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29 pages, 3995 KB  
Article
The Geography of Meaning: Investigating Semantic Differences Across German Dialects
by Alfred Lameli and Matthias Hahn
Languages 2026, 11(3), 56; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages11030056 - 16 Mar 2026
Viewed by 215
Abstract
This study reconstructs the geography of meaning of the German perception verb schmecken on the basis of 30 major dialect dictionaries, treating them as a distributed semantic corpus and coding attestations as binary variables reflecting the presence or absence of semantic options. Combining [...] Read more.
This study reconstructs the geography of meaning of the German perception verb schmecken on the basis of 30 major dialect dictionaries, treating them as a distributed semantic corpus and coding attestations as binary variables reflecting the presence or absence of semantic options. Combining a construal-based framework with spatial modeling, the analysis shows that the polysemy of schmecken is structured by three mutually reinforcing forces: embodied sensory organization, construal-based perspectivization, and regionally patterned areal dynamics. The gustatory–olfactory axis forms the semantic core of the verb, from which tactile, visual, affective, and epistemic extensions emerge. These extensions align with systematic pathways constrained by agentive, experiential, emissive, and evaluative construals, demonstrating that semantic extension is channeled through specific construal modes—notably emissive and agentive—rather than determined by sensory modality alone. A detailed areal analysis reveals a pronounced north–south divide. While Low German dialects conform to the cross-linguistically more common tendency to avoid colexifying taste and smekk—itself the outcome of historical change rather than uninterrupted differentiation—Upper German varieties preserve a typologically rare gustatory–olfactory cluster and exhibit the richest range of cross-modal and abstract extensions. The resulting semantic graph formalizes how regional varieties activate different subsets of a lexeme’s semantic potential and demonstrates that semantic networks themselves display spatial organization. The study thus provides an empirically grounded reconstruction of a German geography of meaning and illustrates how dialect data illuminate the interplay between embodied cognition, construal-based lexical architecture, and areal dynamics. Full article
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15 pages, 272 KB  
Editorial
Dialectal Dynamics—An Introduction
by Alfred Lameli, Simonetta Montemagni and John Nerbonne
Languages 2025, 10(10), 265; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages10100265 - 15 Oct 2025
Viewed by 1257
Abstract
The study of dialects leads very naturally to the study of their geographic distribution and the nature of the distribution, e.g., by examining whether the distribution is based simply on geographic distance or on relatively distinct dialect regions. Dialectal dynamics poses the further [...] Read more.
The study of dialects leads very naturally to the study of their geographic distribution and the nature of the distribution, e.g., by examining whether the distribution is based simply on geographic distance or on relatively distinct dialect regions. Dialectal dynamics poses the further question of why the distribution takes the form it does. Does variation arise through migration, i.e., due to the relative lack of communication among people who live far from one another? Sociolinguists have shown convincingly that variation is often employed to indicate identification with others, leading to the adoption of speech habits and changes in the distribution of variation. Purely linguistic processes may push some varieties toward change while others are more resistant, and contact with other languages and dialects, including particularly standard languages, almost inevitably results in changes. This volume examines studies in the area of dialectal dynamics, including studies focused on methods that promise to illuminate this complex field. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Dialectal Dynamics)
37 pages, 5216 KB  
Article
Unraveling the Overall Picture of Japanese Dialect Variation: What Factors Shape the Big Picture?
by Wilbert Heeringa and Fumio Inoue
Languages 2025, 10(6), 141; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages10060141 - 12 Jun 2025
Viewed by 3049
Abstract
We studied the Japanese dialect by calculating aggregated PMI Levenshtein distances among local Japanese dialects using data from 2400 locations and 141 items from the Linguistic Atlas of Japan Database (LAJDB). Through factor analysis, we found the latent linguistic variables underlying the aggregated [...] Read more.
We studied the Japanese dialect by calculating aggregated PMI Levenshtein distances among local Japanese dialects using data from 2400 locations and 141 items from the Linguistic Atlas of Japan Database (LAJDB). Through factor analysis, we found the latent linguistic variables underlying the aggregated distances. We found two factors, the first of which reflects a division into five groups, and the second of which reflects the long-standing East/West cultural contrast in mainland Japan, also known as the AB division. In the latter division, the eastern group includes the Okinawa islands. We paid special attention to the Tokyo dialect, which is associated with Standard Japanese. In a second factor analysis, only distances to the Tokyo dialect were considered. Although the patterns represented by the four factors vary, they consistently show that dialects geographically closer to Tokyo are more similar to the Tokyo dialect. Additionally, the first three factors reflected the similarity of the Hokkaido varieties to Tokyo’s local dialect. The results of the factor analyses were linked back to the individual variation patterns of the 141 items. A more precise analysis of Tokyo’s position within the Japanese dialect continuum revealed that it is situated within a region of local dialects characterized by relatively small average linguistic distances to other dialects. This area includes the more central area of mainland Japan and Hokkaido. When the influence of geographical distance is filtered out, only the local dialects of Hokkaido remain as dialects with the smallest average distance to other local dialects. Additionally, we observed that dialects geographically close to Tokyo are most closely related to it. However, when we again use distances that are controlled for geographical distance, the local dialects on Hokkaido stand out as being very related to the Tokyo dialect. This probably indicates that the Tokyo dialect has had a relatively large influence on Hokkaido. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Dialectal Dynamics)
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24 pages, 2269 KB  
Article
This Is the Way People Are Negative Anymore: Mapping Emotionally Negative Affect in Syntactically Positive Anymore Through Sentiment Analysis of Tweets
by Christopher Strelluf and Thomas T. Hills
Languages 2025, 10(6), 136; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages10060136 - 10 Jun 2025
Viewed by 1880
Abstract
The adverb anymore is standardly a negative polarity item (NPI), which must be licensed by triggers of non-positive polarity. Some Englishes also allow anymore in positive-polarity clauses. Linguists have posited that this non-polarity anymore (NPAM) carries a feature of negative affect. However, this [...] Read more.
The adverb anymore is standardly a negative polarity item (NPI), which must be licensed by triggers of non-positive polarity. Some Englishes also allow anymore in positive-polarity clauses. Linguists have posited that this non-polarity anymore (NPAM) carries a feature of negative affect. However, this claim is based on elicited judgments, and linguists have argued that respondents cannot reliably evaluate NPAM via conscious judgment. To solve this problem, we employ sentiment analysis to examine the relationship between NPAM and negative affect in a Twitter corpus. Using two complementary sentiment analytic frameworks, we demonstrate that words occurring with NPAM have lower valence, higher arousal, and lower dominance than words occurring with NPI-anymore. Broadly, this confirms NPAM’s association with negative affect in natural-language productions. We additionally identify inter- and intra-regional differences in affective dimensions, as well as variability across different types of NPI trigger, showing that the relationship between negative affect and NPAM is not monolithic dialectally, syntactically, or semantically. The project demonstrates the utility of sentiment analysis for examining emotional characteristics of low-frequency variables, providing a new tool for dialectology, micro-syntax, and variationist sociolinguistics. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Linguistics of Social Media)
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19 pages, 4218 KB  
Article
Dialect Classification and Everyday Culture: A Case Study from Austria
by Philip C. Vergeiner
Languages 2025, 10(2), 17; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages10020017 - 23 Jan 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 3123
Abstract
Considering dialect areas as cultural areas has a long tradition in dialectology. Especially in the first half of the 20th century, researchers explored correspondences between dialect variation and other elements of everyday culture such as traditional clothing and customs. Since then, however, few [...] Read more.
Considering dialect areas as cultural areas has a long tradition in dialectology. Especially in the first half of the 20th century, researchers explored correspondences between dialect variation and other elements of everyday culture such as traditional clothing and customs. Since then, however, few studies have compared dialect variation with everyday culture, and virtually none have used quantitative methods. This study addresses this issue by employing a multivariate, dialectometric approach. It examines dialect variation in phonology and its relationship to non-linguistic aspects of everyday culture in Austria using two types of data: (a) dialect data from a recent dialect survey, and (b) ethnographic data published in the ‘Austrian Ethnographic Atlas’. Analyzing 90 phonetic-phonological and 36 ethnographic variables, statistical methods such as multidimensional scaling (MDS) and cluster analysis (CA) are employed. The results show only limited overlap between the linguistic and ethnographic data, with cultural patterns appearing more fragmented and small-scale. Geographical proximity is more indicative of cultural than linguistic similarity. MDS and CA reveal clear geographical patterns for the linguistic data that align with traditional dialect classifications. In contrast, the cultural data show less distinct clustering and only small-scale regions that do not coincide with the linguistic ones. This article discusses potential reasons for these differences. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Dialectal Dynamics)
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27 pages, 6778 KB  
Article
Phonetic Diversity vs. Sociolinguistic and Phonological Patterning of R in Québec French
by Mathilde Hutin and Mélanie Lancien
Languages 2024, 9(11), 338; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9110338 - 29 Oct 2024
Viewed by 3735
Abstract
In this study, we investigate the multifaceted realizations of the /R/ consonant in Québec French (QF) by combining sociolinguistic and phonological approaches. First, from a sociophonetic point of view, we utilize a mixed-effects multinomial logistic regression model to analyze the impact of various [...] Read more.
In this study, we investigate the multifaceted realizations of the /R/ consonant in Québec French (QF) by combining sociolinguistic and phonological approaches. First, from a sociophonetic point of view, we utilize a mixed-effects multinomial logistic regression model to analyze the impact of various variables on the distribution of /R/ variants. Our analysis of location, birth year and gender reveals that each variable and its interactions significantly influence the distribution of /R/ variants. We identify three distinct speaker groups based on their preferences for these variants: those favoring apical variants, those using uvular trills, and those employing neither apical nor uvular trills (mostly using fricatives and their approximantized or vocalized variants). From a phonological point of view, we show that the use of the /R/ variants among the three groups correlates with syllabic position, with weaker variants displayed in so-called “weakening” contexts, such as coda and intervocalic onset. Our results thus show that the apparent diversity of /R/ realizations in QF actually follows a pattern from both a sociolinguistic and a formal phonological point of view. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Phonetic and Phonological Complexity in Romance Languages)
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18 pages, 871 KB  
Article
Advancing AI-Driven Linguistic Analysis: Developing and Annotating Comprehensive Arabic Dialect Corpora for Gulf Countries and Saudi Arabia
by Nouf Al-Shenaifi, Aqil M. Azmi and Manar Hosny
Mathematics 2024, 12(19), 3120; https://doi.org/10.3390/math12193120 - 5 Oct 2024
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 5500
Abstract
This study harnesses the linguistic diversity of Arabic dialects to create two expansive corpora from X (formerly Twitter). The Gulf Arabic Corpus (GAC-6) includes around 1.7 million tweets from six Gulf countries—Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait, and Bahrain—capturing a wide range of [...] Read more.
This study harnesses the linguistic diversity of Arabic dialects to create two expansive corpora from X (formerly Twitter). The Gulf Arabic Corpus (GAC-6) includes around 1.7 million tweets from six Gulf countries—Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait, and Bahrain—capturing a wide range of linguistic variations. The Saudi Dialect Corpus (SDC-5) comprises 790,000 tweets, offering in-depth insights into five major regional dialects of Saudi Arabia: Hijazi, Najdi, Southern, Northern, and Eastern, reflecting the complex linguistic landscape of the region. Both corpora are thoroughly annotated with dialect-specific seed words and geolocation data, achieving high levels of accuracy, as indicated by Cohen’s Kappa scores of 0.78 for GAC-6 and 0.90 for SDC-5. The annotation process leverages AI-driven techniques, including machine learning algorithms for automated dialect recognition and feature extraction, to enhance the granularity and precision of the data. These resources significantly contribute to the field of Arabic dialectology and facilitate the development of AI algorithms for linguistic data analysis, enhancing AI system design and efficiency. The data provided by this research are crucial for advancing AI methodologies, supporting diverse applications in the realm of next-generation AI technologies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic AI and Data-Driven Advancements in Industry 4.0)
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17 pages, 4914 KB  
Article
Language Perceptions of New Mexico: A Focus on the NM Borderland
by Kathryn P. Bove
Languages 2024, 9(5), 161; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9050161 - 28 Apr 2024
Viewed by 3441
Abstract
New Mexico is located along the U.S.–Mexico border, and as such, Spanish, English, and language mixing form an integral part of the New Mexican identity. New Mexico is often divided into a northern and a southern region with the north known for Spanish [...] Read more.
New Mexico is located along the U.S.–Mexico border, and as such, Spanish, English, and language mixing form an integral part of the New Mexican identity. New Mexico is often divided into a northern and a southern region with the north known for Spanish archaisms due to historic isolation, and the south associated with ties to a Mexican identity due to the location of the U.S.–Mexico border. The current study uses perceptual dialectology to capture the way in which speakers in the south of New Mexico perceive this north/south divide and communicate their identity. Overall, there is evidence of the north/south divide, but speakers in southern New Mexico focus much more on language use such as Spanglish, English, and Spanish than on their northern counterparts. Participants reference language mixing over language “purity” and borders over an explicit rural/urban divide. Like previous accounts, we see reference to the “correctness” of both English and Spanish, examples of specific terminology used in different parts of the state, and descriptions of accents throughout the state. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Language Contact in Borderlands)
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34 pages, 1677 KB  
Article
Existential Constructions, Definiteness Effects, and Linguistic Contact: At the Crossroads between Spanish and Catalan
by Jorge Agulló
Languages 2024, 9(1), 11; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9010011 - 23 Dec 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 5290
Abstract
Existential sentences in Spanish are sensitive to the definiteness or quantification restriction or effect, which prevents personal pronouns, proper nouns, and definite constituents from occupying the pivot position. Contact varieties between Spanish, a robust language as regards the effect, and Catalan, which has [...] Read more.
Existential sentences in Spanish are sensitive to the definiteness or quantification restriction or effect, which prevents personal pronouns, proper nouns, and definite constituents from occupying the pivot position. Contact varieties between Spanish, a robust language as regards the effect, and Catalan, which has a weaker version, remain largely unexplored. This paper fills this void. A large corpus was gathered to quantitatively study the variation between definite and indefinite pivots. Examples involving definite, specific pivots and even proper names, hitherto unnoticed, are brought to the fore. The pivot of the existential in Spanish is argued to bear Partitive case, as shown by (i) pronominal existential pivots in other Romance languages, (ii) the phi-feature defectiveness of the clitic out of the pivot position, (iii) and partitive pronouns with unaccusatives in Spanish. The hypothesis is put forth that varieties of Spanish in contact with Catalan no longer relate Partitive case to the non-definiteness of the pivot. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Approaches to Spanish Dialectal Grammar)
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22 pages, 863 KB  
Article
(Extreme) Polymorphism in Occitan Verb Morphology
by Franck Floricic
Languages 2023, 8(1), 40; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages8010040 - 30 Jan 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 3215
Abstract
Polymorphism has long been recognized as a crucial dimension of the nature of language. One of the merits of dialectology and dialectologists is emphasis on the inherently variable and polymorphic nature of linguistic systems, which are always in a state of relative equilibrium [...] Read more.
Polymorphism has long been recognized as a crucial dimension of the nature of language. One of the merits of dialectology and dialectologists is emphasis on the inherently variable and polymorphic nature of linguistic systems, which are always in a state of relative equilibrium and stability. The most striking features of the Occitan data that will be discussed lies in the possibility of finding various forms in a given cell in certain paradigms; more strikingly, it will be shown that two or three (even four) paradigms for one and the same (tense) verb may coexist in the same variety. It will be argued that if polymorphism is the natural state of linguistic systems, it is also anti-economic from a cognitive and processing point of view. It follows that the diachronic evolution of languages tends to develop adaptive solutions to circumvent the potential drawbacks of extreme polymorphism: “natural selection” leads to the reduction or elimination of morphological proliferation. Of course, before reduction or elimination take place, a more or less extended period of time may elapse during which a preference for some paradigmatic options may arise. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Morphology Explorations in Romance Languages)
18 pages, 1143 KB  
Review
Polyorchidism: An Up-to-Date Systematic Review
by Krzysztof Balawender, Agata Wawrzyniak, Józef Kobos, Michał Golberg, Andrzej Żytkowski, Michał Zarzecki, Jerzy Walocha, Michał Bonczar, Andrzej Dubrowski, Agata Mazurek, Edward Clarke, Michał Polguj, Grzegorz Wysiadecki and Anna Smędra
J. Clin. Med. 2023, 12(2), 649; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12020649 - 13 Jan 2023
Cited by 21 | Viewed by 6318
Abstract
Polyorchidism is a rare male urogenital tract anomaly characterized by at least one supernumerary testis in the scrotum or ectopically. According to data based on our systematic review, 76% of the supernumerary testes (SNTs) were located in the scrotum, and 24% were extra-scrotal [...] Read more.
Polyorchidism is a rare male urogenital tract anomaly characterized by at least one supernumerary testis in the scrotum or ectopically. According to data based on our systematic review, 76% of the supernumerary testes (SNTs) were located in the scrotum, and 24% were extra-scrotal (p < 0.001). Among testes located outside the scrotum, 87% were found in the inguinal canal and 13% in the abdominal cavity. In 80% of cases, the diagnosis of SNT was made based on imaging tests, and the remaining 20% of cases were detected incidentally during surgery. The imaging tests performed (US or MRI) resulted in a significantly higher rate of patients who qualified for observation vs. surgical treatment (45% vs. 35%, p < 0.001). The most common conditions associated with SNT were ipsilateral inguinal hernia (15% of cases) and cryptorchidism (15% of cases). Surgery (orchidopexy/orchidectomy) was performed on 54% of patients with SNT, and the decision to observe the SNT was made in a total of 46% of patients (p = 0.001). The therapeutic approach depends on the location of the SNT and the presence of factors that raise suspicion of neoplastic proliferation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Nephrology & Urology)
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16 pages, 1031 KB  
Review
The Morphology of the Pituitary Gland: A Meta-Analysis with Implications for Diagnostic Imaging
by Michał Bonczar, Grzegorz Wysiadecki, Patryk Ostrowski, Mateusz Michalczak, Dawid Plutecki, Jakub Wilk, Weronika Michalik, Jerzy Walocha, Krzysztof Balawender, Tomasz Iskra, Dariusz Lusina, Mateusz Koziej, Maciej Radek and Andrzej Żytkowski
Brain Sci. 2023, 13(1), 89; https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci13010089 - 2 Jan 2023
Cited by 13 | Viewed by 6489
Abstract
The objective of this meta-analysis was to present transparent data on the morphology of the pituitary gland (PG) using the available data in the literature. The main online medical databases, such as PubMed, Embase, Scopus, and Web of Science, were searched to gather [...] Read more.
The objective of this meta-analysis was to present transparent data on the morphology of the pituitary gland (PG) using the available data in the literature. The main online medical databases, such as PubMed, Embase, Scopus, and Web of Science, were searched to gather all relevant studies regarding PG morphology. The mean overall volume of the PG was found to be 597.23 mm3 (SE = 28.81). The mean overall height of the PG was established to be 5.64 mm (SE = 0.11). The mean overall length of the PG was found to be 9.98 mm (SE = 0.26). In the present study, the PG’s overall morphology and morphometric features were analyzed. Our results showed that, on average, females from Asia have the highest volume of PG (706.69 mm3), and males from Europe have the lowest (456.42 mm3). These values are crucial to be aware of because they represent the normal average properties of the PG, which may be used as reference points when trying to diagnose potential pathologies of this gland. Furthermore, the present study’s results prove how the PG’s size decreases with age. The results of the present study may be helpful for physicians, especially surgeons, performing procedures on the PG. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Neurosurgery and Neuroanatomy)
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12 pages, 855 KB  
Article
Jesuit Rhetoric and Language Studies in Modern Shanghai
by Wei Mo
Religions 2022, 13(12), 1129; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13121129 - 23 Nov 2022
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 3203
Abstract
From the sixteenth century onwards, the Jesuit educational model, as well as the method of evangelization propounded by the same religious Order, have been relying on the mastery of certain rhetorical techniques and, notably, in strong linguistic competency. This contribution examines how the [...] Read more.
From the sixteenth century onwards, the Jesuit educational model, as well as the method of evangelization propounded by the same religious Order, have been relying on the mastery of certain rhetorical techniques and, notably, in strong linguistic competency. This contribution examines how the Jesuits in modern Shanghai understood and put into application their traditional focus on rhetoric in the semi-colonial context of the time. After having recalled how Jesuits engaged with Chinese language and discourse in the Ming and early Qing dynasties, we take the 1923 Catalogue of the Jesuit publications in the missionary enclave of Zi-ka-wei as a reference point so as to describe and assess a number of trends that we summarize as follows. A privileged relationship was maintained between Latin and ancient Chinese and a growing interest in the “margins” and the way to address them efficiently triggered a renewal of ethnographic and linguistic studies; specifically, the expertise developed in dialectology testifies to the change that was occurring in the way to rhetorically address hearts and minds. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Plots and Rhetorical Patterns in Religious Narratives)
28 pages, 8121 KB  
Article
Contact Phenomena in Azov Greek
by Maxim Kisilier
Languages 2022, 7(3), 174; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages7030174 - 6 Jul 2022
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 8017
Abstract
Azov Greek is a Modern Greek dialect currently spoken in several villages in the area of Mariupol (Eastern Ukraine). Recent studies in Modern Greek dialectology clearly demonstrate that all Modern Greek dialects (even so specific as Tsakonian) in some period (or periods) of [...] Read more.
Azov Greek is a Modern Greek dialect currently spoken in several villages in the area of Mariupol (Eastern Ukraine). Recent studies in Modern Greek dialectology clearly demonstrate that all Modern Greek dialects (even so specific as Tsakonian) in some period (or periods) of their history were deeply influenced by other dialects or languages and the traces of this influence can be found on various linguistic levels. Azov Greek is no exception here. This contribution intends not only to specify languages involved in language contact with Azov Greek and to analyze the most remarkable features but also to reconstruct a timeline of these contacts. The analysis is based on the field research data collected in Greek speaking villages around Mariupol between 2001 and 2019 and considers folklore and literary texts in Azov Greek. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Investigating Language Contact and New Varieties)
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19 pages, 2548 KB  
Article
The Emergence of a Mixed Type Dialect: The Example of the Dialect of the Bani ˁAbbād Tribe (Jordan)
by Antonella Torzullo
Languages 2022, 7(1), 9; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages7010009 - 5 Jan 2022
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 5206
Abstract
The present article aims at questioning the status of the šāwi dialect of the Bani ʕAbbād tribe by providing a new analysis of the main distinctive phonological, morphological, and syntactical traits which may hint at dialect mixing. The data provided by the [...] Read more.
The present article aims at questioning the status of the šāwi dialect of the Bani ʕAbbād tribe by providing a new analysis of the main distinctive phonological, morphological, and syntactical traits which may hint at dialect mixing. The data provided by the field research, based on a functional framework that relies on descriptive linguistics and a typological approach, show that this dialect is deeply affected by a koineizing tendency due to increasing contacts with the populations of the neighboring areas (especially ʕAmmān and Salṭ) which, in turn, leads to the gradual loss of its authentic features. Finally, this paper discusses whether the dialect of the Bani ʕAbbād should still be considered as belonging to the yigūl group (recently renamed Central Bedouin ygūlu) of the Syro-Mesopotamian sheep-raising tribes or if a new typology of mixed type dialects should eventually be adopted for the dialects displaying important markers of both Bedouin and sedentary types. Full article
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