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The Arabic Language
their own dialects. Secondary Bedouinisation is not an uncommon phenomenon
even in more recent times, when Muslim urban populations shifted to a Bedou
-
inised dialect, whereas the Christians and Jews stuck to their urban dialect. As
for the Bedouin speakers themselves, even today some of them have managed to
escape sedentary interference to some extent (cf. Chapter 10, pp. 186f.). Besides,
in the course of time the scale of prestige has changed. In the early period of the
Islamic conquests, the urban dialects almost certainly did not have the kind of
prestige that they enjoy nowadays, so that they were not likely to affect the way
of speaking of the Bedouin. At a later stage, the urban centres became the focus of
Islamic civilisation and the seat of power, so that the Bedouin could hardly avoid
the interference of urban speech.
In general, we must conclude that too little is known about the process of
classicisation to determine the extent to which it may have influenced the growth
of the dialects. Since we know only the output of the process of change which
Arabic underwent after it was exported from the Arabian peninsula, namely, the
modern dialects, the question of interference on the part of the Classical standard
is crucial if we wish to extrapolate from the structure of the modern dialects to
the early vernacular varieties of the language during the first centuries of the
Islamic era. On the other hand, none of the existing theories about the emergence
of the new dialects – monogenesis, substratal influence, convergence, natural
development, general trends – offers a comprehensive explanation of the evolu-
tion of the dialects, although each of them explains a subset of the phenomena
in this process. In the present state of affairs, we have to conclude that historical
linguistics alone cannot provide a satisfactory answer. Much more information
is needed about the sociolinguistic context of the early Islamic empire and the
pattern of settlement in each particular area. Even more help may be expected
from general models to explain the evolution of languages.
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