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The Arabic Language
formulae. Thus, for instance, when we find that in the papyri the internal passive is
used rather frequently or that the negative
lam
is quite common, this does not mean
that people used the passive in everyday speech. Such
forms are typical examples
of Classical markers (not only then but still today!). This is also confirmed by the
abundant occurrence of pseudo-corrections in the papyri, for instance, the use of
the accusative
ʾalif
in nominative position, the verbal ending
-ūna
after
lam
, etc.
There are no instances of analytic genitives or
aspectual
particles, but this is not
unexpected, since such forms belonged to the most informal register of speech.
Apart from the papyri, various categories of pre-modern Middle Arabic texts
may be distinguished. Among the best known are fairytales of the Arabian Nights
(
ʾAlf layla wa-layla
) type. Most of these stories originated in the period from the
twelfth to the sixteenth centuries, and the manuscripts
date from the thirteenth
to the nineteenth centuries. In the form in which we have them, they have under
-
gone a literary adaptation, and the colloquial elements represent a conscious
attempt to enliven the narrative. Most printed editions have ‘corrected’
the text
in the manuscripts according to the standard norm, but the most important
collection, that of the Arabian Nights, is now available in a critical edition by
Muḥsin Mahdī (1984), based entirely on the manuscripts. As an example of this
style, we quote from another collection of similar stories the following passage,
again with the caliph, his vizier and his eunuch as protagonists. It illustrates the
dialogue style with a number of colloquial traits (use of the negation
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