In:Perspectives on Arabic Linguistics XXXII: Papers selected from the Annual Symposium on Arabic Linguistics, Tempe, Arizona, 2018
Edited by Elly van Gelderen
[Studies in Arabic Linguistics 9] 2020
► pp. 55–68
A study of the place of articulation of the Arabic voiceless dorsal fricative
Published online: 28 August 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/sal.9.03abo
https://doi.org/10.1075/sal.9.03abo
Abstract
Previous descriptions of the place of articulation of the
Arabic dorsal fricative suggest that it ranges from velar to uvular, and there
remains uncertainty in terms of identifying the place of articulation of this
fricative. If the dorsal fricatives are velar in articulation, this presents a
mismatch between their phonological class membership and their phonetic
manifestation, since the velar-uvular split is precisely where the guttural class
boundary is. If the natural class of gutturals excludes velars, then the common
patterning of the dorsal fricative with the gutturals suggests that it is not
underlyingly velar. This study seeks to empirically determine the place of
articulation of the voiceless dorsal fricative (/x/ or /χ/) in a speaker of each of
the following six Arabic dialects: Moroccan Darija, Algerian Darija (West side of
Algeria), Egyptian (Cairene), Triangle-Area Palestinian, Syrian (Aleppo), and Faifi
(Saudi Arabia). The study uses a state-of-the-art 3D/4D ultrasound machine,
digitized 3D palate impressions, and audio recordings to analyze the dorsal
fricatives of Arabic speakers. The results show a general tendency toward uvular
articulation or pre-uvular articulation across dialects, with some variation in some
speakers.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Methods
- 2.1Participants
- 2.2Stimuli
- 2.3Experimental procedure
- 2.4Analysis
- 3.Results
- 3.1Ultrasound traces – 2D midsagittal profiles
- 3.2Nearest Neighbor Distance (NND) from Velar and Uvular Stops to Dorsal Fricatives
- 4.Discussion and conclusions
References Appendix
References (21)
Abu-Haidar, F. 2006. Baghdad
Arabic. Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and
Linguistics, Managing Editors Online
Edition: Lutz Edzard, Rudolf de Jong, 1, 222–231. Leiden – Boston: Brill.
Al-Nassir, A. A. 1985. Sibawayh
the phonologist: A critical study of the phonetic and phonological theory of
Sibawayh as presented in his treatise
al-Kitab. (Doctoral
dissertation). University of York, Heslington. Bouamor, Houda, Nizar Habash, and Kemal Oflazer. A Multidialectal Parallel Corpus of Arabic. LREC. 2014.
Csapó, T. G., Deme, A., Gráczi, T. E., & Markó, A. 2017. Comparison
of distance measures in tongue contour traces of ultrasound
images. Poster presented
at Ultrafest
VIII, Potsdam,
Germany.
Herzallah, R. 1990. Aspects
of Palestinian Arabic phonology: A non-linear
approach. Doctoral
dissertation, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y.
Holes, C. 2006. Bahraini
Arabic. Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and
Linguistics, Managing Editors Online
Edition: Lutz Edzard, Rudolf de Jong, 1, 241–255. Boston, MA: Brill.
Ingham, B. 2008. Najdi
Arabic. Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and
Linguistics, Managing Editors Online
Edition: Lutz Edzard, Rudolf de Jong, 3, 326–334. Boston, MA: Brill.
Jastrow, O. 2006. Anatolian
Arabic. Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and
Linguistics, Managing Editors Online
Edition: Lutz Edzard, Rudolf de Jong, 1, 87–96. Boston, MA: Brill.
McCarthy, J. J. 1991. Semitic
gutturals and distinctive feature
theory. Perspectives on Arabic
Linguistics, 3, 63–91.
McCarthy, John. (1994). The
phonetics and phonology of Semitic
pharyngeal. In Patricia Keating (ed.), Phonological
Structure and Phonetic Form: Papers in Laboratory Phonology
III, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
McCarus, E. 2008. Modern
Standard Arabic. Encyclopedia of Arabic Language
and Linguistics, Managing Editors Online
Edition: Lutz Edzard, Rudolf de Jong, 3, 238–262. Boston, MA: Brill.
Saiegh-Haddad, E. 2003. Linguistic
distance and initial reading acquisition: The case of Arabic
diglossia. Applied
Psycholinguistics, 24 (03).
Scobbie, J. M., Wrench, A. A., van der Linden, M. 2008. Head-Probe
stabilization in ultrasound tongue imaging using a headset to permit natural
head movement. Proceedings of the 8th
International Seminar on Speech
Production, 373–376.
Woidich, M. A. 2006. Cairo
Arabic. Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and
Linguistics, Managing Editors Online
Edition: Lutz Edzard, Rudolf de Jong, 1, 323–333.
Zawaydeh, B. 1997. An
acoustic analysis of uvularization spread in Ammani-Jordanian
Arabic. Studies in the Linguistic
Sciences 27.1, 185–200.
