Presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
Index of subjects
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Editorial Note vii
- Introduction ix
-
Phonology and Morphology
- Stretching ablaut: Morphological adaptation of new * CCu and * CCi stems in Moroccan Arabic 3
- Hypocoristics revisited: Challenging the primacy of the consonantal root 25
- Morphology and thematic Arity operations: Evidence from standard Arabic 51
-
II. Syntax
- On the individual-property contrast in free state possessive nominals in Egyptian Arabic 71
- Reconstruction and islandhood in Jordanian Arabic 87
- An Arabic wackernagel clitic? The morphosyntax of negation in Palestinian Arabic 105
-
III. Psycholinguistics
- The split-INFL hypothesis: Findings from English and Japanese L2 learners of Arabic 135
- Lexical processing in two language varieties: An even-related brain potential study of Arabic native speakers 153
-
IV. Pragmatics
- A cognitive approach to analyzing demonstratives in Tunisian Arabic 169
- A prosodic feature that invites back-channels in Egyptian Arabic 187
-
V. Computational Linguistics
- Implementing an open source Arabic resource grammar in GF 209
- A link grammar parser for Arabic 233
- Index of subjects 245
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Editorial Note vii
- Introduction ix
-
Phonology and Morphology
- Stretching ablaut: Morphological adaptation of new * CCu and * CCi stems in Moroccan Arabic 3
- Hypocoristics revisited: Challenging the primacy of the consonantal root 25
- Morphology and thematic Arity operations: Evidence from standard Arabic 51
-
II. Syntax
- On the individual-property contrast in free state possessive nominals in Egyptian Arabic 71
- Reconstruction and islandhood in Jordanian Arabic 87
- An Arabic wackernagel clitic? The morphosyntax of negation in Palestinian Arabic 105
-
III. Psycholinguistics
- The split-INFL hypothesis: Findings from English and Japanese L2 learners of Arabic 135
- Lexical processing in two language varieties: An even-related brain potential study of Arabic native speakers 153
-
IV. Pragmatics
- A cognitive approach to analyzing demonstratives in Tunisian Arabic 169
- A prosodic feature that invites back-channels in Egyptian Arabic 187
-
V. Computational Linguistics
- Implementing an open source Arabic resource grammar in GF 209
- A link grammar parser for Arabic 233
- Index of subjects 245