2017
DOI: 10.5539/elt.v10n2p48
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The Syntax of Word Order Derivation and Agreement in Najrani Arabic: A Minimalist Analysis

Abstract: The paper aims to explore word order derivation and agreement in Najran Arabic (henceforth, NA) and examines the interaction between the NA data and Chomsky 's (2001, 2005) Agree theory which we adopt in this study. The objective is to investigate how word order occurs in NA and provide a satisfactorily unified account of the derivation of SVO and VSO orders and agreement in the language. Furthermore, the study shows how SVO and VSO word orders are derived morpho-syntactically in NA syntax and why and how the… Show more

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“…(ii) There are, however, other Arabic dialects which do not allow the wh-phrase to move overtly; such Arabic varieties are viewed as wh-in-situ languages (e.g., Egyptian Arabic, Cheng (1991Cheng ( , 2000, Lassadi (2003), Sultan (2010) and Yassin (2013); Makkan Arabic, Abu-Sulaiman (2007)). (iii) There are other Arabic dialects which permit the wh-question word to move obligatorily to [Spec, CP] in overt syntax (e.g., Moroccan Arabic, Nouhi (1996); Jordanian Arabic, Yassin (2013); Najran and Hodeidi Arabic, Fakih 2014Fakih , 2015Fakih , 2016Fakih , 2017).…”
Section: The Syntax Of Wh-movement In Arabic Dialectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(ii) There are, however, other Arabic dialects which do not allow the wh-phrase to move overtly; such Arabic varieties are viewed as wh-in-situ languages (e.g., Egyptian Arabic, Cheng (1991Cheng ( , 2000, Lassadi (2003), Sultan (2010) and Yassin (2013); Makkan Arabic, Abu-Sulaiman (2007)). (iii) There are other Arabic dialects which permit the wh-question word to move obligatorily to [Spec, CP] in overt syntax (e.g., Moroccan Arabic, Nouhi (1996); Jordanian Arabic, Yassin (2013); Najran and Hodeidi Arabic, Fakih 2014Fakih , 2015Fakih , 2016Fakih , 2017).…”
Section: The Syntax Of Wh-movement In Arabic Dialectsmentioning
confidence: 99%