Diversity in Language: Contrastive Studies in Arabic and English Theoretical and Applied LinguisticsZaynab Ibrāhīm, Sabiha T. Aydelott, Nagwa Kassabgy American University in Cairo Press, 2000 - 255 oldal The Arabic and English languages have developed along separate lines over the centuries. Thus, it is no surprise that even apart from purely cultural elements, there are distinctive characteristics of the two languages that pose particular problems to native speakers of one language attempting to learn the other. The scholarly papers of Diversity in Language: Contrastive Studies in Arabic and English Theoretical and Applied Linguistics offer new views on the contrasts between Arabic and English and on contemporary theoretical and applied linguistics. Contributors focus on an array of elusive features that make the Arabic language especially difficult for English speakers to understand fully and intuitively. Comparative studies of English and Arabic, including research on the acquisition of Arabic or English as a second language, underscore the concept of diversity. Contributors to Diversity in Language also investigate stylistics, a major source of diversity between the two languages. Practical observations and suggestions may help teachers of Arabic or English as a second language enable students to better understand their second language and become more persuasive and effective in using it. The papers assembled here will be a welcome addition to the bookshelves of scholars and students of Arabic, contrastive rhetoric, and linguistics. Teachers of English as a foreign language, even if their students are not primarily from an Arabic-speaking background, can likewise benefit from the insights made in these contrastive studies. Contributors: Jehan Allam, El-Said Badawi, Huda M. M. Ghali, Mona Kamel Hassan, Nancy G. Hottel-Burkhart, Christopher Horger, Salwa Kamel, Abdel-Hakeem Kasem, Nagwa Kassabgy, Mohammad Al-Khawalda, Nabila El-Taher Makhlouf, Maha El-Seidi, Cynthia May Sheikholeslami, Devin Stewart, Loubna A. Youssef. |
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50. oldal
... Arabic speakers of English as a foreign language ( EFL ) and English speakers of Arabic as a foreign language ( AFL ) has so far been done . Comparing the difficulties encountered by both groups of learners could shed light on whether ...
... Arabic speakers of English as a foreign language ( EFL ) and English speakers of Arabic as a foreign language ( AFL ) has so far been done . Comparing the difficulties encountered by both groups of learners could shed light on whether ...
129. oldal
Contrastive Studies in Arabic and English Theoretical and Applied Linguistics Zaynab Ibrāhīm, Sabiha T. Aydelott, Nagwa Kassabgy. texts . In the written discourse of Arabic , the rhetoric of expository prose , even in the Middle Ages ...
Contrastive Studies in Arabic and English Theoretical and Applied Linguistics Zaynab Ibrāhīm, Sabiha T. Aydelott, Nagwa Kassabgy. texts . In the written discourse of Arabic , the rhetoric of expository prose , even in the Middle Ages ...
130. oldal
... Arabic ( 1994 ) shows that one of the characteristic features of Arabic prose is the use of wa as a text - organizing feature that is not com- parable to the English coordinating conjunction and ( see sample text C , where this type of ...
... Arabic ( 1994 ) shows that one of the characteristic features of Arabic prose is the use of wa as a text - organizing feature that is not com- parable to the English coordinating conjunction and ( see sample text C , where this type of ...
Tartalomjegyzék
Huda M M Ghali | 5 |
Devin Stewart | 31 |
Comparative Studies | 49 |
Copyright | |
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