Tihamiyya Arabic: Difference between revisions

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Accoeidng to many sources from Google Tihami Arabic is considered a sub dialect of Ta'izzi-Adeni Arabic, while other sources say it diverged from Ta'izzi-Adeni Arabic so I have added Ta'izzi-Adeni Arabic as the name of specific Arabic dialect of Yemen that Tihami Arabic originated from.
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| fam4 = [[Central Semitic languages|Central Semitic]]
| fam4 = [[Central Semitic languages|Central Semitic]]
| fam5 = [[Arabic]]
| fam5 = [[Arabic]]
| fam6 = [[Peninsular Arabic]]
| fam6 = [[Peninsular Arabic|Peninsular]]
| fam7 = [[Ta'izzi-Adeni Arabic|Ta'izzi-Adeni]]
| fam7 = [[Yemeni Arabic]]{{Which|date=March 2024|reason=It's still debated whether the Arabic dialects spoken in Yemen fall into the same phylogenetic clade. It would be useful to differentiate which, if any, of the Yemini Arabic dialect groups Tihamiyya falls into.}}
| script = [[Arabic alphabet]]
| script = [[Arabic alphabet]]
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| iso3 =

Revision as of 12:31, 19 April 2024

Tihamiyya Arabic
Tihamiyya, Tihami
تهامية
Native toYemen
RegionTihamah
Arabic alphabet
Language codes
ISO 639-3

Tihāmiyyah (Arabic: تهامية Tihāmiyyah; also known as Tihamiyya, Tihami) is the dialect of the Arabic language originally spoken only by the people of the historic region of the Tihamah which is the coastal plain at the Eastern shore of Yemen. Even though the term Tihama in a broader sense refers to all of the Eastern coastal plain of the Red Sea from the Gulf of Aqaba to the Bab el Mandeb, it is often used especially for the more Southern part of the plain.

Pronunciation

The Tihami Arabic or Tihamiyya dialect has many aspects which differentiate it from all other dialects in the Arab world. Phonologically Tihami is similar to the majority of Yemeni dialects, pronouncing the qāf (ق) as [q] and the ǧīm (ج) as a velar plosive [ɡ] (the ǧīm pronunciation is also shared with Egyptian Arabic)[1] unlike San'ani and Hadhrami Arabic which pronounce the qāf (ق) as [g]. Grammatically all Tihami dialects also share the unusual feature of utilizing the definite article (am-) as opposed to the prefix (al-) seen in many Arabic varieties. The future tense, much like the dialects surrounding Sanaa, is indicated with the prefix (š-), for all persons, e.g. ša-būk am-sūq "I will go to the Souq". Some Tihami dialects, such as that spoken in Al-Hodeida, are otherwise fairly similar to other Yemeni dialects in grammar and syntax, differing mainly in vocabulary, while others can be so far from any other Arabic dialect that they are practically incomprehensible even to other Yemenis.

See also

References

  1. ^ Watson, Janet C. E. "The Phonology and Morphology of Arabic" (PDF). Oxford. p. 16. Retrieved 27 July 2019.

External links

  • Shaghi, Abdullah and Imtiaz Hasanain (2009). Arabic Pausal Forms and Tihami Yemeni Arabic pausal /u/: History and Structure. In Hasnain S. Imtiaz (ed.) Aligarh Journal of linguistics. Department of Linguistics, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, India. Vol. 1, January- December 2009, 122-139.