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From Utterances to Speech Acts

By Mikhail Kissine

"Kissine offers a new theory of speech acts which is philosophically sophisticated and builds on work in cognitive science, formal semantics, and linguistic typology. This highly readable, brilliant essay is a major contribution to the field."

--François Recanati, Institut Jean-Nicod



Academic Paper


Title: Against Underlying Mid Vowels in Cairene Arabic
Author: Islam Youssef
Email: click here to access email
Homepage: https://sites.google.com/site/imyoussef/
Institution: Telemark University College
Linguistic Field: Morphology; Phonology
Subject Language: Arabic, Egyptian
Arabic, Egyptian
Abstract: Mid vowels in Cairene Arabic (CA) are claimed to have historically developed from Classical Arabic (CLA) diphthongs through monophthongization. Despite the claims that this is a historical process which no longer applies and that long mid vowels are underlying in CA, the absence of short mid vowels in this dialect raises certain theoretical concerns. This paper examines the distribution of mid vowels and diphthongs in CA and provides evidence that all mid vowels are synchronically derived from underlying diphthongs. Diphthongs, however, surface in systematic environments: after the shortening of underlying long low vowels, across morpheme boundaries, when a geminate glide is involved, and in a few lexical exceptions - contexts which resist various phonological processes across languages. I argue that the appearance of CA long mid vowels is the result of total assimilation of two adjacent vocalic root nodes. As a consequence, CA and CLA surface forms can both be derived from diphthongal underlying representations with minimal constraint re-ranking.
Type: Individual Paper
Status: Completed
Publication Info: Zeitschrift für Arabische Linguistik (2010) 52: 5–38


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