116
The
Arabic Language
(i.e., singular, masculine, indefinite) state in more than one way, it resembles
a verb and therefore loses part of its declensional rights. These
deviations are
the so-called
mawāniʿ aṣ-ṣarf
‘the preventing factors of complete declension’, for
instance, when a noun is definite, plural, feminine, a proper name, of foreign
origin, an epithet or when it has a verbal pattern. On this basis, words like
yazīdu
‘Yazīd’ (name, verbal pattern),
ʾibrāhīmu
‘Abraham’ (name, foreign origin) and the
comparative
ʾafʿalu
(epithet, verbal pattern) are assigned to the category of the
diptotic nouns.
In Arabic grammatical theory, diptotic nouns are fundamentally different from
nouns that in their surface form do not exhibit all case endings. This occurs in
the so-called weak nouns, that is, nouns containing one of the glides
w
,
y
or
ʾalif
.
In
these nouns, phonological rules may produce a merger of case endings, for
example,
qāḍin
‘judge’, with genitive
qāḍin
, accusative
qāḍiyan
; or
ʾafʿan
‘viper’,
whose cases are all identical. The grammarians derive these surface forms from
an underlying form, on which all three case endings are visible: /qa”ḍiyun/,
/ qa”ḍiyin/, /qa”ḍiyan/; /ʾafʿayun/, /ʾafʿayin/, /ʾafʿayan/. According to them,
the reason for these specific changes is that the speakers of Arabic dislike combi-
nations
of the vowels
i
and
u
or of two
a
’s with the glide
y
, which they find too
‘heavy’ to pronounce. The difference with the diptotic nouns is that weak nouns
are actually declinable, even though their surface case endings are identical.
Apart from the case endings and the nunation,
nouns may undergo morpholog
-
ical alterations, that is, changes in their form that are not caused by a governing
word (
ʿāmil
). The most frequent alteration consists in the category of number:
nouns may become dual or plural. The dual number of nouns is formed with
suffixes, in the masculine
-āni
for the nominative,
-ayni
for the genitive/accusa-
tive;
in the feminine
-atāni
/
-atayni
. In the plural, we have to distinguish between
a declension with suffixes (the so-called sound plural) and a declension by pattern
modification (the so-called broken plural). The sound plural suffixes are
-ūna
for the nominative,
-īna
for the genitive/accusative; in the feminine nouns, the
suffixes are
-ātun
/
-ātin
. The sound plural is used almost
exclusively for animate
plurals and certain adjectives, as well as for the participles.
Because of the abovementioned principle (p. 110) of one-morph-one-meaning,
the segmentation of the dual and plural endings constituted a major problem
for Arabic grammarians. Take, for instance, the form
Dostları ilə paylaş: