Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference contribution › peer-review
THE ARABIC DIGLOSSIA : WHAT IS NEXT?(1). / Redkin, Oleg; Bernikova, Olga.
SGEM 2016, BK 1: PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY, SOCIOLOGY AND HEALTHCARE, EDUCATION CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS, VOL I. STEF92 Technology Ltd., 2016. p. 1075-1080 (International Multidisciplinary Scientific Conferences on Social Sciences and Arts).Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference contribution › peer-review
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TY - GEN
T1 - THE ARABIC DIGLOSSIA
AU - Redkin, Oleg
AU - Bernikova, Olga
N1 - Conference code: 3
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - The term 'diglossia' introduced by Ch. Ferguson which is widely used by dialectologists and as a rule means simultaneous coexistence of Standard Arabic and vernaculars of Arabic. the idea of diachronically coexistence of various dialects and a kind of more or less standard language known to the majority of speakers on a certain territory has been always accepted by scholars and has found a lot of evidence on examples which range from ancient Greece to mediaeval England and modern China. In Arabic speaking world diglossia existed long before Islam. During the last decades Arabic countries have witnessed dramatic political, economic and demographic changes, introduction of new means of communication and spread of electronic mass media which affected the linguistic state of affairs. Thus it is necessary to revise whether the term diglossia still reflects the real state of the current linguistic continuum in the Arab world. So the question is: does diglossia still exist in the Arab world, or there is mono- or polyglossia?
AB - The term 'diglossia' introduced by Ch. Ferguson which is widely used by dialectologists and as a rule means simultaneous coexistence of Standard Arabic and vernaculars of Arabic. the idea of diachronically coexistence of various dialects and a kind of more or less standard language known to the majority of speakers on a certain territory has been always accepted by scholars and has found a lot of evidence on examples which range from ancient Greece to mediaeval England and modern China. In Arabic speaking world diglossia existed long before Islam. During the last decades Arabic countries have witnessed dramatic political, economic and demographic changes, introduction of new means of communication and spread of electronic mass media which affected the linguistic state of affairs. Thus it is necessary to revise whether the term diglossia still reflects the real state of the current linguistic continuum in the Arab world. So the question is: does diglossia still exist in the Arab world, or there is mono- or polyglossia?
KW - diglossia
KW - poliglossia
KW - Classical Arabic
KW - Modern Standard Arabic
KW - language
KW - dialect
KW - koine
M3 - статья в сборнике материалов конференции
SN - 978-619-7105-70-4
T3 - International Multidisciplinary Scientific Conferences on Social Sciences and Arts
SP - 1075
EP - 1080
BT - SGEM 2016, BK 1: PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY, SOCIOLOGY AND HEALTHCARE, EDUCATION CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS, VOL I
PB - STEF92 Technology Ltd.
Y2 - 24 August 2016 through 30 August 2016
ER -
ID: 18947315