PERSPECTIVES ON ARABIC LINGUISTICS XII AMSTERDAM STUDIES IN THE THEORY AND HISTORY OF LINGUISTIC SCIENCE General Editor E. F. KONRAD KOERNER (University of Ottawa) Series IV - CURRENT ISSUES IN LINGUISTIC THEORY Advisory Editorial Board Raimo Anttila (Los Angeles); Lyle Campbell (Christchurch, N.Z.] John E. Joseph (Edinburgh); Manfred Krifka (Austin, Tex.) Hans-Heinrich Lieb (Berlin); E. Wyn Roberts (Vancouver, B.C.); Hans-Jürgen Sasse (Köln) Volume 190 Elabbas Benmamoun (ed.) Perspectives on Arabic Linguistics XII Papers from the Twelfth Annual Symposium on Arabic Linguistics PERSPECTIVES ON ARABIC LINGUISTICS XII PAPERS FROM THE TWELFTH ANNUAL SYMPOSIUM ON ARABIC LINGUISTICS Edited by ELABBAS BENMAMOUN University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign JOHN BENJAMINS PUBLISHING COMPANY AMSTERDAM/PHILADELPHIA The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences — Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984. Elabbas Benmamoun (ed.) Perspectives on Arabic Linguistics XII Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science. Series IV, Current issues in linguistic theory, ISSN 0304-0763 ; v. 190) ISBN 90 272 3696 8 (Eur.) / 1 55619 967 8 (US) (alk. paper) © 1999 - John Benjamins B.V. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, by print, photoprint, microfilm, or any other means, without written permission from the publisher. John Benjamins Publishing Co. • P.O.Box 75577 • 1070 AN Amsterdam • The Netherlands John Benjamins North America • P.O.Box 27519 • Philadelphia PA 19118-0519 • USA Table of Contents Foreword vii Introduction 1 I. Syntax and Morphosyntax Modes of Interrogation 7 Joseph Aoun & Lina Choueiri Checking and Licensing Inside DP in Palestinian Arabic 27 M. A. Mohammad On Locality and Discontinuity: Agreement as Across the Board Movement 45 Peter Hallman II. Computational Linguistics Arabic Stem Morphotactics via Finite-State Intersection 85 Kenneth R. Beesley Computational Tool for Developing Morphophonological Models for Arabic 101 George Anton Kiraz III. Phonology and Historical Linguistics Hypocoristic Formation in Ammani-Jordanian Arabic 113 Bushra Adnan Zawaydeh & Stuart Davis On et alia 141 David Testen vi IV. Sociolinguistics (θ) and (ð) as Ternary and Binary Variables in Damascene Arabic 163 Jamil Daher Testing Lexical Difference in Regional Standard Arabics 183 Dilworth B. Parkinson and Zeinab Ibrahim Index of Subjects 203 FOREWORD On March 6-8, 1998, the Twelfth Annual Symposium on Arabic Linguistics was held at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The symposium was sponsored by the Arabic Linguistics Society, the University of Illinois Department of Linguistics, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the Center for African Studies, the International Program of Studies, and the Program of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies. The papers selected for publication in this volume were anonymously peer reviewed before their final acceptance for publication. The transcription of all Arabic materials in the body of the papers follows the International Phonetic Alphabet or standard equivalents. The Arabic emphatics, however, are represented by a dot underneath the symbol, and long vowels as sequences of two vowels. The transliteration of Arabic names and titles follows accepted formats, with some simplification in the use of diacritics. The preparation and printing of the final manuscript was done using facilities available at the Middle East Center of the University of Utah, Salt Lake City. I am indebted to Tessa Hauglid who has served as assistant editor as well as copy editor for this volume. I wish also to thank Georgia Green, Hans Hock, Edward Miner, Jerry Morgan, and Daniel Silverman for their help. INTRODUCTION Elabbas Benmamoun University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign The papers in this volume deal with various topics in Arabic linguistics. Most of the papers focus on new issues and introduce new empirical generalizations that have not been studied before within the context of Arabic linguistics. The volume is divided into four sections. Section I includes three papers that deal with syntactic and morphosyntactic issues. The topic of the paper by Aoun and Choueiri is extraction in Lebanese Arabic. In addition to the two familiar extraction strategies, namely, the gap strategy and the resumption strategy, they consider the less familiar in situ strategy. It is well known that the gap strategy is subject to standard Island Conditions such as the Wh-Island Constraint and the Complex NP Constraint, while the resumption strategy is not subject to those conditions. Interestingly, the in situ strategy is also not subject to Island Conditions, when it involves a single Wh-element. In this respect, the in situ strategy patterns with the resumption strategy. What is intriguing is Aoun and Choueiri's finding that the relation between wh-elements in situ is sensitive to Islands. For example, two Wh-elements in situ cannot be separated by an Island. The authors analyze the relation between the wh-elements in situ in terms of 'absorption'. Assuming that sensitivity to Islands is a diagnostic of movement, the implication, then, is that 'absorption' involves movement of one Wh-element to the other. The paper by Mohammad deals with the structure of the noun phrase containing the word taba in Palestinian Arabic. He provides 2 ELABBAS BENMAMOUN several arguments to show that the word taba heads a Construct State representation. Several syntactic and phonological properties that obtain in the context of the well-known cases of the Construct State structures obtain in the context of the noun phrase headed by taba . Mohammad then discusses agreement and Case within the Construct State and suggests an analysis that draws on recent ideas within the Minimalist Program. Hallman deals with the distribution of the nominal, adjectival, and verbal morphological features in Standard Arabic. He focuses, in particular, on the realization of features such as definiteness, number, gender, and Case. He notes that the features in question display co variation. Assuming that co-variation obtains under locality, the challenge is to account for cases of co-variation where locality is apparently violated. Hallman maintains the locality requirement on co variation and argues that the apparent violations are due to syntactic transformations (movement). He also discusses agreement between nouns and adjectives and takes it as an Across the Board phenomenon subject to the Across the Board movement. Other types of agreement, particularly subject-verb agreement, are also considered. In general, Hallman assumes a theory of syntax that allows morphological features to head independent syntactic projections that are, in turn, subject to syntactic operations such as movement. The morphology then spells out the output of the syntactic derivation. Section II includes two papers on computational Arabic morphology. Both papers attempt to deal with the challenge posed by the non-concatenative nature of Arabic morphology. As is well known, some lexical relations in Arabic cannot be captured in a string compositional fashion. Beesley and Kiraz make use of the analysis first advanced by McCarthy whereby a form, such as a verb, is decomposed into a root tier, a CV tier, and a vocalic tier. Both authors illustrate how their programs can handle Arabic morphology. Kiraz deals mainly with the triliteral perfective verb form, while Beesley discusses other verbal patterns and the issue of the non-radical segments. Section III includes a morpho-phonology paper and an historical linguistics paper. The paper by Zawaydeh and Davis deals with the hypocoristic formation in Ammani-Jordanian Arabic. Hypocoristic formation basically involves the modification of a full name. The paper considers the relation between the full name and its hypocoristic
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