| ARABIC LANGUAGE
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SOME FACTS
ARABIC ranks sixth in the world's league
table of languages, with an estimated 186
million native speakers. As the language
of the Qur'an, the holy book of Islam, it
is also widely used throughout the Muslim
world. It belongs to the Semitic group of
languages which also includes Hebrew and
Amharic, the main language of Ethiopia.
There are many Arabic dialects. Classical
Arabic – the language of the Qur'an
– was originally the dialect of Mecca
in what is now Saudi Arabia. An adapted
form of this, known as Modern Standard Arabic,
is used in books, newspapers, on television
and radio, in the mosques, and in conversation
between educated Arabs from different countries
(for example at international conferences).
Local dialects vary, and a Moroccan might
have difficulty understanding an Iraqi,
even though they speak the same language.
North Arabic
North Arabic, or Arabic, was confined largely
to the Arabian Peninsula until the 7th cent.
A.D. Thereafter the spread of Islam took
the Arabic language into the Fertile Crescent
and across North Africa. Today Arabic is
spoken throughout the Arabian Peninsula
and also in Iraq, Syria, Jordan, Lebanon,
Israel, Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria, Libya,
Egypt, Sudan, Mauritania, and Chad. It is
the mother tongue of over 180 million people
in Africa and Asia. In addition, Arabic
plays an important part in the lives of
all Muslims, for it is the sacred language
of Islam and its holy book, the Qur'an.
The Arabic of the Qur'an and of subsequent
Arabic literature is called classical or
literary Arabic. It is uniform and standardized.
Classical Arabic is still employed today
as the written language, but it is restricted
to formal usage as a spoken tongue. It differs
considerably from its descendant, the modern
colloquial Arabic that is the medium of
general conversation. Modern colloquial
Arabic has three principal groups of dialects:
Eastern, Western, and Southern. A standardized
form of modern Arabic is used by the mass
media and official communications—it
also is one of the languages used officially
by the United Nations—but the colloquial
dialects, which differ in many respects
from Modern Standard Arabic, dominate in
daily life.
Grammatically, Arabic has that distinctive
feature of Semitic languages, the triconsonantal
root consisting of three consonants separated
by two vowels. The basic meaning of the
root is furnished by the consonants and
is altered by changes in, or omission of,
the vowels and by the addition of various
affixes. Gender is found in the Arabic verb,
as well as in the noun, pronoun, and adjective.
The modern Arabic dialects have considerably
simplified classical Arabic, as by discarding
the declension of the noun and other inflections.
Arabic has its own alphabet, which is composed
of 28 consonants. Most of the characters
have four different forms, one for beginning
a word, another for ending a word, still
another for a medial position, and a fourth
for a letter used by itself. Vowels are
shown by symbols above or below the consonants,
but they are optional and are often not
written. The direction of writing is from
right to left. The Arabic alphabet evolved
from the Nabataean script, which is a descendant
of the Aramaic writing (see Aramaic). There
are two major styles of the Arabic script,
the angular Kufic (well-suited for decorative
uses) and the cursive Naskhi. Arabic writing
is also the basis of a number of scripts
used by non-Arab peoples following the Muslim
religion and has been adapted for the Persian,
Pashto, Urdu, Malay, Hausa, and Swahili
languages, among others.
South Arabian
Old South Arabian, or Himyaritic, was the
language of people living in the S Arabian
Peninsula in ancient times. It had several
known dialects, and is considered by some
linguists to be closely related to the Ethiopic
of Ethiopia. Old South Arabian had its own
alphabet, the origin of which is still not
clear, although it is generally thought
to have had the same source as the North
Semitic writing. Surviving inscriptions
in Old South Arabian date from the 8th cent.
B.C. or earlier. The coming of Islam in
the 7th cent. A.D. brought with it North
Arabic, which displaced Old South Arabian.
Modern South Arabian, which has several
dialects, is spoken by about 50,000 people
in the S Arabian Peninsula. Its ancestor
is may be Old South Arabian, although not
all linguists agree.
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