206
The Arabic Language
Although much is still unknown about the Central African varieties of Arabic,
it is clear that there are many common features linking Nigerian Arabic, Chadian
Arabic
and Sudanic Arabic, as Owens (1993) has shown.
Within Egypt, the following dialect groups are usually distinguished:
•
The dialects of the Delta; a further division is made between the eastern Delta
dialects in the Šarqiyya and the western Delta dialects; in some respects the
latter constitute the link between Egyptian Arabic and the dialects of the
Maghreb,
for instance, in the use of
ni-…-u
for the first-person plural of the
imperfect in some of these dialects (cf. above, pp. 178f.).
•
The dialect of Cairo.
• The Middle Egyptian dialects (from Gizeh to Asyūṭ).
• The Upper Egyptian dialects (from Asyūṭ to the south); these are subdivided
into four groups: the dialects between Asyūṭ and Nag Hammadi; the dialects
between Nag Hammadi and Qēna; the dialects between Qēna and Luxor; and
the dialects between Luxor and Esna.
Until recently, only the Cairene dialect had been studied relatively well. Yet, in
spite of the wealth of information about the dialect of the capital, its history and
its formative period are still unclear. If one compares
the present-day dialect
of the capital with descriptions of ‘Egyptian’ (i.e., Cairene) from the nineteenth
century and with dialect texts from that period, it turns out that there is a
considerable difference (Woidich 1994). Cairene
from that period exhibits a
Map 11.2 Arab tribes in the central African
Baggara
belt (after Owens 1993: 17)
The Dialects of Arabic
207
number of features that have disappeared from the modern dialect, for example,
the passive with the prefix
Dostları ilə paylaş: