Possessive constructions in Najdi Arabic. Unpublished PhD dissertation, Newcastle University.

Alrasheedi, E. (2022). Flaps and Trills in Najdi and Hijazi Arabic. International Journal of Linguistics. 14(6):106-119.

Blevins, J. (1995). The syllable in phonological theory. In J. A. Goldsmith (ed.), The handbook of phonological theory, (pp. 206-244).

Broselow, E. (1976). The phonology of Egyptian Arabic. Unpublished PhD dissertation, University of Massachusetts at Amherst.

Clements, G. N. (1992). The sonority cycle and syllable organization. In Phonologica 1988: proceedings of the 6th International Phonology Meeting (pp. 63-76). Cambridge University Press.

Ingham, B. (1994). Najdi Arabic: Central Arabian. John Benjamins Publishing Company.

Kenstowicz, M. (1986). Notes on syllable structure in three Arabic dialects. Revue québécoise de linguistique, 16(1), 101-127.

Kenstowicz, M. (1994). Phonology in generative grammar. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell.

Kiparsky, P. (1982). From cyclic phonology to lexical phonology. The structure of phonological representations, 1, 131-175.

Lewis, R. (2013). Complementizer agreement in Najdi Arabic. Unpublished Master’s dissertation, University of Kansas.

Liberman, M. (1975). The intonational system of English. Unpublished PhD dissertation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

McCarthy, J. (1979). On stress and syllabification. Linguistic Inquiry, 10, 443-466.

McCarthy, J., & Prince, A. (1990). Prosodic morphology and templatic morphology. In Perspectives on Arabic linguistics II: papers from the second annual symposium on Arabic linguistics. 1-54.

McCarthy, J. & Prince, A. (1993). Prosodic morphology I: Constraint interaction and satisfaction. University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ.

Pike, K., & Pike, E. (1947). Immediate constituents of Mazateco syllables. International Journal of American Linguistics, 13(2), 78-91.

Prochazka, T. (1988). Saudi Arabian dialects. Kegan Paul Intl.

Roca, I. (1994). Generative Phonology. Routledge.

Rowicka, G. (1999). Prosodic optimality and prefixation in Polish. In The prosody-morphology interface, René Kager, Harry van der Hulst, and Wim Zonneveld (eds.), 367-389. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Segui, J., Ferrand, L., (2002). The role of syllable in speech perception and production. In: Durand, J., Laks, B. (eds.), Phonetics, Phonology and Cognition. Oxford University Press, Oxford. (pp. 151-67).

Selkirk, E. (1982). Syllables. The structure of phonological representations, (2): 337-383.

Thelwall, R., & Sa'Adeddin, M. A. (1990). Arabic. Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 20(02), 37-39.

Watson, J. (1999). The syllable and syllabification in modern spoken Arabic. In: van der Hulst, H. and N.A. Ritter (eds.), The syllable: Views and facts. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. (pp. 501–525).

Watson, J. (2002). The phonology and morphology of Arabic. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Watson, J. (2007). Syllabification patterns in Arabic dialects: Long segments and mora sharing’. Phonology, 24, 335-356.

Zhang, J. (2023). Chinese Syllable Structure. In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Linguistics. Published online on 31 January, 2023. https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199384655.013.898.

Ziegler, W., Maassen, B., Maassen, B., Kent, R. D., Peters, H. F. M., van Lieshout, P. H. H. M., & Hulstijn, W. (2004). The role of the syllable in disorders of spoken language production. Speech motor control in normal and disordered speech (pp. 415-447).

Downloads

Published

2023-10-02

Issue

Section

Articles