International Journal for Arabic Linguistics and Literature Studies

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Controbutions of Nigerian Schorlars in Arabic Philology: “Al-Nahr al-Tafih lil-Labib al-Rabih” by Sheikh Abdulqadir Al-Taliki as Model

Dahiru Yahya

This paper aims to study the personalty of al-Talki being among Nigerian scholars who contributed to Arabic philology through his book titled ‘al-nahar al-tafih lil-labib al-rabih’. Despite all the conrobutions it rendered to knowledge; the researchers didn’t give it good consideration. ...

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Arabic Is Not Mankind’s First Language: An Analytical Study

Osama Khaled Mohammed Hammad

Scholars from different times and places have debated over man’s first language. While some assumed it was Arabic, others said it was Hebrew, Persian, etc. Some scholars concluded that looking into this topic was meaningless and invited others not to examine it. This paper aims to address this ...

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Exploring Pan-African Unity and Development in Yoruba Arabic Literature

Kahar Wahab Sarumi

This article examines the theme of Pan-Africanism in Yoruba literature in Arabic and analyzes the perspectives of Yoruba literati on how unity of the African nations and leaders could function in evolving a new Africa that would withstand socio-economic and political challenges. The article investigates ...

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Aspects of Al-Farra'a's Syntactic Thought in Defining the Answers to Some of Conditional Particles in the Light of his Book (The Meanings of the Qur'an)

Hamdi Mahmoud Jabali

The article aimed to uncover some aspects of the syntactic thought of al-Farra'a in determining the answers of some conditional phrases in the Quranic text in light of his book (The Meanings of the Quran). One of these aspects was a characteristic that involved the combination of two particles with a ...

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The Auxiliary Verb in Contemporary Jordanian Arabic: A Historical Descriptive Study

Haytham Althawbih , Juhaina Al-Issawi , Omar Abu Nawas , Mohammad Saraireh

Objectives: The present study proceeds from the idea that many of the contemporary Arabic phenomena that modern linguists experience are linguistic phenomena that existed in classical Arabic or ancient Semitic languages. This study, therefore, has argued that the hypothesis stating Arabic is different ...

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