Languages (Oct 2021)

An Innovative Copula in Maghrebi Arabic and Its Dialectological Repercussions: The Case of Copular <i>yabda</i>

  • Adam Benkato,
  • Christophe Pereira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/languages6040178
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 4
p. 178

Abstract

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Research on copulas in Arabic dialects has hitherto largely focused on the pronominal copula, and has also mostly ignored Maghrebi dialects. Drawing on published literature as well as fieldwork-based corpora, this article identifies and analyzes a hitherto undescribed verbal copula in dialects of Tunisian and northwestern Libya deriving from the verb yabda (“to begin”). We show that copular yabda occurs mostly in predicational copular sentences, with time reference including the habitual present and generic future. It takes nominal, adjectival, and locational predicate types. We also argue for broader inclusion of syntactic isoglosses in Arabic dialectology, and show how copular yabda crosses the traditional isogloss lines established on the basis of phonology, morphology, or lexicon, and therefore contradicts established dialect classifications such as Bedouin/sedentary or Tunisian/Libyan.

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