Arabic Language and Linguistics
Penulis
: Reem Bassiouney and E. Graham Katz
Subyek
: Arabic language—Discourse analysis, Arabic language—Variation, Arabic
language—Rhetoric, Arabic language—Usage
Penerbit
: Georgetown University Press
Ringkasan :The Georgetown University Round Table on Languages and Linguistics (GURT) has
been held since 1949, placing it among the most long-standing language and linguistics
conferences in the United States. GURT began as a small gathering for researchers
in language studies to share their current work and has gradually grown to become
an internationally known forum for linguistic and language research, with an annual
thematic focus. The theme of the 2010 Round Table was Arabic Language and Linguistics.
At Georgetown and around the world, students are flocking to courses on
Modern Standard Arabic and on Arabic linguistics. Arabic, one of the official languages
of the United Nations, is spoken by more than half a billion people around
the world and is of increasing importance in political and economic spheres. In addition
the study of the Arabic language has a long and rich history: The earliest
grammatical accounts date from the eighth century, and they include full syntactic,
morphological, and phonological analyses of the vernaculars and of Classical Arabic.
GURT 2010 was cohosted by the Department of Linguistics and by the Department
of Arabic Language and Islamic Studies and was held March 12–14, with
scholars of Arabic from around the world presenting research on various aspects of
Arabic language study, from grammatical analysis to language pedagogy, and from
sociolinguistic investigation to computational analysis. The invited speakers, whose
work spanned this spectrum, were Mushira Eid, University of Utah; Ali Farghaly,
formerly of Monterey Institute of International Studies and Cairo University, now at
DataFlux Corporation; Catherine Miller, French Council of Research and Centre
Jacques Berque; Karin Ryding, Georgetown University; and Yasir Suleiman, University
of Cambridge. GURT 2010 drew more than 200 attendees from around the world,
including many from Europe, Asia, North Africa, and the Middle East, making it the
largest assemblage of Arabic language scholars in North America to date. Nearly
eighty papers were presented in the main sessions, and another two dozen were
presented in panel sessions. This volume includes a selection of the papers presented
that represents the range and quality of research on the Arabic language in the twentyfirst
century.
Daftar copy :
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No. Rak |
Ketersediaan |
1 |
00131649 |
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TIDAK DIPINJAMKAN |
Diproses dalam : 0.14872193336487 detik