The Emergence of New Arabic
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and to the emergence of simplified varieties, one must assume that at a later
stage the influence of the Classical standard and, in particular, the language of
the
Qurʾān
reintroduced many of the features of Standard Arabic that are found
in the modern dialects, such as the inflection of the verb and the existence of
two verbal forms. In this scenario, the population of the urban centres of the
Islamic empire originally communicated with the Arab conquerors in a simpli
-
fied variety of Arabic. In the linguistic melting-pot of the cities, such varieties
became the mother tongue of children in mixed marriages between Arabs and
indigenous women, or between speakers of different languages whose common
second language was Arabic.
The dissemination of Classical Arabic as the prestige language of culture and
religion introduced a model that affected the linguistic situation to such a degree
that between colloquial speech and standard language a linguistic continuum
arose that paralleled the present-day diglossia of the Arabophone world. In this
continuum, the lower (basilectal) speech levels were stigmatised and ultimately
abandoned by the speakers in favour of higher (acrolectal) features. In principle,
the replacement of basilectal features by acrolectal features is not an uncommon
phenomenon. There is no direct evidence for such a large-scale restructuring in
historical times, but to some extent the process may be compared with contem
-
porary Classical interference, which leads to shifts in the language used by dialect
speakers. For many literate speakers of Arabic, for instance, the use of the Classical
genitive construction alongside the dialectal construction has become a normal
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