Library Highlights Kit July - December 2021

Page 13

Language and linguistics

13

The Cambridge Handbook of Arabic Linguistics Karin Ryding

Georgetown University, Washington DC

David Wilmsen

American University of Beirut

Description Arabic linguistics encompasses a range of language forms and functions from formal to informal, classical to contemporary, written to spoken, all of which have vastly different research traditions. Recently however, the increasing prominence of new methodologies such as corpus linguistics and sociolinguistics have allowed Arabic linguistics to be studied from multiple perspectives, revealing key discoveries about the nature of Arabic-in-use and deeper knowledge of traditional fields of study. With contributions from internationally renowned experts on the language, this handbook provides a state-of-the-art overview of both traditional and modern topics in Arabic linguistics. Chapters are divided into six thematic areas: applied Arabic linguistics, variation and sociolinguistics, theoretical studies, computational and corpus linguistics, new media studies and Arabic linguistics in literature and translation. It is an essential resource for students and researchers wishing to explore the exciting and rapidly moving field of Arabic linguistics.

Key Features • Provides state-of-the-art research reports with updates and overviews of current research areas and efforts • Introduces the application of theory to new types of Arabic texts • Includes a range of approaches to linguistic issues from generative grammar to social media studies

Contents Introduction and Chapter Summaries; Part I. Arabic Applied Linguistics: 1. Arabic Applied Linguistics; 2. Language Planning in the Arab World; 3. The Study of Arabic Language Acquisition; 4. Issues in Arabic Language Testing and Assessment; 5. Arabic Study Abroad: Critical Contextualization and Research-based Interventions; 6. Models of Arabic Pronunciation; Part II. Arabic Variation and Sociolinguistics: 7. Diglossia, Variation, and Structural Complexity; 8. Sociolinguistic Variation and Variation in Sociolinguistics; 9. What is Formal Spoken Arabic?; 10. Arabic Dialectology; 11. Maltese: A Peripheral Dialect in the Historical Dialectology of Arabic; Part III. Theoretical and Descriptive Studies: 12. Grammaticalization in Arabic;

Additional Information Level: Academic Researchers, graduate students Series: Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics September 2021 247 x 174 mm c.650pp 978-1-108-41730-3 Hardback £125.00 / US$165.00

13. Arabic and Onomastics; 14. The Intonation of Arabic; 15. Case in Arabic; 16. On Arabic Morphosyntax within the Theory of Generative Grammar; 17. Arabic Morphology: Inflectional and Derivational; Part IV. Arabic Computational and Corpus Linguistics: 18. Arabic Computational Linguistics; 19. Arabic Corpus Linguistics and Related Tools: An Overview and Some Critical Observations; 20. The Utility of Arabic Corpus Linguistics; Part V. Arabic Linguistics and New Media Studies: 21. Language Policy and the Arabic Localization of Twitter; 22. Variation and Social Change on Syrian Dissidents’ Social Media; Part VI. Arabic Linguistics in Literature and Translation: 23. Vernacular Varieties in Recent Arabic Literature; 24. Stylistics and Translation: A Corpus-based Case Study of English-Arabic Demonstratives.


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Articles inside

Analytic Philosophy of Literature

1min
page 36

Philosophy of Language and Metaphor

2min
page 35

Negation and Denial

1min
page 32

Types and Definitions of Irony

1min
page 34

Deception: Lying and Beyond

1min
page 33

The Philosophy of Argument

1min
page 31

Contemporary Discourse Studies and Philosophy of Language Part VI. Some Extensions:

1min
page 30

Mental Files

1min
page 29

Conceptual Semantics and its Implications for Philosophy of Language

2min
page 27

Relevance Theory and the Philosophy of Language

1min
page 28

Slurs: Semantic and Pragmatic Theories of Meaning Part V. Philosophical Implications and Linguistic Theories:

2min
page 25

The Normativity of Meaning and Content

2min
page 23

Metasemantics: A Normative Perspective (and the Case of Mood

1min
page 22

Propositions, Predication, and Assertion

2min
page 19

Entailment, Presupposition, Implicature; 18. Speech Acts, Actions, and Events

4min
pages 17-18

Vagueness in Natural Language Part IV. Issues in Semantics and Pragmatics:

3min
page 16

Natural Kind Terms

3min
page 15

Indexicals and Contextual Involvement

3min
page 14

Semantic Minimalism and Contextualism in Light of the Logicality of Language Part III. From Truth to Vagueness:

2min
page 10

Truth and Theories of Truth

1min
page 11

Names in Philosophy

2min
page 13

Philosophy of Language, Ontology and Logic

3min
page 5

Reference and Theories of Reference

2min
page 12

Metasemantics and Metapragmatics: Philosophical Foundations of Meaning

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page 7

Semantic Content and Utterance Context: A Spectrum of Approaches

1min
page 9

Frege’s Legacy in the Philosophy of Language and Mind

1min
page 6
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