The Arabic Language



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Kees Versteegh & C. H. M. Versteegh - The Arabic language (2014, Edinburgh University Press) - libgen.li

*ṭ

*ṣ

*ḳ

*ṯ̣
 
and 
*ḏ̣
; Arabic 
has four such consonants, /ṭ/, /ṣ/, /ḍ/, and /ḏ̣/.
Second, the phoneme corresponding in Arabic to proto-Semitic 
*ṯ̣
is /ḏ̣/; in 
other Semitic languages (except Ugaritic and Old South Arabian), this phoneme 
does not have an interdental character, for instance, in Akkadian, Hebrew and 
Ethiopic /ṣ/ (cf. Hebrew 
ṣǝbī
‘gazelle’, Arabic 
ḏ̣
aby
). The current transcription with 
voiceless voiced nasal velarised lateral trill
labial 
f b m
interdental 

d

dental 



ṣ 
l
alveolar 


ṭ 
ḍ 
r
pre-palatal 
š 
j
post-palatal 

q
velar 
ḫ 
ġ
pharyngal 
ḥ 
ʿ
laryngal 
ʾ 
h
Table 2.1 The Arabic consonantal system


24
The Arabic Language

in Arabic is based on the modern pronunciation of this phoneme in loanwords 
from Classical Arabic in the dialects (e.g., Classical Arabic 
ʿaḏ̣īm
, pronounced in 
Egyptian and Syrian Arabic as 
ʿaẓīm
).
Third, the phoneme corresponding in Classical Arabic to proto-Semitic 
*ḏ̣
is 
/ḍ/. There is some evidence in Arabic, based on explanations by grammarians 
and Arabic loanwords in other languages, that /ḍ/ was realised as a lateral frica-
tive [ɮ] or a lateralised [d̴ɫ]. In Akkadian, the name of the Arabic god 
Ruḍāʾ
was 
transcribed as 
Ruldāʾu
or 
Rulṭāʾ
, and early loans from Arabic in Spanish (e.g., 
alcalde
‘mayor’ < 
al-qāḍī
) and in Malaysian languages (e.g., in Bahasa Indonesia, 
ridla
as 
a spelling variant of 
ridha

ridza
‘God’s blessing’ < 
riḍā
) also exhibit traces of this 
lateral character of the 
ḍād
. Since it exists as an independent phoneme only in the 
South Semitic languages, it is difficult to say anything about its original realisa-
tion. In Akkadian and Hebrew, it has merged with /ṣ/ (cf. Hebrew 
ṣāḥaq
‘to laugh’, 
with Arabic 
ḍaḥika
). In the modern realisation of Classical Arabic, /ḍ/ has become 
the voiced counterpart of /ṭ/ and in the modern dialects it has merged with /ḏ̣/.
Fourth, the phoneme corresponding in Classical Arabic to proto-Semitic 
*ḳ
was probably a non-emphatic voiced counterpart to /k/, that is, /g/; this is the 
phoneme that is nowadays realised in Standard Arabic as a voiceless /q/, but that 
in earlier stages of Classical Arabic was probably a voiced /g/, as in the modern 
Bedouin dialects (cf. p. 187). At any rate, /q/ was not emphatic in Classical Arabic, 
since it did not lead to assimilation of adjacent consonants (compare 
iṣṭabara

*iṣtabara
‘to be patient’, where the infix 
-t- 
is assimilated to 
ṣ,
with 
iqtaraḍa
‘to raise 
a loan’ without assimilation of the 
t
).
Fifth, for proto-Semitic a series of three sibilants, 
*s


, and 
*s
(probably a later
-
alised 
ś
), is usually posited; the Modern South Arabian languages have these three 
sibilants, but in Arabic 
*s
corresponds to /š/, and 

and 
*s
have merged to /s/. In 
all other Semitic languages, 
*s
and *
š 
have remained distinct (e.g., cf. Hebrew 
sāʿad
‘to support’/
ḥāmē
š ‘five’, with Arabic 
sāʿada
‘to help’/
ḫamsa
‘five’). 
Sixth, in Arabic the phoneme corresponding to proto-Semitic 
*g
is affricated 
/j/ (e.g., cf. Hebrew 
gāmāl
, with Arabic 
jamal
‘camel’); this phoneme forms a 
pre-palatal series with the new /š/.
The debate about the exact position of Arabic within the Semitic languages is 
still going on. The only conclusion we can draw from the data presented here is 
that the language exhibits common features with both the South (South Arabian, 
Ethiopic) and the North (Canaanite, Aramaic) Semitic languages, and that it 
also contains innovations not found anywhere else. Because of the uncertain
-
ties concerning the chronology of the common features, there is little basis for a 
genealogical classification of the kind current in Indo-European linguistics, and 
it may be preferable to stay within the bounds of a descriptive and typological 
analysis of the relationships between Arabic and its Semitic neighbours.


Arabic as a Semitic Language 
25

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