Article published In: Linguistic Approaches to Poetry
Edited by Christine Michaux and Marc Dominicy
[Belgian Journal of Linguistics 15] 2001
► pp. 113–136
Meters and formulas
The case of ancient Arabic poetry
Published online: 27 March 2003
https://doi.org/10.1075/bjl.15.09pao
https://doi.org/10.1075/bjl.15.09pao
This paper deals with the metrical and rhythmical foundations of the formulaic style of ancient Arabic poetry. It is first shown
how proper formulas can match different verse-patterns, by means of slight modifications such as the adjunction, deletion or
substitution of conjunctions, prepositions, interrogative pronouns or aspectual markers, which partly behave like “stop-gaps”,
keeping the meaning unchanged while modifying the metrical pattern of the formula. The analysis is then extended to
“rhythmical formulas”, i.e. to combined metrical and word-stress patterns which serve as models for a great number of
“formulaic expressions”. Word boundaries may be specified, as well as some morphological and syntactical informations, so that
expressions derived from a same rhythmical formula can be classified into a number of more or less abstract subcategories.
Finally, the syntagmatic combination of rhythmical formulas into lines leads to the identification of a small number of
prototypical verse-instances underlying the various actual instances of a same verse-pattern.
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