A taxonomy of antonymy in Arabic: Egyptian and Saudi proverbs in comparison

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Abstract

This study has set out to identify, quantify, typify, and exemplify the discourse functions of canonical antonymy in Arabic paremiography by comparing two manually collected datasets from Egyptian and Saudi (Najdi) dialects. Building upon Jones's (2002) most extensive and often-cited classification of the discourse functions of antonyms as they co-occur within syntactic frames in news discourse, the study has substantially revised this classification and developed a provisional and dynamic typology thereof. Two major textual functions are found to be quantitatively significant and qualitatively preponderant: ancillarity (wherein an A-pair of canonical antonyms project their antonymicity onto a more important B-pair) and coordination (wherein one antonym holds an inclusive or exhaustive relation to another antonym). Three new functions have been developed and added to the retrieved classification: subordination (wherein one antonym occurs in a subordinate clause while the other occurs in a main clause), case-marking (wherein two opposite cases are served by two antonyms), and replacement (wherein one antonym is substituted with another). Semicanonical and noncanonical guises of antonymy are left and recommended for future research.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)200-222
Number of pages23
JournalOpen Linguistics
Volume7
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2021

Keywords

  • canonical antonyms
  • Egyptian Arabic
  • frames
  • functions
  • paremiography
  • Saudi Arabic
  • typology

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