Arabic phonology
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Arabic phonology
While many languages have numerous dialects that differ in pronunciation, the Arabic language is more properly described as a collection of different varieties or Macrolanguage.[1] This article deals primarily with Modern Standard Arabic, which is the standard variety shared by educated speakers throughout Arabic-speaking regions. Modern Standard Arabic is used in writing in all print media and orally in newscasts, speeches, formal declarations of all types,[2] and recitations of the Qur'an. Modern Standard Arabic has 28 consonant phonemes, making phonemic contrasts between "emphatic" (pharyngealized or velarized) consonants and non-emphatic ones; Arabic also has three vowel phonemes. A "phonemic quality of length" applies to consonants as well as vowels.[3]
VowelsThere are three short vowels, three long vowels and two diphthongs (formed by a combination of short with the semivowels and ). Allophony is partially conditioned by neighboring consonants within the same word. For example, and are:
Other vowels exhibit similar allophony. Although there are long and short vowels, length distinctions are neutralized before a pause where all vowels appear as short.
The final heavy syllable of a root morpheme is stressed.[9] ConsonantsEven in the most formal of conventions, pronunciation depends upon a speaker's background.[10] Nevertheless, the number and phonetic character of most of the 28 consonants has a broad degree of regularity among Arabic-speaking regions.
In most dialects, uvular fricatives of the classical period have become velar or post-velar.[18] Long consonants are pronounced exactly like short consonants, but last longer. In Arabic, they are called them "mushaddadah" i.e. "strengthened", but they are not pronounced any stronger, just held longer. Between a geminate consonant and a pause, an epinthetic occurs.[19] Local variationsColloquial varieties differ from Standard Arabic not only in specific words but also in pronunciation. Trends common to most or many dialects include:
CaireneThe Arabic of Cairo, for example, has emphatic labials and [20] and emphatic [21] with marginal phonemic status. Cairene has also merged the interdental consonants with the dental plosives (e.g. ? , 'three') except in loanwords from Standard Arabic where they are nativized as sibilant fricatives (e.g. ? , 'secondary school'). Cairene has also retracted to (while adopting loanwords from Standard Arabic with ) and debuccalized to (again, loanwords from Standard Arabic have reintroduced this sound).[22] Classical Arabic diphthongs and became realized as and respectively; loanwords from Standard Arabic reintroduced the diphthongs, sometimes with minimal pairs like ('carrying' f.s.) vs ('burden') as well as ('cheese') vs ('our pocket').[23] San'a'Other varieties, such as that of , Yemen, are more conservative and retain most phonemic contrasts of Classical Arabic. possesses but as a reflex of Classical (which still functions as an emphatic consonant).[24] In unstressed syllables, short vowels may be reduced to .[25] and is voiced to in initial and intervocalic positions.[26] Despite differences amongst colloquial varieties, there is a great deal of regional consistency in speakers' recitation of the Qur'an as many fluently speak and understand the standard pronunciation. DistributionThe most frequent consonant phoneme of Arabic is , the rarest is . The frequency distribution of the 28 consonant phonemes, based on the 2,967 triliteral roots listed by is (with the percentage of roots in which each phoneme occurs):
This distribution does not necessarily reflect the actual frequency of occurrence of the phonemes in speech, since pronouns, prepositions and suffixes are not taken into account, and the roots themselves will occur with varying frequency. In particular, occurs in several extremely common affixes (occurring in the marker for second-person or feminine third-person as a prefix, the marker for first-person or feminine third-person as a suffix, and as the second element of Forms VIII and X as an infix) despite being fifth from last on Wehr's list. The list does give, however, an idea of which phonemes are more marginal than others. Note that the five least frequent letters are among the six letters added to those inherited from the Phoenician alphabet. References
Bibliography
ca:Fonologia àrab fr:Phonologie de l'arabe Source: Wikipedia | The above article is available under the GNU FDL. | Edit this article
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