Results 201 to 210 of about 165,711 (240)
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Arabic Loanwords in Basa Magindanawn: A Lexical Analysis Based on Juanmartí’s Dictionary
International Journal of Linguistics Literature & TranslationThis article examines Arabic loanwords in Basa Magindanawn (the Maguindanao language), as documented in what is widely considered the first Maguindanao dictionary: the Moro-Maguindanao-Spanish Dictionary, compiled by the Spanish Jesuit Jacinto Juanmartí ...
Víctor M. Barraso Romero
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Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 1957
Needless to say the Amharic speakers also have close contact with the speakers of the other Semitic Ethiopic languages as well as of the Cushitic languages. Nearly all the Semitic Ethiopic and Cushitic languages have many Arabic loanwords for the same reasons mentioned above in connexion with Amharic.
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Needless to say the Amharic speakers also have close contact with the speakers of the other Semitic Ethiopic languages as well as of the Cushitic languages. Nearly all the Semitic Ethiopic and Cushitic languages have many Arabic loanwords for the same reasons mentioned above in connexion with Amharic.
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PHONETIC ADAPTATION OF ARABIC LOANWORDS IN THE DOBRUJAN TATAR
Romano-ArabicaAs indicated by the title, this study deals with the phonetic adaptation of the Arabic loanwords in the Dobrujan Tatar. This Turkic variety possesses a large number of Arabic lexical borrowings due to the fact that Arabic is the language of the Quran, a ...
Leyla Cheamil
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Arabic Loanwords in Bahasa Indonesia: Phonological Changes and Pedagogical Implications
Formosa Journal of Multidisciplinary ResearchThis study investigates the phonological and semantic transformation of Arabic loanwords in Bahasa Indonesia and their pedagogical implications. Using qualitative descriptive approach, data were collected from the Arabic textbooks for Madrasah Tsanawiyah
Fatonah Puji Astuti +1 more
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Journal of Lifestyle and SDGs Review
Objectives: This study explores the phonological adaptation of Arabic loanwords in Maguindanaon, aiming to deepen understanding of the language's sound system and its linguistic preservation. Theoretical Framework: Drawing on the Optimality Theory (OT)
Wang Almira B. Menson
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Objectives: This study explores the phonological adaptation of Arabic loanwords in Maguindanaon, aiming to deepen understanding of the language's sound system and its linguistic preservation. Theoretical Framework: Drawing on the Optimality Theory (OT)
Wang Almira B. Menson
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Language Borrowing and Semantic Change: A Study of Arabic Loanwords in Baatonum
TASAMBO JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE, LITERATURE, AND CULTURESemantic change in language borrowing is a general phenomenon among living languages. When a language borrows lexical items from the other, some modifications occur, thus, affecting the meanings of some of the borrowed items.
Aliyu Okuta Ahmad
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Arabic loanwords in French via Spanish as an intermediate language: A semantic analysis
Beyond Philology : An International Journal of Linguistics, Literary Studies and English Language TeachingThe aim of this article is to examine the way in which, from a semantic point of view, words have passed from language A to language B by transiting through language C, on the model of the assimilation of Arabic words into French through Spanish.
Marta Kaźmierczak
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The Arabic Loanwords in Nabatean Aramaic
Journal of Near Eastern Studies, 1986THE 4,000 Nabatean texts cover a remarkable range of territory-from the area of Bostra over to the Sinai and down into northern Arabia-and document the history of the region in a variety of ways.' Among the most remarkable historical witnesses in the Nabatean corpus is a lintel inscription from the isolated shrine site of Rawwiafah, a Greek and ...
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British journal of multidisciplinary and advanced studies
This study investigates semantic change in twenty Arabic loanwords in Hausa, examining how borrowed lexical items undergo meaning elevation (amelioration) and meaning degradation (pejoration) in the host language.
Nasiru Yusha’u
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This study investigates semantic change in twenty Arabic loanwords in Hausa, examining how borrowed lexical items undergo meaning elevation (amelioration) and meaning degradation (pejoration) in the host language.
Nasiru Yusha’u
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Morphological Adaptation, Word Formation and Functional Integration of Arabic Loanwords in English
European International Journal of Philological SciencesThis article examines the role of Arabic loanwords in the English language, focusing on their morphological adaptation, participation in word formation processes, and functional integration into the lexical system.
Uzoqboyeva Ra’no Anvarjon qizi
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