50
The Arabic Language
Map 4.2
Disappearance of the
hamza
in the pre-
Islamic dialects (after Rabin 1951: 132)
and the first-person plural, and
a
for the first-person singular, the second-person,
and the third-person singular feminine (cf. Hetzron 1976; and see above, Chapter
2, p. 14). In this case, Classical Arabic has ‘followed’ the Western pattern, since all
prefixes in Classical Arabic have
-a-
.
Ninth, the dialect of Tamīm was characterised by a phenomenon called
kaškaša
, which consisted in the palatalisation of the
kāf
in
the second-person
singular feminine suffix
-ki
, for example,
ʾinnaši ḏāhiba
‘you [sg. fem.] are leaving’,
instead of
ʾinnaki ḏāhiba
(Sībawayhi,
Kitāb
, II, ed. Bulaq, n.d., pp. 295–6). A
related phenomenon was called
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